1962 Winter Universiade Explained

Villars 1962
II Winter Universiade
Size:200px
Host City:Villars, Switzerland
Nations:23
Athletes:332
Events:6 sports
Opening:March 6, 1962
Closing:March 12, 1962
Opened By:Paul Chaudet
Athlete Oath:no
Judge Oath:no
Torch Lighter:Ville Alois
Stadium:Stadium Villars
Previous:1960 Chamonix

The 1962 Winter Universiade, the II Winter Universiade, took place in Villars, Switzerland.

Alpine skiing

Men: Slalom
Gold – Willy Bogner (West Germany)
Gold – Ulf Ekstam (Finland)
Bronze – Masayoshi Mitani (Japan)

Men: Downhill
Gold – Philippe Mollard (France)
Silver – Walter Kutschera (Austria)
Bronze – Willy Bogner (West Germany)

Men: Combined
Combined event is the overall standings of all disciplines on the Universiade program.
Gold – Willy Bogner (West Germany)
Silver – Philippe Mollard (France)
Bronze – Manfred Köstinger (Austria)

Women: Slalom
Gold – Cécile Prince (France)
Silver – Barbi Henneberger (West Germany)
Bronze – Annie Famose (France)

Women: Giant Slalom
Gold – Barbi Henneberger (West Germany)
Silver – Astrid Sandvik (Norway)
Bronze – Annie Famose (France)
Bronze – Gertraud Ehrenfried (Austria)

Women: Downhill
Gold – Barbi Henneberger (West Germany)
Silver – Gertraud Ehrenfried (Austria)
Bronze – Cécile Prince (France)

Women: Combined
Combined event is the overall standings of all disciplines on the Universiade program.
Gold – Barbi Henneberger (West Germany)
Silver – Cécile Prince (France)
Bronze – Gundl Sernetz (Austria)

Nordic skiing

Men: 12 km Classical
Gold – Igor Veranzhinin (Soviet Union)
Silver – German Karpov (Soviet Union)
Bronze – Ivan Kondrachev (Soviet Union)

Nordic combined

Small Hill Ski Jumping and 15km Cross-Country

Men:
Gold – Vyacheslav Dryagin (Soviet Union)
Silver – Albert Larinov (Soviet Union)
Bronze – Yosuke Eto (Japan)

Ski jumping

Men: Small Hill - K90
Gold – Shigeyuki Wasaka (Japan)
Silver – Yosuke Eto (Japan)
Bronze – Renzo Nigawara (Japan)

Ice hockey

Men:Gold – Czechoslovakia
Silver – Soviet Union
Bronze – Sweden

Figure skating

Women:
Gold – Junko Ueno (Japan)
Silver – Jitka Hlavacková (Czechoslovakia)
Bronze – Helga Zollner (Hungary)

References