La face de Bellevarde
Place: France Val d'Isere, France
Mountain: Rocher de Bellevarde
Architect: Bernhard Russi (SUI)
Opened: 1992
Level: Expert
Competition: Critérium of the First Snow
(Critérium de la première neige)
Downhill
Start: 2,807 m (9,209 ft) (AA)
Finish: 1,848 m (6,063 ft)
Vertical drop:    959 m (3,146 ft)
Length: 2.998 km (1.863 mi)
Max. incline:    35.4° degrees (71%)
Avr. incline:    17.8° degrees (32.1%)
Avr. incline:      2.8° degrees (5%)
Giant slalom
Start: 2,300 m (7,546 ft) (AA)
Finish: 1,850 m (6,070 ft)
Vertical drop:    450 m (1,476 ft)
Most wins: Austria Marcel Hirscher (4x)
Slalom
Start: 2,065 m (6,775 ft) (AA)
Finish: 1,845 m (6,053 ft)
Vertical drop:    220 m (722 ft)
Most wins: Austria Marcel Hirscher (3x)

La face de Bellevarde is a World Cup downhill ski course in France, on Rocher de Bellevarde mountain in Val d'Isere, Savoie; it debuted at the 1992 Winter Olympics with the men's downhill.[1][2][3]

It is only about two kilometres (1.2 mi) kilometres up the road from "Piste Oreiller-Killy" in La Daille, another legendary course with a lengthier World Cup tradition.

With 17.8 degrees (32.1%) incline it is the world's steepest giant slalom course in average gradient, with no flat sections, only steepness the whole time.

History edit

The course was developed for the 1992 Winter Olympics, designed by Swiss Olympic downhill champion Bernhard Russi, a respected constructor of downhill slopes around the world. The official opening was planned for late 1991 with two World Cup events, but the course was not yet finished. Both were moved to the nearby Oreiller-Killy course, and held on 7–8 December.[4]

The Bellevarde course was officially opened two months later at the Olympics with the men's downhill competition; later events on the slope included combined, super-G, and giant slalom.

Near the end of 1992, the World Cup circuit premiered on this course with Super-G and slalom events on 6–7 December; the downhill was cancelled due to poor weather conditions.[5][6] In February 2008, World Cup races returned after an absence of more than fifteen years; it became a regular host on the men's calendar, rarely exchanged with Oreiller-Killy.

A year later in February 2009, Val d'Isere hosted its first World Championships. All of the men's events and the women's technical events (GS, SL) were held on the Bellevarde slope; the team event was cancelled.

Course sections from GS start edit

  • Passage de la Rute, Le Rocher, Slalom Start, Le Stade Olympique, La Flamme

Olympics edit

Men's events edit

Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
1992 DH 9 February 1992     Patrick Ortlieb   Franck Piccard   Günther Mader
KB 10–11 February 1992     Josef Polig   Gianfranco Martin     Steve Locher
SG 16 February 1992    Kjetil André Aamodt   Marc Girardelli  Jan Einar Thorsen
GS 18 February 1992     Alberto Tomba   Marc Girardelli  Kjetil André Aamodt
The slalom was held at Les Menuires on 22 February.

World Championships edit

Men's events edit

 
Bernhard Russi (SUi);
the course constructor
Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
2009 SG 4 February 2009       Didier Cuche   Peter Fill   Aksel Lund Svindal
DH 7 February 2009     John Kucera     Didier Cuche     Carlo Janka
SC 9 February 2009     Aksel Lund Svindal   Julien Lizeroux   Natko Zrnčić-Dim
GS 13 February 2009       Carlo Janka   Benjamin Raich   Ted Ligety
SL 15 February 2009     Manfred Pranger   Julien Lizeroux   Michael Janyk

Women's events edit

Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
2009 GS 12 February 2009     Kathrin Hölzl   Tina Maze   Tanja Poutiainen
SL 15 February 2009     Maria Riesch   Šárka Záhrobská   Tanja Poutiainen
The downhill, super-G, and combined events were held at Piste Rhône-Alpes.

Team event edit

Poor weather conditions.

Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
2009 PG 11 February 2009   cancelled due to heavy snowfall over the night

World Cup edit

It is part of traditional annual "Critérium of the First Snow" (Critérium de la première neige) competition.

Men edit

 
Marcel Hirscher (AUT) won
record 4 giant slaloms in total
and record 3 slaloms in total
No. Type Season Date Winner Second Third
DH 1991/92 7 December 1991   course was not yet ready for scheduled premiere; replaced on nearby Oreiller-Killy course
SG 8 December 1991  
DH 1992/93 4 December 1992   downhill cancelled due to poor weather conditions
762 SG 5 December 1992     Jan Einar Thorsen   Franz Heinzer   Luigi Colturi
763 SL 6 December 1992     Thomas Fogdö   Thomas Sykora   Hubert Strolz
DH 2007/08 2 February 2008   replaced in Kvitfjell on 29 February 2008
1325 SC 3 February 2008     Bode Miller   Ivica Kostelić   Natko Zrnčić-Dim
1345 SC 2008/09 12 December 2008     Benjamin Raich   Jean-Baptiste Grange   Marcel Hirscher
1346 GS 13 December 2008       Carlo Janka   Massimiliano Blardone   Gauthier de Tessières
SL 14 December 2008   strong winds; replaced in Alta Badia on 22 December 2008
1381 SC 2009/10 11 December 2009     Benjamin Raich   Marcel Hirscher   Manfred Mölgg
  Romed Baumann
1382 SG 12 December 2009     Michael Walchhofer   Ted Ligety   Werner Heel
1383 GS 13 December 2009     Marcel Hirscher   Massimiliano Blardone   Benjamin Raich
1413 GS 2010/11 11 December 2010     Ted Ligety   Aksel Lund Svindal   Massimiliano Blardone
1414 SL 12 December 2010     Marcel Hirscher   Benjamin Raich   Steve Missillier
GS 2011/12 10 December 2011   lack of snow; replaced in Beaver Creek on 6 December 2011
SL 11 December 2011   lack of snow; replaced in Beaver Creek on 8 December 2011
1495 GS 2012/13 8 December 2012     Alexis Pinturault   Felix Neureuther   Marcel Hirscher
1496 SL 9 December 2012     Marcel Hirscher   Stefan Luitz   Ted Ligety
1529 GS 2013/14 14 December 2013     Marcel Hirscher   Thomas Fanara   Stefan Luitz
1530 SL 15 December 2013     Mario Matt   Mattias Hargin   Patrick Thaler
GS 2014/15 13 December 2014   lack of snow; replaced in Åre on 12 December 2014
SL 14 December 2014   lack of snow; replaced in Åre on 14 December 2014
1599 GS 2015/16 12 December 2015     Marcel Hirscher   Felix Neureuther   Victor Muffat-Jeandet
1600 SL 13 December 2015     Henrik Kristoffersen   Marcel Hirscher   Felix Neureuther
1642 GS 2016/17 10 December 2016     Alexis Pinturault   Marcel Hirscher   Henrik Kristoffersen
1643 SL 11 December 2016     Henrik Kristoffersen   Marcel Hirscher   Aleksandr Khoroshilov
1679 GS 2017/18 9 December 2017     Alexis Pinturault   Stefan Luitz   Marcel Hirscher
1680 SL 10 December 2017     Marcel Hirscher   Henrik Kristoffersen   André Myhrer
1715 GS 2018/19 8 December 2018     Marcel Hirscher   Henrik Kristoffersen   Matts Olsson
SL 9 December 2018   heavy snowfall and wind; replaced in Saalbach-Hinterglemm on 20 December 2018
GS 2019/20 14 December 2019   moved on 15th due to weather, then finally cancelled; replaced in Hinterstoder on 1 March 2020
1754 SL 15 December 2019     Alexis Pinturault   André Myhrer   Stefano Gross
1824 GS 2021/22 11 December 2021       Marco Odermatt   Alexis Pinturault   Manuel Feller
1825 SL 12 December 2021     Clément Noël   Kristoffer Jakobsen   Filip Zubčić
1860 GS 2022/23 10 December 2022       Marco Odermatt   Manuel Feller   Žan Kranjec
1861 SL 11 December 2022     Lucas Braathen   Manuel Feller     Loïc Meillard

 Not in original World Cup calendar. It replaced super combined from Beaver Creek

References edit

  1. ^ "SKI ALPINFace de Bellevarde, la montagne sacrée" (in French). .ledauphine.com. 30 January 2008.
  2. ^ "La face de Bellevarde à Val d'Isère, championne des championnats" (in French). ledauphine.com. 16 February 2016.
  3. ^ "List of all events on La face de Bellevarde". fis-ski.com. 2 November 2021.
  4. ^ "Bellevarde was not yet ready for competition (page 40)" (in Norwegian). Stavanger Aftenblad. 7 December 1991.
  5. ^ "Trojni spored v Val d'Iseru je ogrožen (page 7)" (in Slovenian). Delo. 5 December 1992.
  6. ^ "Val d'Isere 1992: Thomas Fogdoe" (in Slovenian). YouTube. 8 December 2010.

External links edit

45°26′47″N 6°58′21″E / 45.44625°N 6.9725°E / 45.44625; 6.9725