Mont Lachaux
Place: Switzerland Crans-Montana
Downhill
Start: 2,210 m (7,251 ft) (AA)
Finish: 1,545 m (5,069 ft)
Vertical drop:    665 m (2,182 ft)
Length: 2,451 m (8,041 ft)
Max. incline: 28 degrees (53%)
Min. incline: 5.7 degrees (10%)

Mont Lachaux is a World Cup women's speed ski course in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, opened in 1987.[1][2]

They hosted the Alpine World Ski Championships in 1987, with Swiss skiers Pirmin Zurbriggen, Maria Walliser, Erika Hess and Peter Müller who took 8 of 10 available gold medals, dominating in front of the home crowd. Other events were held on another two nearby ski courses, "Nationale" and "Chetzeron".[3][4][5][6]

Course edit

Sections from top to bottom edit

  • La Face
  • Le Trour de Renard
  • La Traversée de Glavan
  • Le Tobbogan
  • Reck de Vermala

World Championships edit

Women's events edit

Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
1987 KB (SL) 29 January 1987  
30 January 1987  
  Erika Hess   Sylvia Eder   Tamara McKinney
DH (DH) 1 February 1987     Maria Walliser   Michela Figini   Regine Mösenlechner
  • The women's World Championships combined slalom was held on "Chetzeron" ski course.

World Cup edit

Women edit

No. Type Season Date Winner Second Third
DH 2013/14 1 March 2014   fog; replaced in Crans-Montana on 2 March
1447 DH 2 March 2014     Andrea Fischbacher   Anna Fenninger   Tina Maze
SC 2 March 2014   cancelled; rescheduled with downhill
DH 2015/16 13 February 2016   excessive snow: replaced in La Thuile on 19 February 2016
AC 14 February 2016   excessive snow forced delay in previous days event
1512 SL 15 February 2016     Mikaela Shiffrin   Nastasia Noens   Marie-Michèle Gagnon
1553 AC 2016/17 24 February 2017     Federica Brignone   Ilka Štuhec   Michaela Kirchgasser
1554 SG 25 February 2017     Ilka Štuhec   Elena Curtoni   Stephanie Venier
1555 AC 26 February 2017     Mikaela Shiffrin   Federica Brignone   Ilka Štuhec
1595 DH 2017/18 3 March 2018     Tina Weirather   Anna Veith     Wendy Holdener
1596 AC 4 March 2018     Federica Brignone     Michelle Gisin   Petra Vlhová
1629 DH 2018/19 23 February 2019     Sofia Goggia   Nicole Schmidhofer     Corinne Suter
1630 AC 24 February 2019     Federica Brignone    Roni Remme     Wendy Holdener
1663 DH 2019/20 21 February 2020       Lara Gut-Behrami     Corinne Suter   Stephanie Venier
1664 DH 22 February 2020       Lara Gut-Behrami     Corinne Suter   Nina Ortlieb
1665 AC 23 February 2020     Federica Brignone   Franziska Gritsch   Ester Ledecká
1683 DH 2020/21 22 January 2021     Sofia Goggia   Ester Ledecká   Breezy Johnson
1684 DH 23 January 2021     Sofia Goggia     Lara Gut-Behrami   Elena Curtoni
1685 SG 24 January 2021       Lara Gut-Behrami   Tamara Tippler   Federica Brignone
1725 DH 2021/22 26 February 2022     Ester Ledecká  Ragnhild Mowinckel   Cornelia Hütter
1726 DH 27 February 2022      Priska Nufer   Ester Ledecká   Sofia Goggia
DH 2022/23 25 February 2023   bad weather; moved to 26 February 2023
1763 DH 26 February 2023     Sofia Goggia   Federica Brignone   Laura Gauché
SG 26 February 2023   program changes; no replacement
1801 DH 2023/24 16 February 2024       Lara Gut-Behrami     Jasmine Flury
  Cornelia Hütter
1802 DH 17 February 2024     Marta Bassino   Federica Brignone     Lara Gut-Behrami
1803 SG 18 February 2024  

References edit

  1. ^ "List of World Cup events". International Ski Federation. 16 February 2024.
  2. ^ "The legendary Nationale piste gets a green light from the FIS". cransmontana2027.ch. 26 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Do naslova z velikim tveganjem..." (in Slovenian). Delo. 3 February 1987. p. 11.
  4. ^ "Že šesto zlato Švicarjem, še drugo Pirminu Zurbriggnu" (in Slovenian). Delo. 5 February 1987. p. 6.
  5. ^ "Samo Mateja Svet enakovredna švicarskim šampionkam" (in Slovenian). Delo. 6 February 1987. p. 8.
  6. ^ "Erika prva, Mateja druga" (in Slovenian). Delo. 9 February 1987. p. 9.

External links edit

46°19′00″N 7°29′00″E / 46.316667°N 7.483333°E / 46.316667; 7.483333