France at the 1968 Winter Olympics

Last updated
France at the
1968 Winter Olympics
Flag of France.svg
IOC code FRA
NOC French National Olympic and Sports Committee
Website www.franceolympique.com  (in French)
in Grenoble
Competitors75 (64 men, 11 women) in 10 sports
Flag bearer Gilbert Poirot (ski jumping)
Medals
Ranked 3rd
Gold
4
Silver
3
Bronze
2
Total
9
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).

Contents

Medalists

MedalNameSportEvent
Gold medal icon.svg Gold Jean-Claude Killy Alpine skiing Men's downhill
Gold medal icon.svg Gold Jean-Claude Killy Alpine skiing Men's giant slalom
Gold medal icon.svg Gold Jean-Claude Killy Alpine skiing Men's slalom
Gold medal icon.svg Gold Marielle Goitschel Alpine skiing Women's slalom
Silver medal icon.svg Silver Guy Périllat Alpine skiing Men's downhill
Silver medal icon.svg Silver Isabelle Mir Alpine skiing Women's downhill
Silver medal icon.svg Silver Annie Famose Alpine skiing Women's giant slalom
Bronze medal icon.svg Bronze Annie Famose Alpine skiing Women's slalom
Bronze medal icon.svg Bronze Patrick Pera Figure skating Men's singles

Alpine skiing

Men
AthleteEventRace 1Race 2Total
TimeRankTimeRankTimeRank
Léo Lacroix Downhill2:03.8620
Bernard Orcel 2:02.228
Guy Périllat 1:59.93Silver medal icon.svg
Jean-Claude Killy 1:59.85Gold medal icon.svg
Bernard Orcel Giant SlalomDSQDSQ
Georges Mauduit 1:44.8641:48.92123:33.789
Guy Périllat 1:44.7831:47.2853:32.064
Jean-Claude Killy 1:42.7411:46.5423:29.28Gold medal icon.svg
Men's slalom
AthleteHeat 1Heat 2Final
TimeRankTimeRankTime 1RankTime 2RankTotalRank
Jean-Pierre Augert 52.10354.911 QF51.3217DSQDSQ
Guy Périllat 57.71355.371 QF49.896DSQDSQ
Alain Penz 54.632 QF49.89651.25111:41.148
Jean-Claude Killy 49.891 QF49.37150.3641:39.73Gold medal icon.svg
Women
AthleteEventRace 1Race 2Total
TimeRankTimeRankTimeRank
Florence Steurer Downhill1:43.009
Marielle Goitschel 1:42.958
Annie Famose 1:42.155
Isabelle Mir 1:41.33Silver medal icon.svg
Marielle Goitschel Giant Slalom1:56.097
Isabelle Mir 1:56.076
Florence Steurer 1:54.754
Annie Famose 1:54.61Silver medal icon.svg
Florence Steurer SlalomDSQDSQ
Annie Famose 42.21745.6831:27.89Bronze medal icon.svg
Isabelle Mir 42.14646.0841:28.225
Marielle Goitschel 40.27245.5921:25.86Gold medal icon.svg

Biathlon

Men
EventAthleteTimePenaltiesAdjusted time 1Rank
20 km Guy Daraffourg 1'23:51.4181'41:51.458
Louis Romand 1'25:55.2121'37:55.257
Aimé Gruet-Masson 1'20:50.4111'31:50.442
Jean-Claude Viry 1'19:16.2101'29:16.235
1 One minute added per close miss (a hit in the outer ring), two minutes added per complete miss.
Men's 4 x 7.5 km relay
AthletesRace
Misses 2TimeRank
Daniel Claudon
Serge Legrand
Aimé Gruet-Masson
Jean-Claude Viry
102'31:12.910
2 A penalty loop of 200 metres had to be skied per missed target.

Bobsleigh

SledAthletesEventRun 1Run 2Run 3Run 4Total
TimeRankTimeRankTimeRankTimeRankTimeRank
FRA-1 Bertrand Croset
Henri Sirvain
Two-man1:12.36151:12.79161:12.35111:13.78204:51.2816
FRA-2 Gérard Christaud-Pipola
Jacques Christaud-Pipola
Two-man1:11.2461:34.47201:12.49131:13.47185:11.6720
SledAthletesEventRun 1Run 2Total
TimeRankTimeRankTimeRank
FRA-1 Francis Luiggi
André Patey
Gérard Monrazel
Maurice Grether
Four-man1:10.6571:08.1972:18.847
FRA-2 Bertrand Croset
Claude Roussel
Louis Courtois
Henri Sirvain
Four-man1:11.11121:08.61112:19.7211

Cross-country skiing

Men
EventAthleteRace
TimeRank
15 km Jean Jobez 53:22.146
Félix Mathieu 52:58.844
Victor Arbez 51:20.528
Roger Pires 50:52.624
30 km Roger Pires 1'45:54.643
Luc Colin 1'45:40.742
Philippe Baradel 1'45:33.341
Jean Jobez 1'45:08.839
50 km Luc Colin 2'48:57.944
Claude Legrand 2'45:36.941
Fernand Borrel 2'45:10.640
Roger Pires 2'36:48.824
Men's 4 × 10 km relay
AthletesRace
TimeRank
Félix Mathieu
Victor Arbez
Philippe Baradel
Roger Pires
2'21:23.011

Figure skating

Men
AthleteCFFSPointsPlacesRank
Jacques Mrozek 18201601.017920
Philippe Pélissier 14121706.011413
Patrick Péra 371864.531Bronze medal icon.svg
Women
AthleteCFFSPointsPlacesRank
Sylvaine Duban 19291551.421927
Micheline Joubert 28151594.818220

Ice hockey

Consolation round

Teams in this group play for 9th-14th places. France entered in this round, from the start, they did not play for a medal.

RankTeamPldWLTGFGAPts
9Flag of Yugoslavia (1946-1992).svg  Yugoslavia 550033910
10Flag of Japan.svg  Japan 541027128
11Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 532015156
12Flag of Romania (1965-1989).svg  Romania 523022234
13Flag of Austria.svg  Austria 514012272
14Flag of France.svg  France 50509320

Flag of Norway.svg Norway – Flag of France.svg France 4:1 (1:1, 2:0, 1:0)
Goalscorers: Hagensen, Smefjell, Dalsören, Mikkelsen – Liberman.

Flag of France.svg France – Flag of Romania.svg Romania 3:7 (0:2, 0:2, 3:3)
Goalscorers: Itzicsohn, Mazza, Lacarriere – Iuliu Szabo 2, Florescu 2, Pana, Geza Szabo, Stefan.

Flag of France.svg France – Flag of Austria.svg Austria 2:5 (0:1, 2:3, 0:1)
Goalscorers: Faucomprez, Caux – Puschnig 2, Kirchbaumer, St. John, Schupp.

Flag of France.svg France – Flag of Yugoslavia (1946-1992).svg Yugoslavia 1:10 (0:6, 0:1, 1:3)
Goalscorers: Itzicsohn – Tisler 3, Ivo Jan 2, Felc 2, Beravs, Roman Smolej, Hiti.

Flag of France.svg France – Flag of Japan.svg Japan 2:6 (0:0, 0:4, 2:2)
Goalscorers: Mazza, Faucomprez – Ebina 2, Hikigi, Itoh, Okajima, Araki.

Contestants

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.

Luge

Men
AthleteRun 1Run 2Run 3Total
TimeRankTimeRankTimeRankTimeRank
Ion Pervilhac 1:01.98381:02.99401:01.45373:06.4238
Jean-Pierre De Petro 1:01.03361:01.24341:01.26353:03.5335
Georges Tresallet 59.75281:00.41311:00.21303:00.3729

(Men's) Doubles

AthletesRun 1Run 2Total
TimeRankTimeRankTimeRank
Georges Tresallet
Ion Pervilhac
49.971149.2991:39.2611
Women
AthleteRun 1Run 2Run 3Total
TimeRankTimeRankTimeRankTimeRank
Jacqueline Barasinski 51.962052.392152.44202:36.7920
Sylvette Grassi 51.851752.082052.55212:36.4819

Nordic combined

Events:

AthleteEventSki JumpingCross-countryTotal
Distance 1Distance 2PointsRankTimePointsRankPointsRank
Jean-Marie Bourgeois Individual53.552.5111.44050:18.0214.509325.9038
Émile Salvi 63.063.0158.63953:44.3173.7832332.3837
Gervais Poirot 53.053.0102.44150:22.2213.5810315.9841

Ski jumping

AthleteEventJump 1Jump 2Total
DistancePointsDistancePointsPointsRank
Michel Saint Lezer Normal hill67.085.064.079.7164.750
Maurice Arbez 70.091.368.587.4178.741
Alain Macle 74.0104.272.599.8204.018
Gilbert Poirot 76.5106.773.5100.4207.110
Michel Saint Lezer Large hill85.580.676.062.3142.954
Maurice Arbez 87.083.279.066.0149.250
Alain Macle 89.593.793.5100.3194.017
Gilbert Poirot 97.0103.794.0100.0203.710

Speed skating

Men
EventAthleteRace
TimeRank
500 m François Perrenoud 44.146
Michel Thépénier 43.845
1500 m François Perrenoud 2:14.037
Michel Thépénier 2:13.736
5000 m François Perrenoud 8:07.531
Michel Thépénier 8:06.230
10,000 m François Perrenoud 17:10.226
Women
EventAthleteRace
TimeRank
500 m Martine Ivangine 48.522
Marie-Louise Perrenoud 48.219
1000 m Patricia Demartini 1:44.628
Marie-Louise Perrenoud 1:39.324
Martine Ivangine 1:37.417
1500 m Patricia Demartini 2:40.629
Marie-Louise Perrenoud 2:39.228
Martine Ivangine 2:29.914
3000 m Marie-Louise Perrenoud 5:41.725
Martine Ivangine 5:19.315

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ice hockey at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span>

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Belarus at the 1998 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Belarus competed at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Canada at the 1988 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Canada at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ukraine at the 1998 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Ukraine competed at the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sweden at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Sweden competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">France at the 1988 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

France competed at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Frank Piccard won France's first Winter Olympic gold medal for 20 years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">France at the 1992 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Norway at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Norway competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Austria at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Austria competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Austria at the 1992 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Austria competed at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville, France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Finland at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Finland competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Finland at the 1988 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Finland competed at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">West Germany at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">East Germany at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Czechoslovakia at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Czechoslovakia competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yugoslavia at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Athletes from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Germany at the 1992 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Romania at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Japan at the 1968 Winter Olympics</span> Sporting event delegation

Japan competed at the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France.

References