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The '''[[FIS Alpine World Ski Championships]] 1999''' were held in [[Vail Ski Resort|Vail]] and [[Beaver Creek Resort|Beaver Creek]], [[Colorado]], [[United States of America|U.S.A.]], from February 2-[[February 14|14]], [[1999 Alpine Skiing World Cup|1999]].<ref> [[:de:Alpine Skiweltmeisterschaft 1999|de.wikipedia.org Alpine Skiweltmeisterschaft 1999 ]]</ref>
The '''[[FIS Alpine World Ski Championships]] 1999''' were held in [[Vail Ski Resort|Vail]] and [[Beaver Creek Resort|No one Cares]], [[Colorado]], [[United States of America|U.S.A.]], from February 2-[[February 14|14]], [[1999 Alpine Skiing World Cup|1999]].<ref> [[:de:Alpine Skiweltmeisterschaft 1999|de.wikipedia.org Alpine Skiweltmeisterschaft 1999 ]]</ref>


[[Lasse Kjus]] of [[Norway]] placed in the top two in all five events, winning two gold medals and taking three silvers. [[Hermann Maier]] of [[Austria]] won gold medals in the two speed events, the [[Downhill skiing|downhill]] and [[Super Giant Slalom skiing|Super-G]] (a dead-heat tie with Kjus). Austria dominated the women's two speed events, sweeping all six medals.
[[Lasse Kjus]] of [[Norway]] placed in the top two in all five events, winning two gold medals and taking three silvers. [[Hermann Maier]] of [[Austria]] won gold medals in the two speed events, the [[Downhill skiing|downhill]] and [[Super Giant Slalom skiing|Super-G]] (a dead-heat tie with Kjus). Austria dominated the women's two speed events, sweeping all six medals.

Revision as of 03:10, 10 October 2011

The FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1999 were held in Vail and No one Cares, Colorado, U.S.A., from February 2-14, 1999.[1]

Lasse Kjus of Norway placed in the top two in all five events, winning two gold medals and taking three silvers. Hermann Maier of Austria won gold medals in the two speed events, the downhill and Super-G (a dead-heat tie with Kjus). Austria dominated the women's two speed events, sweeping all six medals.

This was the third non-Olympic World Championships held in the U.S., all in Colorado (the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley, CA, and the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, NY, are also officially considered to be World Championships). Vail hosted a decade earlier, in 1989, and Aspen in 1950, the first held outside of Europe. As a host country, the U.S. has won just two medals in the three World Championships, a gold and a bronze by Tamara McKinney in 1989.

Men's competitions

Downhill

Date: February 6

Medal Name Country Time Diff.
Gold Hermann Maier  Austria 1:40.60 --
Silver Lasse Kjus  Norway 1:40.91 + 0.31
Bronze Kjetil André Aamodt  Norway 1:41.17 + 0.57


Super-G

Date: February 2

Medal Name Country Time Diff.
Gold Lasse Kjus  Norway 1:14.53 --
Gold Hermann Maier  Austria 1:14.53 --
Bronze Hans Knauss  Austria 1:14.54 + 0.01



Giant Slalom

Date: February 12

Medal Name Country Time Diff.
Gold Lasse Kjus  Norway 2:19.31 --
Silver Marco Büchel  Liechtenstein 2:19.36 + 0.05
Bronze Steve Locher  Switzerland 2:20.79 + 1.48


Slalom

Date: February 14

Medal Name Country Time Diff.
Gold Kalle Palander  Finland 1:42.12 --
Silver Lasse Kjus  Norway 1:42.23 + 0.11
Bronze Christian Mayer  Austria 1:42.25 + 0.13


Combined

Date: February 9

Medal Name Country Time Diff.
Gold Kjetil André Aamodt  Norway 2:43.09 --
Silver Lasse Kjus  Norway 2:43.25 + 0.16
Bronze Paul Accola  Switzerland 2:43.62 + 0.53



Women's competitions

Downhill

Date: February 7

Placing Country Athlete Time
1  Austria Renate Götschl 1:48.20
2  Austria Michaela Dorfmeister 1:48.35
3  Austria Stefanie Schuster 1:48.37



Super-G

Date: February 3

Placing Country Athlete Time
1  Austria Alexandra Meissnitzer 1:20.53
2  Austria Renate Götschl 1:20.56
3  Austria Michaela Dorfmeister 1:20.74



Giant Slalom

Date: February 11

Placing Country Athlete Time
1  Austria Alexandra Meissnitzer 2:08.54
2  Norway Andrine Flemmen 2:08.84
3  Austria Anita Wachter 2:32.76


Slalom

Date: February 13

Placing Country Athlete Time
1  Australia Zali Steggall 1:39.55
2  Sweden Pernilla Wiberg 1:33.97
3  Norway Trine Bakke 1:34.77


Combined

Date: February 8

Placing Country Athlete Time
1  Sweden Pernilla Wiberg 3:08.52
2  Austria Renate Götschl 3:08.67
3  France Florence Masnada 2:43.83


Medals table

Place Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1  Austria 5 3 5 13
2  Norway 3 4 2 9
3  Sweden 1 1 - 2
4  Australia 1 - - 1
 Finland 1 - - 1
6  Liechtenstein - 1 - 4
7  Switzerland - - 2 2
8  France - - 1 1

References

External links

  • FIS-ski.com - results - 1999 World Championships - Vail/Beaver Creek, CO, USA
  • FIS-ski.com - results - World Championships