Sabtu, 14 Mei 2016

Luge Olympic Tickets For Uk,usa And Canada Fans

In the alpine regions of Austria, Italy and Switzerland luge Olympic is also considered a family sport with many luge tracks all over the region.
Traditionally most of these tracks do not offer any lifts or other technical help – you are supposed to walk up the mountain, pulling or carrying your own luge (this may also explain why locals like this sport so much – only few tourists do this).

Luge Tickets, like the skeleton, and the bobsled, originated in the health-spa town of St Moritz, Switzerland, in the mid-to-late nineteenth century, through the endeavours of hotel entrepreneur Caspar Badrutt. Badrutt successfully sold the idea of winter resorting, as well as rooms with food, drink, and activities. His more adventurous English guests began adapting delivery boys’ sleds for recreation, which led to collisions with pedestrians as they sped down the lanes and alleys of the village. This had two outcomes: in the short term the guests began to devise methods of steering the sleds, and so invented the skeleton (head first, prone), the luge (feet first, supine), and the two- and four-man bobsleighs.

In the long term, in the interests of pedestrian safety, he built a special track for his guests’ activities — the world’s first “half-pipe”, in about 1870. The track is still in use today; it has been used as a venue in two Olympiads, and is one of the few natural weather tracks that do not depend on artificial refrigeration. Its success eventually enabled Badrutt to build the Palace Hotel; he was able to retain the popular Krup Hotel, which catered for different clientèle and brought in competition as Alpine winter tourism increased in popularity.

The first organized meeting of the sport took place in 1883 in Switzerland. In 1913, the Internationale Schlittensportverband or International Sled Sports Federation, was founded in Dresden (Germany). This body governed the sport until 1935, when it was incorporated in the Fédération Internationale de Bobsleigh et de Tobogganing (FIBT, International Bobsleigh and Tobogganing Federation). After it had been decided that luge would replace the sport of skeleton at the Olympic Luge Games, the first World Championships in the sport were held in 1955 in Oslo (Norway). In 1957, the Fédération Internationale de Luge de Course (FIL, International Luge Federation) is founded. Luge events were first included in the Olympic Winter Games in 1964.

Artificial Tracks Olympic Luge have specially designed and constructed banked curves plus walled-in straights. Most tracks are artificially refrigerated, but artificial tracks without artificial cooling also exist (for example, St. Moritz). Tracks tend to be very smooth.
The athletes ride in an aerodynamic and flat position on the sled, keep their heads low to minimise air resistance. The sled is steered mainly with the feet by applying pressure on the runners. It takes a precise mix of shifting body weight, applying pressure with feet and rolling the shoulders. There are also handles for minor adjustments. They race at speeds averaging from 120–160 km/h around high banked curves while experiencing a centripetal pull of up to 7G. Men’s Singles have their start locations near where the bobsled and skeleton competitors start at most tracks while both the Doubles and Women’s Singles competition have their starthouse located further down the track. Artificial track Luge is the fastest and most agile sledging sport.

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