TNT Sports
Luge track shortened
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Published 14/02/2010 at 00:50 GMT
Olympic organisers shortened the luge track for both men and women as an extra safety precaution, a day after a Georgian slider died in training.
Eurosport
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Training resumed at the Sliding Centre with the men completing two full runs from what had been the women's start, and organisers said the women and doubles events would begin even further down the track.
The measures were taken after 21-year-old Nodar Kumaritashvili, a first-time Olympian, was catapulted off the track in Friday's fatal crash.
Organisers have since raised the walls at the exit of curve 16 where he died and changed the ice profile as preventative measures, despite concluding that there was no indication the accident was caused by any deficiency in the track.
The medals will be decided on Sunday.
"The jury has made a decision to lower the men's competition start to the current women's start," International Luge Federation secretary general Svein Romstad told a news conference.
"Also the technical delegates and jury are currently working with the track management to adjust the women's and doubles starts as a precautionary measure," he said. "As soon as a decision has been made on this, we will inform you."
Romstad said the decision had been taken primarily for emotional reasons, to reassure the shaken sliders after the tragic event.
"The primary concern we have right now is the emotional aspect of it," he added, pointing out that the difference in speeds reached by the men and women from their respective starts was around 10kph.
An FIL spokesman later said that the competitors would now no longer have to negotiate two corners and the steepest part of the track as a result of the start switch.
Kumaritashvili's team mate Levan Gureshidze was among those due to resume training but he missed both runs and it was not immediately clear whether he would have any further involvement in the competition.
The Whistler Sliding Center is acknowledged as the fastest in the world, although an FIL spokesman said there had been 2,500 runs with only a three percent crash rate.
However, athletes have been remarking all week on the speed and technical difficulty of the 1,400 meter track which features corners nicknamed 50-50 and Shiver.
FIL spokesman Wolfgang Harder said earlier in the week, when Manuel Pfister set the fastest recorded luge speed of 154kph, that future tracks would need to be slowed down to protect the safety of athletes.
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