Vancouver Now - FEBRUARY 12 to 28, VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA

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Luge designer recommends raising walls

Last Updated: Saturday, February 13, 2010 | 6:47 PM ET

Track workers scrape Saturday at the Whistler Sliding Centre. Track workers scrape Saturday at the Whistler Sliding Centre. (Michael Sohn/Associated Press)

The man who designed the Olympic luge course on which a Georgian slider was killed says he is surprised by the death and track walls may have to be raised, an opinion shared by a three-time Olympic champion.

"We've already designed six Olympic courses," designer Udo Gurgel told Sport-Bild magazine's online edition. "No one has been thrown from the track before."

Nodar Kumaritashvili crashed at nearly 145 kilometres per hour coming out of the final turn in training Friday at the Vancouver Games.

Gurgel said the usual speed at the finish is under 120 km/h, and "normally every slide should be under control. He must have been shot out like a bullet.

"Now one should think how the course can be altered. One could raise the wall at the exit by between 40 to 50 centimetres," he said.

Georg Hackl, Germany's former three-time luge champion, agreed.

"They have to put high wooden boards there, then the luger doesn't fly off but hits the plank, falls back to the track and slides down," Hackl told the online edition of the Tagesspiegel newspaper.

Hackl said a small driving error and not the speed of the track was to blame for the tragedy.

"It's a track that's significantly faster than any other tracks that we know," Hackl told the newspaper.

"At the beginning, it was a great challenge for the athletes. But it's their job to master these demands. And they have. They all have the track under control, including the Georgian. Such a tiny driving error, it can happen.

"He simply was too late coming into the final curve," he added. "What happened was something that no one in the luge world could have imagined possible."

Hackl said luge specialists assume that the competitors who crash will remain on the track and not fly off.

"In luge, accidents are part of our daily routine. In the run before, Armin Zoeggeler, the world's best luger, had a spectacular crash. That's normal. You stand up, shake yourself and ride again.

"We assume that those who crash will stay on the track and we don't pay too much attention to the structures outside the track."

Hackl said the decision to have the men begin from the women's start was made "to please those who don't know anything about the sport."

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Germany may have owned the podium in luge at the Vancouver Olympics, but the competition will always be associated with the tragic death of Georgia's Nodar Kumaritashvili.
Future of Whistler track uncertain
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IOC boss calls for safer track in 2014
International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge has asked for a safer sliding track at the 2014 games in Sochi, Russia.
Georgian luger dies in crash
Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili died Friday in a horrific crash in an Olympic training run at Whistler, just hours before the opening ceremony.
Funeral held in Georgia for Olympic luger
Georgians hoping to watch one of the nation's most promising young athletes compete in the Vancouver Olympics gathered instead to mourn him Saturday, more than a week after the luger died in a practice run at the Whistler Sliding Centre.

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