1983 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Men's Giant Slalom and Super G

Men's Giant Slalom and Super G World Cup 1982/1983

1983 Men's Giant Slalom and Super G World Cup
Previous: 1982 Next: 1984

Calendar

RoundRace NoDisciplinePlaceCountryDateWinnerSecondThird
12Super GVal d'Isère FranceDecember 12, 1982 Peter Müller Peter Lüscher Pirmin Zurbriggen
28Super GMadonna di Campiglio ItalyDecember 22, 1982 Michael Mair Hans Enn Pirmin Zurbriggen
313GiantAdelboden  SwitzerlandJanuary 11, 1983 Pirmin Zurbriggen Max Julen Jacques Lüthy
419GiantKranjska Gora YugoslaviaJanuary 29, 1983 Hans Enn Max Julen Ingemar Stenmark
524Super GGarmisch-Partenkirchen West GermanyFebruary 9, 1983 Peter Lüscher Pirmin Zurbriggen Hans Enn
628GiantTodtnau West GermanyFebruary 13, 1983 Ingemar Stenmark Max Julen Pirmin Zurbriggen
730GiantGällivare SwedenFebruary 26, 1983 Ingemar Stenmark Phil Mahre
Max Julen
833GiantAspen United StatesMarch 7, 1983 Phil Mahre Marc Girardelli Ingemar Stenmark
934GiantVail United StatesMarch 8, 1983 Phil Mahre Ingemar Stenmark Max Julen
1036GiantFurano JapanMarch 19, 1983 Phil Mahre Max Julen Ingemar Stenmark

Final point standings

In Men's Giant Slalom and Super G World Cup 1982/83 the best 5 results count. Deductions are given in ().

PlaceNameCountryTotal PointsDeduction2SG8SG131924SG2830333436
1Phil Mahre United States107(16)--(5)(11)-1220252525
2Ingemar Stenmark Sweden100(29)--(9)15(5)25251520(15)
Max Julen  Switzerland100(30)--2020(3)2020(12)(15)20
4Pirmin Zurbriggen  Switzerland90(30)151525(4)2015(7)(8)-(11)
5Hans Enn Austria83(21)(10)20(4)2515--(7)1112
6Marc Girardelli Luxembourg52--96710-20--
7Peter Lüscher  Switzerland51202--25----4
8Jure Franko Yugoslavia50(16)91011(7)(8)-911-(1)
Robert Erlacher Italy50(15)(4)(5)-12(6)8-9129
10Jacques Lüthy  Switzerland44--1599-101--
11Boris Strel Yugoslavia43(5)---5(5)1011-710
12Andreas Wenzel Liechtenstein38(2)2(1)10(1)1211-3--
13Thomas Bürgler  Switzerland3611-78-1--9-
14Franz Gruber Austria31-3---58-105
15Hubert Strolz Austria27511--11-----
Alex Giorgi Italy27--110---106-
Peter Müller  Switzerland2725--------2
18Michael Mair Italy25-25--------
19Franz Heinzer  Switzerland241212--------
20Bojan Križaj Yugoslavia227-123------
21Grega Benedik Yugoslavia21-71-1-6--6
22Siegfried Kerschbaumer Italy1936--10-----
23Christian Orlainsky Austria176--224---3
24Harti Weirather Austria1688--------
25Günther Mader Austria15-9-----6--
26Leonhard Stock Austria14-4------37
27Steve Mahre United States13-------58-
28Johan Wallner Sweden12------12---
29Egon Hirt West Germany11-----7-4--
Odd Sørli Norway11------425-
31Patrick Lamotte France10-----6--4-
Frank Wörndl West Germany10-----2---8
33Hans Pieren  Switzerland8--6---2---
34Jörgen Sundqvist Sweden5------5---
Hannes Spiss Austria5--2---3---
Torsten Jakobsson Sweden5--3---2---
37Joël Gaspoz  Switzerland3-----3----
38Martin Hangl  Switzerland22---------
Guido Hinterseer Austria2--------2-
40Ivano Camozzi Italy1--1-------
Yves Tavernier France1--------1-

Men's Giant Slalom and Super G Team Results

All points were shown including individuel deduction. bold indicate highest score - italics indicate race wins

PlaceCountryTotal Points2SG8SG131924SG2830333436RacersWins
1  Switzerland44585297341573939212437103
2 Austria23129556272891113262791
3 Yugoslavia157161724151410261171740
4 Sweden151--12155254415201542
5 Italy137736222168-1918951
6 United States136--511-122030332523
7 Luxembourg52--96710-20--10
8 Liechtenstein40211011211-3--10
9 West Germany21-----9-4-820
10 France11-----6--5-20
 Norway11------425-10
Alpine skiing World Cup
Men

Overall | Downhill | Giant/Super G | Slalom | Combined

1983
gollark: I think market systems are waaay better than some weird communist one at resource allocation (with intervention), so I'd prefer markets + limited central governance.
gollark: If there's some leather available, and two different production processes needing leather, how do you decide which factory gets which?
gollark: And a quota for "10 tons of nails", so they made a single 10-ton nail.
gollark: There were things with Soviet truck depots driving trucks in circles pointlessly because they had a quota of "40000 miles driven".
gollark: If your factory is told to make 100K units of winter clothing of any kind they will probably just go for the simplest/easiest one, even if it isn't very useful to have 100K winter coats (extra small) (plain white). Now, you could say "but in capitalism they'll just make the cheapest one", but companies are directly subservient to what consumers actually want and can't get away with that.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.