Aleksander Aamodt Kilde airlifted from course after downhill crash at Wengen


 

Downhill star Aleksander Aamodt Kilde influenced hard with the walls inside sight of the satisfaction in the long Lauberhorn race on the planet Cup on Saturday and appeared to have harmed his right leg before being moved to an emergency place

For the second consecutive day at Wengen, a previous men's general World Cup champion was moved by helicopter from Switzerland's most celebrated ski-setting

He had expansive treatment as he lay level close to a definitive goal and race laborers tied his right leg over the knee. A helicopter appeared in the fulfillment region to divert Kilde to an emergency office.


Racers hurt at Wengen - a raised ski resort appeared at by a stuffed tooth railroad that starts lower down the mountain - are routinely gone to a middle in Interlaken.


Kilde was running in a speed occasion for the third consecutive day at Wengen - a strange interest in the men's Reality Cup plan in light of how a decline was dropped last month at Beaver Stream, Colorado.


The 31-year-old Norwegian had been battling a disorder before setting third in a more confined downhill on Thursday and third again in a super-G on Friday

It's three days of hustling here and we wrap up with the longest (race). Three days is truly hard genuinely," said Sarrazin, who had the second-speediest time behind pioneer Marco Odermatt.


Kilde was disproportionate on his skis pushing toward the last winding S-outlined part nearly two minutes, and 10 seconds into a tiring run, then, made another blunder entering the left-hand change down into the satisfaction.

He was sent off his skis and twisted in mid-air before crashing in reverse with course-side success walls.


Kilde has been a top downhill racer for a surprisingly long time, with two victories in the marquee discipline at Wengen. He is a deceive chief in the season-long World Cup downhill standings.


The race Saturday was being driven by Swiss star Odermatt with Sarrazin in next. They were one and a half seconds quicker than any opponent.


Odermatt put his hands to his head when he saw Kilde's accident around 80 meters (yards) from where he remained in the course-side pioneer's case

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