Bobsleigh

Bobsleigh is a winter sport in which teams make timed runs down narrow, twisting, banked purpose-built iced tracks in a gravity-powered, steerable sled. In the United States the sport is known as bobsled.

The sport was invented in the 1880s in Switzerland. The first races were run on snow-covered roads, with the opening competition in 1884 at St. Moritz. The first club was formed in 1897 and the first purpose-built track was opened in 1902. A modern track should be at least 1500 metres long and have at least fifteen curves, speeds up to 130 km/h are common and some curves can subject the crews to over five gravities. There are twelve top-level competition tracks in the world:

  • Igls, Austria. 1,220 m, 98.10 m vertical drop, 14% maximum grade
  • Calgary, Canada. 1,475 m, 121.2 m vertical drop, 15% maximum grade
  • La Plagne, France. 1,507.5 m, 124.5 m vertical drop, 14.5% maximum grade
  • Altenberg, Germany. 1,413 m, 122.22 m vertical drop, 15% maximum grade
  • Konigssee, Germany. 1,250 m, 117 m vertical drop, --% maximum grade
  • Winterberg, Germany. 1,325 m, 110 m vertical drop, 14.5% maximum grade
  • Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy. 1,350 m, 120.45 m vertical drop, 16% maximum grade
  • Nagano, Japan. 1,762.3 m, 112.5 m vertical drop, 15% maximum grade
  • Lillehammer, Norway. 1,365 m, 114 m vertical drop, 15% maximum grade
  • St. Moritz, Switzerland. 1,722 m, 129 m vertical drop, 15% maximum grade
  • Lake Placid, United States. 1,455 m, 107 m vertical drop, --% maximum grade
  • Salt Lake City, United States. 1,340 m, 103.9 m vertical drop, --% maximum grade

Initially the sled teams were of five or six, this was reduced to two- or four-person sleighs in the 1930s. Sleds were wood but steel-runner sleds came into use from ????. Modern sleighs combine light metals, steel runners, and an aerodynamic composite body. Competition sleighs must be a maximum of 3.80 m long (4-crew) or 2.70 m long (2-crew), both have a maximum width of 0.67 m. The maximum weight, including crew, is 630 kg (4-crew) or 390 kg (2-crew) - metal weights may be added to reach these limits, as the greater the weight the faster the run, until the 1952 weight-limit rule bobsleigh crews tended to be very heavy.

A crew is made up of a pilot, a brakeman, and in 4-crew two pushers are added. Runs (lauf) begin from a standing start, with the crew pushing the sled for up to fifty metres before moving on board. Races are won and lost in the initial push.

The Fédération Internationale de Bobsleigh et de Tobogganing (FIBT) was founded in 1923 and the sport has been part of the Winter Olympic Games since 1924. Initially just a four-crew event for men, the two-crew sled was added in 1932 and women's bobsled made its Olympic debut at the 2002 Winter Olympic Games. As of 2005 bobsleigh is split into men's and women's events, women compete in two-crew and the men in both two- and four-crew competition. The men's standing is calculated over the aggregate of four runs, the women's over two runs.

The Swiss have been the most successful bobsleighing nation over European, World, World Cup, and Olympic championships.

The story of the Jamaican bobsleigh team in the 1988 Winter Olympic Games inspired the film Cool Runnings.

Also, Bobsled Productions, a television/film production company created in early 2005 by four men, owes its namesake to the sport. Some of its major productions include The Sperm and the Egg and Bachelors' Degree.

See also: luge, skeleton, toboggan

External links

ja:ボブスレー nl:Bobsleeën sv:Rodel pt:Bobsleigh

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