bgcolor=#b0c4de colspan=2 align="center" | Roc de Fer | |
---|---|---|
Place: | Méribel | |
Opened: | 10 February 1990 | |
bgcolor=#b0c4de colspan=2 align="center" | Downhill | |
Start: | 2150m (7,050feet) (AA) | |
Finish: | 1465m (4,806feet) | |
Vertical drop: | 685m (2,247feet) | |
Length: | 2.413km (01.499miles) | |
Max. incline: | 28.8 degrees (55%) | |
Min. incline: | 5.1 degrees (9%) |
Roc de Fer is considered venue for 2030 Winter Olympics Alpine skiing events.[1]
Although Méribel has hosted an Alpine skiing slope with a chair lift since 1938, when the resort was developed and opened by a former Scottish military officer and avid skier named Peter Lindsay,[2] and then expanded dramatically as a ski resort after World War II,[3] it still needed a course upgrade when it was designated to host some of the skiing events for the 1992 Winter Olympics, which were centered in nearby Albertville.[4]
According to the official record of the 1992 Games, the Roc de Fer course was developed after studying the sporting aspect and the environmental impact of the new course.[5] For those Olympics, for which some of the course development was handled by former Olympic gold medalist Bernhard Russi, all five of the women's alpine events (downhill, Super-G, giant slalom, slalom, and combined) were planned for (and took place at) Roc de Fer.
In advance preparation for the Olympics, on 10–11 February 1990, the new Roc de Fer course was opened with two World Cup Super-Gs, both won by Carol Merle.[6] [7] [8] Less than a year later in 1991, Petra Kronberger won consecutive World Cup events in downhill and Super-G.[9]
During the Olympics, some of the female skiers were displeased with being "isolated" in Méribel instead of being housed in a communal Olympic village, as had been the case in the prior Olympics in Calgary.[10]
After the Olympics, outside of a slalom in 1994, the Roc de Fer course remained dormant on the World Cup circuit for twenty years.[11] But then, a women's World Cup downhill and combined were held on the course on 23-24 February 2013, and the course once again returned to the World Cup circuit. More significantly, the course hosted the World Cup season finals in 2015 and later co-hosted both the season finals in 2022 (hosting all of the men's and women's technical events (giant slalom, slalom, and mixed team parallel)) and the 2023 FIS World Ski Championships (hosting all of the traditional women's events, similar to the 1992 Winter Olympics, as well as both men's and women's individual parallel giant slalom and the mixed team parallel event) in combination with the L’Éclipse course in Courchevel.
Also, during the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, Méribel held a celebration in honor of the 30th anniversary of the 1992 Olympic skiing at Roc de Fer and the hockey in the town.[12]
Year | Date | Event | Winner | Second place | Third place | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center colspan=6 bgcolor=#F0EAD6 style="border-top-width:5px" | ↓ Women ↓ | |||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=5 | 12–13 February | |||||
15 February | ||||||
18 February | ||||||
19 February | ||||||
20 February |
Year | Date | Event | Winner | Second place | Third place | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center colspan=6 bgcolor=#F0EAD6 style="border-top-width:5px" | ↓ Women ↓ | ||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=6 | 6 February | ||||||
8 February | |||||||
11 February | Corinne Suter | ||||||
15 February | Thea L. Stjernesund | ||||||
16 February | |||||||
18 February | |||||||
align=center colspan=6 bgcolor=#F0EAD6 style="border-top-width:5px" | ↓ Men ↓ | ||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 | 15 February | Timon Haugan | |||||
align=center colspan=6 bgcolor=#F0EAD6 style="border-top-width:5px" | ↓ Alpine team event ↓ | ||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 | 14 February |
Season | Date | Event | Winner | Second place | Third place | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align=center colspan=6 bgcolor=#F0EAD6 style="border-top-width:5px" | ↓ Women ↓ | ||||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=2 | 10 February | SG | |||||||
11 February | SG | Maria Walliser | |||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=2 style="border-top-width:3px" | align=right style="border-top-width:3px" | 19 January | align=center style="border-top-width:3px" | DH | Veronika Wallinger | ||||
20 January | SG | Carole Merle | |||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 style="border-top-width:3px" | align=right style="border-top-width:3px" | 30 December | align=center style="border-top-width:3px" | SL | Leila Piccard | ||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=2 style="border-top-width:3px" | align=right style="border-top-width:3px" | 23 February | align=center style="border-top-width:3px" | DH | Marie Marchand-Arvier | ||||
24 February | KB | Michaela Kirchgasser | |||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=4 style="border-top-width:3px" | align=right style="border-top-width:3px" | 18 March | align=center style="border-top-width:3px" | DH | Nicole Hosp | ||||
19 March | SG | Tina Maze | |||||||
21 March | SL | Veronika Velez-Zuzulová | |||||||
22 March | GS | Tina Maze | |||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=2 style="border-top-width:3px" | align=right style="border-top-width:3px" | 19 March | align=center style="border-top-width:3px" | SL | Petra Vlhová | ||||
20 March | GS | Petra Vlhová | |||||||
align=center colspan=6 bgcolor=#F0EAD6 style="border-top-width:5px" | ↓ Men ↓ | ||||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=4 | 18 March | DH | Georg Streitberger | ||||||
19 March | SG | Brice Roger | |||||||
21 March | GS | Thomas Fanara | |||||||
22 March | SL | Alexander Khoroshilov | |||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 rowspan=2 style="border-top-width:3px" | align=right style="border-top-width:3px" | 19 March | align=center style="border-top-width:3px" | GS | Loïc Meillard | ||||
20 March | SL | Manuel Feller | |||||||
align=center colspan=6 bgcolor=#F0EAD6 style="border-top-width:5px" | ↓ Alpine team events ↓ | ||||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 | 20 March | PG (Team) | |||||||
align=center bgcolor=#E5E5E5 style="border-top-width:3px" | align=right style="border-top-width:3px" | 18 March | align=center style="border-top-width:3px" | PG (Team) |
One source described the Roc de Fer downhill course as "having a steep start", permitting skiers to accelerate to over 100 km/hour in less than eight seconds, but then requiring more technical skills due to both turns and "many rolls and bumps".[13]