GENEVA — Call it a case of bad timing, in Switzerland of all places.
In a nation renowned for precision clocks and Alpine skiing, Swiss timekeepers of a World Cup race got things so wrong that the results of a women’s downhill had to be altered three days after it was run — with two skiers knocked off the podium as a result.
The fiasco stemmed from faulty finish-line timing, which had already caused organizers to amend the results list once on Saturday shortly after the race ended.
Having to change it a second time left both the International Ski Federation (FIS) and Swiss Timing — the sports industry leader tied to luxury watch brands Longines and Omega, the Olympic Games timekeeper — facing criticism and ridicule from some athletes.
“Is FIS a joke????” French skier Julien Lizeroux wrote on Twitter after seeing the revised result.
The governing body accepted its share of the blame Tuesday in a statement confirming the amended result.
“FIS and Swiss Timing would like to apologize to all competitors, teams, media and Alpine Skiing followers for this unfortunate incident,” the Switzerland-based organization said.
The problems started on a sunbathed Saturday morning at Crans-Montana when the electronic clock failed to stop for four racers crossing the finish line.
The four — all Swiss, wearing start bib numbers 2, 6, 12 and 27 — were all later given times calculated manually.
While the race winner, Olympic champion Sofia Goggia of Italy, was unaffected by the problems, Swiss racers Joana Haehlen and Lara Gut-Behrami were initially placed second and fourth, respectively.
Soon after the race ended — and third-place Nicole Schmidhofer of Austria had taken part in a finish-area ceremony — new manual times were given to Haehlen, who was still second, and Gut-Behrami, who was upgraded to third.
But between Saturday and Tuesday, and after an Austrian team objection, the manual times were reevaluated and found to be wrong.
FIS said Tuesday that recalculating the four Swiss racers’ runs had now added 0.13 seconds to their new times, dropping Haehlen and Gut-Behrami dropped to fourth and sixth. For Haehlen, that meant losing her first career podium finish.
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