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Norway hopes for success at downhill’s ‘Formula One’

Aksel Lund Svindal and his Norwegian teammates on Thursday put the finishing touches to their preparation for Kitzbuehel's World Cup downhill, the alpine skiing equivalent of the Monaco Formula One race.

Norway hopes for success at downhill's 'Formula One'
Aksel Lund Svindal. Photo: Cornelius Poppe / NTB scanpix
Svindal clocked 1min 58.14sec in the second training run down the “Streif” piste on the Hahnenkamm mountain in the picturesque Tyrolean resort.
 
That was enough for joint sixth alongside compatriot Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, with Kjetil Jansrud in 11th, 0.12sec adrift.
 
Unheralded Italian Mattia Casse was the pace setter, the 2010 world junior downhill champion improbably clocking 1:56.85 from a starting bib number of 47, to nip in ahead of teammate Christof Innerhofer.
 
The Norwegian men's team has dominated the alpine ski season so far, winning 12 of 19 races on offer in an incredible show of consistency including victories in all three races in Wengen last weekend.
 
“For this weekend it's top of the list because we're in Kitzbuehel and that's where the racing is!” the unflappable Svindal said of his winning ambitions in Austria.
 
“I would love to win it, but I wouldn't trade it for two victories anywhere else. It's the biggest World Cup race we have, but is it double the size of any other race? I don't think so. Of course I would love to win it, but if I don't win it, then I'll try again next year.”
 
Svindal said his victory in the Wengen downhill and second place behind Jansrud in the combined was a real boost before tackling the toughest course on the World Cup circuit.
 
“Confidence is always something you build, not something you wake up with one day,” he said. “So everything I've done this season should build some confidence for what's coming up.”
 
The Hahnenkamm remains the most prestigious speed event in one of the circuit's most iconic locations: racers touch 100km/h within 8.5 seconds of leaving the start and there have been some extremely gruesome crashes, notably Swiss racer Daniel Albrecht in 2009 and Austrian Hans Grugger in 2011.
 
'Very unforgiving'
Saturday's 76th running of the downhill, which made its debut in 1931, is over a piste more than 3.3 kilometres long, with racers reaching motorway-coasting speeds of 140km/h while being forced into negotiating 80-metre jumps.
 
“One of the things is that it is very unforgiving,” Svindal said of the Streif. “There are a lot of sections that if you go out, you don't miss a gate — you hit the net.
 
“It's like driving Formula One in Monaco, where there's no gravel or grass to roll out on if you don't take the corner but you go into a wall. Luckily there's no wall here!”
 
Italian speed specialist Innerhofer insisted he could be in the mix, but stressed he was not out to break the growing Norwegian hegemony.
 
“I don't think about this. I will do my race and then we will see,” Innerhofer said. “I don't think about overall or any globes. While Aksel and Hannes (Reichelt) can ski fast on every race, I must have steep parts and icy snow.
 
“The most important for me is to come through the finish line having given 100 percent risk.
 
“The key to Aksel's success is that last year he didn't ski. So he's come back with more passion. He stopped for one year but is now really enjoying his racing.”
 
The dangers of racing here were shown up when Austrian Florian Scheiber was airlifted off the course after losing a ski and crashing heavily into the safety netting.
 
France's Guillermo Fayed, standing third in the downhill standings behind Svindal and Reichelt, likened the extreme course to a personal battle.
 
“I have good and bad memories of this piste,” he said, having finished third last year for just his fourth ever podium finish.
 
“To arrive at the bottom in one piece is good, better to get a result. The course is like love: if it goes well, it's great, if not it's hellish!”
 
Fayed's teammate Adrien Theaux, who won December's downhill in Santa Caterina, Italy, and clocked the fastest time in Tuesday's training, again showed his form with fourth place.

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SKIING

Snow report: What’s the latest outlook for French ski resorts this winter?

Good news for skiers in France, as a mild December has given way to a cold blast in early January that's bringing some much-needed snow.

Snow report: What's the latest outlook for French ski resorts this winter?

After a mostly dry and mild December, snow returned to the the Pyrenees on Friday.

Meanwhile most resorts in the Alps have been able to stay open after a promising early start to the ski season, thanks to fresh snowfalls, with more on the way this weekend.

Pyrenees

Snow has returned in the Pyrenees. Some 5cm fell overnight into Friday, January 5th in eastern parts of the mountain range, with forecasts predicting a further 15cm to 20cm to be on the ground 24 hours later. The region had not seen any snow since December 2nd.

In Angles, 20cm of snow had fallen at higher altitudes by mid-morning on Friday.

Further west, numerous resorts in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques département remained closed this week after early December snow had melted in mild conditions that have dominated France in recent weeks, but significant snowfall is expected over the weekend into Monday, and resorts are hoping that they will see enough to open.

One resort, Artouste, has been unable to offer skiing since the start of the season on December 23rd due to a lack of snow. A scenic rail service – usually reserved for warmer months – has kept the resort going. It is set to stop running on Friday, amid expectations of enough snow to finally open the slopes.

READ ALSO Climate crisis: ’90 percent’ of Europe’s ski resorts face critical snow shortages

Alps 

Many ski resorts opened on time, or even a little earlier than scheduled last month, after significant early snow fall, and have enjoyed deposits in the first days of 2024. But, even here, resort managers welcomed the promise of more significant snow this weekend.

Some resorts weren’t so fortunate. Ski areas in Gérardmer, in the Vosges, were still closed in the week leading up to Christmas because of poor snow conditions, but they are hoping for enough snow to finally get started this weekend, while La Bresse-Honeck was using ‘stocked snow’ made by using snow that fell earlier in the winter months to stay open as recently as December 30th.

In the Northern Alps, resorts such as Alpe d’Huez benefited from fresh snowfall on December 22nd, while Val d’Isère had new snow on December 29th. In the Southern Alps, Les Orres’ last pre-New Year snow was on December 8th.

And the French Alps have enjoyed more snow since the start of the year. There’s at least 50cm of fresh snow on the higher slopes of Les Gets and Morzine, for example, a significant improvement on the same time last year, when the resorts were among several that had very little snow to speak of.

In Chamonix, meanwhile, snow has fallen on eight of the last 14 days, with more expected every day between Friday and Monday.

Massif Central

As the post on X / Twitter shows, the Massif Central has not had the best of winters for snow so far. But between 30cm and 50cm is expected in Le Lioran by Monday. 

READ ALSO ‘So many barriers since Brexit’: The French ski businesses no longer willing to hire Brits

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