FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1950


The FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1950 were the 11th FIS Alpine World Ski Championships, held February 13–18 in the United States at Aspen, Colorado.
These were the first world championships held outside of Europe, and the first official world championships not concurrent with the Olympics since 1939. The Giant slalom made its world championships debut and displaced the combined event, which returned to the program in 1954 as a "paper race," using the results of the three races through 1980.
At Aspen's Ajax Mountain, Zeno Colò of Italy won the downhill and giant slalom, and just missed a sweep of the gold medals; he finished 0.3 seconds behind in the slalom, taking the silver. Austria dominated the women's races: Dagmar Rom won the giant slalom and slalom, Trude Jochum-Beiser won gold in the downhill and silver in the GS, and Erika Mahringer took two silver medals, in the downhill and slalom.
Aspen was in its fourth year as a ski area; it opened in December 1946 with a single chairlift.
The Nordic world championships were also held in the U.S. in 1950, at Lake Placid, New York. Due to lack of snow at Lake Placid, the cross-country events were moved to Rumford, Maine.

Men's competitions

Downhill

Saturday, February 18, 1950
In the final race of the championships, Colò descended the course
at an average speed of to win his second gold medal and third podium.

Giant Slalom

Tuesday, February 14, 1950
In the first men's race, Colò averaged in the one-run event.
The course had 35 gates with a vertical drop of.

Slalom

Thursday, February 16, 1950
Georges Schneider edged Colò by three-tenths of a second over two runs.
The course of 40 gates had a vertical drop of.

Women's competitions

Downhill

Friday, February 17, 1950
Trude Jochum-Beiser, 22, won the final women's event, averaging nearly.
She had given birth to her first child just four months earlier.

Giant Slalom

Monday, February 13, 1950
In the first race of the championships, Rom averaged in the one-run event.
The course had 28 gates with an approximate vertical drop of.

Slalom

Wednesday, February 15, 1950
Rom, 21, won her second gold medal in as many events by the slimmest of margins over two runs.
The quarter-mile course of 33 gates had a vertical drop of.

Medal Standings



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