Kandahar
Place: Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Mountain: Kreuzeck / Zugspitze
Garmisch Classic
Member: Club5+
Opened: 1936 (Kandahar 1)
2009 (Kandahar 2)
Competition: Arlberg-Kandahar races
Downhill
Kandahar 1 (women's course)
Start: 1,490 m (4,888 ft) (AA)
Finish:    770 m (2,526 ft)
Vertical drop:    720 m (2,362 ft)
Length: 2.920 km (1.81 mi)
Max. incline:   40.4 degrees (85%)
Most wins (W): United States Lindsey Vonn (5x)
Most wins (M):  Switzerland  Roland Collombin (3x)
Canada Steve Podborski (3x)
Kandahar 2 (men's course)
Start: 1,690 m (5,545 ft) (AA)
Finish:    770 m (2,526 ft)
Vertical drop:    920 m (3,018 ft)
Length: 3.330 km (2.07 mi)
Max. incline:   42.6 degrees (92%)

Kandahar is a classic World Cup downhill ski course in Bavaria, Germany, opened in 1936. It is located at the Garmisch Classic ski area on the Zugspitze, above Garmisch-Partenkirchen.[1]

Garmisch-Partenkirchen is located in Germany
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Garmisch-Partenkirchen is located in Alps
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Location in the Alps

Since 1954, the competition called Arlberg-Kandahar races have been held here, which is rotating with other notable downhill ski courses in Austria, Switzerland, France, and Italy.

In 2009, the new "Kandahar 2" course opened, parallel to the original, which became "Kandahar 1".[2][3] With a max. incline of 42.6 degrees (92%), it has the 2nd steepest gradient on the World Cup circuit.

Kandahar 1

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The name origin

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The course was named after Sir Frederick Roberts, a British Victorian era major general who was known as "Baron of Kandahar", who led the Kabul Field Force in the Second Anglo-Afghan War and defeated Ayub Khan at the Battle of Kandahar in southern Afghanistan. The Kandahar Ski Club of Mürren, Switzerland, was founded by Arnold Lunn and other British skiers in early 1924.

Women's course

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The original Kandahar 1 course was built for the Olympic debut of alpine skiing in 1936. Since 2009, it is used only for women's World Cup speed events, as a new parallel, more demanding "Kandahar 2" downhill ski course opened for the men's events.

The Kandahar 1 course starts on "Tröglhang" at 1,490 m (4,888 ft) (AA), and follows mainly the old men's route. After the "Schußanger" with two curves, "Himmelreich" jump follows where the Super-G start is located, then "Bödele". Then comes the "Waldeck" with 85% gradient, the steepest section in women's circuit and a technically very demending traverse. From 2009, course from there continues by newly built route where also giant slalom starts; the "Eishang" is bypassed by via the "Ramwiesen" and via the "Höllentor" it returns to the original Kandahar in "Hölle", the steep section. Then passing the "FIS Schneise", a sloping run that, after a hard left-hand bend, ends in the men's course just before the "Tauber-Schuss".[4]

K1 course sections

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  • Tröglhang
  • Olympia-Kurve
  • Panorama-Sprung
  • Schußanger
  • Himmelreich
  • Alte Quelle
  • Bödele
  • Waldeck (85%)
  • Ramwiesen
  • Höllentor
  • Hölle
  • FIS Schneise
  • Tauberschuss
  • Finish

Kandahar 2

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Men's course

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A new downhill run for men in 2009, "Kandahar 2" shares the same start and finish with the original course. It begins at the original start at 1,690 m (5,545 ft) (AA) on Kreuzjoch mountain, reaching speed up to 100 km/h (62 mph) after the "S-Kurve". After the "Tröglhang", the steepest section until 2008, the course continues into newly built route in 2009 to "Olympia-Kurve" and then to "Panorama-Sprung".

After that comes the "Alte Quelle", before the route at the "Bödele" returns into the original Kandahar to the start of the giant slalom above "Eishang" and after the cable car jump (40 to 60 m (130 to 195 ft)), the racers turn right into the second newly designed part at the "Kramersprung" (20 to 40 m (65 to 130 ft)). Then to the next newly section called "Padöls" and into "Auf der Mauer" flat passage. Next is "Frei Fall", with 92% incline, the absolute steepest section in this competition. At the end, last couple of hundred metres, routes joins with the old original course into the "Tauber-Schuss" and a twenty-metre (65 ft) jump just before the finish line.

K2 course sections

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  • Starthang
  • S-kurve
  • Tröglhang
  • Olympia-Kurve
  • Panorama-Sprung
  • Schußanger
  • Himmelreich
  • Alte Quelle
  • Bödele
  • Eishang
  • Seilbahnsprung
  • Kramersprung
  • Padöls
  • Auf der Mauer
  • Freier Fall (92%)
  • Tauberschuss
  • Finish

Olympics

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Men's events

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Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
1936 KB 7–9 February 1936   Birger Ruud   Franz Pfnür   Gustav Lantschner

Women's events

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Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
1936 KB 7–8 February 1936   Laila Schou Nilsen   Lisa Resch   Käthe Grasegger

Combined (both downhills held on "Kandahar" and both slaloms on "Gudiberg" course.)

World Championships

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Men's events

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Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
1978 DH 29 January 1978     Josef Walcher   Michael Veith   Werner Grissmann
KB (DH) 29 January 1978  
(GS) 2 February 1978  
(SL) 5 February 1978  
  Andreas Wenzel   Sepp Ferstl   Pete Patterson
2011 SG 9 February 2011     Christof Innerhofer   Hannes Reichelt   Ivica Kostelić
DH 12 February 2011     Erik Guay     Didier Cuche   Christof Innerhofer
SC 14 February 2011     Aksel Lund Svindal   Christof Innerhofer   Peter Fill
GS 18 February 2011     Ted Ligety   Cyprien Richard   Philipp Schörghofer

Women's events

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Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
2011 SG 8 February 2011     Elisabeth Görgl   Julia Mancuso   Maria Riesch
SC 11 February 2011     Anna Fenninger   Tina Maze   Anja Pärson
DH 13 February 2011     Elisabeth Görgl   Lindsey Vonn   Maria Riesch
GS 17 February 2011     Tina Maze   Federica Brignone   Tessa Worley

Team event

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Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
2011 PG 16 February 2011     France
Taïna Barioz
Anémone Marmottan
Tessa Worley
Thomas Fanara
Cyprien Richard
Gauthier de Tessières
  Austria
Anna Fenninger
Michaela Kirchgasser
Marlies Schild
Romed Baumann
Benjamin Raich
Philipp Schörghofer
  Sweden
Sara Hector
Anja Pärson
Maria Pietilä-Holmner
Axel Bäck
Hans Olsson
Matts Olsson
  • Men's combined in 1978 (SL and GS held on other courses counted together with DH for combined result.)
  • Men's and women's super combined in 2011 (both slaloms held on "Gudiberg" course.)

World Cup

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The World Cup circuit debuted in January 1967.

Gen. Frederick Roberts Roland Collombin Steve Podborski Christoph Gruber
 
300x
 
300x
 
300x
 
300x
"Baron of Kandahar"
(course is named after him)
won record
3 downhills
won record
3 downhills
won record
3 super-Gs
Hermann Maier Lindsey Vonn Lara Gut-Behrami
 
300x
 
300x
 
300x
won record 3 super-Gs
and record 5 events in total
won record 5 downhills
and record 8 events in total
won record
4 super-Gs
No. Type Season Date Winner Second Third
"Kandahar 1" (old course)
FIS–A
DH 1954 1954     Ernst Oberaigner N/A N/A
KB 1954     Anderl Molterer N/A N/A
DH 1959 7 February 1959     Karl Schranz     Roger Staub N/A
KB 1959     Karl Schranz N/A N/A
GS 1964 1964     Jean-Claude Killy N/A N/A
KB 1964     Jimmie Heuga N/A N/A
World Cup
DH 1969/70 31 January 1970   rescheduled on the next day due to strong fog
76 DH 1 February 1970     Karl Schranz   Karl Cordin   Franz Vogler
138 DH 1972/73 6 January 1973       Roland Collombin     Philippe Roux
  Marcello Varallo
139 DH 7 January 1973       Roland Collombin   Marcello Varallo     Bernhard Russi
164 DH 1973/74 6 January 1974       Roland Collombin   Franz Klammer   Herbert Plank
183 DH 1974/75 5 January 1975     Franz Klammer   Werner Grissmann   Josef Walcher
237 DH 1976/77 8 January 1977     Franz Klammer   Ernst Winkler   Peter Wirnsberger
238 GS 9 January 1977     Klaus Heidegger     Heini Hemmi   Willi Frommelt
304 DH 1978/79 27 January 1979     Peter Wirnsberger   Uli Spieß   Herbert Plank
306 KB 28 January 1979       Peter Lüscher   Phil Mahre   Andreas Wenzel
354 DH 1980/81 10 January 1981     Steve Podborski     Peter Müller   Harti Weirather
356 KB 6 January 1981  
10 January 1981  
  Phil Mahre     Peter Müller   Andreas Wenzel
401 DH 1981/82 13 February 1982     Steve Podborski     Conradin Cathomen   Harti Weirather
403 KB 14 February 1982     Steve Mahre   Michel Vion     Peter Lüscher
437 SG 1982/83 9 February 1983       Peter Lüscher     Pirmin Zurbriggen   Hans Enn
472 DH 1983/84 28 February 1984     Steve Podborski   Erwin Resch   Franz Klammer
473 SG 29 February 1984     Andreas Wenzel     Pirmin Zurbriggen   Hans Enn
474 KB 28 February 1984  
29 February 1984  
    Pirmin Zurbriggen   Andreas Wenzel     Peter Müller
510 DH 1984/85 26 February 1985     Helmut Höflehner     Peter Müller   Anton Steiner
511 SG 27 February 1985     Marc Girardelli   Andreas Wenzel   Hans Stuffer
512 KB 26 February 1985  
27 February 1985  
    Peter Müller     Peter Lüscher     Franz Heinzer
583 DH 1986/87 10 January 1987       Pirmin Zurbriggen   Michael Mair     Peter Müller
584 SG 11 January 1987     Markus Wasmeier     Pirmin Zurbriggen   Alberto Ghidoni
709 DH 1990/91 5 January 1991       Daniel Mahrer   Atle Skårdal
  Hannes Zehentner
710 SG 6 January 1991     Günther Mader     Franz Heinzer   Marc Girardelli
738 DH 1991/92 11 January 1992     Markus Wasmeier   Patrick Ortlieb   Hansjörg Tauscher
739 SG 12 January 1992     Patrick Holzer     Paul Accola   Peter Rzehak
741 KB 11 January 1992  
13 January 1992  
    Paul Accola   Ole Kristian Furuseth   Hubert Strolz
DH 1992/93 8 January 1993   recheduled DH from Val d'Isere cancelled; moved to 11 January
DH 9 January 1993   original DH (9.1.) program switched with SL (10.1.) due to weather
772 DH 10 January 1993       Franz Heinzer   Pietro Vitalini   Günther Mader
773 KB 9 January 1993  
10 January 1993  
  Marc Girardelli   Kjetil André Aamodt   Günther Mader
774 DH 11 January 1993       Daniel Mahrer   Peter Rzehak     Franz Heinzer
888 DH 1995/96 2 February 1996     Luc Alphand   Brian Stemmle   Peter Runggaldier
DH 3 February 1996   moved to Monday on 5 February due to weather
SG 4 February 1996  
DH 5 February 1996   double programm; morning DH cancelled due to TV broadcast problems[5]
889 SG 5 February 1996     Werner Perathoner   Luc Alphand   Patrick Wirth
922 SG 1996/97 21 February 1997     Luc Alphand   Hermann Maier   Werner Perathoner
923 DH 22 February 1997     Luc Alphand   Pietro Vitalini   Kristian Ghedina
924 SG 23 February 1997     Hermann Maier   Kristian Ghedina   Atle Skårdal
  Lasse Kjus
961 DH 1997/98 31 January 1998     Andreas Schifferer   Nicolas Burtin   Hermann Maier
962 SG 1 February 1998     Hermann Maier   Hans Knauß  Lasse Kjus
1027 DH 1999/00 29 January 2000     Hermann Maier   Kristian Ghedina   Hannes Trinkl
1067 DH 2000/01 27 January 2001     Fritz Strobl   Peter Rzehak     Franco Cavegn
1068 SG 28 January 2001     Christoph Gruber   Hermann Maier     Didier Cuche
1103 SG 2001/02 26 January 2002     Fritz Strobl     Didier Cuche   Stephan Eberharter
1104 SG 27 January 2002     Stephan Eberharter     Didier Cuche   Andreas Schifferer
1141 DH 2002/03 22 February 2003     Stephan Eberharter     Didier Cuche   Daron Rahlves
1142 SG 23 February 2003     Marco Büchel   Stephan Eberharter     Tobias Grünenfelder
1175 DH 2003/04 30 January 2004       Didier Cuche   Daron Rahlves   Stephan Eberharter
1176 DH 31 January 2004     Stephan Eberharter   Fritz Strobl   Alessandro Fattori
1177 SG 1 February 2004     Hermann Maier   Pierre-Emmanuel Dalcin     Tobias Grünenfelder
1214 DH 2004/05 18 February 2005     Michael Walchhofer   Hermann Maier   Bode Miller
1215 DH 19 February 2005     Michael Walchhofer   Mario Scheiber   Fritz Strobl
1216 SG 20 February 2005     Christoph Gruber     Didier Défago   François Bourque
1251 DH 2005/06 28 January 2006     Hermann Maier   Klaus Kröll   Andreas Buder
1252 SG 29 January 2006     Christoph Gruber   Scott Macartney   Kjetil André Aamodt
1286 DH 2006/07 23 February 2007     Andrej Jerman   Hans Grugger   Erik Guay
1287 DH 24 February 2007     Erik Guay   Andrej Jerman     Didier Cuche
"Kandahar 2" (new course)
DH 2008/09 31 January 2009   fog at mid-course; replaced in Kvitfjell on 6 March 2009
1404 DH 2009/10 10 March 2010       Carlo Janka   Mario Scheiber   Erik Guay
    Patrick Küng
1405 SG 11 March 2010     Erik Guay   Ivica Kostelić   Aksel Lund Svindal
1406 GS 12 March 2010       Carlo Janka   Davide Simoncelli   Philipp Schörghofer
  Ted Ligety
1467 DH 2011/12 28 January 2012       Didier Cuche   Erik Guay   Hannes Reichelt
SG 29 January 2012   fog; replaced in Kvitfjell on 2 March 2012
1514 DH 2012/13 23 February 2013     Christof Innerhofer   Georg Streitberger   Klaus Kröll
1515 GS 24 February 2013     Alexis Pinturault   Marcel Hirscher   Ted Ligety
DH 2013/14 1 February 2014   lack of snow; replaced in St. Moritz on 1 February 2014
GS 2 February 2014   lack of snow; replaced in St. Moritz on 2 February 2014
1583 DH 2014/15 28 February 2015     Hannes Reichelt   Romed Baumann   Matthias Mayer
1584 GS 1 March 2015     Marcel Hirscher   Felix Neureuther   Benjamin Raich
1617 DH 2015/16 30 January 2016     Aleksander Aamodt Kilde   Boštjan Kline     Beat Feuz
GS 31 January 2016   humid, pouring rain, fog; replaced in Kranjska Gora on 4 March 2016
1660 DH 2016/17 27 January 2017     Travis Ganong   Kjetil Jansrud   Peter Fill
1661 DH 28 January 2017     Hannes Reichelt   Peter Fill     Beat Feuz
1662 GS 29 January 2017     Marcel Hirscher   Matts Olsson   Stefan Luitz
1699 DH 2017/18 27 January 2018       Beat Feuz   Vincent Kriechmayr
  Dominik Paris
1700 GS 28 January 2018     Marcel Hirscher   Manuel Feller   Ted Ligety
DH 2018/19 2 February 2019   cancelled; fog, rain, heavy snowfall, replaced in Kvitfjell on 1 March 2019
GS 3 February 2019   cancelled; fog, rain, heavy snowfall
1772 DH 2019/20 1 February 2020     Thomas Dreßen  Aleksander Aamodt Kilde   Johan Clarey
1773 GS 2 February 2020     Alexis Pinturault     Loïc Meillard  Leif Kristian Nestvold-Haugen
SG 2020/21 5 February 2021   originally scheduled SG was moved to 6 February due to weather
1808 DH 5 February 2021     Dominik Paris     Beat Feuz   Matthias Mayer
DH 6 February 2021   originally scheduled DH was moved to 5 February due to weather
1809 SG 6 February 2021     Vincent Kriechmayr   Matthias Mayer     Marco Odermatt
DH 2022/23 28 January 2023   lack of snow; no replacement
GS 29 January 2023   lack of snow; moved to Schladming on 25 January 2023
1914 SG 2023/24 27 January 2024     Nils Allègre   Guglielmo Bosca     Loïc Meillard
1915 SG 28 January 2024       Marco Odermatt   Raphael Haaser     Franjo von Allmen
1953 DH 2024/25 2 February 2025   cancelled due to lack of training due to bad weather conditions

 Not in original calendar. It replaced Val d'Isere (1993), Sestriere (1996), Whistler Mountain (1997), Wengen (2004, 2017), Kitzbühel (2005, 2007). 
 Cancelled SL in St. Anton (1992) replaced in Ga-Pa and with scheduled DH there counted for classic combined. 
 In 1981, GS in Morzine (6 January) counted for combined with DH in Garmisch (10 January). 

Women

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No. Type Season Date Winner Second Third
FIS–A
DH 1954 —     Miri Buchner N/A N/A
KB   Miri Buchner N/A N/A
DH 1959   Erika Netzer N/A N/A
KB   Anne Heggtveit N/A N/A
GS 1964   Edith Zimmermann N/A N/A
KB   Marielle Goitschel N/A N/A
World Cup
75 DH 1969/70 30 January 1970     Françoise Macchi   Wiltrud Drexel   Michèle Jacot
233 DH 1976/77 11 January 1977     Annemarie Moser-Pröll     Bernadette Zurbriggen     Marie-Theres Nadig
661 DH 1990/91 8 February 1991      Chantal Bournissen   Carole Merle   Veronika Wallinger
662 SG 9 February 1991     Carole Merle   Karin Dedler   Michaela Gerg
DH 1993/94 28 January 1994   replacement for Leysin; due to strong wind rescheduled on 29 January
DH 29 January 1994   original DH from Ga-Pa rescheduled on 30 January; due to replacement from Leysin
758 DH 29 January 1994     Isolde Kostner   Melanie Suchet   Michelle Ruthven
SG 30 January 1994   original SG from Ga-Pa cancelled; due to rescheduled DH from 29 January
DH 30 January 1994   rescheduled DH from 29 January cancelled due to fatal crash of Ulrike Maier
784 SG 1994/95 14 January 1995     Florence Masnada   Picabo Street   Shannon Nobis
819 SG 1995/96 13 January 1996     Katja Seizinger   Martina Ertl   Alexandra Meissnitzer
1003 SG 2000/01 16 February 2001     Carole Montillet   Renate Götschl   Brigitte Obermoser
SG 17 February 2001   cancelled
SG 2008/09 31 January 2009   fog in mid-course; replaced on next day 1 February 2009
1273 SG 1 February 2009     Lindsey Vonn   Anja Pärson   Jessica Lindell-Vikarby
1314 DH 2009/10 10 March 2010     Maria Riesch   Lindsey Vonn   Anja Pärson
1315 GS 11 March 2010     Tina Maze   Kathrin Hölzl   Maria Riesch
1316 SG 12 March 2010     Lindsey Vonn   Elisabeth Görgl     Nadia Styger
1372 DH 2011/12 4 February 2012     Lindsey Vonn     Nadja Kamer   Tina Weirather
1373 SG 5 February 2012     Julia Mancuso   Anna Fenninger   Tina Weirather
1416 SG 2012/13 1 March 2013     Tina Weirather   Tina Maze
  Julia Mancuso
1417 DH 2 March 2013     Tina Maze   Laurenne Ross   Maria Höfl-Riesch
1418 SG 3 March 2013     Anna Fenninger   Maria Höfl-Riesch   Julia Mancuso
DH 2013/14 1 February 2014   lack of snow; replaced in Cortina d'Ampezzo on 25 January 2014
SG 2 February 2014   lack of snow; replaced in Cortina d'Ampezzo on 26 January 2014
1479 DH 2014/15 7 March 2015     Tina Weirather   Anna Fenninger   Tina Maze
1480 SG 8 March 2015     Lindsey Vonn   Tina Maze   Anna Fenninger
1510 DH 2015/16 6 February 2016     Lindsey Vonn     Fabienne Suter   Viktoria Rebensburg
1511 SG 7 February 2016       Lara Gut   Viktoria Rebensburg   Lindsey Vonn
1547 DH 2016/17 21 January 2017     Lindsey Vonn     Lara Gut   Viktoria Rebensburg
1548 SG 22 January 2017       Lara Gut   Stephanie Venier   Tina Weirather
1593 DH 2017/18 3 February 2018     Lindsey Vonn   Sofia Goggia   Cornelia Hütter
1594 DH 4 February 2018     Lindsey Vonn   Sofia Goggia   Tina Weirather
DH 2018/19 26 January 2019   program switched due to bad weather forecast; DH moved from 26 to 27 January
1624 SG 26 January 2019     Nicole Schmidhofer   Sofia Goggia     Lara Gut-Behrami
SG 27 January 2019   program switched due to bad weather forecast; SG moved from 27 to 26 January
1625 DH 27 January 2019     Stephanie Venier   Sofia Goggia   Kira Weidle
1659 DH 2019/20 8 February 2020     Viktoria Rebensburg   Federica Brignone   Ester Ledecká
1660 SG 9 February 2020       Corinne Suter   Nicole Schmidhofer     Wendy Holdener
DH 2020/21 30 January 2021   DH was replaced with SG; as due to weather no dowhnill was possible
1687 SG 30 January 2021       Lara Gut-Behrami  Kajsa Vickhoff Lie   Marie-Michèle Gagnon
SG 31 January 2021   SG was cancelled due to heavy fog; replaced on the next day on 1 February
1688 SG 1 February 2021       Lara Gut-Behrami   Petra Vlhová   Tamara Tippler
1723 DH 2021/22 29 January 2022       Corinne Suter     Jasmine Flury   Cornelia Hütter
1724 SG 30 January 2022     Federica Brignone
  Cornelia Hütter
  Tamara Tippler
DH 2023/24 3 February 2024   cancelled due to the high temperatures and unfavorable snow conditions
SG 4 January 2024  
1830 DH 2024/25 25 January 2025     Federica Brignone   Sofia Goggia     Corinne Suter
1831 SG 26 January 2025       Lara Gut-Behrami   Kajsa Vickhoff Lie   Federica Brignone

 Not in original calendar. It replaced Leysin (1994) and Val d'Isere (2013). 

Sections

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Kandahar 1 (W)

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  • Tröglhang, Schussanger, Himmelreich, Bödele, Eishang, Seilbahn Stadl, Waldeck, Ramwiesen, Höllentor, Hölle, FIS Schneise, Tauber-Schuss

Kandahar 2 (M)

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  • Tröglhang, Olimpiakurve, Panorama-Sprung, Stegerwald, Alte Quelle, Eishang, Kramarsprung, Padöls, Auf der Mauer, Frei Fall, Tauber-Schuss

Fatal accidents

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On 29 January 1994, Austrian ski racer Ulrike Maier suffered fatal injuries at "FIS Schneise" section crashing into intermediate timing device at 105 km/h (65 mph) during the World Cup downhill event. A week before, she won a giant slalom in Maribor.[6][7][8]

Thirty-five years earlier in 1959, Canadian John Semmelink crashed into a rock-filled gully and later succumbed to his injuries.[9] Held on an icy course on 7 February in challenging conditions of fog and flat light, Semmerlink was the 44th racer on the course. At a lower section named Himmelreich (heaven) just 500 yards (460 m) from the finish, witnesses said one of his bindings opened and he crashed into a rock-filled gully.[10] Semmerlink had a serious head injury and was taken by U.S. Army helicopter to a nearby U.S. military dispensary, but died of his injuries.[10][11] Of the 89 starters, 39 did not finish the race.[10][12]

Club5+

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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.[13]

Later over the years other classic longterm organizers joined the now named Club5+: Alta Badia, Cortina, Kranjska Gora, Maribor, Lake Louise, Schladming, Adelboden, Kvitfjell, St.Moritz and Åre.[14]

References

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  1. ^ "Proga za smuk (column 2, page 5)" (in Slovenian). Jutro. 8 February 1936.
  2. ^ "Official men's downhill training 2 (2009)" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 30 January 2009.
  3. ^ "Women's super G (2009)" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 1 February 2009.
  4. ^ "Kandahar 1 and 2 course graphic profile". gap2011.com. 8 February 2011.
  5. ^ "Končno zmaga "azzurrov" Jernej Koblar najvišje doslej". Delo. 6 February 1996.
  6. ^ "V znamenju tragedije (page 11)" (in Slovenian). Delo. 31 January 1994.
  7. ^ "Na Zlati lisici se je izkazalo še celo vreme (page 1)" (in Slovenian). Delo. 22 January 1994.
  8. ^ "Ulrike Maier najuspešnejša v prvem lovu na pohorsko lisico (page 7)" (in Slovenian). Delo. 22 January 1994.
  9. ^ "Canadian ski tragedy, triumph". Ottawa Citizen. (Canada). Canadian Press. 9 February 1959. p. 11.
  10. ^ a b c Johnson, William Oscar (11 February 1980). "The Downhill: Majesty and Madness". Sports Illustrated. (Olympic preview). p. 97.
  11. ^ "Ski crash kills Canadian youth". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). Associated Press. 8 February 1959. p. 4, sports.
  12. ^ "Tragedy mars Canadian ski triumph". Montreal Gazette. (Canada). Canadian Press. 9 February 1959. p. 17.
  13. ^ "Srečko Medven predsednik elitnega združenje (page 9)" (in Slovenian). Naše novice. June 2010.
  14. ^ "Club5+ workshop in Adelboden". saslong.org. 23 October 2021.
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47°28′06″N 11°03′49″E / 47.4683°N 11.0636°E / 47.4683; 11.0636