Raceline by James Christie
Nice n' icy please from Fall 2009
Canada is best known as the land of
hockey, but at the Winter Olympics
there’s another indisputable
marquee event—the downhill alpine race.
And Canadians like their speed courses to live
up to the description of being lightning fast.
In October, four full months before the 2010
Vancouver Games open, the snow cannons
started firing the icy base layer at Whistler
for the Dave Murray Olympic run, which will
be the proving ground for the men’s Olympic
downhill champ and serve as part of the
women’s downhill course. (The new women’s
course combines Dave Murray with portions of
Wildcard, Jimmy’s Joker and Franz’s Run.)
More than $27 million has been spent
in modifications down 3.1 km at Whistler-
Blackcomb, which will also be host to super-G,
giant slalom, slalom and super-combined
races. Mark your calendars now, the men’s
downhill kicks off the first Saturday of the
Games, the morning of February 13.
“The Dave Murray course itself is not
dramatically different. Most of the $27 million
has been spent on snowmaking,” says Pete
Bosinger, the 1988 Olympian who is sport
manager for alpine events for the Olympic
organizing committee VANOC.
As well as doubling snowmaking capacity,
officials have installed new timing and data
infrastructures, installed new infrastructure to
support safety nets and doubled the width of
the finish corral for the Olympics.
There will be major challenges for the
Olympic field, however. The Dave Murray
course has the reputation of being one of the
longest in the world, a hard test on the legs.
The last World Cup skiers faced 33 turns or
directional changes and Bosinger says they’ll
encounter a similar test in 2010. The course is
shorter than it was in 1989, when Rob Boyd
became the first Canadian to win a World Cup
race on home snow, but the vertical drop from
start to finish is still about 860 metres and
the average slope gradient is 28 degrees.

Dave Murray, for whom the men’s Olympic
run was named, died of skin cancer in 1989—
far too young at 37. He was one of the four
originals who branded the Canadian ski style
as daring and risk-laden. (The Crazy Canucks
were Ken Read, Steve Podborski, Dave Irwin
and Dave Murray.)
The men’s Olympic run is a test worthy
of the Crazy Canuck legacy. It has seen 13
World Cup downhill and super-G races over
the past 20 years, the most memorable for
Canadians being the 1989 World Cup win by a
young Rob Boyd, now a coach of the women’s
speed team. His name still is attached to the
Whistler run. One of the prominent features
identified by Bosinger is called “Boyd’s Chin.”
Racers reach speeds of more than 120
km an hour—not unusual on the World Cup
circuit, but high-speed navigation will be
a challenge on an Olympic surface that’s
“different from the kind you and I might
face on a sunny Sunday,” says Bosinger, who
also has coached the national teams for
Canada and the United States. “It will be a
classic downhill, with high speeds, flats and
technical sections”—not unlike classics like
Kvitfjell in Norway or Chamonix in France. “But we’ll increase the density of the snow. It
will be harder snow, created with the intent
of building a racetrack. From the beginning,
we’ll be making snow with more moisture
(water) in it. It will be groomed immediately
by snowcats, then compacted. Water will be
added on the women’s courses, too.”
One year before the Games open, Erik
Guay of Mont Tremblant, Quebec, praised the
Dave Murray course at the World Cup race
that served as an Olympic test, saying it
has “a little bit of everything...everything a
downhiller wants and everything a downhiller
looks for.”
Liechtenstein’s Marco Buechel lauded the
Dave Murray Downhill as a “true Olympic
course. Whoever wins here at the Olympic
Games will be the true champion. I can
say nothing against this course. It has
everything...it’s just amazing to ski here. But
it is very, very difficult.”
Guay, John Kucera of Calgary, Manuel
Osborne-Paradis of North Vancouver and
Jan Hudec of Calgary—if he recovers from
a knee injury—are all medal threats for
Canada in the Olympic speed events. Alpine
Canada’s goal is to win at least three medals
at the 2010 Games. Guay wasn’t three-years-old
when Edi Podivinsky placed 3rd in the
downhill at the 1994 Games in Lillehammer,
Norway—the last Canadian to win an Olympic
skiing medal.