Ski circuit sees air bags as safety solution

GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN, Germany (AP) — A complicated air bag system could be the solution to the recent spate of head injuries in skiing.
The International Ski Federation has entered into radical talks with Italian manufacturer Dainese to develop a way of curbing career-threatening injuries in the sport.
Three-time defending overall World Cup champion Lindsey Vonn recently pulled out of the world championships to recuperate from a mild concussion, having fallen on her head in training two weeks ago.
Vonn's fall was tame compared to three nearly identical crashes on the feared Streif course over the last four years in Kitzbuehel, Austria.
In 2008, American downhiller Scott Macartney suffered brain injuries and was kept in an induced coma after smashing his head on the icy slope following a crash at the final jump. The next year, Daniel Albrecht of Switzerland suffered life-threatening brain and lung injuries after a crash in the same exact spot.
Both Macartney and Albrecht recovered and returned to World Cup competition, but Austrian skier Hans Grugger is still hospitalized following a crash last month in the Hahnenkamm race, which resulted in emergency brain surgery.
The FIS is convinced that no helmet light enough for ski racing could prevent brain injuries after such high-speed crashes, and that's why it has turned its attention to air bags.
Dainese has already developed a successful air bag system for motorcycle racing, but figuring out when to deploy a safety system for a skier heading toward the fences is proving tougher.
In motorcycling, the system ignites when the body leaves the bike with a forward rotation, whereas in skiing the exact moment when a racer loses complete control varies from one crash to another.
FIS men's race director Guenter Hujara suggested one possible indicator for release could come when a racer's leg is raised over his head. He then explained why that wouldn't work, saying he has watched five video sequences where Bode Miller — one of the most unconventional skiers on the circuit — raised his leg over his head and then recovered.
"We are very eager to get all the data to find the algorithm which defines this moment when all the forces are overloading the system of the ski racer," Hujara said. "If we know exactly when this moment exists, then we can install systems protecting the head, neck, shoulder, back, knee and maybe also start an ignition where the binding releases to get rid of the skis.
"It's kind of a visionary project, but because it's already existing in another sport we are very eager to follow up and what we have already is very promising," Hujara said, adding that introducing the system is likely at least two years away.
In coordination with the University of Salzburg, the FIS's Injury Surveillance System (ISS) has been studying ski racing injuries since January 2006, and is also currently researching safety solutions involving course setting, snow conditions and equipment.
Two-time overall World Cup winner Aksel Lund Svindal, who had a gruesome crash in 2007 at Beaver Creek, Colorado, supports the air bag research but also suggests looking into less complicated solutions.
"The fact is we don't really ski on snow a lot — we ski on ice, so are the helmets classified for impact on the snow surface or ice surface?" Svindal said. "And maybe the suits should be made by a protection supplier (rather) than just by a clothing supplier?"
American downhiller Steven Nyman doesn't believe an air bag system will work.
"Everything is so sudden in ski racing. I don't understand what will happen with an air bag system," he said.
"The biggest problem, I think, is the skis are so wide," Nyman added. "They changed them to wider skis, saying it's safer, and I don't think it's safer at all. Because you have more leverage and they bounce a lot more, they're not as smooth. Think of a hockey skate where the blade under your foot is really smooth and solid. Here it's wide and it's constantly wanting to go away."
Nyman would also like to see fewer turns on courses.
"I think downhill needs to be more downhill," he said. "I feel like they're trying to turn it to control our speed so we don't crash, but we're more fatigued, hence more crashes."
But changes don't come easy in skiing — just ask Hujara, who says many racers are still not aware of rule changes allowing athletes to wear protective padding covering virtually any part of their body.
"We saw it this year when the first racers started to use shin and knee protectors, it became an issue. But it's been permitted for three years," Hujara said. "The racers do not like to change. They do not like to change boots. They do not like to change underwear. They do not like to change protectors."
But something has got to change, which the Canadian team realizes after it has been hit by an unusually high number of injuries lately — part of the reason it didn't win a single medal in Alpine skiing at its home Olympics in Vancouver last year.
"Right now, it's quite difficult for parents to send their young kids into the sport," said Canada Alpine director Patrick Riml, adding that a safety symposium has been scheduled in the country for later this year.
Safety issues, of course, are not new to skiing. Austrian racer Ulrike Maier died from injuries following a crash in Garmisch in 1994.
"The bottom line is that Alpine ski racing involves speed and courage, therefore also some residual risk," said FIS women's race director Atle Skaardal, a two-time super-G world champion. "However, we are doing our utmost to create the safest possible frames for our sport."
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.