Have an open mind about Beijing downhill course, says designer Russi

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Bernhard Russi has designed every Olympic downhill course except one since the 1988 Calgary Games and the Swiss rates his Beijing layout as 'surprisingly good'.Skiers will have to take Russi's word on this since none of them have skied the Yangqing course, or even seen it, with the COVID-19 pandemic havin

Bernhard Russi has designed every Olympic downhill course except one since the 1988 Calgary Games and the Swiss rates his Beijing layout as"surprisingly good".

"I would say it is surprisingly good, good in the sense it is going to be challenging," Russi told Reuters."It is going to be a much steeper downhill than everybody was thinking. "According to the terrain, according to the mountain, according to the work we have done this could be a very good downhill, a very demanding downhill."

"That's what is going to make it the great equaliser," Read, vice chair of the FIS Alpine executive board and former head of Alpine Canada, told Reuters. But pressed he said Beijing reminded him of the Birds of Prey layout at Beaver Creek in Colorado - one of the World Cup circuit's most demanding tracks.When designing a course Russi's philosophy is to construct one that will test the best skiers by putting a premium on jumps, technique and bravery - not gliding.

"Normally I don't like to compare a downhill from the others because I think every mountain has the right to be it's own without being compared," he added.

 

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