Alpine skiing at the 1976 Winter Olympics – Men's downhill
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The Men's Downhill competition of the 1976 Winter Olympics at Innsbruck, Austria, was held at Patscherkofel on Thursday, 5 February,[1][2][3] on the same course as in 1964.[4]
| Men's downhill at the XII Olympic Winter Games | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Venue | Patscherkofel Tyrol, Austria | ||||||||||||
| Date | 5 February 1976 | ||||||||||||
| Competitors | 74 from 27 nations | ||||||||||||
| Winning time | 1:45.73 | ||||||||||||
| Medalists | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
| Men's Downhill | |
|---|---|
| Location | Patscherkofel |
| Vertical | 870 m (2,854 ft) |
| Top elevation | 1,950 m (6,398 ft) |
| Base elevation | 1,080 m (3,543 ft) |
| Longest run | 3,020 m (1.88 mi) |
The defending world champion was David Zwilling of Austria, who had recently retired; Bernhard Russi of Switzerland was the defending Olympic champion. Franz Klammer of Austria was the defending World Cup downhill champion and led the current season;[5][6] he had also won the pre-Olympic World Cup downhill at Patcherkofel a year earlier in January 1975.
Klammer won the gold medal, Russi took the silver, and Herbert Plank of Italy was the bronze medalist.[1][2][7]
The starting gate was at an elevation of 1,950 m (6,398 ft) above sea level, with a vertical drop of 870 m (2,854 ft).[3] The course length was 3.020 km (1.88 mi) for an average gradient of 28.8% (16.1 degrees). Klammer's famous winning run resulted in an average speed of 102.828 km/h (63.9 mph), with an average vertical descent rate of 8.2285 m/s (27.0 ft/s), significantly faster than previous Olympic downhills. At age 22, the win elevated him to an international celebrity and he was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated.[7]
Egon Zimmermann, also of Austria, took the gold medal a dozen years earlier in the 1964 Olympic downhill. His winning time was 2:18.16, more than a half-minute behind Klammer's.
Through 2022, no Olympic men's downhill champion has repeated; Russi remains the sole defender to medal.
Results
- Source:[3]