Kristian Ghedina

Kristian Ghedina
 Alpine skier 
Ghedina in January 2000
Disciplines Downhill
Born (1969-11-20) 20 November 1969
Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy
World Championships
Medals 3 (0 gold)
World Cup
Seasons 17
Wins 13
Podiums 33
Overall titles 0 (4th 1997, 2000)
Discipline titles 0 (2nd DH 1995, 1997, 2000)

Kristian Ghedina (Italian pronunciation: [ˈkristjan ɡeˈdina]; born 20 November 1969) is a former World Cup alpine ski racer from Italy. His thirteen victories are the most by an Italian downhill specialist in World Cup history. He is currently an auto racer.

Biography

Ghedina was born in Cortina d'Ampezzo in the province of Belluno, and his mother tongue is Ladin. He studied in Innsbruck and made his World Cup debut in 1989. The following year, after a series of initial podiums and a ruinous fall, he won the last two downhills of the season. He won the silver medal in the Combined race of the 1991 World Championships at Saalbach, Austria; however, the following year he suffered a serious car crash.

Ghedina returned to his best form only in 1995, remaining among the best specialists in the speed disciplines until 2001, when he obtained the last of his 13 World Cup victories (12 Downhills and one Super-G, with a total of 33 podiums).[1] He won also another silver medal at the 1996 and a bronze in the 1997 championships, both in downhill. After his last World Cup victory he kept on racing for another 5 seasons, reaching 15 top ten results, two of them podiums.

His probably most remarkable performance he gave on 24 January 2004 at the Hahnenkamm race in Kitzbühel: on the last jump, approaching the finish line at a speed of 137,6 km/h, he produced a straddle in the air ("spread eagle") which amazed spectators and TV commentators; nevertheless he gained a temporary lead in the race, which he finished sixth in the end.[2]

Ghedina retired from ski racing following the 2006 season. He has raced a BMW in the Italian Superturismo Championship and, driving a Lola, in the Formula 3000 International Masters. In 2012 he started working with the Croatian national ski team, advising the team on the alpine speed disciplines.[3]

World Cup results

Podium

  • 13 wins (12 DH, 1 SG)
  • 33 podiums (29 DH, 4 SG)
DatePlaceDisciplineRank
16/12/1989Italy Val GardenaDownhill3rd
11/01/1990Austria SchladmingDownhill2nd
03/02/1990Italy Cortina d'AmpezzoDownhill1st
15/03/1990Sweden AreDownhill1st
13/01/1995Austria KitzbuehelDownhill3rd
20/01/1995Switzerland WengenDownhill1st
25/02/1995Canada Whistler, BCDownhill1st
10/03/1995Norway KvitfjellSuper G2nd
11/03/1995Norway KvitfjellDownhill2nd
06/03/1996Norway KvitfjellDownhill3rd
20/12/1996Italy Val GardenaDownhill3rd
21/12/1996Italy Val GardenaDownhill1st
29/12/1996Italy BormioDownhill3rd
11/01/1997France ChamonixDownhill1st
18/01/1997Switzerland WengenDownhill1st
22/02/1997Germany Garmisch-PartenkirchenDownhill3rd
23/02/1997Germany Garmisch-PartenkirchenSuper G2nd
12/03/1997United States Vail, CODownhill2nd
13/03/1997United States Vail, COSuper G3rd
04/12/1997United States Beaver Creek, CODownhill1st
24/01/1998Austria KitzbuehelDownhill1st
19/12/1998Italy Val GardenaDownhill1st
27/11/1999United States Vail, CODownhill3rd
17/12/1999Italy Val GardenaDownhill1st
18/12/1999Italy Val GardenaDownhill2nd
22/01/2000Austria KitzbuehelDownhill2nd
29/01/2000Germany Garmisch-PartenkirchenDownhill2nd
04/03/2000Norway KvitfjellDownhill2nd
05/03/2000Norway KvitfjellSuper G1st
16/12/2000France Val d'IsereDownhill2nd
14/12/2001Italy Val GardenaDownhill1st
02/03/2002Norway KvitfjellDownhill3rd
08/01/2005France ChamonixDownhill2nd

Overall

Year/Rank Overall Downhill Giant Super-G Combined
Rank Points Rank Points Rank Points Rank Points Rank Points
199015th976th98----7th10
199122nd6311th4032nd319th106th10
199243rd20615th147--39th3329th26
199357th13927th110----20th29
199440th20719th146--39th97th52
19957th6282nd47332nd297th126--
199615th4928th23746th910th1705th76
19974th9902nd700--5th2186th72
199811th5446th412--10th114--
199920th3558th296--36th149th45
20004th9582nd677--8th2168th65
200160th9521st95------
200210th5053rd381--15th8812th36
200398th3836th35--57th3--
200449th16920th169------
200532nd25712th225--34th32--
200635th23510th235------

See also

References

  1. Ski-db.com – Kristian Ghedina – accessed 9 March 2010
  2. shown on YouTube-Videos - one in German followed by an interview, the other one in French
  3. "Ivica Kostelic and Kristian Ghedina team up at Colmar". International Ski Federation. 5 July 2012. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  • Kristian Ghedina at the International Ski Federation
  • FIS-ski.com – World Cup season standings – Kristian Ghedina
  • Ski-db.com – results – Kristian Ghedina
  • Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill. "Kristian Ghedina". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC.
  • ghedina.com – personal site – (in Italian)
  • YouTube.com – victory (and crash) at Wengen – 1997-01-18
  • YouTube.com – spread eagle at Kitzbühel – 2004-01-24
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