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| ALPINE SKI WORLD CUP 1999/2000 |
Chamonix (FRA) Men's 5th Downhill, 08,Jan.2000
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| 1st/Hermann Maier |
2nd/Stefan Eberharter |
3rd/Hannes Trinkl |
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| Kristian Ghedina |
Chamonix M-DH, Podium |
Penta Photo |
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Maier Works out Y2K Bugs
The year 2000 started off fine
for the Herminator
in Chamonix, France, where he
won his sixth
race of the season in a very
dramatic downhill.
The Austrian team, three of whom
stood on
the podium ahead of the top favorite,
Italy's
Kristian Ghedina, whose last
two training
runs were outstanding, dominated
the race.
Four more Austrians finished
among the top-10,
as well as two Norwegians including
the winner
from 1994, Kjetil Aamodt. One
US skier, Daron
Rahlves, also scored points.
He placed 27th,
over three seconds from the lead.
It was Maier's first win in a
traditional
downhill after a series of top-3
finishes
in several races this season.
This 24th World
Cup success also helps him increase
his lead
in the downhill and the Overall
World Cup
standings. He will enter the
slalom on Sunday
to try to win the combined and
score as many
points as possible before the
end of the
season. He aims to set a new
record of total
points marked within a season
at least 2000!
In 1992, Switzerland's Paul Accola
set a
best mark of 1699 points when
he beat the
great Alberto Tomba.
Hermann Maier fought hard to
win the first
men's race of the year 2000 after
struggling
in the training runs which were
dominated
by Ghedina, the fastest man on
the course
during training. Ghedina's best
training
mark of 2.00.50 on Friday would
have allowed
him to win again (he took it
by 1/100 in
1997) on this treacherous "Verte
des
Houches" course, used since
1948. But
the skier from Cortina d'Ampezzo
was not
able to repeat his impressive
run during
the real race.
The snow and visibility were
quite different
this Saturday and his skis were
not cruising
as smoothly on the gliding sections.
In fact,
he lost time in the middle and
the final
parts where he has crushed his
Austrian rivals
in the past days.
On the contrary, the Herminator
was charged
with great determination after
loosing 1.76
second on the Italian on Friday.
Afterwards,
he admitted having skied as aggressively
today as last February in Beaver
Creek while
chasing his first World Championship
gold
medal in downhill. It's Maier's
second downhill
success this season, the fifth
in his career
on the World Cup tour.
"Ghedina's outstanding best
time didn't
leave me another choice than
skiing at my
limits from top to bottom,"
Maier explained.
"I was particularly focused
and motivated
today and ready to give my best
to achieve
a great run. Yet it was far from
being perfect.
"I was even a little surprised
setting
a new best time because I made
some little
mistakes at the top, but it forced
me to
attack even more at the bottom,"
he
added. "It's for sure a
special victory
because it is really a piste
for downhill
specialists and I didn't expect
too much
to win it. I'm really pleased
to win the
first World Cup competition of
the new century.
I was impatient to race again
after this
long Christmas break. Luck was
on my side
this time after some wafer-thin
losses in
the last weeks," concluded
Maier, who
now leads his compatriot Stephan
Eberharter
by 420 points in the World Cup
overall standings.
His last success this season
goes back to
his victory in super G in Lake
Louise in
early December. His worst result
afterwards
was his 6th place in the first
downhill in
Val Gardena.
This victory definitely proves
that the Herminator
is now able to win on each kind
of downhill
course after his intensive summer
training
in that specialty. Maier's victory
also marked
a special revenge for him. It
was on this
course three years ago that he
took a bad
crash and broke a hand.
"I had quite a lot of respect
before
coming here and I didn't take
useless risks
in training," he explained.
"The
course has been nicely improved
in the meantime,
but downhill is a dangerous specialty
which
requires great concentration."
Ghedina, who won here in 1997,
showed some
strong performances in Val Gardena
before
Christmas. But the Italian from
Cortina d'Ampezzo
had to be content with fourth
this time,
after a slow start in the upper
part. "You
can't be disappointed with fourth
place but
I was 0.30 seconds slower than
in practice
and something went wrong,"
he said.
"Maybe I had some visibility
problems,"
he offered.
Eberharter, who is more of a
giant slalom
specialist, was not too frustrated
at missing
his first downhill victory by
a mere 0.05
seconds. He was already 2nd in
November in
Beaver Creek. "Of course
I won't have
that many opportunities to clinch
a downhill
but the best won today. I made
some mistakes
here and there, but all in all
it was not
a bad run," he said. "To
me, this
is a great achievement as I had
crashed out
of the two giants held before
Christmas.
It's good to feel that I'm back
in shape.
Last year, I had some problems
with my form
in January," said Eberharter.
He will also compete in the slalom
to score
some points in the combined.
The favorite
for this "paper race"
is Kjetil
Aamodt, winner of the downhill
and the combined
in 1994. He lost less than two
seconds on
Maier, which should be enough
for him since
he is also an excellent slalom
skier. The
favorites of this first slalom
of the New
Year are Austria's Benjamin Raich
and Thomas
Stangassinger, Didier Plaschy
from Switzerland,
Finn Christian Jagge and Sebastien
Amiez
from France.
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