Luge at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics – Girls' singles

The girls' singles luge at the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics took place on 17 January at the St. Moritz-Celerina Olympic Bobrun.[1]

Girls' singles
at the III Winter Youth Olympic Games
VenueSt. Moritz-Celerina Olympic Bobrun
Dates17 January
Competitors24 from 17 nations
Winning time1:49.687
Medalists
Merle Fräbel  Germany
Jessica Degenhardt  Germany
Diana Loginova  Russia

Results

The first run was held at 08:30 and the second run at 09:40.[2][3]

RankBibAthleteCountryRun 1Rank 1Run 2Rank 2TotalBehind
8Merle Fräbel Germany55.011154.67611:49.687
11Jessica Degenhardt Germany55.171354.72421:49.895+0.208
3Diana Loginova Russia55.155254.81131:49.966+0.279
44Caitlin Nash Canada55.483555.07541:50.558+0.871
51Yulianna Tunytska Ukraine55.425455.15151:50.576+0.889
610Corina Buzățoiu Romania55.646855.22771:50.873+1.186
75Kailey Allan Canada55.7041055.21161:50.915+1.228
82Barbara Allmaier Austria55.657955.29681:50.953+1.266
99Elizaveta Yurchenko Russia55.566655.44191:51.007+1.320
1013Justīne Maskale Latvia55.597755.510111:51.107+1.420
1114Zane Kaluma Latvia55.7891155.478101:51.267+1.580
127Nadia Falkensteiner Italy55.9121355.676121:51.588+1.901
1312Madlen Loss Austria55.8301255.814141:51.644+1.957
146Katharina Putzer Italy56.1381555.775131:51.913+2.226
1519McKenna Mazlo United States56.0451456.047161:52.092+2.405
1616Anna Bryk Poland56.5101855.960151:52.470+2.783
1715Nikola Trembošová Slovakia56.2931656.189181:52.482+2.795
1824Ella Cox New Zealand56.4241756.171171:52.595+2.908
1922Bianka Petríková Slovakia56.6582056.322191:52.980+3.293
2021Anna Čežíková Czech Republic56.6041956.395201:52.999+3.312
2120Ema Kovačič Slovenia57.1092257.139211:54.248+4.561
2217Yuki Ishikawa Japan57.6542357.402221:55.056+5.369
2318Våril Tangnes Norway56.7312158.622231:55.353+5.666
2423Adriana Adam Moldova58.7792459.199241:57.978+8.291
gollark: Might be a difference in dependency culture I guess.
gollark: Really? I find it to go much faster on average go programs versus average rust ones.
gollark: I mean, Go manages to sort of hit the first two and definitely the third.
gollark: Because programmers somehow can't just convert stuff to machine code given a mere 120 billion clock cycles to work with.
gollark: For Haskell.

References

  1. "Luge – Women's Singles – Run 1 – Start List" (PDF). lausanne2020.sport. 16 January 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  2. "Luge – Women's Singles – Run 1 – Results" (PDF). lausanne2020.sport. 17 January 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  3. "Luge – Women's Singles – Competition – Results" (PDF). lausanne2020.sport. 17 January 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
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