Alpine skiing at the 1988 Winter Olympics – Men's super-G

The Men's Super G competition of the Calgary 1988 Olympics was held at Nakiska on Sunday, February 21.[1][2] This was the Olympic debut of the event.

Men's Super G
at the XV Olympic Winter Games
VenueNakiska
DateFebruary 21
Competitors94 from 34 nations
Winning time1:39.66
Medalists
Franck Piccard  France
Helmut Mayer  Austria
Lars-Börje Eriksson  Sweden
Men's Super-G
LocationNakiska
Vertical   647 m (2,123 ft)
Top elevation2,179 m (7,149 ft)  
Base elevation1,532 m (5,026 ft)

The defending world champion was Pirmin Zurbriggen of Switzerland, who was also the defending World Cup Super G champion and led the current season.[3][4]

France's Franck Piccard won the gold medal, Helmut Mayer of Austria took the silver, and Lars-Börje Eriksson of Sweden was the bronze medalist. Zurbriggen tied for fifth, more than two seconds behind. Italy's Alberto Tomba lasted three gates and did not finish.[5] It was the first Olympic alpine gold for France in twenty years, since the sweep by Jean-Claude Killy in 1968.

The course started at an elevation of 2,179 m (7,149 ft) above sea level with a vertical drop of 647 m (2,123 ft) and a course length of 2.327 km (1.45 mi). Piccard's winning time was 99.66 seconds, yielding an average speed of 84.058 km/h (52.2 mph), with an average vertical descent rate of 6.492 m/s (21.3 ft/s).

Results

The race was started at 10:00 local time, (UTC −7). At the starting gate, it was snowing, the temperature was −3.0 °C (26.6 °F), and the snow condition was hard. The temperature at the finish was 1.0 °C (33.8 °F).

RankBibNameCountryTimeDifference
5Franck Piccard France1:39.66
10Helmut Mayer Austria1:40.96+1.30
1Lars-Börje Eriksson Sweden1:41.08+1.42
417Hubert Strolz Austria1:41.11+1.45
514Pirmin Zurbriggen Switzerland1:41.96+2.30
57Günther Mader Austria1:41.96+2.30
723Luc Alphand France1:42.27+2.61
88Leonhard Stock Austria1:42.36+2.70
925Tomaž Čižman Yugoslavia1:42.47+2.81
1020Ivano Camozzi Italy1:42.66+3.00
114Heinz Holzer Italy1:42.88+3.22
1213Andreas Wenzel Liechtenstein1:43.00+3.34
1337Jim Read Canada1:43.01+3.35
1427Shinya Chiba Japan1:43.03+3.37
1515Franz Heinzer Switzerland1:43.32+3.66
1632Klemen Bergant Yugoslavia1:43.41+3.75
1719Günther Marxer Liechtenstein1:44.16+4.50
1835Tiger Shaw United States1:44.26+4.60
1912Felix Belczyk Canada1:44.31+4.65
2036Niklas Lindqvist Sweden1:44.88+5.22
2028Yves Tavernier France1:44.88+5.22
2240Rob Boyd Canada1:45.04+5.38
2331Adrian Bireš Czechoslovakia1:45.33+5.67
2452Matthias Hubrich New Zealand1:45.46+5.80
2429Jeff Olson United States1:45.46+5.80
2633Carlo Gerosa Italy1:45.82+6.16
2738Peter Jurko Czechoslovakia1:46.03+6.37
2849Silvio Wille Liechtenstein1:46.08+6.42
2948Nigel Smith Great Britain1:47.15+7.49
3034Bill Hudson United States1:47.29+7.63
3160Richard Biggins Australia1:47.38+7.72
3284Elias Majdalani Lebanon1:47.58+7.92
3361Juan Pablo Santiagos Chile1:48.74+9.08
3426Martin Bell Great Britain1:48.82+9.16
3553Graham Bell Great Britain1:48.98+9.32
3658Jorge Pujol Spain1:49.33+9.67
3763Paulo Oppliger Chile1:49.71+10.05
3859Nahum Orobitg Andorra1:53.22+13.56
3965Jorge Birkner Argentina1:53.79+14.13
4067Park Jae-hyuk South Korea1:53.89+14.23
4187Hur Seung-Wook South Korea1:55.13+15.47
4266Hubertus von Hohenlohe Mexico1:56.03+16.37
4394Resul Sare Turkey1:57.65+17.99
4490Yakup Kadri Birinci Turkey1:59.32+19.66
4572Nicola Ercolani San Marino1:59.70+20.04
4677Ioannis Kapraras Greece2:02.06+22.40
4793Göksay Demirhan Turkey2:02.22+22.56
4868Sokratis Aristodimou Cyprus2:03.10+23.44
4983Alex Christian Benoit Mexico2:05.80+26.14
5088Christian Bruderer Guatemala2:05.99+26.33
5173Fabio Guardigli San Marino2:06.59+26.93
5289Jason Edelmann Puerto Rico2:09.93+30.27
5391Patrice Martell Mexico2:10.69+31.03
5486Fabrice Notari Monaco2:11.73+32.07
5599Ong Ching-Ming Chinese Taipei2:17.22+37.56
5678Walter Sandza Puerto Rico2:25.95+46.29
5782Lin Chi-Liang Chinese Taipei2:30.81+51.15
-98Carlos Andrés Bruderer GuatemalaDNF-
-97Nam Won-gi South KoreaDNF-
-85Daníel Hilmarsson IcelandDNF-
-80Javier Rivara ArgentinaDNF-
-79Federico van Ditmar ArgentinaDNF-
-86Félix Flechas Puerto RicoDNF-
-75Kevin Wilson Puerto RicoDNF-
-70Kang Nak-youn South KoreaDNF-
-69Alekhis Fotiadis CyprusDNF-
-62Gerard Escoda AndorraDNF-
-56Delfin Campo SpainDNF-
-55Nils Linneberg ChileDNF-
-54Konstantin Chistyakov Soviet UnionDNF-
-51Alain Villiard CanadaDNF-
-50Frank Wörndl West GermanyDNF-
-47Sergey Petrik Soviet UnionDNF-
-46Simon Lyle Wi Rutene New ZealandDNF-
-45Finn Christian Jagge NorwayDNF-
-43Niklas Henning SwedenDNF-
-42Robert Büchel LiechtensteinDNF-
-41Katsuhito Kumagai JapanDNF-
-39Luis Fernández Ochoa SpainDNF-
-30Philippe Verneret FranceDNF-
-24Steven Lee AustraliaDNF-
-22Atle Skårdal NorwayDNF-
-21Jan Einar Thorsen NorwayDNF-
-18Daniel Mahrer SwitzerlandDNF-
-16Martin Hangl SwitzerlandDNF-
-11Alberto Tomba ItalyDNF-
-9Peter Roth West GermanyDNF-
-6Markus Wasmeier West GermanyDNF-
-3Marc Girardelli LuxembourgDNF-
-2Michael Eder West GermanyDNF-
-96Tang Wei-tsu Chinese TaipeiDQ-
-81Ignacio Birkner ArgentinaDQ-
-74Riccardo Stacchini San MarinoDQ-
-44A. J. Kitt United StatesDQ-
100F. Alfredo Rego GuatemalaDNS
95Ahmet Demir TurkeyDNS
92Carlos Pruneda MexicoDNS
71Giannis Stamatiou GreeceDNS
64Mauricio Rotella ChileDNS
57Ronald Duncan Great BritainDNS
Source:[1]

References

  1. "Calgary 1988 Official Report" (PDF). XV Olympic Winter Games Organizing Committee. LA84 Foundation. 1988. Retrieved January 3, 2014.
  2. "Alpine Skiing at the 1988 Calgary Winter Games: Men's Super G". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  3. "1987 World Cup standings". FIS. Retrieved January 3, 2014.
  4. "1987 World Championships results". FIS. Retrieved January 3, 2014.
  5. "Piccard wins super-giant showdown". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Knight-Ridder. February 22, 1988. p. C1.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.