Alpine skiing at the 2014 Winter Olympics – Men's super-G

Men's super-G
at the XXII Olympic Winter Games
Alpine skiing pictogram
VenueRosa Khutor Alpine Resort
Date16 February
Competitors63 from 28 nations
Winning time1:18.14
Medalists
   Norway
   United States
   Canada
   United States
Alpine skiing at the
2014 Winter Olympics
Combined   men   women
Downhill men women
Giant slalom men women
Slalom men women
Super-G men women

The men's super-G competition of the Sochi 2014 Olympics was held at the Rosa Khutor Alpine Resort, near Krasnaya Polyana, Russia.[1] Two bronze medals, one to Canada and one to the United States, were awarded for the third-place tie between Jan Hudec and Bode Miller.[2]

Results

The race was started at 10:00.[3]

Rank Bib Name Country Time Difference
1st, gold medalist(s) 21 Kjetil Jansrud Norway 1:18.14
2nd, silver medalist(s) 29 Andrew Weibrecht United States 1:18.44 +0.30
3rd, bronze medalist(s) 22 Jan Hudec Canada 1:18.67 +0.53
13 Bode Miller United States
5 15 Otmar Striedinger Austria 1:18.69 +0.55
6 14 Max Franz Austria 1:18.74 +0.60
7 16 Aksel Lund Svindal Norway 1:18.76 +0.62
8 8 Peter Fill Italy 1:18.85 +0.71
9 34 Ondřej Bank Czech Republic 1:19.11 +0.97
10 6 Morgan Pridy Canada 1:19.19 +1.05
11 20 Adrien Théaux France 1:19.35 +1.21
12 19 Patrick Küng Switzerland 1:19.38 +1.24
13 24 Aleksander Aamodt Kilde Norway 1:19.44 +1.30
14 9 Ted Ligety United States 1:19.48 +1.34
15 2 Thomas Mermillod-Blondin France 1:19.53 +1.39
16 27 Dominik Paris Italy 1:19.70 +1.56
17 26 David Poisson France 1:19.74 +1.60
11 Werner Heel Italy
19 5 Johan Clarey France 1:19.75 +1.61
3 Natko Zrnčić-Dim Croatia
21 18 Georg Streitberger Austria 1:19.77 +1.63
22 28 Carlo Janka Switzerland 1:20.01 +1.87
23 25 Travis Ganong United States 1:20.02 +1.88
24 30 Manuel Osborne-Paradis Canada 1:20.19 +2.05
1 Ivica Kostelić Croatia
26 33 Pavel Trikhichev Russia 1:20.62 +2.48
27 7 Beat Feuz Switzerland 1:20.65 +2.51
28 51 Adam Žampa Slovakia 1:20.95 +2.81
29 32 Klemen Kosi Slovenia 1:21.27 +3.13
30 37 Dmitriy Koshkin Kazakhstan 1:21.50 +3.36
31 49 Stepan Zuev Russia 1:21.54 +3.40
32 50 Henrik von Appen Chile 1:21.88 +3.74
33 40 Martin Vráblík Czech Republic 1:22.01 +3.87
34 42 Marc Oliveras Andorra 1:22.02 +3.88
35 35 Olivier Jenot Monaco 1:22.20 +4.06
36 61 Andreas Žampa Slovakia 1:22.42 +4.28
37 52 Yuri Danilochkin Belarus 1:22.45 +4.31
38 39 Maciej Bydliński Poland 1:22.51 +4.37
39 57 Nikola Chongarov Bulgaria 1:22.59 +4.45
40 44 Martin Khuber Kazakhstan 1:22.60 +4.46
41 55 Georgi Georgiev Bulgaria 1:22.72 +4.58
42 53 Matej Falat Slovakia 1:22.81 +4.67
43 43 Martin Bendík Slovakia 1:23.06 +4.92
44 48 Igor Zakurdayev Kazakhstan 1:23.13 +4.99
45 56 Eugenio Claro Chile 1:23.31 +5.17
46 46 Christoffer Faarup Denmark 1:23.34 +5.20
47 38 Cristian Javier Simari Birkner Argentina 1:23.36 +5.22
48 41 Marko Vukićević Serbia 1:23.88 +5.74
49 54 Jorge Birkner Ketelhohn Argentina 1:23.89 +5.75
50 63 Igor Laikert Bosnia and Herzegovina 1:24.20 +6.06
51 62 Kostas Sykaras Greece 1:26.32 +8.18
52 58 Dmytro Mytsak Ukraine 1:28.51 +10.37
53 4 Aleksandr Glebov Russia DNF
53 10 Didier Défago Switzerland DNF
53 12 Christof Innerhofer Italy DNF
53 17 Matthias Mayer Austria DNF
53 31 Paul de la Cuesta Spain DNF
53 45 Georg Lindner Moldova DNF
53 47 Arnaud Alessandria Monaco DNF
53 60 Roberts Rode Latvia DNF
54 23 Erik Guay Canada DSQ
54 36 Ferran Terra Spain DSQ
54 59 Massimiliano Valcareggi Greece DSQ

References

  1. "Competition Schedule". SOCOG. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  2. Ng, Curtis (16 February 2014). "Jan Hudec bronze snaps Canadian alpine medal drought". CBC. Retrieved 16 February 2014.
  3. Final Results
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.