IBSF Para Sport European Championships

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First season2017
CompetitorsAthletes with physical impairments
IBSF Para Sport European Championships
SportBobsleigh
First season2017
Organizing bodyInternational Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation
CompetitorsAthletes with physical impairments
CountriesVarious
Official websiteibsf.org
Para bobsleigh
Highest governing bodyInternational Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation
First playedEarly 2000s
Characteristics
EquipmentMonobob sled, mechanical launcher
VenueIce tracks
Presence
OlympicNot yet included
ParalympicTargeting 2026 Winter Paralympics

The IBSF Para Sport European Championships are the official European championship events for para bobsleigh, organized by the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF). The championships are open to European athletes with physical impairments and are held annually at rotating venues. They are the first continental championships in the discipline.

The championships serve as the highest level of continental competition for para sliding sports. They play a critical role in the campaign for inclusion in the Paralympic Games, with the IBSF aiming for full recognition by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) for future editions along with the IBSF Para Sport World Championships and the IBSF Para Sport World Cup events.[1]

Equipment and format

Para bobsleigh is an adapted discipline of bobsleigh designed for athletes with physical impairments. It features solo competition in modified monobob sleds, raced down ice tracks at speeds exceeding 130 km/h, with athletes experiencing forces of up to 5G in corners.[2]

The sport emerged in the early 2000s, with athletes such as Aaron Lanningham and Gary Kuhl completing successful runs in Park City, Utah. Kuhl notably competed against able-bodied athletes in America Cup races.[3]

In 2010, the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) formally endorsed para bobsleigh, establishing a Para Sport Committee to oversee its development and advocate for Paralympic inclusion.[4]

The first standardized para monobob sled was developed by Renzo Podar and driven by Swiss Paralympic champion Heinz Frei.[5] The inaugural international competition, the Prince Kropotkin Cup, was held in Sigulda, Latvia in 2013.[6]

Para bobsleigh uses a single-person sled known as a monobob, adapted for seated starts and hand steering. Mechanical launchers were introduced to simulate the running start used in able-bodied bobsleigh, ensuring competitive fairness.[7]

Athletes compete individually, and races are timed to the hundredth of a second. The sport emphasizes precision, control, and upper-body strength.

History of the European Championships

The inaugural IBSF Para Sport European Championships were held in January 2017 in Oberhof, Germany, a year after the inaugural World Championships, featuring 19 athletes from 9 nations.[8] The event marked the first formal European continental competition for para bobsleigh athletes. The championships have never to date featured para skeleton.

Medalists

Bobsleigh

The first IBSF Para Sport European Championships event was held in 2017 and has been held annually ever since, with the 2020 event actually being held in December 2019. Three sliders; Jonas Frei of Switzerland, Corie Mapp of Great Britain and Arturs Klots of Latvia have won the championship twice as of 2025, with Mapp's seven podium finishes the record for a single slider.

Each championship is in the monobob format.

Event Gold Silver Bronze
2017 Germany Oberhof[9]
January 2017
Arturs Klots
 Latvia
Lauris Zutis
 Latvia
Corie Mapp
 Great Britain
2018 Austria Innsbruck[10]
January 2018
Alvils Brants
 Latvia
Corie Mapp
 Great Britain
Guro Konstanse Fronsdal
 Norway
2019 Switzerland St. Moritz[11]
February 2019
Christopher Stewart
 Switzerland
Nikolai Johann
 Germany
Sebastian Westin
 Sweden
2020 Germany Oberhof[12]
December 2019*
Corie Mapp
 Great Britain
Christopher Stewart
 Switzerland
Arturs Klots
 Latvia
2021 France La Plagne[13]
March 2021
Sebastian Westin
 Sweden
Corie Mapp
 Great Britain
Christopher Stewart
 Switzerland
2022 Switzerland St. Moritz[14]
March 2022
Jonas Frei
 Switzerland
Corie Mapp
 Great Britain
Nikolai Johann
 Germany
2023 Austria Innsbruck[15]
January 2023
Arturs Klots
 Latvia
Corie Mapp
 Great Britain
Nikolai Johann
 Germany
2024 Norway Lillehammer[16]
March 2024
Corie Mapp
 Great Britain
Christopher Stewart
 Switzerland
Arturs Klots
 Latvia
2025 Latvia Sigulda[17]
January 2025
Jonas Frei
 Switzerland
Hermann Ellmauer
 Austria
Arturs Klots
 Latvia
2026 Latvia Sigulda
January 2026

Medal table

  *   Host nation (IBSF)

All-time medal table (2016–2025)
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Switzerland (SUI)3216
2 Latvia (LAT)3137
3 Great Britain (GBR)2417
4 Sweden (SWE)1012
5 Germany (GER)0123
6 Austria (AUT)0101
7 Norway (NOR)0011
Totals (7 entries)99927
Source: IBSF Results

Multiple medalists

See also

References

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