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Paralympic Alpine Skiing - Slalom, Downhill | Sochi 2014 Olympics
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Paralympic Games

Alpine Skiing

Alpine Skiing is practiced worldwide and features seven disciplines

Alpine Skiing


About

Alpine Skiing is practiced worldwide and features seven disciplines: Downhill, Slalom, Giant Slalom, Super-G, Super Combined, Team Events and most recently Snowboard. Athletes combine speed and agility while racing down slopes at speeds of around 100 km/h.

Competition accommodates male and female athletes with a physical impairment such as spinal injury, cerebral palsy, amputation, “les autres conditions” (other conditions) and blindness/visual impairment.

Athletes compete in three categories based on their functional ability, and a results calculation system allows athletes with different impairments to compete against each other.

Skiers with blindness/visual impairment are guided through the course by sighted guides using signals to indicate the course to follow. Some athletes use equipment that is adapted to their needs including single ski, sit-ski or orthopedic aids.

IPC Alpine Skiing acts as the International Federation for the sport which is coordinated by the IPC Alpine Skiing Technical Committee.

Six events are on the Paralympic Program: Downhill, Super-G, Super Combined, Giant Slalom, Slalom and Snowboard which will make its debut at the Sochi 2014 Paralympic Winter Games.

Competition Description

Downhill

Each athlete completes one run down the course with their finish time determining the final order based on ascending time. Athletes ski down a long, steep course and must pass through a relatively few number of gates. If athletes miss a gate, they are disqualified. For weather, safety and other reasons, the jury can decide to have two-run downhill if the vertical drop does not comply.

Slalom

Each athlete completes two runs on the same day on different courses. Times from the two runs are added together to determine the final order based on ascending total time. It is a technical event over a shorter course than other events but with a high number of gates that the athlete must negotiate. If athletes miss a gate, they are disqualified.

Giant Slalom

Each athlete completes two runs on the same day on different courses. Times from the two runs are added together to determine the final order based on ascending total time. It is a technical event with a longer course and fewer gates than the slalom. The number of gates is determined by the vertical drop of the course. If athletes miss a gate, they are disqualified.

Super-G

A speed event where each athlete completes one run down the course with their finish time determining the final order based on ascending time. The course is generally shorter than Downhill but longer than Slalom and Giant Slalom.

Super Combined

A combined competition which represents the final result of two disciplines - usually one of either a Downhill or Super-G and a single run of Slalom. Each athlete completes two runs on the same day on different courses. Times from the two runs are added together to determine the final order based on ascending total time.

Snowboard Cross

Each athlete completes three runs down the course with their finish time of their best two runs determining the final order based on ascending time. There is only one rider on the course at a time. The event takes place on a man-made course constructed from a variety of terrain features like bank turns, various types of jumps and rollers etc.

History

Following the end of the Second World War, there was a systematic development of ski sport for persons with an impairment as injured ex-servicemen returned to the sport they loved. In 1948, the first courses were offered.

The first documented Championships for skiers with an impairment were held in Bad Gastein, Austria, in 1948 with 17 athletes taking part. Since 1950, events have been held around the world. The introduction of sit-ski allowed people in wheelchairs (paraplegics and double above-the-knee amputees) to begin to ski and race.

The first Paralympic Winter Games took place in Ornskoldsvik in Sweden in 1976 and featured two Apline disciplines ? Slalom and Giant Slalom.

Downhill was added to the Paralympic program in 1984 in Innsbruck, Austria, and Super-G was added in 1994 at Lillehammer, Norway. Sit-skiing was introduced as a demonstration sport at the Innsbruck 1984 Paralympics and became a medal event at the Nagano 1998 Paralympic Games.

More information