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Women's downhill
at the: X Olympic Winter Games
VenueChamrousse
DateFebruary 10
Competitors39 from 14 nations
Winning time1:40.87
Medalists
1st place, gold medalist(s) Olga Pall  Austria
2nd place, silver medalist(s) Isabelle Mir  France
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) Christl Haas  Austria
← 1964
1972 →
Alpine skiing at the
1968 Winter Olympics
Downhillmenwomen
Giant slalommenwomen
Slalommenwomen
Women's Downhill
LocationChamrousse
Vertical   602 m (1,975 ft)
Top elevation2,252 m (7,388 ft)  
Base elevation1,650 m (5,413 ft)

The Women's Downhill competition of the Grenoble 1968 Olympics was held at Chamrousse on Saturday, 10 February.

The defending world champion was Marielle Goitschel of France, who was also the defending World Cup downhill champion. And Austria's Olga Pall led the current season. Christl Haas of Austria was the "defending Olympic champion."

Pall won the gold medal, Isabelle Mir of France took the silver. And Haas was the bronze medalist.

The starting gate was at an elevation of 2,252 m (7,388 ft), and the vertical drop was 602 m (1,975 ft). The course length was 2.160 km (1.34 mi) and Pall's winning time of 100.87 seconds resulted in an average speed of 77.089 km/h (47.9 mph), with an average vertical descent rate of 5.968 m/s (19.6 ft/s).

About an hour before the race, eighteen-year-old American Karen Budge was testing her wax on the practice course and narrowly avoided a full collision with a member of the Moroccan men's team, Said Housni, who had been warned once before——to stay off the hill. She fell, "suffered a dislocated shoulder," and did not start.

Results

Saturday, 10 February 1968

Rank Bib Name Country Time Difference
1st place, gold medalist(s) 15 Olga Pall  Austria 1:40.87
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 13 Isabelle Mir  France 1:41.33 +0.46
3rd place, bronze medalist(s) 7 Christl Haas  Austria 1:41.41 +0.54
4 8 Brigitte Seiwald  Austria 1:41.82 +0.95
5 14 Annie Famose  France 1:42.15 +1.28
6 21 Felicity Field  Great Britain 1:42.79 +1.92
7 18 Fernande Bochatay  Switzerland 1:42.87 +2.00
8 11 Marielle Goitschel  France 1:42.95 +2.08
9 3 Florence Steurer  France 1:43.00 +2.13
10 5 Nancy Greene  Canada 1:43.12 +2.25
11 10 Annerösli Zryd  Switzerland 1:43.76 +2.89
12 30 Gertrud Gabl  Austria 1:43.97 +3.10
13 6 Giustina Demetz  Italy 1:44.22 +3.35
14 2 Burgl Färbinger  West Germany 1:44.29 +3.42
15 31 Gina Hathorn  Great Britain 1:44.36 +3.49
16 32 Madeleine Wuilloud  Switzerland 1:44.49 +3.62
17 25 Kiki Cutter  United States 1:44.94 +4.07
18 28 Vreni Inäbnit  Switzerland 1:45.16 +4.29
19 1 Margret Hafen  West Germany 1:45.33 +4.46
20 38 Judi Leinweber  Canada 1:45.60 +4.73
21 29 Sandy Shellworth  United States 1:46.53 +5.66
22 20 Karen Dokka  Canada 1:47.55 +6.68
23 27 Betsy Clifford  Canada 1:47.60 +6.73
24 24 Christine Laprell  West Germany 1:47.62 +6.75
25 19 Rosi Mittermaier  West Germany 1:47.73 +6.86
26 37 Helen Jamieson  Great Britain 1:48.03 +7.16
27 36 Nina Merkulova  Soviet Union 1:48.04 +7.17
28 9 Suzy Chaffee  United States 1:48.50 +7.63
29 46 Alfina Sukhanova  Soviet Union 1:48.74 +7.87
30 39 Clotilde Fasolis  Italy 1:48.90 +8.03
31 22 Glorianda Cipolla  Italy 1:49.02 +8.15
32 12 Divina Galica  Great Britain 1:49.39 +8.52
33 23 Anna Mohrová  Czechoslovakia 1:50.22 +9.35
34 48 Mihoko Otsue  Japan 1:51.60 +10.73
35 34 Galina Sidorova  Soviet Union 1:51.74 +10.87
36 35 Majda Ankele  Yugoslavia 1:52.13 +11.26
37 44 Anne Reid  New Zealand 1:53.12 +12.25
38 47 Marta Bühler  Liechtenstein 1:53.53 +12.66
- 26 Lotte Nogler  Italy DNF -
- 4 Karen Budge  United States DNS -
- 45 Irina Touroundaevsk  Soviet Union DNS -
Source

References

  1. ^ "Rapport Officiel Xes Jeux Olympiques D'Hiver 1968 Grenoble". Comité d'organisation des Xemes jeux olympiques d'hiver. LA84 Foundation. 1968. Retrieved December 19, 2019.
  2. ^ "Alpine Skiing at the 1968 Grenoble Winter Games: Women's Downhill". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  3. ^ "1967 World Cup standings". FIS. Retrieved January 3, 2014.
  4. ^ "1966 World Championships results". FIS. Retrieved January 3, 2014.
  5. ^ "Finn skater is: speediest". Spokane Daily Chronicle. (Washington). Associated Press. February 10, "1968." p. 10.
  6. ^ "The rewards of an Olympic championship". Spokesman-Review. (Spokane, Washington). (AP photo). February 11, 1968. p. 1, sports.
  7. ^ Jenkins, Dan (February 19, 1968). "Breakneck time in France: over the scattered bones came Jean-Claude". Sports Illustrated. p. 12.

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