FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 – Men's downhill

The Men's downhill competition at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 was held on 9 February 2019.[1][2]

Men's downhill
at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019
VenueÅre ski resort
LocationÅre, Sweden
Dates9 February
Competitors58 from 25 nations
Winning time1:19.98
Medalists
    Norway
    Norway
    Austria
Men's Downhill
LocationÅre, Sweden
Vertical   637 m (2,090 ft)
Top elevation1,033 m (3,389 ft)
Base elevation   396 m (1,299 ft)

In the final event of his international career, Aksel Lund Svindal won the silver medal, two-hundredths of a second behind compatriot and training partner Kjetil Jansrud.[3][4]

Results

The race was delayed an hour due to weather and started at 13:30.[5] Snowing during the race, its start was lowered 234 m (768 ft) to the Super-G start, shortening the length by 0.95 km (0.59 mi) to 2.172 km (1.350 mi).[2][5]

RankBibNameCountryTimeDiff
6Kjetil Jansrud Norway1:19.98
9Aksel Lund Svindal Norway1:20.00+0.02
17Vincent Kriechmayr Austria1:20.31+0.33
415Beat Feuz  Switzerland1:20.42+0.44
55Matthias Mayer Austria1:20.63+0.65
613Dominik Paris Italy1:20.72+0.74
74Benjamin Thomsen Canada1:20.73+0.75
87Aleksander Aamodt Kilde Norway1:20.80+0.82
911Bryce Bennett United States1:20.81+0.83
93Mauro Caviezel  Switzerland1:20.81+0.83
1119Christof Innerhofer Italy1:20.97+0.99
1235Ryan Cochran-Siegle United States1:21.00+1.02
1323Matteo Marsaglia Italy1:21.15+1.17
1430Adrian Smiseth Sejersted Norway1:21.18+1.20
152Adrien Théaux France1:21.23+1.25
1632Felix Monsén Sweden1:21.25+1.27
1728Mattia Casse Italy1:21.35+1.37
1714Johan Clarey France1:21.35+1.37
1912Brice Roger France1:21.38+1.40
2036Boštjan Kline Slovenia1:21.45+1.45
2124Niels Hintermann  Switzerland1:21.45+1.47
2239Christoffer Faarup Denmark1:21.47+1.49
2320Steven Nyman United States1:21.55+1.57
2440Henrik von Appen Chile1:21.56+1.58
2529Dominik Schwaiger Germany1:21.57+1.59
2627Travis Ganong United States1:21.63+1.65
2733Miha Hrobat Slovenia1:21.70+1.82
2810Josef Ferstl Germany1:21.83+1.85
291Hannes Reichelt Austria1:21.87+1.89
3022Maxence Muzaton France1:21.90+1.92
3118Otmar Striedinger Austria1:21.92+1.94
3225Manuel Schmid Germany1:21.95+1.97
3326Brodie Seger Canada1:22.03+2.05
3441Olle Sundin Sweden1:22.30+2.32
358Carlo Janka  Switzerland1:22.38+2.40
3616Gilles Roulin  Switzerland1:22.39+2.41
3756Linus Straßer Germany1:22.45+2.47
3831Marko Vukićević Serbia1:22.46+2.48
3938Andreas Romar Finland1:22.48+2.50
4045Adur Etxezarreta Spain1:22.54+2.56
4142Jack Gower Great Britain1:22.59+2.61
4134Jeffrey Read Canada1:22.59+2.61
4321Klemen Kosi Slovenia1:22.90+2.92
4443Marc Oliveras Andorra1:23.14+3.16
4549Filip Platter Sweden1:23.24+3.26
4637Alexander Köll Sweden1:23.29+3.31
4750Jan Zabystřan Czech Republic1:23.33+3.35
4853Tomáš Klinský Czech Republic1:23.72+3.74
4958Yuri Danilochkin Belarus1:23.90+3.92
5046Ondřej Berndt Czech Republic1:24.06+4.08
5147Martin Bendík Slovakia1:24.12+4.14
5261Simon Breitfuss Kammerlander Bolivia1:24.30+4.32
5354Sven von Appen Chile1:24.93+4.95
5457Ivan Kovbasnyuk Ukraine1:25.81+5.83
5560Albin Tahiri Kosovo1:25.84+5.86
5659Elvis Opmanis Latvia1:26.64+6.66
5755Ioan Valeriu Achiriloaie Romania1:27.00+7.02
52Matej Prieložný SlovakiaDid not finish
44Natko Zrnčić-Dim CroatiaDid not start
48Filip Zubčić Croatia
51Štefan Hadalin Slovenia

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.