Men's combined at the XIX Olympic Winter Games | |||||||||||||
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Venue | Snowbasin | ||||||||||||
Date | February 13, 2002 | ||||||||||||
Competitors | 47 from 19 nations | ||||||||||||
Winning time | 3:17.56 | ||||||||||||
Medalists | |||||||||||||
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Alpine skiing at the 2002 Winter Olympics | ||
---|---|---|
Combined | men | women |
Downhill | men | women |
Giant slalom | men | women |
Slalom | men | women |
Super-G | men | women |
The combined event was held on February 13 at Snowbasin. It consisted of 3 runs, a downhill and two runs in the slalom. American Bode Miller skied from 15th place after the downhill to a silver medal, 0.28 second behind Kjetil André Aamodt, who won a record sixth Olympic medal in alpine skiing. [1]
The results of the men's combined event in Alpine skiing at the 2002 Winter Olympics .
Rank | Name | Country | Downhill | Slalom 1 | Slalom 2 | Time | Difference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kjetil André Aamodt | Norway | 1:38.79 | 46.88 | 51.89 | 3:17.56 | ||
Bode Miller | United States | 1:41.23 | 46.88 | 49.73 | 3:17.84 | +0.28 | |
Benjamin Raich | Austria | 1:41.05 | 46.30 | 50.91 | 3:18.26 | +0.70 | |
4 | Rainer Schönfelder | Austria | 1:41.90 | 45.46 | 51.31 | 3:18.67 | +1.11 |
5 | Lasse Kjus | Norway | 1:38.97 | 47.72 | 53.11 | 3:19.80 | +2.24 |
6 | Paul Accola | Switzerland | 1:39.62 | 48.73 | 53.91 | 3:22.26 | +4.70 |
7 | Patrick Staudacher | Italy | 1:39.23 | 49.51 | 53.73 | 3:22.47 | +4.91 |
8 | Jean-Philippe Roy | Canada | 1:43.31 | 46.87 | 52.50 | 3:22.68 | +5.12 |
9 | Jernej Koblar | Slovenia | 1:41.70 | 48.42 | 53.35 | 3:23.47 | +5.91 |
10 | Stanley Hayer | Czech Republic | 1:45.30 | 47.15 | 51.99 | 3:24.44 | +6.88 |
11 | Kilian Albrecht | Austria | 1:43.32 | 46.13 | 55.50 | 3:24.95 | +7.39 |
12 | Borek Zakouril | Czech Republic | 1:41.64 | 49.52 | 54.04 | 3:25.20 | +7.64 |
13 | Alessandro Fattori | Italy | 1:40.15 | 50.30 | 55.12 | 3:25.57 | +8.01 |
14 | Andrei Filichkin | Russia | 1:43.04 | 50.19 | 54.91 | 3:28.14 | +10.58 |
15 | Ross Green | Great Britain | 1:43.30 | 49.97 | 55.84 | 3:29.11 | +11.55 |
16 | Stefan Georgiev | Bulgaria | 1:44.25 | 49.63 | 55.51 | 3:29.39 | +11.83 |
17 | Darin McBeath | Canada | 1:41.07 | 51.78 | 56.72 | 3:29.57 | +12.01 |
18 | Pavel Chestakov | Russia | 1:41.45 | 52.24 | 56.19 | 3:30.18 | +12.62 |
19 | Jakub Fiala | United States | 1:41.85 | 51.24 | 57.34 | 3:30.42 | +12.87 |
20 | Jan Holicky | Czech Republic | 1:42.85 | 51.78 | 56.72 | 3:31.15 | +13.59 |
21 | Antoine Dénériaz | France | 1:41.91 | 51.82 | 58.24 | 3:31.97 | +14.41 |
22 | Sergey Komarov | Russia | 1:43.47 | 51.66 | 56.90 | 3:32.03 | +14.47 |
23 | Nicolas Arsel | Argentina | 1:48.12 | 51.24 | 57.22 | 3:36.58 | +19.02 |
24 | Ivan Heimschild | Slovakia | 1:44.89 | 52.72 | 59.17 | 3:36.78 | +19.22 |
25 | Nikolay Skriabin | Ukraine | 1:44.80 | 55.03 | 1:01.23 | 3:41.06 | +23.50 |
Ondřej Bank | Czech Republic | 1:42.71 | 48.25 | DNF | |||
AJ Bear | Australia | 1:41.02 | 52.45 | DSQ | |||
Kurt Sulzenbacher | Italy | 1:41.49 | DNS | ||||
Maxim Kendrin | Russia | 1:42.81 | DNS | ||||
Michael Walchhofer | Austria | 1:39.94 | DNF | ||||
Didier Défago | Switzerland | 1:40.04 | DNF | ||||
Bruno Kernen | Switzerland | 1:40.07 | DNF | ||||
Gregor Sparovec | Slovenia | 1:40.42 | DNF | ||||
Gaetan Llorach | France | 1:40.56 | DNF | ||||
Ed Podivinsky | Canada | 1:40.59 | DNF | ||||
Casey Puckett | United States | 1:41.80 | DNF | ||||
Truls Ove Karlsen | Norway | 1:41.85 | DNF | ||||
Andrej Jerman | Slovenia | 1:42.42 | DNF | ||||
Alexander Heath | South Africa | 1:47.27 | DNF | ||||
Tahir Bisic | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 1:48.68 | DNF | ||||
Agustin Garcia Jurjo | Argentina | 1:49.77 | DNF | ||||
Cristian Javier Simari Birkner | Argentina | DSQ | |||||
Craig Branch | Australia | DSQ | |||||
Mitja Dragšič | Slovenia | DSQ | |||||
Michal Rajcan | Slovakia | DSQ | |||||
Paul Schwarzacher-Joyce | Ireland | DSQ | |||||
Angel Pumpalov | Bulgaria | DSQ |
Lasse Kjus is a former World Cup alpine ski racer from Norway. He won the overall World Cup title twice, an Olympic gold medal, and several World Championships. His combined career total of 16 Olympic and World Championship medals ranks second all-time behind fellow Norwegian Kjetil André Aamodt.
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