ALPINE NEWS


USSA Membership Deadline Quickly Approaches - Oct. 15 midnight MST

PARK CITY, Utah (Sept. 12) - U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association members can save now by completing registration by Friday, Oct. 14. Although the deadline is Saturday Oct 15........... read more

Register for a New User Account Today

The USSA has launched a new user account system as of May 1 this year. The new system allows multiple memberships to be managed using one account. Also, users may now use a........... read more

Registration Now open for the 2011-12 Season

Your USSA membership expires on June 30 each year. Online registration makes it easier than ever to get ready for the season ahead with the USSA's new user account system.<........... read more

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ALPINE

People began strapping skis to their feet as far back as 5000 years ago. It is believed that Norwegians were the first - they used skis as a way of hunting across snow-covered terrain. From Norway, skiing spread throughout Scandinavia and Russia as a mode of winter transportation and eventually as a sport similar to cross-country skiing.

Alpine skiing evolved from cross-country skiing. The first alpine skiing competition, a primitive downhill, was held in the 1850s in Oslo. A few decades later, the sport spread to the remainder of Europe and to the United States, where miners held skiing competitions to entertain themselves during the winter.

The first slalom was organized in 1922 in Mürren, Switzerland, and two years later such a race became the first Olympic Alpine event. The Arlberg-Kandahar, a combined slalom and downhill event, is now referred to as the first legitimate Alpine event - the race that planted the seed for Alpine's inclusion in the Olympic program.

Alpine skiing became part of the Olympic program at the 1936 Garmisch-Partenkirchen Games with a men's and ladies combined event.

The alpine competitions that are contested in the FIS World Cup series, FIS Alpine World Ski Championships and at the Olympic Winter Games consist of ten events: five for ladies and five for men. Additional formats such as the Parallel Slalom and (Knock-Out) Slalom and Giant Slalom are carried out as variations of the alpine events. The rules are the same for men and ladies, but the courses differ. In all cases, time is measured to .01 seconds and ties are permitted.

General information on the different competitions can be found below. More specific information can be found in the USSA Alpine Competition Guide and the FIS International Rules.


Downhill
Super-G
Giant Slalom
Slalom
Combined

The downhill features the longest course and the highest speeds in Alpine skiing. It includes challenging turns, jumps and gliding phases. Each skier makes a single run down a single course and the fastest time determines the winner.

USSA GENERAL NEWS


2011-12 Competition Guides Available Online

The USSA Competition Guide for each sport has been published and they are available online as downloadable pdf files.

 

Hard copies of the Competiti........... read more

USSA Membership Deadline Quickly Approaches - Oct. 15 midnight MST

PARK CITY, Utah (Sept. 12) - U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association members can save now by completing registration by Friday, Oct. 14. Although the deadline is Saturday Oct 15........... read more

USSA New Sports

With recent approval of the International Olympic Committee the USSA is aggressively working on programming and structure for the new Olympic Sports that will fall under th........... read more