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Everything You Need to Know About Bobsledding

Washingtonpost.com

 How It Plays
 Venue
 1998 Golds
 Critical Moment
 Nuts & Bolts
 Letting It Slide
 History
 Schedule
 Outlook
 Looking Back at Nagano
 Gold Medalists

Venue: Utah Olympic Park is in Park City, about 24 miles east of Salt Lake City.

1998 Golds: In the two-man there was a tie for the gold medal between Italy I (Günther Huber & Antonio Tartaglia) and Canada I (Pierre Leuders & Dave McEachern) in 3:37.24. Germany II (Christoph Langen, Markus Zimmermann, Marco Jakobs, Olaf Hampel) won the gold in the four-man with a time of 2:39.41.

Critical Moment: Finding the perfect racing line is the key to bobsledding: The driver struggles with a violently shaking bobsled to keep it on the path that gives the fastest time down the run. In turns, the driver must keep the sled high enough to maintain speed but low enough to avoid going extra distance.

face-off
KRT

Nuts & Bolts: Two- and four-member teams fly down a mile-long, ice-covered course in an aerodynamic sled at speeds of as much as 90 mph. The team with the fastest combined time after two runs gets the gold. The two- or four-member crews push-start the sled and jump in. The crewman in front steers the sled and is called the driver. The man in the back is the brakeman. On the four-man team, the other two are called side-push men. The push-start is crucial; it, and gravity, are all the power allowed. The two-man team — sled and crew combined — can weigh no more than 858 pounds, and the four-man no more than 1,386 pounds. Crews falling under these restrictions may add weights to the sled. The sled's runners may not be heated — their temperatures are taken before each race — nor lubricated.

Letting It Slide: To steer, the driver holds ropes connected to polished steel runners. Most drivers wear gloves; some steer bare-handed to have a better feel for the ropes. Crew members shift weight to help the driver steer — they can't see the track ahead, but learn the timing of a particular run's curves.

Speeds can reach 90 miles per hour, and runs take less than a minute. When braking, the crew feels five times the force of gravity.

History: Although sleds have been around for centuries, bobsled racing didn't begin until 1877 in Davos, Switzerland, where a steering mechanism was attached to a toboggan.

The world's first "bobsleigh" club was founded in St. Moritz, Switzerland, in 1896, spurring the growth of the sport in winter resorts throughout Europe. By 1914, bobsled races were taking place on a wide variety of natural ice courses.

The first racing sleds were made of wood but were soon replaced by steel sleds that came to be known as bobsleds, so named because of the way crews bobbed back and forth to increase their speed on the straightaways.

In 1923, the Federation Internationale de Bobsleigh et de Tobogganing (FIBT) was founded and the following year a four-man race took place at the first Winter Olympics in Chamonix, France. A two-man event was added at the 1932 Olympics in Lake Placid, N.Y., a format that has remained to the present. American-built sleds and American athletes ruled the sport until the late 1950s, when Europeans came out with better sleds. By far, the most successful bobsledding nations have been Switzerland and Germany. The sport has since expanded around the world to include countries such as Jamaica, Armenia, Morocco, Japan, Australia and New Zealand, and at the 1995 World Championships, no fewer than eight nations placed in the top 10 in the four-man event while seven nations were represented in the top 10 of the two-man competition.

The most well-known of those teams is from Jamaica, where the average temperature is about 80 degrees. The exploits of the Jamaican team became the gist of a movie, "Cool Runnings," and their training was financed by a beer company and a "secret admirer." At Lillehammer in 1994, the Jamaicans finished 14th, their best finish and ahead of both sleds from the United States.

Schedule
EventDateTime (ET)
Two-Man, Runs 1 & 2Saturday, Feb. 165 p.m.
Two-Man, Runs 3 & 4Sunday, Feb. 175 p.m.
Two-WomenTuesday, Feb. 195:30 p.m.
Four-Man, Runs 1 & 2Friday, Feb. 224:30 p.m.
Four-Man, Runs 3 & 4Saturday, Feb. 234:30 p.m.


Outlook: Men — Christoph Langen of Germany, gold medalist in two-man and four-man events at the world championships, is the top men’s sledder. Langen and Markus Zimmermann won gold and bronze at Nagano. World Cup leader Todd Hays and veteran Olympian Brian Shimer head the U.S. men’s team, trying to win its first bobsled medal in 46 years. It will be Shimer’s fifth and final Winter Olympics. Switzerland’s Martin Annen and Germany’s Andre Lange are 2-3 in World Cup standings. Sandis Prusis of Latvia, one of the world’s top four-man pilots, was reinstated after being banned from the games for steroids.

Women — Bonny Warner failed to qualify for the U.S. women’s team, leaving Jean Racine and Gea Johnson as top American sledders. Germany’s Sandra Prokoff and Susi Erdmann and 2001 world champion Francoise Burdet of Switzerland are also considered strong contenders.

Looking Back at Nagano: Nagano’s two-man event ended in a unique fashion. A gold medal was presented to two teams: Canada and Italy. Both nations wound up tied for first with a time of 3:37.24. Ironically, with the Canadians leading by .02 seconds before the final run, Canadian Pierre Lueders turned to Italian Gunther Huber and said, “Can you imagine if we tied this thing?”

The four-man race provided drama as well. The Bobsleigh and Tobogganing Federation ordered Germany’s Christoph Langen to apply orange adhesive tape to the side of his sled to cover his sponsor’s logo. He complained the tape would considerably slow him down, but in the end he went home with the gold medal.

Gold Medalists

Four Man
Year Country, Driver Time
1924Switzerland (Eduard Scherrer)5:45.54
1928United States (William Fiske) (5-man)3:20.50
1932United States (William Fiske)7:53.68
1936Switzerland (Pierre Musy)5:19.85
1948United States (Francis Tyler)5:20.10
1952Germany (Andreas Ostler) 5:07.84
1956Germany (Andreas Ostler) 5:07.84
1960Not Held
1964Canada (Victor Emery) 4:14.46
1968Italy (Eugenio Monti) (2 runs) 2:17.39
1972Switzerland (Jean Wicki) 4:43.07
1976East Germany (Meinhard Nehmer) 3:40.43
1980East Germany (Meinhard Nehmer)3:59.92
1984East Germany (Wolfgang Hoppe)3:20.22
1988Switzerland (Ekkehard Fasser) 3:47.51
1992Austria (Ingo Appelt) 3:53.90
1994Germany (Harold Czudaj) 3:27.78
1998Germany (Christoph Langen) 2:39.41
 
Two Man
Year Country, Driver Time
1932 United States (Hubert Stevens) 8:14.74
1936 United States (Ivan Brown) 5:29.29
1948 Switzerland (Felix Endrich) 5:29.20
1952 Germany (Andreas Ostler) 5:24.54
1956 Italy (Lamberto Dalla Costa) 5:30.14
1960 Not held
1964 Great Britain (Anthony Nash) 4:21.90
1972 West Germany (Wolfgang Zimmerer) 4:57.07
1976 East Germany (Meinhard Nehmer) 3:44.42
1980 Switzerland (Erich Scharer) 4:09.36
1984 East Germany (Wolfgang Hoppe) 3:25.56
1988 USSR (Janis Kipours) 3:53.48
1992 Switzerland (Gustav Weder) 4:03.26
1994 Switzerland (Gustav Weder) 3:30.81
1998 Italy I (Günther Huber)
Canada I (Pierre Leuders)
3:37.24


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