Engiadina
Place: Switzerland St. Moritz
Mountain: Piz Nair, Albula Alps
Opened: no source
Level: expert
Downhill
Start: 2,745 m (9,006 ft) (AA)
Finish: 2,040 m (6,693 ft)
Vertical drop:    705 m (2,313 ft)
Length: 2,633 m (1.64 mi)
Super-G
Start: 2,590 m (8,497 ft) (AA)
Finish: 2,040 m (6,693 ft)
Vertical drop:    550 m (1,804 ft)
Length: 1,950 m (1.21 mi)

Engiadiana is a World Cup ski course in Switzerland at St. Moritz, Grisons, located in the Engadin valley on Piz Nair mountain in the Albula Alps.[1][2][3]

It is adjacent to the older and more famous men's "Corviglia" speed events course, which hosted the Winter Olympics in 1948 and several World Championships.

World Championships edit

Men's events edit

Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
2003 SG 6 February 2003     Bode Miller  Lasse Kjus  Kjetil André Aamodt
DH 12 February 2003     Bode Miller   Hans Knauß   Erik Schlopy

Women's events edit

Event Type Date Gold Silver Bronze
2003 SG 3 February 2003     Michaela Dorfmeister   Kirsten Lee Clark   Jonna Mendes
DH 9 February 2003     Mélanie Turgeon     Corinne Rey-Bellet   Alexandra Meissnitzer
KB 10 February 2003     Janica Kostelić   Nicole Hosp     Marlies Oester
GS 13 February 2003     Anja Pärson   Denise Karbon   Allison Forsyth
SL 15 February 2003     Janica Kostelić   Marlies Schild   Nicole Hosp
2017 SG 7 February 2017     Nicole Schmidhofer   Tina Weirather     Lara Gut
AC 10 February 2017       Wendy Holdener   Michelle Gisin   Michaela Kirchgasser
DH 12 February 2017     Ilka Štuhec   Stephanie Venier   Lindsey Vonn

World Cup edit

Women edit

Unclear if 1999, 2000 and 2001 events were held on Corviglia or Engiadina course?

 
 
Location in the Alps
No. Type Season Date Winner Second Third
947 DH 1999/00 17 December 1999     Isolde Kostner   Regina Häusl   Špela Bračun
948 DH 18 December 1999     Pernilla Wiberg   Renate Götschl   Hilde Gerg
949 SG 19 December 1999     Karen Putzer   Alessandra Merlin   Régine Cavagnoud
988 DH 2000/01 16 December 2000     Brigitte Obermoser   Renate Götschl   Emily Brydon
989 DH 17 December 2000     Renate Götschl   Isolde Kostner   Régine Cavagnoud
1020 DH 2001/02 21 December 2001       Sylviane Berthod   Isolde Kostner     Corinne Rey-Bellet
1021 SG 22 December 2001     Karen Putzer   Daniela Ceccarelli   Kirsten Lee Clark
  Stefanie Schuster
1122 SG 2004/05 21 December 2004     Hilde Gerg   Lindsey Kildow   Maria Riesch
1123 GS 22 December 2004     Tina Maze   Anja Pärson   María José Rienda Contreras
1369 SC 2011/12 27 January 2012     Lindsey Vonn   Tina Maze   Nicole Hosp
1370 DH 28 January 2012     Lindsey Vonn   Maria Höfl-Riesch   Tina Weirather
1371 SC 29 January 2012     Maria Höfl-Riesch   Lindsey Vonn   Nicole Hosp
1395 SC 2012/13 7 December 2012     Tina Maze   Nicole Hosp   Kathrin Zettel
1396 SG 8 December 2012     Lindsey Vonn   Tina Maze   Julia Mancuso
1431 SG 2013/14 14 December 2013     Tina Weirather   Kajsa Kling   Anna Fenninger
1473 DH 2014/15 24 January 2015       Lara Gut   Anna Fenninger   Edit Miklós
1474 SG 25 January 2015     Lindsey Vonn   Anna Fenninger   Nicole Hosp
1523 DH 2015/16 16 March 2016     Mirjam Puchner     Fabienne Suter   Elena Curtoni
AC 2017/18 8 December 2017   heavy fog; replaced with Super-G in St. Moritz on 10 December 2017
1571 SG 9 December 2017       Jasmine Flury     Michelle Gisin   Tina Weirather
SG 10 December 2017   poor visibility; replaced in Val d'Isère on 16 December 2017
AC 10 December 2017   poor visibility; finally replaced in Lenzerheide on 26 January 2018
1609 SG 2018/19 8 December 2018     Mikaela Shiffrin     Lara Gut-Behrami   Tina Weirather
1644 SG 2019/20 14 December 2019     Sofia Goggia   Federica Brignone   Mikaela Shiffrin
SG 2020/21 5 December 2020   heavy snow and wind; replaced in Crans-Montana on 24 January 2021
SG 6 December 2020   heavy snow and wind; rescheduled for Val di Fassa on 26 February 2021

 Not in original World Cup calendar. It replaced Val-d'Isère (2012). 

Full course sections edit

  • Britain station start (at "Free Fall" bottom), Fashion Alpina, Super-G start, Foppa, Gianda, Großes Loch, Weißes Band, Reinaltersprung, Engnis, Lärchenweg, Salastrains (finish area).

References edit

  1. ^ "Race courses (Engiadina map)". engadin.ch. 9 December 2021.
  2. ^ "Ski-Weltmeisterschaft 2017 in St. Moritz" (in German). urlaub-schweiz.biz. 9 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Egiadina (official course name from World Cup)" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 9 December 2021.

External links edit

46°30′14″N 9°48′04″E / 46.504°N 9.801°E / 46.504; 9.801