Olympiabakken

Olympiabakken
Place: Kvitfjell
Architect: Bernhard Russi
Member: Club5+
Opened: 1993 (1993)
Downhill
Start: 1,020 m (3,346 ft) (AA)
Finish:    182 m (597 ft)
Vertical drop:    838 m (2,749 ft)
Length: 3,035 m (1.89 mi)
Max. incline: 32.6 degrees (64%)
Avg. incline: 15.4 degrees (27.6%)
Min. incline:       0 degrees (0%)
Super-G
Start:    832 m (2,730 ft) (AA)
Finish:    182 m (597 ft)
Vertical drop:    650 m (2,133 ft)
Length: 2,451 m (1.52 mi)
Kvitfjell
Location in Norway

Olympiabakken is an Olympic and World Cup downhill ski course in Kvitfjell, Norway, north of Lillehammer; it hosted its first World Cup events in March 1993,[1][2][3] and the alpine speed events of the 1994 Winter Olympics the following February.

Course

Olympiabakken was constructed by Swiss downhill course architect Bernhard Russi, the 1972 Olympic gold medalist (and silver medalist in 1976). Built in 1990, the course hosted all speed and half of the combined events at the 1994 Winter Olympics for both men and women.

Since 1995, Kvitfjell has been a regular stop for late season World Cup speed events for men, and occasionally for women. Olympiabakken hosted the speed events of the season finals in March 1996 and 2003; in 2021, the two scheduled men's events were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

A favorable downhill course, it is among the least demanding on the men's World Cup circuit.

Sections

  • Winterhogget
  • Russispranget
  • Jansrudhoppet
  • S-Svingen
  • Bøygen
  • Løftet
  • Tunnelhoppet

Olympics

Men's events

Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
1994 DH 13 February 1994 Tommy Moe Kjetil André Aamodt Ed Podivinsky
SG 17 February 1994 Markus Wasmeier Tommy Moe Kjetil André Aamodt
KB 14–25 February 1994 Lasse Kjus Kjetil André Aamodt Harald Strand Nilsen
The men's combined slalom was held at Hafjell on Olympialøypa course on 25 February 1994.

Women's events

Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
1994 SG 15 February 1994 Diann Roffe Svetlana Gladysheva Isolde Kostner
DH 19 February 1994 Katja Seizinger Picabo Street Isolde Kostner
KB 20–21 February 1994 Pernilla Wiberg    Vreni Schneider Alenka Dovžan
The women's combined slalom was held at Hafjell on Olympialøypa course on 21 February 1994.

World Cup

Men

Season Date Event Winner Second Third
1992/93 19 March 1993 DH Adrien Duvillard Werner Perathoner Atle Skårdal
20 March 1993 DH Armin Assinger Werner Perathoner Hannes Trinkl
21 March 1993 SG Kjetil André Aamodt    Daniel Mahrer Dietmar Thöni
1994/95 10 March 1995 SG Werner Perathoner Kristian Ghedina Kyle Rasmussen
11 March 1995 DH Kyle Rasmussen Kristian Ghedina Patrick Ortlieb
1995/96 6 March 1996 DH Lasse Kjus Günther Mader Kristian Ghedina
7 March 1996 SG Kjetil André Aamodt Luc Alphand Lasse Kjus
1996/97 2 March 1997 DH Lasse Kjus Pietro Vitalini Ed Podivinsky
3 March 1997 SG Josef Strobl Andreas Schifferer Lasse Kjus
1997/98 7 March 1998 DH Nicolas Burtin Werner Perathoner Lasse Kjus
Josef Strobl
8 March 1998 SG Hans Knauß Patrik Järbyn    Didier Cuche
1998/99 5 March 1999 DH Andreas Schifferer Stephan Eberharter Kjetil André Aamodt
6 March 1999 DH Andreas Schifferer Lasse Kjus Stephan Eberharter
7 March 1999 SG Hermann Maier Stephan Eberharter Andreas Schifferer
1999/00 3 March 2000 DH Daron Rahlves    Didier Cuche Hermann Maier
4 March 2000 DH Daron Rahlves Kristian Ghedina Max Rauffer
5 March 2000 SG Kristian Ghedina Hermann Maier Andreas Schifferer
2000/01 2 March 2001 DH Hermann Maier Florian Eckert Lasse Kjus
3 March 2001 DH Stephan Eberharter Florian Eckert Fritz Strobl
4 March 2001 SG Hermann Maier Hannes Trinkl Stephan Eberharter
2001/02 2 March 2002 DH Hannes Trinkl Claude Crétier    Franco Cavegn
Kristian Ghedina
3 March 2002 SG Alessandro Fattori    Didier Défago Stephan Eberharter
2002/03 12 March 2003 DH Antoine Dénériaz Stephan Eberharter Daron Rahlves
13 March 2003 SG Stephan Eberharter Lasse Kjus Hannes Reichelt
2003/04 6 March 2004 DH Stephan Eberharter Fritz Strobl Antoine Dénériaz
7 March 2004 SG Daron Rahlves Bjarne Solbakken Hermann Maier
2004/05 5 March 2005 DH Hermann Maier Mario Scheiber    Ambrosi Hoffmann
6 March 2005 SG Hermann Maier    Didier Défago Daron Rahlves
2006/07 9 March 2007 SC Benjamin Raich    Silvan Zurbriggen Aksel Lund Svindal
9 March 2007 DH recheduled to 10 March; due to super combined replacement
10 March 2007 DH    Didier Cuche Erik Guay Marco Büchel
10 March 2007 SG recheduled to 11 March; due to super combined replacement
11 March 2007 SG Hans Grugger Mario Scheiber    Didier Cuche
2007/08 29 February 2008 DH Werner Heel Bode Miller Klaus Kröll
1 March 2008 DH Bode Miller    Didier Cuche Werner Heel
2 March 2008 SG Georg Streitberger Bode Miller    Didier Cuche
2008/09 6 March 2009 DH Manuel Osborne-Paradis Michael Walchhofer Aksel Lund Svindal
7 March 2009 DH Klaus Kröll Michael Walchhofer Manuel Osborne-Paradis
2009/10 6 March 2010 DH    Didier Cuche Aksel Lund Svindal Klaus Kröll
7 March 2010 SG Erik Guay Hannes Reichelt Tobias Grünenfelder
Aksel Lund Svindal
2010/11 11 March 2011 DH    Beat Feuz Erik Guay Michael Walchhofer
12 March 2011 DH Michael Walchhofer Klaus Kröll    Beat Feuz
13 March 2011 SG    Didier Cuche Klaus Kröll Joachim Puchner
2011/12 2 March 2012 SG    Beat Feuz
Klaus Kröll
Kjetil Jansrud
3 March 2012 DH Klaus Kröll Kjetil Jansrud Aksel Lund Svindal
4 March 2012 SG Kjetil Jansrud Aksel Lund Svindal    Beat Feuz
2012/13 2 March 2013 DH Adrien Théaux Aksel Lund Svindal Klaus Kröll
3 March 2013 SG Aksel Lund Svindal Georg Streitberger Werner Heel
2013/14 28 February 2014 DH Kjetil Jansrud
Georg Streitberger
Travis Ganong
1 March 2014 DH Erik Guay Johan Clarey Matthias Mayer
2 March 2014 SG Kjetil Jansrud    Patrick Küng Matthias Mayer
2014/15 7 March 2015 DH Hannes Reichelt Manuel Osborne-Paradis Werner Heel
8 March 2015 SG Kjetil Jansrud Vincent Kriechmayr Dustin Cook
2015/16 12 March 2016 DH Dominik Paris Valentin Giraud Moine Steven Nyman
13 March 2016 SG Kjetil Jansrud Vincent Kriechmayr Dominik Paris
2016/17 24 February 2017 DH Boštjan Kline Matthias Mayer Kjetil Jansrud
25 February 2017 DH Kjetil Jansrud Peter Fill    Beat Feuz
26 February 2017 SG Peter Fill Hannes Reichelt Erik Guay
2017/18 10 March 2018 DH Thomas Dreßen    Beat Feuz Aksel Lund Svindal
11 March 2018 SG Kjetil Jansrud    Beat Feuz Brice Roger
2018/19 2 March 2019 DH Dominik Paris    Beat Feuz Matthias Mayer
3 March 2019 SG Dominik Paris Kjetil Jansrud    Beat Feuz
2019/20 7 March 2020 DH Matthias Mayer Aleksander Aamodt Kilde    Carlo Janka
8 March 2020 SG cancelled due to rain, wind and fog
2020/21 6 March 2021 DH cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
7 March 2021 SG
2021/22 4 March 2022 DH Cameron Alexander
   Niels Hintermann
Matthias Mayer
5 March 2022 DH Dominik Paris Aleksander Aamodt Kilde    Beat Feuz
   Niels Hintermann
6 March 2022 SG Aleksander Aamodt Kilde James Crawford Matthias Mayer
2023/24 17 February 2024 DH    Niels Hintermann Vincent Kriechmayr Cameron Alexander
18 February 2024 SG Vincent Kriechmayr Jeffrey Read    Marco Odermatt
Dominik Paris
2024/25 7 March 2025 DH Dominik Paris    Marco Odermatt    Stefan Rogentin
8 March 2025 DH    Franjo von Allmen    Marco Odermatt    Stefan Rogentin
9 March 2025 SG Dominik Paris James Crawford Miha Hrobat
2025/26 21 March 2026 DH
22 March 2026 SG

 Replacement for Aspen (1993), Wengen (2001), Val d'Isere (2007, 2008), Beaver Creek (2011), Ga-Pa (2012, 2014, 2025), Lake Louise (2022). 

Women

Season Date Event Winner Second Third
1992/93 13 March 1993 DH Kate Pace Picabo Street Carole Montillet
[a]14 March 1993 KB Bibiana Perez Morena Gallizio Miriam Vogt
1995/96 6 March 1996 DH    Heidi Zurbriggen Isolde Kostner Katja Seizinger
7 March 1996 SG Ingeborg Helen Marken Katja Seizinger Isolde Kostner
2002/03 12 March 2003 DH Renate Götschl Ingrid Jacquemod Kirsten Clark
13 March 2003 SG Karen Putzer Martina Ertl
Alexandra Meissnitzer
2022/23 3 March 2023 SG Cornelia Hütter Elena Curtoni    Lara Gut
4 March 2023 DH Kajsa Vickhoff Lie Sofia Goggia    Corinne Suter
5 March 2023 SG Nina Ortlieb Stephanie Venier Franziska Gritsch
2023/24 2 March 2024 DH    Lara Gut Cornelia Hütter Mirjam Puchner
3 March 2024 SG Federica Brignone    Lara Gut Ester Ledecká
2024/25 8 February 2025 DH Cornelia Hütter Emma Aicher Breezy Johnson
1 March 2025 DH Emma Aicher Lauren Macuga Cornelia Hütter
2 March 2025 SG Federica Brignone    Lara Gut Sofia Goggia
2025/26 21 March 2026 DH
22 March 2026 SG

Club5+

In 1986, elite Club5 was originally founded by prestigious classic downhill organizers: Kitzbühel, Wengen, Garmisch, Val d’Isère and Val Gardena/Gröden, with goal to bring alpine ski sport on the highest levels possible.[4]

Later over the years other classic long-term organizers joined the now named Club5+: Alta Badia, Cortina, Kranjska Gora, Maribor, Lake Louise, Schladming, Adelboden, Kvitfjell, St.Moritz and Åre.[5]

Notes

  1. ^ Women's world cup classic combined in 1993, dowhnill was held in Kvitfjell and slalom in Hafjell

References

  1. ^ "Na olimpijskih prizoriščih so naši smučarji že otipali teren" (in Slovenian). Delo. 12 February 1994. p. 8.
  2. ^ "Smuk prinesel skupno zmago Katji Seizinger" (in Slovenian). Delo. 12 February 1994. p. 8.
  3. ^ "Abfahrtsarchitekt Russi" (in German). skionline.ch. 8 March 2025. Retrieved 15 March 2025.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  4. ^ "Srečko Medven predsednik elitnega združenje (page 9)" (in Slovenian). Naše novice. June 2010.
  5. ^ "Club5+ workshop in Adelboden". saslong.org. 23 October 2021.

61°27′43″N 10°7′54″E / 61.46194°N 10.13167°E / 61.46194; 10.13167