Engiadina | |
---|---|
Place: | St. Moritz |
Mountain: | Piz Nair, Albula Alps |
Opened: | no source |
Level: | expert |
Downhill | |
Start: | 2,745 m (9,006 ft) (AA) |
Finish: | 2,040 m (6,693 ft) |
Vertical drop: | 705 m (2,313 ft) |
Length: | 2,633 m (1.64 mi) |
Super-G | |
Start: | 2,590 m (8,497 ft) (AA) |
Finish: | 2,040 m (6,693 ft) |
Vertical drop: | 550 m (1,804 ft) |
Length: | 1,950 m (1.21 mi) |
Engiadiana is a World Cup ski course in Switzerland at St. Moritz, Grisons, located in the Engadin valley on Piz Nair mountain in the Albula Alps.[1][2][3]
It is adjacent to the older and more famous men's "Corviglia" speed events course, which hosted the Winter Olympics in 1948 and several World Championships.
World Championships
editMen's events
editEvent | Type | Date | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | SG | 6 February 2003 | Bode Miller | Lasse Kjus | Kjetil André Aamodt |
DH | 12 February 2003 | Bode Miller | Hans Knauß | Erik Schlopy |
Women's events
editEvent | Type | Date | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | SG | 3 February 2003 | Michaela Dorfmeister | Kirsten Lee Clark | Jonna Mendes |
DH | 9 February 2003 | Mélanie Turgeon | Corinne Rey-Bellet | Alexandra Meissnitzer | |
KB | 10 February 2003 | Janica Kostelić | Nicole Hosp | Marlies Oester | |
GS | 13 February 2003 | Anja Pärson | Denise Karbon | Allison Forsyth | |
SL | 15 February 2003 | Janica Kostelić | Marlies Schild | Nicole Hosp | |
2017 | SG | 7 February 2017 | Nicole Schmidhofer | Tina Weirather | Lara Gut |
AC | 10 February 2017 | Wendy Holdener | Michelle Gisin | Michaela Kirchgasser | |
DH | 12 February 2017 | Ilka Štuhec | Stephanie Venier | Lindsey Vonn |
World Cup
editWomen
editUnclear if 1999, 2000 and 2001 events were held on Corviglia or Engiadina course?
Not in original World Cup calendar. It replaced Val-d'Isère (2012).
Full course sections
edit- Britain station start (at "Free Fall" bottom), Fashion Alpina, Super-G start, Foppa, Gianda, Großes Loch, Weißes Band, Reinaltersprung, Engnis, Lärchenweg, Salastrains (finish area).
References
edit- ^ "Race courses (Engiadina map)". engadin.ch. 9 December 2021.
- ^ "Ski-Weltmeisterschaft 2017 in St. Moritz" (in German). urlaub-schweiz.biz. 9 December 2021.
- ^ "Egiadina (official course name from World Cup)" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 9 December 2021.
External links
edit- Official website
- FIS Alpine Ski World Cup – St. Moritz, Switzerland
- Ski-db.com - St. Moritz women's races