There are good Spanish alpine skiers in the WC from time to time, so I’m also surprised that they haven’t won more medals. FWIW, I think the main Spanish ski resorts are not in the Pyrenees, but the Sierra Nevada.
Thanks. Their other gold was in men’s slalom, but way back in 1972. Their 2 medals in 2026 are both in “ski mountaineering”, which is a new Olympic event.
What was the deal with fifteen consecutive women slalom skiers (or at least, that impression given by Canadian coverage) being unable to stay on the course and finish on Wednesday? Obviously this has much more to do with conditions than ability. Why did this happen? And after the last ten people had crashed or missed flags, why did athletes not temper their aggressive strategy?
My wife (ex-racer and coach) watched the men’s slalom where 45% of the skiers DNF’d the first run and she blamed the skiers not the conditions. They were booting out, stradling the gates, and hooking their tips, pretty basic failures. They all know how to ski when it’s snowing so they should be able to adjust. We hypothesized that placing wasn’t nearly as important in the Olympics where FIS points aren’t counted so they were all more aggressive than normal.
And yet another correction: This friend did not marry the bobsledder. She married his brother, although he was a noted athlete of his own in the area where he grew up.
Great video.
Nova did a short video a few years ago questioning some theories about the Physics of a curling stone, and it was filmed at my club. I thought the “scratches in the ice” theory was accepted now, but I guess it’s still up in the air a bit.
Those “Other Sierra Nevadas”. ![]()
The original Sierra Nevada ![]()
Olympic Biathlon, only use paintball rifles instead, three shots, with three chances to take out the competition. Add a third of a second to your time for every shot you fire.
Random question: why do the Alpine skiers have curvey ski poles?
I’ve always used straight poles, and i see the cross country skiers still do that.
Aerodynamics. I believe they’re custom curved for each skier.
Yes they are curved for aero. The baskets are also specialized aero for racing as well - not what most ski poles at your local resort will require.
Huh! Aerodynamics certainly doesn’t matter for my skiing, and really doesn’t matter for cross country, either, su that makes sense.
50K Cross country is wild.
Very random question, but is there ever a concern that a bobsled ‘s brake won’t activate due to some mechanical glitch, leading to a head-on crash with the end of the track? I assumed that the track just continues in a loop, but I noticed that there is an end where they finish.
This particular track ends going uphill. I would imagine the track end is long enuf such that if a heavy 4-man sled’s brake failed they’d just stop short of the end due to lack of momentum. No idea if other tracks have different safety features.
It appears that this is the norm on bobsled tracks. This document, from the regulatory body for bobsled and skeleton, on track design, says this (note that the final paragraph, about skeleton sleds, is likely because they don’t have brakes, AFAICT):
Also:
Bobsled tracks go downhill – it’s how the sleds are able to go so fast. If they connect back up in a loop, then by default, the other half would have to go uphill. ![]()
I think they meant just the bit after the finish line, so the whole track would look like a figure 6. Well, with a lot more wobbles/bends and the ‘o’ bit being much smaller in relation to the timed part of the track
They have uphill skiing, why not uphill bobsleigh?
Uphill bobsleigh is a breeze compared to the uphill ski jump.