2019–20 Luge World Cup
The 2019–20 Luge World Cup was a multi race tournament over a season for Luge, organised by the FIL. The season started 23 November 2019 in Innsbruck, Austria, and finished 1 March 2020 in Königssee, Germany.
Winners | |
---|---|
Men's singles | |
Men's sprint | |
Doubles | |
Doubles sprint | |
Women's singles | |
Women's sprint | |
Team relay | |
Competitions | |
Venues | 9/9 |
Calendar
Venue | Date | Details |
---|---|---|
23–24 November | Team Relay | |
30 November–1 December | Sprint | |
13–14 December | Sprint | |
11–12 January | Team Relay | |
18–19 January | Team Relay/FIL European Championships | |
25–26 January | Sprint | |
1–2 February | Team Relay | |
14–16 February | World Championships (Doesn't count toward to the World Cup standings) | |
22–23 February | Team Relay | |
29 February–1 March | Team Relay |
Results
Men's singles
Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
Innsbruck | 1:41.015 (50.539 / 50.476) |
1:41.162 (50.779 / 50.383) |
1:41.207 (50.659 / 50.548) | |||
Lake Placid | 1:41.437 (50.624 / 50.813) |
1:41.458 (50.607 / 50.851) |
1:41.489 (50.769 / 50.720) | |||
Lake Placid (Sprint) | 32.158 | 32.191 | 32.280 | |||
Whistler | 1:39.713 (49.874 / 49.839) |
1:39.860 (49.903 / 49.957) |
1:39.884 (49.959 / 49.925) | |||
Whistler (Sprint) | 36.449 | 36.456 | 36.493 | |||
Altenberg | 1:48.150 (54.219 / 53.931) |
1:48.383 (54.409 / 53.974) |
1:48.420 (54.523 / 53.897) | |||
Lillehammer | 1:37.737 (48.763 / 48.974) |
1:37.911 (48.761 / 49.150) |
1:37.965 (48.889 / 49.076) | |||
Sigulda | 1:37.246 (48.898 / 48.348) |
1:37.263 (48.927 / 48.336) |
1:37.268 (48.695 / 48.573) | |||
Sigulda (Sprint) | 29.082 | 29.151 | 29.156 | |||
Oberhof | 1:28.267 (44.745 / 43.522) |
1:28.431 (44.743 / 43.688) |
1:28.437 (44.365 / 44.072) | |||
Winterberg | 1:52.285 (55.662 / 56.623) |
1:52.464 (56.084 / 56.380) |
1:52.507 (55.909 / 56.598) | |||
Königssee | 1:38.359 (49.026 / 49.333) |
1:38.362 (49.058 / 49.304) |
1:38.426 (49.130 / 49.296) |
Women's singles
Event: | Gold: | Time | Silver: | Time | Bronze: | Time |
Innsbruck | 1:21.304 (40.875 / 40.429) |
1:21.414 (40.693 / 40.721) |
1:21.468 (40.728 / 40.740) | |||
1:21.468 (40.674 / 40.794) | ||||||
Lake Placid | 1:27.484 (43.826 / 43.658) |
1:27.551 (43.863 / 43.688) |
1:27.706 (43.883 / 43.823) | |||
Lake Placid (Sprint) | 37.187 | 37.238 | 37.369 | |||
Whistler | 1:17.378 (38.736 / 38.642) |
1:17.569 (38.745 / 38.824) |
1:17.599 (38.868 / 38.731) | |||
Whistler (Sprint) | 27.839 | 27.883 | 27.904 | |||
Altenberg | 1:44.264 (52.092 / 52.172) |
1:44.436 (52.197 / 52.239) |
1:44.647 (52.403 / 52.244) | |||
Lillehammer | 1:35.482 (47.826 / 47.656) |
1:35.599 (47.827 / 47.772) |
1:35.624 (47.753 / 47.871) | |||
Sigulda | 1:24.944 (42.632 / 42.312) |
1:25.059 (42.634 / 42.425) |
1:25.094 (42.606 / 42.488) | |||
Sigulda (Sprint) | 31.334 | 31.403 | 31.458 | |||
Oberhof | 1:22.836 (41.458 / 41.378) |
1:22.876 (41.474 / 41.402) |
1:22.940 (41.546 / 41.394) | |||
Winterberg | 1:27.481 (43.805 / 43.676) |
1:27.561 (43.785 / 43.776) |
1:27.673 (43.883 / 43.790) | |||
Königssee | 1:41.476 (50.744 / 50.732) |
1:41.554 (50.830 / 50.724) |
1:41.623 (50.903 / 50.720) |
Doubles
Team relay
Standings
Men's singles
|
Men's singles Sprint
Only 6 lugers competed on all events |
Women's singles
|
Women's singles Sprint
Only 8 lugers competed on all events |
Doubles
|
Doubles Sprint
|
Medal table
Rank | Nation | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 18 | 12 | 11 | 41 | |
2 | 12 | 10 | 11 | 33 | |
3 | 6 | 3 | 6 | 15 | |
4 | 4 | 4 | 6 | 14 | |
5 | 2 | 5 | 5 | 12 | |
6 | 0 | 9 | 2 | 11 | |
7 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | |
Totals (7 nations) | 42 | 43 | 42 | 127 |
gollark: Since their approach to encouraging more of it in the EU is apparently just to come up with more regulations for it? And not support for startups or offering access to GPU clusters or something actually helpful.
gollark: They are *actually* unironically entirely irrelevant to modern AI stuff and becoming increasingly so.
gollark: Only with a European Parliament law authorising it.
gollark: The EU will have exactly three (3) computers for people to use.
gollark: "Unregulated computers could allow people to process data in violation of the GDPR, or train AI things without reading all 282873 pages of EU regulations, filling out forms, and ensuring they cannot be biased against anyone in any way ever."
References
- "INTERNATIONAL LUGE FEDERATION - IBU". fil-luge.org.
External links
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