Bobsleigh or bobsled is a winter sport in which teams of 2 to 4 athletes make timed speed runs down narrow, twisting, banked, iced tracks in a gravity-powered sleigh. International bobsleigh competitions are governed by the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (formerly the FIBT).
The first bobsleds were built in the late 19th century in St. Moritz, Switzerland, by wealthy tourists from Victorian Britain who were staying at the Palace Hotel owned by Caspar Badrutt. The early sleds were adapted from boys' delivery sleds and . These eventually evolved into bobsleighs, and skeletons. Initially the tourists would race their hand-built contraptions down the narrow streets of St. Moritz; however, as collisions increased, growing opposition from St. Moritz residents led to bobsledding being eventually banned from public highways. In the winter of 1884, Badrutt had a purpose-built run constructed near the hamlet of Cresta. The Cresta Run remains the oldest in the world and is the home of the St. Moritz Tobogganing Club. It has hosted two Olympic Winter Games and as of 2022 was still in use.
Modern bobsleigh teams compete to complete a downhill route in the fastest times. An aggregate time from several runs is used to determine the winners. The four-man event has been featured since the first Winter Games in 1924 in Chamonix, France. The only exception was the 1960 games in Squaw Valley (now known as Olympic Valley), California, United States, when the organizing committee decided not to build a track to reduce costs. The two-man event was introduced at the 1932 games and a two-woman event was first contested at the 2002 Winter Olympics. The women's monobob event was introduced in the 2022 games.
However, when they began colliding with pedestrians in the icy lanes, alleyways and roads of St. Moritz, this led to the invention of "steering means" for the sleds. The basic bobsleigh (bobsled) consisted of two crestas (skeleton sleds) attached together with a board that had a steering mechanism at the front. The ability to steer meant the sleds could make longer runs through the town. Longer runs also meant higher speeds on curves. Local sentiment about these informal competitions varied, but eventually complaints grew so vociferous that Badrutt had to do something. His solution, in the late 1870s, was to build a basic natural-ice run for his guests outside the town near the small hamlet named Cresta. He took action because he did not want to make enemies in the town, and he had worked hard and invested a lot of time and money in popularizing wintering in St. Moritz, so he was not going to let boredom induce customers not to visit the area.
The International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) was founded in 1923. Men's four-man bobsleigh appeared in the first ever Winter Olympics in 1924, and the men's two-man bobsleigh event was added in 1932. Though not included in the 1960 Winter Olympics, bobsleigh has featured in every Winter Olympics since. Women's bobsleigh competition began in the US in 1983 with two demonstration races in Lake Placid, New York, one held in February and the second held during the World Cup races in March 1983. Two-woman bobsleigh made its Olympic debut at the 2002 Winter Olympics. Bobsleigh is also contested at American, European, and World Cup championships.
Germany and Switzerland have proven the most successful bobsleighing nations, measured by overall success in European, World, World Cup, and Olympic championships. Since the 1990s Germans have dominated in international competition, having won more medals than any other nation. Italy, Austria, Canada and the United States also have strong bobsleigh traditions.
Bobsleighs can attain speeds of , with the reported world record being set on March 3, 2019 at the Whistler World Championships in 2019. BMW IBSF World Championships Bob & Skeleton 2019 Whistler (CAN). Official results ibsf.org Retrieved 19 November 2023
Some bobsleigh tracks are also used for luge and skeleton competition.
Some tracks offer tourists rides in bobsleighs, including those at Sigulda, Latvia; Innsbruck-Igls, Austria; Whistler, British Columbia, Canada; Lillehammer, Norway; Cesana Pariol, Italy; Lake Placid, US; Salt Lake City, Utah, US; and La Plagne, France.
Although bobsleighs once were ridden by five or six, crews were reduced in the 1930s to either two or four people. The four-person crew consists of a pilot, a brakeman, and two pushers. Athletes are selected for their speed and strength, which are necessary to push the sleigh to a competitive speed at the start of the race. Pilots must have the skill, timing, and finesse to steer the sleigh along the path, or "line", that will produce the greatest speed.
In modern bobsleighs, the steering system consists of two metal rings that actuate a pulley system located in the forward cowling that turns the front runners. For example, to turn left, the pilot would pull the left ring. Only subtle steering adjustments are necessary to guide the sled; at speeds up to , anything larger would result in a crash. The pilot does most of the steering, and the brakeman stops the sled after crossing the finish line by pulling the sled's brake lever.
Women compete in women's bobsleigh (which is always two-woman) and men in both two- and four-man competitions. Women were confirmed as being able to compete in any four-"man" bobsleigh event, as from 25 September 2014, either as part of a mixed-sex team or an all-female team. However, because women are on average lighter than men (and thus at a competitive disadvantage in a gravity sport), and because most sliding nations have fewer women able to compete than men, this option has not proved popular with teams.
Prior to the 2020–21 competitive season, monobobs were traditionally constructed on one-piece chassis. Starting with the 2020–21 season, competitors in IBSF-sanctioned races must use articulated (two-section) monobobs manufactured by the IBSF's sole source sled builder, iXent. The sled must weigh a minimum of without the athlete (but including timing equipment and any ballast weights) and a maximum of including the athlete; runners are the same as for two-person bobsleighs. This implies a maximum athlete weight limit of .
Race times are recorded in hundredths of seconds, so even seemingly minor errors – especially those at the beginning, which affect the remainder of the heat – can have a measurable impact on the final race standings.
The men's and women's standings for normal races are calculated over the aggregate of two runs or heats. At the Olympic Winter Games and World Championships, all competitions (for both men and women) consist of four heats.
A significant number of athletes have either died by suicide or died of . Examples include medal-winning bobsledders Eugenio Monti and Pavle Jovanovic, who died by suicide; Steven Holcomb died of an overdose. Since 2013, three North American former bobsledders have taken their lives, another attempted it, and two others died of overdoses; this is far over expectation of the group from chance, as only a few hundred athletes participate seriously in bobsled and other sliding sports such as luge and skeleton at any one time.
skeleton | |||||||
Oberüberl | 1911 | Practice run | 5-man sled | ||||
Karl Gerloff | 1933 | Oberhof | Practice run | 4-man sled | |||
Rudolf Gerloff | 1933 | Oberhof | Practice run | 4-man sled | |||
Reto Capadrutt | 1939 | Cortina d'Ampezzo | Practice run | World Championships 1939 | 4-man sled | ||
Max Houben | 1949 | Lake Placid | Shady corner | Practice run | World Championships 1949 | 2-man sled | |
Alexandru Budișteanu | 1951 | Poiana Brașov | penultimate turn of the track | World University Winter Games 1951 | 4-man sled | ||
Felix Endrich | 1953 | Riessersee | Bayernkurve | Practice run | World Championships 1953 | 4-man sled | |
Moritz Heidegger | 1956 | St. Moritz-Celerina | 2-man sled | ||||
Sergio Zardini | 1966 | Lake Placid | Zig-Zag Curves | Practice run | 4-man sled | ||
Toni Pensperger | 1966 | Cortina d'Ampezzo | Practice run | World Championships 1966 | 4-man sled | ||
Josef Schnellneger | 1970 | Königssee | Practice run | Austria-Cup | 2-man sled | ||
Andrea Clemente | 1970 | Breuil-Cervinia | Finish | 2nd heat | Italy Bob Championship | 4-man sled | |
Luis López | 1971 | Breuil-Cervinia | Practice run | World Championships 1971 | 2-man sled | ||
Giuseppe Soravia Hamburger Abendblatt article, accessed December 2010 | 1980 | Igls | Finish | Practice run | 4-man sled | ||
James Morgan | 1981 | Cortina d'Ampezzo | Finish | 3rd heat | World Championships 1981 | 4-man sled | |
Imants Karlsons | 1982 | Igls | Training session | Training | 2-man sled | ||
Daniel Oaida | 1989 | Altenberg | Curve 4 | Training session | Training | 4-man sled | |
41 | Peter Förster | 1990 | Altenberg | Finish | Training session | Training | 2-man sled |
42 | Yvonne Cernota Stern.de (German) (German) | 2004 | Königssee | Echowand | Training session | Training | 2-woman sled |
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