France at the 1968 Winter Olympics | |
---|---|
IOC code | FRA |
NOC | French National Olympic and Sports Committee |
Website | www |
in Grenoble | |
Competitors | 75 (64 men, 11 women) in 10 sports |
Flag bearer | Gilbert Poirot (ski jumping) |
Medals Ranked 3rd |
|
Winter Olympics appearances (overview) | |
France was the host nation for the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble. It was the second time that France had hosted the Winter Olympic Games (after the 1924 Games in Chamonix), and the fourth time overall (after the 1900 and 1924 Summer Olympics, both in Paris).
Medal | Name | Sport | Event |
---|---|---|---|
Gold | Jean-Claude Killy | Alpine skiing | Men's downhill |
Gold | Jean-Claude Killy | Alpine skiing | Men's giant slalom |
Gold | Jean-Claude Killy | Alpine skiing | Men's slalom |
Gold | Marielle Goitschel | Alpine skiing | Women's slalom |
Silver | Guy Périllat | Alpine skiing | Men's downhill |
Silver | Isabelle Mir | Alpine skiing | Women's downhill |
Silver | Annie Famose | Alpine skiing | Women's giant slalom |
Bronze | Annie Famose | Alpine skiing | Women's slalom |
Bronze | Patrick Pera | Figure skating | Men's singles |
Athlete | Event | Race 1 | Race 2 | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Léo Lacroix | Downhill | 2:03.86 | 20 | ||||
Bernard Orcel | 2:02.22 | 8 | |||||
Guy Périllat | 1:59.93 | ||||||
Jean-Claude Killy | 1:59.85 | ||||||
Bernard Orcel | Giant Slalom | DSQ | – | – | – | DSQ | – |
Georges Mauduit | 1:44.86 | 4 | 1:48.92 | 12 | 3:33.78 | 9 | |
Guy Périllat | 1:44.78 | 3 | 1:47.28 | 5 | 3:32.06 | 4 | |
Jean-Claude Killy | 1:42.74 | 1 | 1:46.54 | 2 | 3:29.28 |
Athlete | Heat 1 | Heat 2 | Final | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time 1 | Rank | Time 2 | Rank | Total | Rank | |
Jean-Pierre Augert | 52.10 | 3 | 54.91 | 1 QF | 51.32 | 17 | DSQ | – | DSQ | – |
Guy Périllat | 57.71 | 3 | 55.37 | 1 QF | 49.89 | 6 | DSQ | – | DSQ | – |
Alain Penz | 54.63 | 2 QF | – | – | 49.89 | 6 | 51.25 | 11 | 1:41.14 | 8 |
Jean-Claude Killy | 49.89 | 1 QF | – | – | 49.37 | 1 | 50.36 | 4 | 1:39.73 |
Athlete | Event | Race 1 | Race 2 | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Florence Steurer | Downhill | 1:43.00 | 9 | ||||
Marielle Goitschel | 1:42.95 | 8 | |||||
Annie Famose | 1:42.15 | 5 | |||||
Isabelle Mir | 1:41.33 | ||||||
Marielle Goitschel | Giant Slalom | 1:56.09 | 7 | ||||
Isabelle Mir | 1:56.07 | 6 | |||||
Florence Steurer | 1:54.75 | 4 | |||||
Annie Famose | 1:54.61 | ||||||
Florence Steurer | Slalom | DSQ | – | – | – | DSQ | – |
Annie Famose | 42.21 | 7 | 45.68 | 3 | 1:27.89 | ||
Isabelle Mir | 42.14 | 6 | 46.08 | 4 | 1:28.22 | 5 | |
Marielle Goitschel | 40.27 | 2 | 45.59 | 2 | 1:25.86 |
Event | Athlete | Time | Penalties | Adjusted time 1 | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
20 km | Guy Daraffourg | 1'23:51.4 | 18 | 1'41:51.4 | 58 |
Louis Romand | 1'25:55.2 | 12 | 1'37:55.2 | 57 | |
Aimé Gruet-Masson | 1'20:50.4 | 11 | 1'31:50.4 | 42 | |
Jean-Claude Viry | 1'19:16.2 | 10 | 1'29:16.2 | 35 |
Athletes | Race | ||
---|---|---|---|
Misses 2 | Time | Rank | |
Daniel Claudon Serge Legrand Aimé Gruet-Masson Jean-Claude Viry | 10 | 2'31:12.9 | 10 |
Sled | Athletes | Event | Run 1 | Run 2 | Run 3 | Run 4 | Total | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | |||
FRA-1 | Bertrand Croset Henri Sirvain | Two-man | 1:12.36 | 15 | 1:12.79 | 16 | 1:12.35 | 11 | 1:13.78 | 20 | 4:51.28 | 16 |
FRA-2 | Gérard Christaud-Pipola Jacques Christaud-Pipola | Two-man | 1:11.24 | 6 | 1:34.47 | 20 | 1:12.49 | 13 | 1:13.47 | 18 | 5:11.67 | 20 |
Sled | Athletes | Event | Run 1 | Run 2 | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | |||
FRA-1 | Francis Luiggi André Patey Gérard Monrazel Maurice Grether | Four-man | 1:10.65 | 7 | 1:08.19 | 7 | 2:18.84 | 7 |
FRA-2 | Bertrand Croset Claude Roussel Louis Courtois Henri Sirvain | Four-man | 1:11.11 | 12 | 1:08.61 | 11 | 2:19.72 | 11 |
Event | Athlete | Race | |
---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | ||
15 km | Jean Jobez | 53:22.1 | 46 |
Félix Mathieu | 52:58.8 | 44 | |
Victor Arbez | 51:20.5 | 28 | |
Roger Pires | 50:52.6 | 24 | |
30 km | Roger Pires | 1'45:54.6 | 43 |
Luc Colin | 1'45:40.7 | 42 | |
Philippe Baradel | 1'45:33.3 | 41 | |
Jean Jobez | 1'45:08.8 | 39 | |
50 km | Luc Colin | 2'48:57.9 | 44 |
Claude Legrand | 2'45:36.9 | 41 | |
Fernand Borrel | 2'45:10.6 | 40 | |
Roger Pires | 2'36:48.8 | 24 |
Athletes | Race | |
---|---|---|
Time | Rank | |
Félix Mathieu Victor Arbez Philippe Baradel Roger Pires | 2'21:23.0 | 11 |
Athlete | CF | FS | Points | Places | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jacques Mrozek | 18 | 20 | 1601.0 | 179 | 20 |
Philippe Pélissier | 14 | 12 | 1706.0 | 114 | 13 |
Patrick Péra | 3 | 7 | 1864.5 | 31 |
Athlete | CF | FS | Points | Places | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sylvaine Duban | 19 | 29 | 1551.4 | 219 | 27 |
Micheline Joubert | 28 | 15 | 1594.8 | 182 | 20 |
Teams in this group play for 9th-14th places. France entered in this round, from the start, they did not play for a medal.
Rank | Team | Pld | W | L | T | GF | GA | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9 | Yugoslavia | 5 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 33 | 9 | 10 |
10 | Japan | 5 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 27 | 12 | 8 |
11 | Norway | 5 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 15 | 15 | 6 |
12 | Romania | 5 | 2 | 3 | 0 | 22 | 23 | 4 |
13 | Austria | 5 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 12 | 27 | 2 |
14 | France | 5 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 9 | 32 | 0 |
Norway – France 4:1 (1:1, 2:0, 1:0)
Goalscorers: Hagensen, Smefjell, Dalsören, Mikkelsen – Liberman.
France – Romania 3:7 (0:2, 0:2, 3:3)
Goalscorers: Itzicsohn, Mazza, Lacarriere – Iuliu Szabo 2, Florescu 2, Pana, Geza Szabo, Stefan.
France – Austria 2:5 (0:1, 2:3, 0:1)
Goalscorers: Faucomprez, Caux – Puschnig 2, Kirchbaumer, St. John, Schupp.
France – Yugoslavia 1:10 (0:6, 0:1, 1:3)
Goalscorers: Itzicsohn – Tisler 3, Ivo Jan 2, Felc 2, Beravs, Roman Smolej, Hiti.
France – Japan 2:6 (0:0, 0:4, 2:2)
Goalscorers: Mazza, Faucomprez – Ebina 2, Hikigi, Itoh, Okajima, Araki.
14. FRANCE
Goaltenders: Jean-Claude Sozzi, Bernard Deschamps
Defence: Joel Godeau, Claude Blanchard, Philippe Lacarriere, René Blanchard, Joel Gauvin
Forwards: Bernard Cabanis, Gerard Faucomprez, Alain Mazza, Olivier Prechac, Gilbert Lepre, Patrick Pourtanel, Michel Caux, Gilbert Itzicsohn, Daniel Grando, Patrick Francheterre, Charles Liberman.
Athlete | Run 1 | Run 2 | Run 3 | Total | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | |
Ion Pervilhac | 1:01.98 | 38 | 1:02.99 | 40 | 1:01.45 | 37 | 3:06.42 | 38 |
Jean-Pierre De Petro | 1:01.03 | 36 | 1:01.24 | 34 | 1:01.26 | 35 | 3:03.53 | 35 |
Georges Tresallet | 59.75 | 28 | 1:00.41 | 31 | 1:00.21 | 30 | 3:00.37 | 29 |
(Men's) Doubles
Athletes | Run 1 | Run 2 | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | |
Georges Tresallet Ion Pervilhac | 49.97 | 11 | 49.29 | 9 | 1:39.26 | 11 |
Athlete | Run 1 | Run 2 | Run 3 | Total | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | |
Jacqueline Barasinski | 51.96 | 20 | 52.39 | 21 | 52.44 | 20 | 2:36.79 | 20 |
Sylvette Grassi | 51.85 | 17 | 52.08 | 20 | 52.55 | 21 | 2:36.48 | 19 |
Events:
Athlete | Event | Ski Jumping | Cross-country | Total | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Distance 1 | Distance 2 | Points | Rank | Time | Points | Rank | Points | Rank | ||
Jean-Marie Bourgeois | Individual | 53.5 | 52.5 | 111.4 | 40 | 50:18.0 | 214.50 | 9 | 325.90 | 38 |
Émile Salvi | 63.0 | 63.0 | 158.6 | 39 | 53:44.3 | 173.78 | 32 | 332.38 | 37 | |
Gervais Poirot | 53.0 | 53.0 | 102.4 | 41 | 50:22.2 | 213.58 | 10 | 315.98 | 41 |
Athlete | Event | Jump 1 | Jump 2 | Total | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Distance | Points | Distance | Points | Points | Rank | ||
Michel Saint Lezer | Normal hill | 67.0 | 85.0 | 64.0 | 79.7 | 164.7 | 50 |
Maurice Arbez | 70.0 | 91.3 | 68.5 | 87.4 | 178.7 | 41 | |
Alain Macle | 74.0 | 104.2 | 72.5 | 99.8 | 204.0 | 18 | |
Gilbert Poirot | 76.5 | 106.7 | 73.5 | 100.4 | 207.1 | 10 | |
Michel Saint Lezer | Large hill | 85.5 | 80.6 | 76.0 | 62.3 | 142.9 | 54 |
Maurice Arbez | 87.0 | 83.2 | 79.0 | 66.0 | 149.2 | 50 | |
Alain Macle | 89.5 | 93.7 | 93.5 | 100.3 | 194.0 | 17 | |
Gilbert Poirot | 97.0 | 103.7 | 94.0 | 100.0 | 203.7 | 10 |
Event | Athlete | Race | |
---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | ||
500 m | François Perrenoud | 44.1 | 46 |
Michel Thépénier | 43.8 | 45 | |
1500 m | François Perrenoud | 2:14.0 | 37 |
Michel Thépénier | 2:13.7 | 36 | |
5000 m | François Perrenoud | 8:07.5 | 31 |
Michel Thépénier | 8:06.2 | 30 | |
10,000 m | François Perrenoud | 17:10.2 | 26 |
Event | Athlete | Race | |
---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | ||
500 m | Martine Ivangine | 48.5 | 22 |
Marie-Louise Perrenoud | 48.2 | 19 | |
1000 m | Patricia Demartini | 1:44.6 | 28 |
Marie-Louise Perrenoud | 1:39.3 | 24 | |
Martine Ivangine | 1:37.4 | 17 | |
1500 m | Patricia Demartini | 2:40.6 | 29 |
Marie-Louise Perrenoud | 2:39.2 | 28 | |
Martine Ivangine | 2:29.9 | 14 | |
3000 m | Marie-Louise Perrenoud | 5:41.7 | 25 |
Martine Ivangine | 5:19.3 | 15 |
The men's ice hockey tournament at the 1968 Winter Olympics held in Grenoble, France, was the 11th Olympic Championship, also serving as the 35th World Championships and the 46th European Championships. This was the last Olympic tournament to include the World and European titles. Games were held at the Palais des Sports. The Soviet Union won their third Olympic gold medal, eighth World Championship and twelfth European Championship. Czechoslovakia won the silver, followed by Canada taking the bronze.
Belarus competed at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.
Canada was the host nation for the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary. It was the first time that Canada had hosted the Winter Olympic Games, and second time overall, after the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal. Vancouver would eventually host the 2010 Winter Olympics which makes it the second city in Canada to host the Winter Olympics and the third overall.
Canada competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. Canada has competed at every Winter Olympic Games. This was the first Winter Olympic Games in which the new Maple Leaf Flag was used to represent the country.
Ukraine competed at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.
Sweden competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.
France competed at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Frank Piccard won France's first Winter Olympic gold medal for 20 years.
France was the host nation for the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville. It was the third time that France had hosted the Winter Olympic Games, and the fifth time overall.
Norway competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.
Austria competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.
Austria competed at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France.
Finland competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.
Finland competed at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
West Germany competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble. West German athletes had competed together with East German athletes as the United Team of Germany in the previous three Winter Olympic Games, but both nations sent independent teams starting in 1968.
East Germany competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. East German athletes had competed together with West German athletes as the United Team of Germany in the previous three Winter Olympic Games, but both nations sent independent teams starting in 1968.
Czechoslovakia competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.
Athletes from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.
Germany competed at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France. It was the first time that the nation had competed at the Olympic Games following reunification in 1990 and for the first time as a single nation since 1936. Previously, West Germany and East Germany had sent independent teams to the Games.
Romania competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. The two-man bobsleigh team of Nicolae Neagoe and Ion Panţuru won the nation's first medal at the Winter Games, a bronze. As of the 2018 games, they remain Romania's only Winter Olympic medalists.
Japan competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.