FIL European Luge Championships 2008

The FIL European Luge Championships 2008 took place January 7-13, 2008 at the Cesana Pariol track in Cesana, Italy. The relay competition took the place of the team event that had been held at every European championship since 1988. This event had all teams start at the same part of the track (located at the women's singles/ men's doubles start house), then run down to the finish and tap on a relay marker to exchange from one slider on a team to the next (men's doubles to women's singles to men's singles) with the fastest time winning.

Time table edit

  • Practice dates for the events took place January 7-11 with event draws taking place on the 11th.
  • Opening ceremonies took place at 6 PM CET (17:00 UTC) on January 10.
  • To avoid direct sunlight, the events were conducted in the early morning both days.

Competitors edit

80 competitors from 15 nations competed at these championships. This included ten relay teams which took place on the 13th.

Men's singles edit

January 13, 2008 at 8 AM CET (07:00 UTC)

Medal Athlete Time
Gold   Armin Zöggeler (ITA) 1:44.341
Silver   Albert Demtschenko (RUS) + 0.341
Bronze   David Möller (GER) + 0.403
4th   Daniel Pfister (AUT) + 0.428
5th   Martin Abentung (AUT) + 0.474
6th   Felix Loch (GER) + 0.509
7th   Stefan Höhener (SUI) + 0.556
8th   Wilfried Huber (ITA) + 0.806
9th   Jan Eichhorn (GER) + 0.808
10th   Manuel Pfister (AUT) + 0.876

This was Zöggeler's second European championship in this event and fifth straight medal at the championships.

Women's singles edit

January 12, 2008 at 9 AM CET (08:00 UTC)

Medal Athlete Time
Gold   Natalie Geisenberger (GER) 1:35.364
Silver   Silke Kraushaar-Pielach (GER) +0.160
Bronze   Veronika Halder (AUT) +0.167
4th   Tatjana Hüfner (GER) + 0.176
5th   Nina Reithmayer (AUT) + 0.320
6th   Anke Wischnewski (GER) + 0.412
7th   Maija Tīruma (LAT) + 0.735
8th   Anna Orlova (LAT) + 0.779
9th   Liliya Ludan (UKR) + 1.019
10th   Alexandra Rodionova (RUS) + 1.037

Geisenberger won her first ever championship. The event was delayed one hour to heavy snowfall in the area. Hadler is the first non-German to medal in this event at the Winter Olympic, world, or European level since fellow Austrian Angelika Neuner won a bronze at the 1998 Winter Olympics.

Men's doubles edit

January 12, 2008 at 3 PM CET (14:00 UTC)

Medal Athlete Time
Gold   Italy (Christian Oberstolz, Patrick Gruber) 1:33.779
Silver   Austria (Andreas Linger, Wolfgang Linger) +0.159
Bronze   Italy (Gerhard Plankensteiner, Oswald Haselrieder) +0.183
  Germany (Patric Leitner, Alexander Resch)
5th   Germany (André Florschütz, Torsten Wustlich) +0.408
6th   Austria (Peter Penz, Georg Fischler) +0.591
7th   Latvia (Andris Šics, Juris Šics) +0.638
8th   Russia (Mihail Kuzmitch, Stanislav Mikheev) +0.896
9th   Germany (Marcel Lorenz, Christian Baude) +1.151
10th   Russia (Ivan Nevmerzhitski, Vladimir Prokhorov) +1.174

The tie for the bronze was the first in a Winter Olympic, world championship, or European championship event since they started timing luge in the 1/1000ths of a second following the tie between Italy and East Germany in the men's doubles event at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo. Oberstolz and Gruber won their first ever title, ending Leitner and Resch's four-time championships reign in this event.

Mixed team relay edit

January 13, 2008 at 12 PM CET (11:00 UTC)

Medal Athlete Time
Gold   Latvia (Mārtiņš Rubenis, Maija Tīruma, Andris Šics, Juris Šics) 2:40.863
Silver   Austria (Martin Abentung, Veronika Halder, Andreas Linger, Wolfgang Linger) + 0.008
Bronze   Italy (Armin Zöggeler, Sandra Gasparini, Gerhard Plankensteiner, Oswald Haselrieder) + 0.050

For the first time since the event debuted at the 1988 championships, Germany did not medal, finishing fourth.

Medal table edit

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  Italy (ITA)2024
2  Germany (GER)1124
3  Latvia (LAT)1001
4  Austria (AUT)0213
5  Russia (RUS)0101
Totals (5 entries)44513

References edit