Friedrich leads 4-man world bobsleigh title race as weather takes its toll on Lake Placid track

Germany's Francesco Friedrich is well on his way to another world bobsled title. And that was about the only predictable development in the four-man world championship race that started Friday at Mount Van Hoevenberg.

Canada's Melissa Lotholz, Leah Walkeden are 9th after 2 heats of 2-woman bobsleigh

Four male bobsleigh athletes push sled on the track at the start of the race.
Francesco Friedrich, Matthias Sommer, Alexander Schuller and Felix Straub of Germany compete during the 4-Man Bobsleigh Race Heat 2 on day five of the 2025 IBSF World Championships at Mt Van Hoevenberg on Friday in Lake Placid, N.Y. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Germany's Francesco Friedrich is well on his way to another world bobsleigh title.

And that was about the only predictable development in the four-man world championship race that started Friday at Mount Van Hoevenberg.

The second heat of the four-heat race was cancelled — after it had been run in its entirety — Friday because of track conditions getting worse as the air temperature climbed quickly, the International Bobsled and Skeleton Federation said.

That decision came after Germany's Johannes Lochner had one of the runners attached to his sled damaged by sliding through bare spots on the track. He also had damage to the front of his sled from something that happened as he jumped in at the start, which wouldn't have been caused by any track condition issue.

Germany successfully appealed and Lochner could have taken his second run again, but the jury decided that warmer air wouldn't have led to that re-run having a fair result. So, the entire heat was cancelled.

"The competition will resume (Saturday) as planned with heats 3 and 4," the IBSF said.

Weather-permitting, that is.

It was about -4 C when racing started Friday and climbed to about 8 C when the four-man event was done for the morning. And the weather forecast for Saturday calls for even warmer air.

Friedrich — a 15-time world champion, with nine two-man golds and four two-man golds on his resume along with two more Olympic golds in both disciplines — was going to be the leader anyway. His one-run time is 54.23 seconds, with Lochner (54.52) second and Britain's Brad Hall (54.54) third.

Had the second run counted, Hall would have been second, with Germany's Adam Ammour third, Frank Del Duca of the U.S. fourth, Kris Horn of the U.S. in fifth and Lochner in sixth. Instead, it's officially Friedrich, Lochner and Hall in the top three spots, followed by Ammour, Del Duca and then Horn and South Korea's Jinsu Kim tied for sixth.

"We've prepared. We're ready. It's just time to make consistent runs," Del Duca said.

The four-man race is scheduled to resume at 8 a.m. Saturday, followed by the final two runs of women's bobsleigh in the early afternoon.

Women's bobsleigh

The leader board after Day 1 of the two-woman bobsleigh championship looks like this: Germany, Germany, Germany, United States, United States, United States.

Laura Nolte and Deborah Levi finished their two runs in 1 minute, 52.77 seconds, good enough for a lead of 0.23 seconds over Kim Kalicki and Leonie Fiebig. Lisa Buckwitz and Kira Lipperheide capped off the German grip on the top three spots Friday, finishing another two-tenths of a second off the lead.

WATCH | Canada's Lotholz, Walkeden sit 9th in 2-woman bobsleigh at worlds:

Canada's Lotholz, Walkeden sit 9th in 2-woman bobsleigh at worlds

10 hours ago
Duration 3:20
Melissa Lotholz from Barrhead, Alta., and teammate Leah Walkeden of Ardrossan, Alta., are in ninth place after two heats of the 2-woman bobsleigh event at the IBSF World Championships in Lake Placid, N.Y.

Germany is looking to sweep the two-woman medals at the world championships for the second straight year. A year ago, Buckwitz drove to the win, with Nolte second and Kalicki third.

World monobob champion Kaysha Love led the American contingent on Day 1, after she and Jazmine Jones were fourth in 1:53.53. Kaillie Humphries and Emily Renna are fifth for the U.S., with Elana Meyers Taylor and Lolo Jones sixth.

All three U.S. sleds still have a medal shot on Saturday.

"Push hard. Drive fast," Humphries said. "That's always the strategy."