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Alpine skiing at the 1964 Winter Olympics – Men's downhill

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Men's downhill
at the IX Olympic Winter Games
VenuePatscherkofel
Tyrol, Austria
Date30 January 1964
Competitors84 from 27 nations
Winning time2:18.16
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Egon Zimmermann  Austria
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Léo Lacroix  France
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Wolfgang Bartels  United Team of Germany
← 1960
1968 →
Men's Downhill
LocationPatscherkofel
Vertical   867 m (2,844 ft)
Top elevation1,952 m (6,404 ft)  
Base elevation1,085 m (3,560 ft)

The Men's downhill competition of the 1964 Winter Olympics at Innsbruck, Austria, was held at Patscherkofel on Thursday, 30 January.[1] The defending world champion was Karl Schranz of Austria,[2] and defending Olympic champion Jean Vuarnet of France had retired from competition.

The race course had a number of casualties during training runs, including the death of Ross Milne of Australia.[3][4] This led to a label of "Course of Fear."[5] Zimmermann was favored by many to win the downhill and to the delight of the Austrian fans he won by 0.74 seconds.[5][6]

The starting gate was at an elevation of 1,952 m (6,404 ft), and the vertical drop was 867 m (2,844 ft).[1] The course length was 3.120 km (1.939 mi) and Zimmerman's winning run resulted in an average speed of 81.297 km/h (50.52 mph), with an average vertical descent rate of 6.275 m/s (20.59 ft/s). Following the victory, Zimmerman was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated in the United States.[6]

A dozen years later in 1976, Franz Klammer raced on a slightly shorter course (by 100 metres (110 yards)) and shaved more than 32 seconds off of Zimmerman's time to famously win the Olympic downhill.[7]

Results

Rank Name Country Time Difference
1st place, gold medalist(s) Egon Zimmermann  Austria 2:18.16 -
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Léo Lacroix  France 2:18.90 +0.74
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Wolfgang Bartels  United Team of Germany 2:19.48 +1.32
4 Jos Minsch  Switzerland 2:19.54 +1.38
5 Luggi Leitner  United Team of Germany 2:19.67 +1.51
6 Guy Périllat  France 2:19.79 +1.63
7 Gerhard Nenning  Austria 2:19.98 +1.82
8 Willy Favre  Switzerland 2:20.23 +2.07
9 Willy Bogner  United Team of Germany 2:20.72 +2.56
10 Heini Messner  Austria 2:20.74 +2.58
11 Karl Schranz  Austria 2:20.98 +2.82
12 Fritz Wagnerberger  United Team of Germany 2:21.03 +2.87
13 Dumeng Giovanoli  Switzerland 2:21.16 +3.00
14 Ni Orsi, Jr.  United States 2:21.59 +3.43
15 François Bonlieu  France 2:21.71 +3.55
16 Billy Kidd  United States 2:21.82 +3.66
17 Buddy Werner  United States 2:22.05 +3.89
18 Georg Grünenfelder  Switzerland 2:22.69 +4.53
19 Ivo Mahlknecht  Italy 2:22.72 +4.56
20 Chuck Ferries  United States 2:23.00 +4.84
21 Paride Milianti  Italy 2:23.01 +4.85
22 Raimo Manninen  Finland 2:23.94 +5.78
23 Bruno Alberti  Italy 2:25.30 +7.14
24 Jerzy Woyna Orlewicz  Poland 2:25.88 +7.72
25 Jean-Guy Brunet  Canada 2:26.59 +8.43
26 Ulf Ekstam  Finland 2:27.31 +9.15
27 Martino Fill  Italy 2:27.33 +9.17
28 Gary Battistella  Canada 2:27.74 +9.58
29 Peter Lakota  Yugoslavia 2:27.82 +9.66
30 Rod Hebron  Canada 2:27.90 +9.74
31 Bengt-Erik Grahn  Sweden 2:29.29 +11.13
32 Jon Terje Øverland  Norway 2:29.74 +11.58
33 Hajime Tomii  Japan 2:30.02 +11.86
34 Peter Duncan  Canada 2:30.06 +11.90
35 Luis Viu  Spain 2:30.35 +12.19
36 Vasily Melnikov  Soviet Union 2:30.83 +12.67
37 Olle Rolén  Sweden 2:31.14 +12.98
38 Arild Holm  Norway 2:31.32 +13.16
39 Radim Koloušek  Czechoslovakia 2:31.34 +13.18
40 Bronisław Trzebunia  Poland 2:32.29 +14.13
41 Juan Garriga  Spain 2:32.85 +14.69
42 Jean-Claude Killy  France 2:32.96 +14.80
43 Javier Masana  Spain 2:33.52 +15.36
44 John Rigby  Great Britain 2:34.32 +16.16
45 Yoshiharu Fukuhara  Japan 2:34.55 +16.39
46 Tsuneo Noto  Japan 2:34.76 +16.60
47 Tally Monastyryov  Soviet Union 2:35.27 +17.11
48 Hans-Walter Schädler  Liechtenstein 2:35.84 +17.68
49 Andrzej Dereziński  Poland 2:35.89 +17.73
50 Charles Westenholz  Great Britain 2:36.12 +17.96
51 Fric Detiček  Yugoslavia 2:36.54 +18.38
52 August Wolfinger  Liechtenstein 2:37.25 +19.09
53 Josef Gassner  Liechtenstein 2:37.38 +19.22
54 Valery Shein  Soviet Union 2:38.13 +19.97
55 Andrej Klinar  Yugoslavia 2:39.79 +21.63
56 Charles Palmer-Tomkinson  Great Britain 2:39.97 +21.81
57 Yoshihiro Ohira  Japan 2:40.82 +22.66
58 Hernán Boher  Chile 2:41.67 +23.51
59 Prince Karim Aga Khan  Iran 2:42.59 +24.43
60 Petar Angelov  Bulgaria 2:43.32 +25.16
61 Simon Brown  Australia 2:44.07 +25.91
62 Oto Pustoslemšek  Yugoslavia 2:44.77 +26.61
63 Muzaffer Demirhan  Turkey 2:45.63 +27.47
64 Pedro Klempa  Argentina 2:47.07 +28.91
65 Lotfollah Kia Shemshaki  Iran 2:50.70 +32.54
66 Fayzollah Band Ali  Iran 2:52.44 +34.28
67 Nazih Geagea  Lebanon 2:55.34 +37.18
68 Peter Wenzel  Australia 2:55.58 +37.42
69 Ovaness Meguerdonian  Iran 2:57.10 +38.94
70 Osman Yüce  Turkey 3:03.66 +45.50
71 Zeki Şamiloğlu  Turkey 3:05.71 +47.55
72 Abdurrahman Küçük  Turkey 3:09.99 +51.83
73 Konstantinos Karydas  Greece 3:10.09 +51.93
74 Jean Keyrouz  Lebanon 3:40.44 +82.28
75 Michel Rahme  Lebanon 3:55.15 +96.99
76 Jorge Abelardo Eiras  Argentina 4:34.51 +136.35
77 Juan Holz  Chile 4:51.18 +153.02
- Claudio Wernli  Chile DQ -
- Rune Lindström  Sweden DNF -
- Jeremy Bujakowski  India DNF -
- Lars Olsson  Sweden DNF -
- Jorge Rodríguez  Spain DNF -
- Jonathan Taylor  Great Britain DNF -
- Sami Beyroun  Lebanon DNF -

Source:[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c "Offizieller Bericht der IX. Olympischen Winterspiele Innsbruck 1964" (PDF). Austrian Federal Publishing House for Instruction, Science and Art, Vienna and Munich. LA84 Foundation. 1964. Retrieved January 3, 2014.
  2. ^ "1962 World Championships results". FIS. Retrieved January 3, 2014.
  3. ^ "Australian skier killed in Olympic drill". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Associated Press. January 26, 1964. p. 41.
  4. ^ "Aussie's Milne dies of injuries". Bend (OR) Bulletin. UPI. January 25, 1964. p. 5.
  5. ^ a b Ress, Paul (January 27, 1964). "A fight for life by the home team". Sports Illustrated. p. 32.
  6. ^ a b Jenkins, Dan (February 10, 1964). "Russian blades and fast French skis". Sports Illustrated. p. 14.
  7. ^ Johnson, William Oscar (16 February 1976). "On came the heroes". Sports Illustrated. p. 10.