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Tag: FIS Alpine Skiing World Championships

  • Sofia Goggia wins World Cup downhill, closes on season title

    Sofia Goggia wins World Cup downhill, closes on season title

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    Sofia Goggia has raced toward another World Cup downhill title with a fifth win in her dominating season

    ByThe Associated Press

    February 26, 2023, 7:14 AM

    CRANS-MONTANA, Switzerland — Sofia Goggia raced toward another World Cup downhill title with a fifth win in her dominating season on Sunday.

    Goggia raced through lightly falling snow and was fastest on the lower section of the Mont Lachaux course to finish 0.15 seconds ahead of Federica Brignone, her Italy teammate who matched a career-best result in downhill.

    Brignone got some of the best racing conditions as the No. 21 starter, starting 35 minutes after Goggia when the snow had stopped falling and sunshine broke through the clouds to light the slope.

    Laura Gauche wearing the No. 26 bib then placed third, 0.41 seconds behind Goggia, for a first career podium finish. The French racer’s previous best result in downhill was seventh.

    The result was unofficial with lower-ranked racers yet to start.

    Mikaela Shiffrin did not start as she takes a break after the world championships with a massive lead of more than 700 points in the overall World Cup standings. The 27-year-old American is well on track to win a fifth giant crystal globe as the overall season-long champion.

    Goggia’s fifth win in seven World Cup downhills earned 100 race points and extended her lead in the season-long standings to more than 170 over Ilka Štuhec, who was sitting in ninth place.

    With two downhills left — next weekend at Kvitfjell, Norway and March 15 at the final week’s races at Soldeu, Andorra — Goggia needs just a top-10 finish in either race to secure a fourth career crystal globe trophy.

    Goggia’s 22nd career World Cup win came two weeks after she crashed out as favorite at the world championships and was her 17th in downhill. That lifted her into a tie for fourth place in career World Cup wins in the marquee speed discipline. Lindsey Vonn leads with 43 wins.

    Racing immediately after Brignone, Isabella Wright fell when she seemed unbalanced by the shifting terrain. The American slid about 60 meters (yards) down the slope before coming to a stop.

    Romane Miradoli crashed out when her left ski hooked a gate at a sharp turn. The ski detached and she was turned sideways before hitting the safety fences.

    Both racers appeared to be unhurt and skied down to the finish area.

    The start was delayed by more than 30 minutes while fog clouded the upper part of the 2.45-kilometer (1½-mile) course at Crans-Montana.

    The downhill was rescheduled from Saturday when a combination of poor visibility on a lower section and a soft snow surface in the sunshine made racing too dangerous.

    The snow surface was more stable Sunday after a cold night and race-time temperature around minus-4 degrees Celsius (25 Fahrenheit).

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  • Swiss skier Odermatt wins giant slalom, 2nd gold at worlds

    Swiss skier Odermatt wins giant slalom, 2nd gold at worlds

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    COURCHEVEL, France — Swiss skier Marco Odermatt won the men’s giant slalom Friday for his second gold medal at the world championships.

    Odermatt, who is the Olympic giant slalom champion, was second after the opening run but beat Swiss teammate Loic Meillard by 0.32 seconds.

    First-run leader Marco Schwarz of Austria finished 0.40 seconds behind to take the bronze medal.

    “I actually didn’t expect to win,” Odermatt said. “Marco skied so well in the first run. He did some mistakes in the second, that helped me for gold.”

    Many fans were waving Swiss flags in the stands and chanted “Odi, Odi” when Odermatt won.

    “It’s amazing. So many great Swiss fans here, family, friends,” Odermatt said. “I came to the finish and I had to count a little bit. Yeah, two medals today for us.”

    Odermatt also won gold in downhill five days ago. He had not won a medal in his eight previous world championship races.

    Odermatt has been dominating the giant slalom on the World Cup circuit, winning four of the five events he competed in this season. The Swiss skier is on his way to successfully defending the overall World Cup title he won last year.

    Schwarz won the combined title at the worlds two years ago and was the 2020-21 World Cup slalom champion but has yet to win a top-level giant slalom.

    Schwarz won bronze in giant slalom at the worlds two years ago but only got his first World Cup podium in the discipline in the last race before the worlds, in Schladming, Austria in January.

    “Overall I am satisfied. I had a couple of mistakes in my second run that you cannot make on this level,” said the Austrian, who led Odermatt by 0.58 seconds after the opening run. “The pressure was a bit more than usual. I tried to keep the focus and I managed to do that well. Odi has been dominating the GS for two years now, so you have to acknowledge that.”

    Austrian skiers have yet to win an event at this year’s championships, two years after the team led the medals table at the worlds in Italy with five golds.

    The gold medal awarded in the men’s giant slalom was the 400th in world championships history. The first gold was won by British skier Esme Mackinnon in women’s slalom at the 1931 worlds in Switzerland.

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  • Shiffrin wins gold, thanks former coach after surprise split

    Shiffrin wins gold, thanks former coach after surprise split

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    MERIBEL, France (AP) — Mikaela Shiffrin covered her mouth with her fluorescent orange mittens and then collapsed to the snow, still breathing heavily as her entire body pulsated from the exertion of her gold medal-winning run.

    What a relief after a hectic week for the American skier.

    Having endured a small protest aimed at her by environmentalists who mistakenly thought she was using a helicopter for training, Shiffrin’s team was thrown into disarray two days before the giant slalom at the world championships when her longtime coach, Mike Day, left suddenly when Shiffrin told him she wanted to change her staff at the end of the season.

    “It’s been definitely some high levels of stress these days,” Shiffrin said. “It was very, very difficult today to keep the focus and keep the intensity on the right level.”

    Day had coached Shiffrin since 2016 and was with her for 65 of her 85 World Cup wins. Shiffrin needs just one more win to match Ingemar Stenmark’s overall record of 86 victories, having already broken Lindsey Vonn’s women’s mark of 82 wins.

    While wins at worlds don’t count toward the World Cup totals, that was the last thing on Shiffrin’s mind Thursday.

    “One thing I really want to say is just, ‘Thank you,’ to Mike for seven years of — I can’t even say helping me — he’s been such an integral part of my team and being there to support me through some of the most incredible moments in my career and some of the most challenging moments of my career and also my life,” Shiffrin said, her voice cracking with emotion.

    Shiffrin has now won two straight medals after taking silver in super-G, ending an unfortunate run in major championship races. She didn’t finish three of her five individual races at last year’s Beijing Olympics and didn’t win a medal despite enormous expectations — then also didn’t finish her first race at these worlds, when she straddled three gates from the finish of the combined to throw away what would have surely been gold.

    Nobody on Shiffrin’s personal team, which is also led by her mother, Eileen, who also coaches her, expected Day to react the way that he did.

    “It’s just a little bit sad how it came down,” Shiffrin said, adding that she was hoping to give Day “the time and the notice” to figure out his own plans before the end of the season but that his decision to leave immediately was “difficult for all of us to imagine” after “being such a tight group, really a family.”

    The entire skiing circuit is like a family, too, with rivals on the slopes often sleeping in the same Alpine chalets and sharing dinners as they travel together all winter on what is known as the “White Circus.”

    That tight-knit bond that the skiers feel for each other was evident when Federica Brignone and Ragnhild Mowinckel rushed over to congratulate Shiffrin while she was still lying on the snow, then jumped on top of her.

    Brignone finished a mere 0.12 seconds behind Shiffrin to take the silver, adding to the Italian’s gold in combined, and Mowinckel of Norway finished 0.22 behind for the bronze.

    French skier Tessa Worley, who was second after the opening run, slid on her inside ski and fell in her second run.

    “I didn’t want to go for a medal, I wanted to go for the win,” said Worley, a two-time giant slalom world champion who had the added pressure of skiing in front of her home fans.

    Brignone spent four days at home in bed with a fever before this race and has also been mourning former teammate Elena Fanchini, who died last week of a tumor at age 37.

    “It’s also been an emotional time for us,” Brignone said.

    Shiffrin won the giant slalom at the 2018 Olympics but this was her first world title in the discipline, making her only the fourth female skier to win world titles in four different disciplines, after previously winning four golds in slalom, one in super-G and the combined gold two years ago.

    It raises Shiffrin’s tally to seven world titles and 13 medals overall from 16 career world championship races. She’s in second place behind German skier Christl Cranz on the all-time list for the most individual medals won by a woman at the worlds. Cranz won 15 medals in the 1930s.

    “Coaches are important but Shiffrin is still Shiffrin,” said super-G champion Marta Bassino, who finished fifth. “She wasn’t depending (only) on (Day). Let’s not take anything away from him or the other coaches, with all due respect, but look at her.”

    Nina O’Brien posted the second-fastest time in the final run and improved from 21st to 11th position, while American teammate Paula Moltzan spun around and missed a gate halfway through her first run and did not finish. Moltzan fractured her hand in Tuesday’s team event, which the U.S. team won. Shiffrin did not compete in that event.

    “The hand is as good as it was going to feel so I’m not disappointed with that,” said Moltzan, who had her glove taped to her ski pole during her run. “I think I just misjudged my turn a tiny bit and came inside a bit and couldn’t recover.”

    The men’s giant slalom is scheduled for Friday then Shiffrin’s last race at worlds is the slalom — her best event — on Saturday.

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    Willemsen reported from Vienna.

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  • Swiss skier Odermatt beats Kilde for downhill gold at worlds

    Swiss skier Odermatt beats Kilde for downhill gold at worlds

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    COURCHEVEL, France — Swiss skier Marco Odermatt won gold in the men’s downhill Sunday for his first career world championships medal.

    Odermatt had a flawless run on the demanding L’Eclipse course to beat Aleksander Aamodt Kilde by 0.48 seconds as the Norwegian added to his silver from Thursday’s super-G.

    Cameron Alexander finished 0.89 behind to take the bronze for Canada’s second medal of the worlds after teammate James Crawford had won the super-G.

    Odermatt let out a few screams after posting the fastest time. He had not won a medal in eight previous starts at senior world championships, after winning five golds at the 2018 junior worlds.

    “It was definitely something I’d never felt before, this scream at the finish,” Odermatt said. “Also, those two minutes during Aleks’ run, I was shaking all over my body like never before.”

    Odermatt is the defending overall World Cup champion and is dominating the circuit again this season, but had not won a downhill race before.

    His gold medal came three days after he finished fourth in the super-G, an event in which he was heavily favored after winning four of this season’s six World Cup races.

    “The fourth place from three days ago makes this gold even nicer,” Odermatt said.

    Super-G winner Crawford stood third for a while in Sunday’s race before his time was beaten by his teammate Alexander and by Austria’s Marco Schwarz, who finished four-hundredths of a second off the podium in fourth.

    It’s the first time since 2015 that the Austrian men’s team failed to medal in the marquee event of the world championships.

    Defending champion Vincent Kriechmayr lost his chance of a medal as he struggled in the Trou Noir (Black Hole), where racers land a jump in the dark shade and cannot see the tracks and bumps of the course.

    “It was a good run but you have to race error-free here, and I didn’t manage to do that. All in all, just not good enough,” Kriechmayr said. “Odermatt had the perfect run, for sure.”

    The start of the L’Eclipse course is in the sun, but racers soon enter a lengthy shaded middle part through a forest before coming out in the sun again for the finish.

    On another bright day in the French Alps, the sunshine didn’t affect the race like it had done in the women’s downhill Saturday, when the sun started beaming down on the Roc de Fer course in Meribel and seemed to break down the course and slow the later starters. Odermatt’s victory made it a Swiss downhill double after Jasmine Flury won the women’s race.

    The race was interrupted for 20 minutes after Brodie Seger awkwardly landed a jump and apparently hurt his right knee. The Canadian had to be taken off the hill on a stretcher and was flown to hospital by helicopter.

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