Two-man at the XIX Olympic Winter Games | ||||||||||
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![]() Pictogram for bobsleigh | ||||||||||
Venue | Park City | |||||||||
Dates | February 16 — 17, 2002 | |||||||||
Competitors | 74 from 27 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 3:10.11 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
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Bobsleigh at the 2002 Winter Olympics | ||
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Two | men | women |
Four | men | |
The Men's two-man bobsleigh competition at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, United States was held on 16 and 17 February, at Park City. [1]
Each of the 37 two-man teams entered for the event completed all four runs
Rank | Country | Athletes | Run 1 | Run 2 | Run 3 | Run 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ![]() | Christoph Langen Markus Zimmermann | 47.54 | 47.52 | 47.44 | 47.61 | 3:10.11 |
![]() | ![]() | Christian Reich Steve Anderhub | 47.52 | 47.53 | 47.45 | 47.70 | 3:10.20 |
![]() | ![]() | Martin Annen Beat Hefti | 47.56 | 47.64 | 47.73 | 47.69 | 3:10.62 |
4 | ![]() | Todd Hays Garrett Hines | 47.71 | 47.70 | 47.61 | 47.63 | 3:10.65 |
5 | ![]() | Pierre Lueders Giulio Zardo | 47.67 | 47.70 | 47.65 | 47.71 | 3:10.73 |
6 | ![]() | René Spies Franz Sagmeister | 47.77 | 47.69 | 47.61 | 47.77 | 3:10.84 |
7 | ![]() | Wolfgang Stampfer Martin Schützenauer | 47.91 | 47.78 | 47.72 | 47.75 | 3:11.16 |
8 | ![]() | Günther Huber Antonio Tartaglia | 47.84 | 47.88 | 47.92 | 48.00 | 3:11.64 |
9 | ![]() | Brian Shimer Darrin Steele | 47.92 | 47.99 | 48.07 | 47.95 | 3:11.93 |
10 | ![]() | Lee Johnston Marcus Adam | 48.04 | 48.16 | 48.05 | 48.02 | 3:12.27 |
11 | ![]() | Sandis Prūsis Mārcis Rullis | 48.10 | 48.06 | 48.08 | 48.36 | 3:12.60 |
11 | ![]() | Fabrizio Tosini Cristian La Grassa | 48.04 | 48.16 | 48.03 | 48.37 | 3:12.60 |
13 | ![]() | Bruno Mingeon Emmanuel Hostache | 48.23 | 48.03 | 48.27 | 48.15 | 3:12.68 |
13 | ![]() | Gatis Gūts Intars Dīcmanis | 48.07 | 48.22 | 48.14 | 48.25 | 3:12.68 |
15 | ![]() | Yevgeny Popov Pyotr Makarchuk | 48.12 | 48.18 | 48.22 | 48.19 | 3:12.71 |
16 | ![]() | Arend Glas Marcel Welten | 48.26 | 48.23 | 48.26 | 48.33 | 3:13.08 |
16 | ![]() | Ivo Danilevič Roman Gomola | 48.19 | 48.28 | 48.35 | 48.26 | 3:13.08 |
18 | ![]() | Alexandr Zubkov Dmitriy Stepushkin | 48.71 | 48.16 | 48.15 | 48.07 | 3:13.09 |
19 | ![]() | Pavel Puškár Jan Kobián | 48.22 | 48.03 | 48.35 | 48.50 | 3:13.10 |
20 | ![]() | Arnfinn Kristiansen Bjarne Røyland | 48.34 | 48.21 | 48.46 | 48.17 | 3:13.18 |
21 | ![]() | Hiroshi Suzuki Masanori Inoue | 48.41 | 48.61 | 48.58 | 48.36 | 3:13.96 |
22 | ![]() | Patrice Servelle Sebastien Gattuso | 48.37 | 48.56 | 48.43 | 48.76 | 3:14.12 |
22 | ![]() | Neil Scarisbrick Colin Bryce | 48.44 | 48.46 | 48.72 | 48.50 | 3:14.12 |
24 | ![]() | Yannick Morin John Sokolowski | 48.41 | 48.50 | 48.55 | 48.70 | 3:14.16 |
25 | ![]() | Florian Enache Adrian Duminicel | 48.52 | 48.51 | 48.65 | 48.75 | 3:14.43 |
26 | ![]() | Peter Donohoe Paul Kiernan | 48.50 | 48.95 | 48.51 | 48.51 | 3:14.47 |
27 | ![]() | Alan Henderson Mark Edmond | 48.46 | 48.36 | 48.72 | 49.36 | 3:14.90 |
28 | ![]() | Winston Watt Lascelles Brown | 48.59 | 48.58 | 49.01 | 48.76 | 3:14.94 |
29 | ![]() | Hiroaki Ohishi Shinji Miura | 48.61 | 48.70 | 49.08 | 48.70 | 3:15.09 |
30 | ![]() | Milan Jagnešák Róbert Kresťanko | 49.00 | 48.96 | 49.28 | 48.87 | 3:16.11 |
31 | ![]() | John-Andrew Kambanis Ioannis Leivatidis | 49.03 | 49.06 | 49.60 | 48.97 | 3:16.16 |
32 | ![]() | Stefan Vasilev Miroslav Danov | 49.77 | 49.35 | 49.48 | 49.42 | 3:18.02 |
33 | ![]() | Dan Janjigian Yorgo Alexandrou | 49.53 | 49.50 | 49.75 | 49.33 | 3:18.11 |
34 | ![]() | Oleksandr Ivanyshyn Oleksandr Streltsov | 49.47 | 49.43 | 49.77 | 49.75 | 3:18.42 |
35 | ![]() | Roberto Tamés Roberto Lauderdale | 49.57 | 49.65 | 50.07 | 49.82 | 3:19.11 |
36 | ![]() | Zachary Zoller Quinn Wheeler | 49.81 | 49.76 | 49.86 | 50.01 | 3:19.44 |
37 | ![]() | Gregory Sun Errol Aguilera | 49.74 | 50.07 | 50.68 | 49.69 | 3:20.18 |
Three bobsleigh events were competed at the 2002 Winter Olympics, at Utah Olympic Park. The competition took place between February 16 and February 23, 2002.
Bobsleigh or bobsled is a winter sport in which teams of 2 to 4 athletes make timed runs down narrow, twisting, banked, iced tracks in a gravity-powered sleigh. International bobsleigh competitions are governed by the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation.
Pierre Fritz Lueders is a Canadian Olympic, world and World Cup champion bobsledder who competed from 1990 to 2010. He piloted both two-man and four-man bobsleigh, retiring after the 2010 Winter Olympics. He was named to Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 2012.
Konstantin Aladashvili is a Russian bobsledder and skeleton racer who has competed since 1999. He finished 22nd in the men's skeleton event at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City. Aladashvili also competed at the FIBT World Championships, finishing 23rd in the men's skeleton event at Calgary, in 2005.
Gatis Gūts is a former Latvian bobsleigh pilot who had competed since 1994. Currently he is one of the coaches of Latvian bobsleigh team. His two last seasons have seen him twice in the top ten in the World Cup, both times with co-pilot Intars Dīcmanis. He also competed at the 10 World Championships.Best result in World Championships in Lake Placid 2003 where he and Intars Dīcmanis finished 5th in two man sled. Best World Cup in 4man was fourth.
Beat Hefti is a Swiss bobsledder who has competed since the late 1990s. Competing in four Winter Olympics, he has won a total of four Olympic medals. A gold medal in Sochi, two bronze medals in Torino and another bronze medal in Salt Lake City.
Bobsleigh is an event in the Winter Olympic Games where a two- or four-person team drives a specially designed sled down an ice track, with the winning team completing the route with the fastest time. The event has been featured since the first Winter Games in 1924 in Chamonix, France, with the exception of the 1960 games in Squaw Valley when the organizing committee decided not to build a track in order to reduce expenses. Other than that exception, the four-man competition has been competed at every game. The two-man event was introduced at the 1932 Lake Placid games and a two-woman event was first contested at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics.
Christian Reich is a Swiss bobsledder who competed from the late 1990s to the early 2000s. Competing in four Winter Olympics, he won a silver medal in the two-man event with teammate Steve Anderhub at Salt Lake City in 2002.
Steven Paul Holcomb was an American bobsledder who competed from 1998 until his death in 2017. At the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, he won the four-man bobsled event for the United States, its first gold medal in that event since 1948. At the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, he finished second in both the four-man and two-man event.
Trinidad and Tobago sent a delegation to compete at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, United States from 8–24 February 2002. This was Trinidad and Tobago's third appearance at a Winter Olympic Games. The delegation consisted of three bobsledders, Gregory Sun, Andrew McNeilly, and Errol Aguilera. In the two-man competition, a four-run event in which all three men competed, they came in 37th place.
The Jamaica national bobsleigh team represents Jamaica in international bobsleighing competitions. The men's team debut in the 1988 Winter Olympic Games four-man bobsleigh in Calgary, Alberta, was received as underdogs in a cold weather sport represented by a nation with a tropical environment. Jamaica returned to the Winter Olympics in the two-man bobsleigh in 1992, 1994, 1998, 2002, 2014, and 2022; a women's team debuted in 2018.
The International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) is the international sports federation for the sliding sports of Bobsleigh and Skeleton. It was founded on 23 November 1923 by the delegates of Great Britain, France, Switzerland, Canada, and the United States at the meeting of their first International Congress in Paris, France. In June 2015, it announced a name change from FIBT to IBSF. The federation's headquarters are in Lausanne, Switzerland.
Susi-Lisa Erdmann is an East German-German luger and bobsledder who competed from 1977 to 1998 in luge, then since 1999 in bobsleigh. She was born in Blankenburg, Bezirk Magdeburg. Competing in five Winter Olympics, she won two medals in the women's singles luge event with a silver in 1994 and a bronze in 1992, and a bronze at the inaugural two-women bobsleigh event in 2002. She is one of only two people to ever win a medal in both bobsleigh and luge at the Winter Olympics; Italy's Gerda Weissensteiner is the other.
Brian Shimer is an American bobsledder who competed from 1985 to 2002. Competing in five Winter Olympics, he won the bronze medal in the four-man event at Salt Lake City in 2002.
Michael Kohn is an American former bobsledder who has competed since 1990. Competing in two Winter Olympics, he won a bronze medal in the four-man event at Salt Lake City in 2002 as a push athlete for pilot Brian Shimer.
The Utah Olympic Park Track is a bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton track in the United States, located in the Utah Olympic Park near Park City, Utah. During the 2002 Winter Olympics in nearby Salt Lake City, the track hosted the bobsleigh, luge, and skeleton events, and is expected to reprise these roles for the 2034 Winter Olympics. Today the track still serves as a training center for Olympic and development level athletes and hosts numerous local and international competitions. It is one of two national tracks; the other is at Mt. Van Hoevenberg near Lake Placid, New York.
Winston Alexander Watts is a member of the Jamaica national bobsleigh team. He has competed in four Olympics, most recently the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
The Four-man bobsleigh competition at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City was held on 22 and 23 February, at the Utah Olympic Park Track near Park City.