CBC.ca - Torino 2006

Alpine Skiing
- Detailed Results
- Related Information

Brydon 10th in Lake Louise downhill training
Canadian Emily Brydon skied well on home turf Tuesday, racing to a 10th-place finish in the first training run for this week's World Cup women's downhill races in Lake Louise, Alta.
- Austria's Gruber fastest skier in Colorado training
- Norway's Svindal wins World Cup super-G race
- Strobl wins men's World Cup downhill
- Aamodt first in final training run at Lake Louise
- Stage set for Miller-Maier showdown
- Olympic ski champ Gerg retires
- Maier edges Miller in giant slalom opener; Canada's Bourque 5th
- Maze wins season-opening giant slalom
- More Headlines
Sport History
From its beginnings 5,000 years ago in Scandinavia to modern stars like Jean-Claude Killy and Hermann Maier - a history of the Winter Olympics' glamour event and its legends.
Athlete Diary

Thomas Grandi is focused on the task at hand – skiing fast.
Crib Sheet
Olympic debut: Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1936
Number of alpine events at the 1936 Games: 2
Number of alpine events scheduled for the 2006 Games: 10
Most career alpine gold medals won by a man: 3 (Kjetil Andre Aamodt, Jean-Claude Killy, Toni Sailer and Alberto Tomba)
Most career alpine gold medals won by a woman: 3 (Deborah Compagnoni, Janica Kostelic, Vreni Schneider and Katja Seizinger)
Most career alpine medals won by a Canadian: 2 (Nancy Greene and Karen Percy)
Number of Olympic alpine medals won by Canadians: 10
First Canadian to win Olympic alpine gold: Anne Heggtveit, 1960 slalom champion
First Olympic women’s downhill winner to come from a non-German-speaking country: Canada’s Kerrin Lee-Gartner, Albertville 1992
Number of men’s downhill medals awarded in Olympic history: 46
Number of those medals not awarded to Western Europeans: 4
Number of those medals awarded to Canadians whose last name begins with ‘Pod’: 2: bronze medallists Steve Podborski in 1980 and Ed Podivinsky in 1994
Margin of victory for Henri Oreiller of France in the first Olympic downhill in 1948: 4.1 seconds
Margin of victory for Fritz Strobl of Austria in the 2002 downhill: 0.22 seconds
Alpine gold medallists hailing from Lech, Austria: 4
Population of Lech: 200
Fastest Olympic alpine skier: 1984 downhill gold medallist Bill Johnson of the U.S., whose 104 km/h average speed is the fastest in Olympic history
Slowest Olympic alpine skier: Turkey’s Resat Erces, who took 22 minutes and 44 seconds to navigate the 1936 downhill run, making for an average speed of under 9 km/h
First skier to win the same Olympic alpine event twice: Italy’s Alberto Tomba, who captured giant slalom gold in 1988 and 1992
Inventor of the aerodynamic tuck position: 1960 downhill gold medallistJean Vuarnet of France, who later started a successful sunglasses company bearing his name
Venue

Renowned as the "paradise of alpine skiing," Sestriere is a world-class host.
The Essentials
Skiing is one of the most exhilarating sights on snow – racers reach speeds in excess of 130km/h on two rattling planks, risking the potential for a spectacular crash to have a shot at Olympic glory. Learn about the equipment, techniques and tricks of slalom, downhill, giant slalom, and Super-G racing.
Glossary
Catch an edge, find your fall line and learn about the fine art of "schussing" in the alpine skiing glossary.