Feuz first, Thomsen second in Sochi Olympic test

By Published On: February 11th, 2012Comments Off on Feuz first, Thomsen second in Sochi Olympic test

The first chapter in what will become the reputation of the Rosa Khutor Olympic course at Krasnaya Polyana, Russia was written today (Feb. 11) with a couple of relative newcomers – Beat Feuz and Benjamin Thomsen – putting their names first and foremost.

At this time last season Swiss Feuz had no podium results to his World Cup resume’ but Saturday he got his 11th podium and fourth career win on the long and twisting Rosa Khutor.

Incredibly, it seems, second went to Canadian upstart Thomsen making his first start since working his way into the top 30 with back-to-back kick-butt starts in Chamonix, France last weekend.

Third went to Frenchman Adrien Theaux, the best speed finish for a Frenchman this season. Bode Miller rode to fourth, Carlo Janka fifth and the first Austrian across the finish was Joachim Puchner in sixth.

The Olympic course near Sochi has been much in the eye of racers and media all week as the elite of the world got their first look and made their first turns on the flanks of an incredible mountain. The only recurring complaint was about the tightness of the turns high on the course where it was said to be more super G like before opening into a more conventional downhill track.

The win was a birthday present for Feuz. “To win such a difficult downhill on my birthday is just unbelievable,” he told the press. “It is a hard course, a difficult course and it’s amazing that I won.”

The win tightened the downhill standings considerably with just two races remaining. With 100 points for the win, and just 22 for Didier Cuche’s 12th place finish and 32pts to Klaus Kroell for eighth place, Cuche now leads Kroell by 30 and Feuz by 31.

Virtually all of Feuz success has come this season. Just two of his podium results date back as far as last March when he went first and third in back to back downhills at Kvitfjell, Norway. The other nine podiums – now including three additional wins (Val Gardena super G, Wengen DH and here – have come this season.

Thomsen’s blooming is much more recent. He had been 18th in the first of those two Norwegian races at the end of last season and hadn’t put down a better Cup result until last weekend at Chamonix. The two results in France, an 11th and fifth, bumped him in among the top 30 skiers of the World. At Sochi he started 27th and came within three tenths (.27) of taking the win. In both of his Chamonix races he had been the third finishing Canadians. At Sochi he led his team. Erik Guay finished 20th and Jan Hudec 24th.

“It’s a bit overwhelming right now,” said Thomsen. “It’s awesome.”

Canadian speed coach Johno McBride said he told the 24 year old “if he was somewhat competitive on the top he could be a contender. He backed off to make a gate at the top and skied well from the mid section down.”

Thomsen said nerves played a role and that he was struggling on the top turn laden section. “At the top I was on my hip and slipping inside all over the place. When I got down onto the flats I told myself to put my head down and go for it.”

He said “When I crossed the finish line nobody raised their hands so I thought, “Oh no, I must have had a bad run,’ but then I saw my name come up. I’m still in shock.”

Miller missed the podium by .02 of a second after leading early on course and said it had been a struggle to find the right ski set-up to handle both the super G turns at the top and the bottom of the course. “The bottom of this course, there’s just not much to do. You get in your tuck, put your head down and hope your skis are running.”

And he reiterated his previous comments on the potential of the course. “The Olympic downhill has got to be the real thing,” he said. “This is boarder line obnoxious for a downhill, it’s that turny. It is tough when they have never run it before. I’m sure they’re learning as much as we are. Hopefully they figure out how to use the terrain and really make something special.

“We all have our ideas of what we like and don’t like, but the reality is a downhill should be a challenge. It should be dangerous, it should have risk. If it doesn’t challenge the athletes then you won’t see their best. If it’s not tough, then what’s the point?”

Beyond Miller the Americans were shut out of the points. Travis Ganong finished 31st and Marco Sullivan 39th while Erik Fisher and Andrew Weibrecht failed to finish and Ted Ligety declined to start. Fisher was being evaluated for a lower leg injury.

Thomsen photo, Feuz action photo and podium photo by Gepa.

The SCOOP
by Hank McKee
Men’s World Cup Downhill, Sochi, Russia, Feb. 11, 2012
Equipment

Skier, skis/boots/bindings
1 Feuz, Salomon/Salomon/Salomon
2 Thomsen, Head/Head/Head
3 Theaux, Salomon/Salomon/Salomon
4 Miller, Head/Head/Head   
5 Janka, Atomic/Atomic/Atomic
6 Puchner, Atomic/Atomic/Atomic
7 Jansrud, Head/Head/Head
8 Kroell, Salomon/Salomon/Salomon
9 Reichelt, Salomon/Salomon/Salomon
10 Defago, Rossignol/Lange/Rossignol

Men’s World Cup Downhill, Sochi, Russia, Feb. 11, 2012
. … It is the 28th race of the men’s 44 race 2012 World Cup schedule. … The ninth of 11 scheduled downhills. … It is the first Cup downhill held at Sochi, or anywhere in Russia and is the test event ahead of the 2014 Winter Olympics.

It is the fourth career World Cup win for Beat Feuz. … the third in downhill. … It is his third win of the season and second in downhill (also won Wengen and the Val Gardena super G. … It is the sixth Swiss downhill win in nine chances.

It is the first career World Cup podium result for Benjamin Thomsen in nine career scoring results. … His last three results are his three career best. … It was his first race starting among the elite 30.

It is the fifth career World Cup podium placing for Adrien Theaux. … his third in downhill (he won at Lenzerheide last season and was third at Kitzbuehel last season). … It is the first French men’s DH podium of the season.

North Americans: It is the 95th career World Cup top four for Bode Miller. … His 28th in DH. … It is the 59th time erik Guay has finished in the top 20 of a World Cup DH. … the 39th time Jan Hudec has scored in a World Cup.

Standings: Ivica Kostelic (29th in race) maintains the lead of the overall standings 943-893 over Feuz… Marcel Hirscher (did not race) is third at 825. … Miller is sixth with 612pts and Ligety (did not race) is ninth with 578pts. … Guay is top Canadian in 14th with 397pts. … Didier Cuche (12th in race) leads the downhill standings 495-465 over Klaus Kroell (eighth in race). … Feux is third with 468 and Miller fifth with 383pts. … Guay is seventh with 321pts. … Austria leads the men’s Nations Cup 4630-3014 over Switzerland. … Italy is third with 2355pts. … The US is fifth at 1631 and Canada seventh with 1222pts.

Sochi (RUS)

FIS World Cup
Men’s Downhill

Rank Bib FIS Code Name Year Nation Total Time FIS Points
 1  16  511383 FEUZ Beat  1987  SUI   2:14.10  0.00
 2  27  103271 THOMSEN Benjamin  1987  CAN   2:14.37  2.68
 3  8  192746 THEAUX Adrien  1984  FRA   2:14.69  5.85
 4  21  532431 MILLER Bode  1977  USA   2:14.71  6.05
 5  7  511313 JANKA Carlo  1986  SUI   2:14.75  6.45
 6  14  51327 PUCHNER Joachim  1987  AUT   2:14.84  7.34
 7  6  421483 JANSRUD Kjetil  1985  NOR   2:14.91  8.03
 8  22  50753 KROELL Klaus  1980  AUT   2:15.00  8.93
 9  18  50742 REICHELT Hannes  1980  AUT   2:15.21  11.01
 10  11  510727 DEFAGO Didier  1977  SUI   2:15.24  11.31
 11  30  291459 PARIS Dominik  1989  ITA   2:15.33  12.20
 12  20  510030 CUCHE Didier  1974  SUI   2:15.41  12.99
 13  13  421328 SVINDAL Aksel Lund  1982  NOR   2:15.61  14.98
 14  17  51215 BAUMANN Romed  1986  AUT   2:15.65  15.37
 15  48  294277 KLOTZ Siegmar  1987  ITA   2:15.69  15.77
 16  37  200379 SANDER Andreas  1989  GER   2:15.73  16.17
 17  41  180570 ROMAR Andreas  1989  FIN   2:15.76  16.46
 18  40  990081 CASSE Mattia  1990  ITA   2:15.78  16.66
 19  44  191964 POISSON David  1982  FRA   2:15.80  16.86
 20  19  102263 GUAY Erik  1981  CAN   2:15.88  17.65
 21  5  292455 FILL Peter  1982  ITA   2:15.96  18.45
 22  12  191740 CLAREY Johan  1981  FRA   2:15.97  18.55
 23  36  293550 MARSAGLIA Matteo  1985  ITA   2:16.06  19.44
 24  10  102271 HUDEC Jan  1981  CAN   2:16.09  19.74
 25  26  50858 STREITBERGER Georg  1981  AUT   2:16.21  20.93
 26  15  560447 SPORN Andrej  1981  SLO   2:16.36  22.41
 27  24  53817 FRANZ Max  1989  AUT   2:16.56  24.40
 27  3  192932 FAYED Guillermo  1985  FRA   2:16.56  24.40
 29  31  380260 KOSTELIC Ivica  1979  CRO   2:16.77  26.48
 30  23  51005 SCHEIBER Mario  1983  AUT   2:16.78  26.58
 31  2  530874 GANONG Travis  1988  USA   2:16.95  28.27
 32  25  510890 ZURBRIGGEN Silvan  1981  SUI   2:17.21  30.84
 33  42  561087 MARKIC Gasper  1986  SLO   2:17.28  31.54
 34  53  192504 MERMILLOD BLONDIN Thomas  1984  FRA   2:17.34  32.13
 35  50  294904 PANGRAZZI Paolo  1988  ITA   2:17.40  32.73
 36  39  501076 OLSSON Hans  1984  SWE   2:17.66  35.31
 37  1  191591 BERTRAND Yannick  1980  FRA   2:17.75  36.20
 38  47  561216 KLINE Bostjan  1991  SLO   2:17.97  38.38
 39  35  533131 SULLIVAN Marco  1980  USA   2:18.03  38.98
 40  28  510767 HOFFMANN Ambrosi  1977  SUI   2:18.15  40.17
 41  32  50625 RAICH Benjamin  1978  AUT   2:18.58  44.43
 42  43  380292 ZRNCIC-DIM Natko  1986  CRO   2:18.67  45.33
 43  45  561067 PERKO Rok  1985  SLO   2:19.59  54.45
 44  46  481705 GLEBOV Alek  1983  RUS   2:20.44  62.88
 45  58  481196 BYSTROV Andrey  1991  RUS   2:21.51  73.49
 46  59  660021 DANILOCHKIN Yuri  1991  BLR   2:21.73  75.67
 46  55  380298 SIROKI Tin  1987  CRO   2:21.73  75.67
 48  61  92534 CHONGAROV Nikola  1989  BUL   2:23.76  95.81
Did not start 1st run
   63  700830 ZAMPA Adam  1990  SVK     
   62  30149 SIMARI BIRKNER Cristian Javier  1980  ARG     
   60  150644 KRYZL Krystof  1986  CZE     
   56  194364 PINTURAULT Alexis  1991  FRA     
   49  510997 BERTHOD Marc  1983  SUI     
   33  534562 LIGETY Ted  1984  USA     
   29  201606 KEPPLER Stephan  1983  GER     
Did not finish 1st run
   64  550022 RODE Roberts  1987  LAT     
   57  481054 MURAVYEV Ivan  1989  RUS     
   54  20267 ESTEVE Kevin  1989  AND     
   52  53902 MAYER Matthias  1990  AUT     
   51  510747 GRUENENFELDER Tobias  1977  SUI     
   38  511142 LUEOEND Vitus  1984  SUI     
   34  530939 WEIBRECHT Andrew  1986  USA     
   9  293006 INNERHOFER Christof  1984  ITA     
   4  534939 FISHER Erik  1985  USA   

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About the Author: Hank McKee

In memoriam: The veteran of the staff, McKee started with Ski Racing in 1980. Over the seasons, he covered virtually every aspect of the sport, from the pro tours to junior racing, freestyle and World Cup alpine competition. He wrote the first national stories for many U.S. team stars, and was still around to report on their retirements. “Longevity has its rewards,” he said, “but it’s a slow process.”