Kyle Rasmussen
Kyle A. Rasmussen (born June 20, 1968, in Sonora, California) is a former World Cup alpine ski racer from Angels Camp, California.
Alpine skier | |
Disciplines | Downhill, Super G, Combined |
---|---|
Born | Sonora, California, U.S. | June 20, 1968
Height | 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) |
World Cup debut | December 8, 1990 (age 22) (first top 15) |
Retired | October 1998 (age 30)[1] |
Olympics | |
Teams | 3 – (1992, 1994, 1998) |
Medals | 0 |
World Championships | |
Teams | 2 – (1989, 1996) |
Medals | 0 |
World Cup | |
Seasons | 7 – (1992–1998) |
Wins | 2 – (2 DH) |
Podiums | 3 – (2 DH, 1 SG) |
Overall titles | 0 – (17th in 1995) |
Discipline titles | 0 – (5th in SG, 1995) |
While competing with the U.S. Ski Team, he won two World Cup downhills in 1995 (Wengen and Kvitfjell), his best season, in which he finished sixth in the downhill standings, fifth in the Super-G standings, and 17th in the overall standings.
Rasmussen competed in three Winter Olympics in the 1990s and was ninth in the 1998 Downhill. With 12 top-ten finishes in his World Cup career, he retired from competition at age 30 in October 1998.[1]
World Cup results
Season standings
Season | Age | Overall | Slalom | Giant Slalom | Super G | Downhill | Combined |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1991 | 22 | 91 | – | – | – | 39 | – |
1992 | 23 | 72 | – | – | 37 | 63 | 22 |
1993 | 24 | 102 | – | – | 57 | – | 21 |
1994 | 25 | 43 | – | – | 14 | 29 | — |
1995 | 26 | 17 | – | – | 5 | 6 | – |
1996 | 27 | 43 | – | – | 33 | 18 | 12 |
1997 | 28 | 74 | – | – | – | 28 | – |
1998 | 29 | 87 | – | – | – | 37 | – |
World Championship results
Year | Age | Slalom | Giant Slalom | Super G | Downhill | Combined |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | 20 | — | — | — | 29 | — |
1991 | 22 | |||||
1993 | 24 | injured, did not compete | ||||
1996 | 27 | — | — | 40 | 14 | — |
1997 | 28 | injured, did not compete |
Olympic results
Year | Age | Slalom | Giant Slalom | Super G | Downhill | Combined |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1992 | 23 | — | — | 17 | 16 | 16 |
1994 | 25 | — | — | DSQ | 11 | 31 |
1998 | 29 | — | — | 13 | 9 | — |
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gollark: > The 22 nm node may be the first time where the gate length is not necessarily smaller than the technology node designation. For example, a 25 nm gate length would be typical for the 22 nm node.
gollark: As far as I know it *used* to actually be a measure of something, but they hit issues around... 22nm or something, don't really know... and despite said measure not changing very much the processes kept getting better, so they just reduced them.
gollark: I mean, generally if the number goes down the density of the transistors goes up, but it's not an actual measurement of anything.
gollark: They don't correspond to any actual measurement now.
References
- "Skier Kyle Rasmussen retires". Associated Press. archives. October 14, 1998. Retrieved October 15, 2014.
External links
- Kyle Rasmussen at the International Ski Federation
- Kyle Rasmussen World Cup standings at the International Ski Federation
- Kyle Rasmussen at Ski-DB Alpine Ski Database
- Kyle Rasmussen at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com (archived)
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