Alpine Ski World Cup / Records
This article lists the records set in the Alpine Ski World Cup . Active racers are shown in bold in the tables.
Records
Crystal balls
- Men's
- The Austrian Marcel Hirscher won the overall World Cup ("large crystal ball") eight times - Hirscher achieved these eight victories in a row. Marc Girardelli , who started for Luxembourg , achieved five overall victories, the Italian Gustav Thöni , the Swiss Pirmin Zurbriggen and the Austrian Hermann Maier each won four times .
- The Swiss Pirmin Zurbriggen was the only skier so far to win the overall ranking as well as four of the five discipline rankings ("small crystal ball") in one season ( 1986/87 : Downhill, Super-G, Giant Slalom, Combined, Overall World Cup), but back then it was for the Alpine Combined no crystal ball awarded.
- Marcel Hirscher is the men's record holder with 20 crystal balls (8 overall, 6 giant slalom, 6 slalom).
- Ladies
- The Austrian Annemarie Moser-Pröll won the overall World Cup six times, five of them in a row (the first three overall victories as Annemarie Pröll )
- The US-American Lindsey Vonn was the first athlete to win four crystal balls in one season (twice in total [ 2009/10 and 2011/12 ]).
- The Slovenian Tina Maze won the overall ranking and three other discipline rankings in 2012/13 (no ball was awarded for the super combination), in the other two disciplines downhill and slalom she took second place.
- The US-American Mikaela Shiffrin won the overall ranking as well as three discipline ratings (slalom, giant slalom and super-G) in 2018/19 .
- Lindsey Vonn holds the record with 20 crystal balls (4 overall, 8 downhill, 5 super-G, 3 combination) for the women.
Overall World Cup
Below are all the winners of the overall World Cup.
Men's | |||
---|---|---|---|
rank | athlete | Number of victories | Seasons |
1. | Marcel Hirscher | 8th | 2011/12, 2012/13, 2013/14, 2014/15, 2015/16, 2016/17, 2017/18, 2018/19 |
2. | Marc Girardelli | 5 | 1984/85, 1985/86, 1988/89, 1990/91, 1992/93 |
3. | Hermann Maier | 4th | 1997/98, 1999/2000, 2000/01, 2003/04 |
Gustav Thöni | 1970/71, 1971/72, 1972/73, 1974/75 | ||
Pirmin Zurbriggen | 1983/84, 1986/87, 1987/88, 1989/90 | ||
6th | Phil Mahre | 3 | 1980/81, 1981/82, 1982/83 |
Ingemar Stenmark | 1975/76, 1976/77, 1977/78 | ||
8th. | Stephan Eberharter | 2 | 2001/02, 2002/03 |
Jean-Claude Killy | 1967, 1968 | ||
Leave kjus | 1995/96, 1998/99 | ||
Bode Miller | 2004/05, 2007/08 | ||
Karl Schranz | 1968/69, 1969/70 | ||
Aksel Lund Svindal | 2006/07, 2008/09 | ||
14th | Kjetil André Aamodt | 1 | 1993/94 |
Paul Accola | 1991/92 | ||
Luc Alphand | 1996/97 | ||
Piero Gros | 1973/74 | ||
Carlo Janka | 2009/10 | ||
Aleksander Aamodt Kilde | 2019/20 | ||
Ivica Kostelić | 2010/11 | ||
Peter Lüscher | 1978/79 | ||
Benjamin Raich | 2005/06 | ||
Alberto Tomba | 1994/95 | ||
Andreas Wenzel | 1979/80 | ||
Status: end of season 2019/20 |
Ladies | |||
---|---|---|---|
rank | sportswoman | Number of victories | Seasons |
1. | Annemarie Pröll / Moser-Pröll | 6th | 1970/71, 1971/72, 1972/73, 1973/74, 1974/75, 1978/79 |
2. | Lindsey Vonn | 4th | 2007/08, 2008/09, 2009/10, 2011/12 |
3. | Janica Kostelić | 3 | 2000/01, 2002/03, 2005/06 |
Petra Kronberger | 1989/90, 1990/91, 1991/92 | ||
Vreni Schneider | 1988/89, 1993/94, 1994/95 | ||
Mikaela Shiffrin | 2016/17, 2017/18, 2018/19 | ||
7th | Michela Figini | 2 | 1984/85, 1987/88 |
Nancy Greene | 1967, 1968 | ||
Erika Hess | 1981/82, 1983/84 | ||
Anja Pärson | 2003/04, 2004/05 | ||
Katja Seizinger | 1995/96, 1997/98 | ||
Anna Veith | 2013/14, 2014/15 | ||
Maria Walliser | 1985/86, 1986/87 | ||
Hanni Wenzel | 1977/78, 1979/80 | ||
15th | Federica Brignone | 1 | 2019/20 |
Michaela Dorfmeister | 2001/02 | ||
Michèle Jacot | 1968/69 | ||
Gertrud Gabl | 1969/70 | ||
Renate Götschl | 1999/2000 | ||
Lara Gut-Behrami | 2015/16 | ||
Nicole Hosp | 2006/07 | ||
Tina Maze | 2012/13 | ||
Tamara McKinney | 1982/83 | ||
Alexandra Meissnitzer | 1998/99 | ||
Rosi Mittermaier | 1975/76 | ||
Lise-Marie Morerod | 1976/77 | ||
Marie-Theres Nadig | 1980/81 | ||
Maria Riesch | 2010/11 | ||
Anita Wachter | 1992/93 | ||
Pernilla Wiberg | 1996/97 | ||
Status: end of season 2019/20 |
Wins of the season
Status: end of season 2019/20. Athletes in bold are still active; the season in bold is not over yet.
Points records
The following table shows how many points were enough to win the overall standings. The points for second or third places in the overall ranking are not considered here. B. Lindsey Vonn achieved 1725 points in second place in 2010/11, clearly surpassing her third-best result in this list and was in ninth place ahead of Alexandra Meissnitzer. Kjetil Andre Aamodt had in the seasons 1998/99 and 1999/2000 for his second places with 1442 and 1440 more points than in his only overall victory in 1993/94 (1392 points) and Benjamin Raich had 2004/05 for his second place in overall score 1454 points, more than for his only overall victory in 2005/06 (1410 points); meanwhile both are no longer in the top ten .
Status: end of season 2019/20
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- Remarks
- In the 1991/92 season there was a change in the allocation of points . Until then, only the best 10, later the best 15 runners in a World Cup race received points, the winner 25 points each; since then, the best 30 runners have received points and the winner 100 points.
- A separate table for the period before 1991/92 would not really be meaningful because the regulations were changed several times. So could z. B. in the very first World Cup year (1967) Jean-Claude Killy achieved the maximum possible points at that time; but since only the three best results per discipline (downhill, slalom and giant slalom) were counted, the 3 x 75 = 225 points achieved for this could often be exceeded by subsequent winners of the overall ranking, as more results were credited to them.
- Marcel Hirscher was able to place four times in the men's top ten. Lindsey Vonn was placed in the top ten three times for women.
Podium places
Status: end of season 2019/20
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Age records
The age limits have shifted slightly upwards. Premature career endings happen / happened mainly because of injuries or a drop in performance, here or there also because of achieving a "highlight" (e.g. Olympic or world championship victory or medal).
Men's
Especially in the men's area (again with the “speed drivers”) there are many more “oldies” than in earlier times.
- Especially Didier Cuche and Marco Büchel have set up various age records in connection with achieved victories and podium.
- Patrik Järyn (born April 16, 1969 - career end March 2012) is to be mentioned as the oldest podium driver (December 19, 2008) and because he has exceeded the "40-year limit".
- Although Hubertus von Hohenlohe is the front runner, only once a 5th place in a combination (out of five classifieds) was his “best result”.
- As the oldest winner of a men's slalom, Mario Matt is noted on December 15, 2013.
With regard to a very early retirement of well-known runners (especially winning runners), it was u. a. Jean-Claude Killy , who contested his last race less than five months before his 25th birthday in April 1968. Similarly, Carlo Senoner (also 1968) or Alfred Matt (1973), as this age applies to many (especially until the late 1980s).
- Jure Franko was only 23 when he finished his career in 1985.
- Tyler Palmer resigned at the age of 22 (or just under).
- Hansi Hinterseer ended his World Cup career at the age of 24, but still drove as a professional for five years.
The career end of some French runners came relatively early in December 1973, when they - some of them not yet 25 years old - were excluded from the association, with some of them still hired as professionals in the USA for a few years.
Älteste Herren bei ihrem letzten Sieg: Didier Cuche: 16. Aug. 1974 – letzter Sieg 24. Feb. 2012 = 37 Jahre und 192 Tage Hannes Reichelt: 5. Juli 1980 – noch aktiv 16. März 2017 = 36 Jahre und 254 Tage Didier Défago: 2. Okt. 1977 – letzter Sieg 26. Jan. 2014 = 36 Jahre und 116 Tage Marco Büchel: 4. Nov. 1971 – letzter Sieg 18. Jan. 2008 = 36 Jahre und 75 Tage Hermann Maier: 7. Dez. 1972 – letzter Sieg 30. Nov. 2008 = 35 Jahre und 359 Tage Michael Walchhofer: 28. Apr. 1975 – letzter Sieg 12. März 2011 = 35 Jahre und 319 Tage Stephan Eberharter: 24. März 1969 – letzter Sieg 6. März 2004 = 34 Jahre und 348 Tage Leonhard Stock: 14. März 1958 – letzter Sieg 12. Dez. 1992 = 34 Jahre und 274 Tage Mario Matt: 9. Apr. 1979 – letzter Sieg 15. Dez. 2013 = 34 Jahre und 251 Tage Lasse Kjus: 14. Jan. 1971 – letzter Sieg 10. März 2005 = 34 Jahre und 56 Tage Bode Miller: 12. Okt. 1977 – letzter Sieg 2. Dez. 2011 = 34 Jahre und 51 Tage Hannes Trinkl: 1. Feb. 1968 – letzter Sieg 2. März 2002 = 34 Jahre und 30 Tage
Ladies
In the women's area, pregnancies should also be mentioned with regard to the end of a career, but there were only a few (mostly they only led to a “baby break” - as with Ulrike Maier or Karin Roten ). From the last few years, however, that of Isolde Kostner is known, who - almost 31 years old - announced her resignation during the 2005/06 season.
Mateja Svet , Michela Figini and Petra Kronberger made very early (surprising) “exits” . Even Isabelle Mir at the age of 24 years in March 1973 or Olga Pall who denied in March 1970, 22 years and four months her last race, are also included. Kiki Cutter quit in February 1970, when she was not yet 21, in the World Cup, but she still competed in the “Women's Pro Tour” in North America for a few years. Even younger was Judy Nagel , who, at around 18 years and 7 months, competed in her last World Cup race in March 1970. Another US runner was Penny McCoy , who (Oct. 9, 1949) retired after the 1968/69 season.
As with the men, age records have only increased in the recent past. The majority of all runners in the early years of the World Cup ended their careers at the age of 27 or under, including the oldest winning runners at the time, such as u. a. Christa Kinshofer , Hanni Wenzel , Marie-Theres Nadig and Annemarie Moser-Pröll or, from even earlier years, Rosi Mittermaier or Jacqueline Rouvier . To the nearly 25 years were Nancy Greene and Marielle Goitschel as winners at the Olympic Games in 1968, which stopped with the then end of the season.
Älteste Damen bei ihrem letzten Sieg: Elisabeth Görgl: 20. Feb. 1981 – letzter Sieg 21. Dez. 2014 = 33 Jahre und 304 Tage Lindsey Vonn: 18. Okt. 1984 – letzter Sieg 14. Mrz. 2018 = 33 Jahre und 147 Tage Michaela Dorfmeister: 25. März 1973 – letzter Sieg 5. März 2006 = 32 Jahre und 345 Tage Anita Wachter: 12. Feb. 1967 – letzter Sieg 28. Dez. 1999 = 32 Jahre und 319 Tage Marlies Schild: 31. Mai 1981 – letzter Sieg 17. Dez. 2013 = 32 Jahre und 200 Tage Alexandra Meissnitzer: 18. Juni 1973 – letzter Sieg 4. Dez. 2005 = 32 Jahre und 169 Tage Tina Maze: 2. Mai 1983 – letzter Sieg 12. Dez. 2014 = 31 Jahre und 225 Tage Renate Götschl: 6. Aug. 1975 – letzter Sieg 14. März 2007 = 31 Jahre und 221 Tage Veronika Velez Zuzulova: 15. Juli 1984 – letzter Sieg 15. Jan. 2016 = 31 Jahre und 184 Tage Carolina Ruiz Castillo: 14. Okt. 1981 – letzter Sieg 23. Feb. 2013 = 31 Jahre und 133 Tage Nicole Hosp: 6. Nov. 1983 – letzter Sieg 30. Nov. 2014 = 31 Jahre und 25 Tage Carole Montillet: 7. Apr. 1973 – letzter Sieg 1. Feb. 2004 = 30 Jahre und 300 Tage
- Youth records - age at first win
Mikaela Shiffrin (born March 13, 1995), won for the first time on December 20, 2012; she is not quite at the forefront, but she has surpassed this with series victories (and also various "big titles", including 2014 youngest ever slalom Olympic champion).
Both women and men did not win speed competitions until they were slightly older - exceptions are Sylvia Eder and Herbert Plank .
Christa Zechmeister: 4. Dez. 1957 – erster Sieg 7. Dez. 1973 = 16 Jahre und 3 Tage Pamela Behr: 21. Sep. 1956 – erster Sieg 9. Dez. 1972 = 16 Jahre und 79 Tage Betsy Clifford: 15. Okt. 1953 – erster Sieg 14. Feb. 1970 = 16 Jahre und 122 Tage Sylvia Eder: 24. Aug. 1965 – erster Sieg 19. Jan. 1982 = 16 Jahre und 148 Tage Patricia Emonet: 22. Juli 1956 – erster Sieg 2. Jan. 1973 = 16 Jahre und 164 Tage Bernadette Zurbriggen: 30. Aug. 1956 – erster Sieg 7. März 1973 = 16 Jahre und 189 Tage Perrine Pelen: 3. Juli 1960 – erster Sieg 26. Jan. 1977 = 16 Jahre und 207 Tage Kathy Kreiner: 4. Mai 1957 – erster Sieg 6. Jan. 1974 = 16 Jahre und 247 Tage Annemarie Moser-Pröll: 27. März 1953 – erster Sieg 25. Jan. 1970 = 16 Jahre und 304 Tage Hanni Wenzel: 14. Dez. 1956 – erster Sieg 20. Dez. 1973 = 17 Jahre und 6 Tage Janica Kostelić: 5. Jan. 1982 – erster Sieg 17. Jan. 1999 = 17 Jahre und 12 Tage Michèle Jacot: 5. Jan. 1952 – erster Sieg 9. Feb. 1969 = 17 Jahre und 36 Tage
Marie-Theres Nadig (born March 8, 1954) was one of the youngest Alpine Olympic champions in 1972, but it wasn't until January 24, 1975 that she won her first World Cup race.
Lara Gut (born April 27, 1991) is listed as the youngest winner of a Super-G (December 20, 2008 in St. Moritz), but she was already 17 years and 237 days old (which again confirms the thesis that in the speed disciplines the winners were generally a little older. The men were all a little older).
Piero Gros: 30. Okt. 1954 – erster Sieg 8. Dez. 1972 = 18 Jahre und 40 Tage Leonardo David: 27. Sep. 1960 – erster Sieg 7. Feb. 1979 = 18 Jahre und 133 Tage Ingemar Stenmark: 18. März 1956 – erster Sieg 22. Dez. 1974 = 18 Jahre und 279 Tage Gustav Thöni: 28. Feb. 1951 – erster Sieg 11. Dez. 1969 = 18 Jahre und 287 Tage Christian Orlainsky: 17. Feb. 1962 – erster Sieg 4. Jan. 1981 = 18 Jahre und 322 Tage Hans Hinterseer: 2. Feb. 1954 – erster Sieg 8. März 1973 = 19 Jahre und 35 Tage Pirmin Zurbriggen: 4. Feb. 1963 – erster Sieg 24. März 1982 = 19 Jahre und 49 Tage Joël Gaspoz: 25. Sep. 1962 – erster Sieg 8. Dez. 1981 = 19 Jahre und 75 Tage Herbert Plank: 3. Sep. 1954 – erster Sieg 10. Dez. 1973 = 19 Jahre und 99 Tage Jean-Noël Augert: 17. Aug. 1949 – erster Sieg 6. Jan. 1969 = 19 Jahre und 143 Tage Klaus Heidegger: 19. Aug. 1957 – erster Sieg 9. Jan. 1977 = 19 Jahre und 144 Tage Henrik Kristoffersen: 2. Juli 1994 – erster Sieg 28. Jan. 2014 = 19 Jahre und 211 Tage
run
- Jean-Claude Killy won most of the consecutive races in the 1967 season (six wins in a row, and even twice this season: from January 9th to 27th, 1967 with three downhill runs, two slaloms and one giant slalom, from March 4 to 24, 1967 with two runs, one slalom and three giant slaloms) and for the ladies Vreni Schneider in the 1988/89 season (eight wins in a row from December 16, 1988 to January 8, 1989 with four slaloms, three Giant slalom and a combination; she was accommodated by the fact that there was no downhill or Super-G during this period and that with the Altenmarkt slalom on December 16, 1988, she won the combination of downhill and slalom at the same time, but also with seven race wins in series it would be the undisputed leader).
Won most races in a row in a row
- in the men's Ingemar Stenmark (14 giant slaloms in a row, including all ten of the 1978/79 season as well as the last of the previous season and the first three of the following season),
- with the women Annemarie Moser-Pröll (eleven runs in series, including all eight of the 1972/73 season and the first three of the following season).
- In the 1987/88 and 1988/89 seasons, the Swiss downhill skiers managed to win all eight downhill runs.
- From February 23, 1997 ( Garmisch-Partenkirchen ) to February 13, 2000 ( St. Anton am Arlberg ), the Austrian men won all 19 Super-Gs, and in the last one they even achieved an "ex-aequo victory" in this series. came.
- In addition to winning all ratings, the women of the ÖSV were able to set new records in the 2006/07 season with 23 wins and 54 podium places.
speed
- On January 19, 2013 Johan Clarey achieved the highest speed ever recorded in the Alpine Ski World Cup on the Wengen descent of 161.9 km / h. The highest average speed in a World Cup race was achieved by Armin Assinger at 112.37 km / h on the descent on March 15, 1993 in Sierra Nevada .
Biggest projections
Men's
- Departure: 3.54 seconds - Franz Klammer (AUT) on Herbert Plank (ITA) - Wengen , January 11, 1975
- Super-G: 1.91 seconds - Hermann Maier (AUT) on Fritz Strobl (AUT) - Bormio , March 16, 2000
- Giant slalom: 4.06 seconds - Ingemar Stenmark (SWE) on Bojan Križaj (YUG / SLO) - Jasná , February 4, 1979
- Slalom: 3.28 seconds - Marcel Hirscher (AUT) on Felix Neureuther (GER) - Garmisch , March 1st, 2015
Ladies
- Departure: 2.96 seconds - Annemarie Moser-Pröll (AUT) on Wiltrud Drexel (AUT) - Chamonix , January 25, 1973
- Super-G: 1.81 seconds - Traudl Hächer (GER) on Maria Walliser (SUI) - Davos , December 8, 1984
- Giant slalom: 5.20 seconds - Marie-Theres Nadig (SUI) on Annemarie Moser-Pröll (AUT) - Furano , March 19, 1979
- Note: When the women did their giant slalom in one run, the 2.96 seconds between Annemarie Moser-Pröll (AUT) and Françoise Macchi (FRA) on March 11, 1971 in Abetone was the biggest advantage.
- Slalom: 3.07 seconds - Mikaela Shiffrin (USA) on Veronika Velez-Zuzulová (SVK) - Aspen , November 28, 2015
- Note: The previous record was set in Abetone in March 1968 when Florence Steurer won 3.00 seconds ahead of Annie Famose .
Negative records
One of the longest series to be without a win as a "great skiing nation" in a discipline experienced the Austrian women's giant slalom: Following the victory of 17 March 1978 in the finals of Arosa by Annemarie Moser-Proell (the 89th Women's Giant Slalom World Cup history) it took over eleven years until December 3, 1989 in Vail , when Anita Wachter ended the "dry spell" in the 174th women's giant slalom.
Something similar happened to the Swiss women in slalom. The victory at the City Event in Stockholm on February 23, 2016 by Wendy Holdener was not only the first ever victory for Switzerland in a parallel slalom (or parallel race), but also the first women's slalom victory since Marlies Oester's in Berchtesgaden on January 20, 2002 (this represented the 76th Swiss victory in this discipline) - so there was a 14-year lack of victory from the 311st women's slalom in World Cup history to the 441st (all figures calculated including parallel slalom and City Events).
The women's slalom team of the ÖSV also experienced a particularly low point on January 21, 1981 in Crans-Montana : In any case, without a win for the entire season (and the following one) and mostly only with modest placings, it was also due to injuries ( Regina Sackl , Lea Sölkner and Ingrid Eberle ) that Roswitha Steiner with start no. 32 appeared first in the start list and finally Elke Kunschitz (start number 55) with 36th place (12.09 seconds behind), this with 38 classified, the only one in the ranking.
Other negatives can still result in a total loss of victory for the Swiss men's team from January 30, 2004 ( Didier Cuche Downhill Garmisch-Partenkirchen ) to January 7, 2007 ( Marc Berthod Slalom Adelboden ) or the non-qualifications of the Swiss men's slalom team at the 2012 and season finals Also "zero reports" in the classification due to the elimination of the only qualified in the finals from 2013 to 2015 - like the Swiss men's team with regard to slalom victories - not only in comparison to the women's team in terms of slalom, but also to the successes in the other disciplines has a modest record (13 victories in almost 50 World Cup years in 459 slaloms including one knockout and two parallel slaloms; as of March 1, 2016).
It is also noted that the Swiss women only got seven points in the 1970/71 season. Rita Good was 30th with four points and Vreni Inäbnit was 33rd with three points in the individual ranking.
Other events
- The US women had a special experience on their way to the World Cup races in Lienz (East Tyrol) in December 1969. The flight to Linz in Upper Austria was made by mistake, so that the journey had to be continued from there. However, this mishap had no effect, because Judy Nagel won both giant slalom and slalom.
- The ZDF initially refused a direct broadcast of the women's slalom from Garmisch-Partenkirchen on January 4, 1975 "because of surreptitious advertising". Only when some of the billboards had been cleared away did the broadcast begin during the first round, and the beginning of the race was subsequently delivered as a recording . The timekeeping company, whose billboard had also been removed, threatened to abort the time measurement at short notice
- There was also a special feature on March 20 and 21, 1982 in L'Alpe d'Huez , where the women drove a slalom and giant slalom. There the slalom was canceled on March 20th after one round due to the weather conditions ( Tamara McKinney was in charge ) and the second round was only carried out on March 21st. However, on March 21st, the giant slalom was held first in the morning, followed by the slalom that was still missing in the afternoon. Erika Hess won both races .
- The women's slalom in Maribor from 26./27. February 1995 took place on two days (due to weather conditions); Vreni Schneider , who had led after the first run, took the win.
- Often, because of cancellations, two races had to be run in the same place on one day. The French Luc Alphand managed to win two (shortened) runs in Kitzbühel on January 14, 1995 . For the women, it was the Swiss Corinne Rey-Bellet : It was on January 16, 1999 in St. Anton, when she first landed her first career win in the downhill and then won the Super-G.
- For the first and so far only time, a pair of siblings won a World Cup race on the same day, on January 5, 2003 Janica Kostelić won the slalom in Bormio , her brother Ivica the one in Kranjska Gora .
- The final races in 1969/70 in the USA took place without the representatives of the Austrian Ski Association. This canceled the trip because of "sporting hopelessness" (report from February 14, 1970).
- Even in the competitions held from February 2 to 6, 1994 in the Sierra Nevada (downhill, slalom - both with additional combination classification - and super-G), the ÖSV women were not at the start, but there was a sad background for this, namely Ulrike Maier's fatal racing accident on January 29th.
Ex-aequo victories
- With the exception of the combination competitions, there has already been at least one "ex-aequo placement" in first place in all disciplines for women and men.
- There was even a triple victory in two races, each for the women: on October 26, 2002 at the giant slalom in Sölden by Tina Maze (SLO), Andrine Flemmen (NOR) and Nicole Hosp (AUT) and on March 3 2006 at the Hafjell Super-G by Nadia Styger (SUI), Lindsey Vonn (USA) and Michaela Dorfmeister (AUT), with Kelly Vanderbeek just 0.01 seconds behind in fourth place.
Men's
Departure | ||
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Jan. 21, 1978 | Hahnenkamm Kitzbühel | Sepp Ferstl & Josef Walcher |
Dec 29, 2012 | Bormio | Hannes Reichelt & Dominik Paris |
Feb 28, 2014 | Kvitfjell | Kjetil Jansrud & Georg Streitberger |
March 14, 2018 | Are | Matthias Mayer & Vincent Kriechmayr |
Super G | ||
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March 3, 1985 | Furano | Daniel Mahrer & Steven Lee |
Feb 6, 2000 | St. Anton | Fritz Strobl & Werner Franz |
March 11, 2005 | Lenzerheide | Bode Miller & Daron Rahlves |
March 2, 2012 | Lenzerheide | Beat Feuz & Klaus Kröll |
slalom | ||
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March 8, 2003 | Shigakogen | Kalle Palander & Rainer Schönfelder |
March 11, 2006 | Shigakogen | Kalle Palander & Reinfried Herbst |
Giant slalom | ||
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Jan. 8, 2011 | Adelboden | Aksel Lund Svindal & Cyprien Richard |
Ladies
Departure | ||
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March 3, 1967 | Sestriere | Marielle Goitschel & Giustina Demetz |
Jan. 24, 1997 | Cortina d'Ampezzo | Heidi Zurbriggen & Isolde Kostner |
Jan. 19, 2009 | Altenmarkt-Zauchensee | Anja Pärson & Dominique Gisin |
Super G | ||
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Jan. 17, 1994 | Cortina d'Ampezzo | Pernilla Wiberg & Alenka Dovžan |
Feb. 1, 2004 | House in the Ennstal | Maria Riesch & Carole Montillet |
Feb 10, 2008 | Sestriere | Fabienne Suter & Andrea Fischbacher |
slalom | ||
---|---|---|
March 16, 1997 | Vail | Pernilla Wiberg & Lara Magoni |
Nov 20, 1999 | Copper Mountain | Špela Pretnar & Christel Pascal |
Jan. 20, 2002 | Berchtesgaden | Marlies Oester & Kristina Koznick |
Jan. 11, 2011 | Flachau | Maria Riesch & Tanja Poutiainen |
Giant slalom | ||
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March 22, 1987 | Sarajevo | Maria Walliser & Vreni Schneider |
Feb. 4, 2006 | Often swing | Anja Pärson & María José Rienda |
Oct 25, 2014 | Soelden | Mikaela Shiffrin & Anna Fenninger |
Feb. 1, 2019 | Maribor | Mikaela Shiffrin & Petra Vlhová |
Jan. 18, 2020 | Sestriere | Federica Brignone & Petra Vlhová |
Closest podium decisions
- Men's
- Departure
- Dec. 29, 2012 - Bormio : Behind the ex-aequo winners Dominik Paris and Hannes Reichelt , Aksel Lund Svindal took third place, just 0.01 seconds behind (fourth-placed Klaus Kröll was just another hundredth of a second behind)
- Super G
- March 2, 2012 - Kvitfjell : Behind the ex-aequo winners Beat Feuz and Klaus Kröll , Kjetil Jansrud came in 3rd place with 0.03 seconds
- slalom
- Jan. 11, 2015 - Adelboden : Stefano Gross with 0.02 seconds ahead of Fritz Dopfer and 0.03 seconds ahead of Marcel Hirscher
- Ladies
- Giant slalom
- January 18, 2020 - Sestriere : Behind the ex-aequo winners Federica Brignone and Petra Vlhová , Mikaela Shiffrin took 3rd place, 0.01 seconds behind
Others
- As far as the combinations are concerned, in the 1986/87 season there was the curious situation in the men’s only two decisions in this regard that only Pirmin Zurbriggen (SUI) classified in the one from Lauberhorn in Wengen (January 18) was and after that at the one from Hahnenkamm in Kitzbühel (January 25th) together with the winner Zurbriggen with Andreas Wenzel (LIE) two athletes were just rated. The reason was the rule at the time that only the first 30 places on the downhill were eligible for the combined classification, and only the first 30 were allowed in the slalom after the first run in the second run. Only then was this regulation lifted and now basically all those classified in the downhill were eligible for the combination and in the slalom the "cut of the first 30" did not apply to the "pure" combiners (but they could not advance to the slalom classification).
- The “rule of thirties” mentioned in the previous article became particularly important for the slalom and giant slalom during this period, after which only the first 30 of the first run, and these in reverse order, are allowed for the second run. This attempt was made for the first time on March 10, 1985 at the men's giant slalom in Aspen ( Marc Girardelli won ). At first they didn't even want to rate this race. Ingemar Stenmark spoke out against this introduction "because of disadvantage" to the leaders after the first run and even made the continuation of his career dependent on continuing to drive according to the previous system.
- Of the participating nations that regularly or at least partially placed in the top ten , Japan and Great Britain are still without a win. Japan's best placings were practically only in slaloms: It was Naoki Yuasa's third place on December 18, 2012 in Madonna di Campiglio and 7th place in Kitzbühel on January 24, 1976 by Masami Ichimura ; also Toshihiro Kaiwa was ranked No. 7 in Wengen on February 6, 1977 January 5, 1978, he finished second in Oberstaufen Rank 5; He was again ranked 10th on January 15, 1978 (again) in Wengen. Rank 6 is listed for Osama Kodama on January 8, 1980 in Lenggries.
- It should be added that there were also various good combination seats (mostly by Shinya Chiba ). Akira Sasaki would have delivered the greatest sensation in Wengen on January 19, 2003, when he missed victory by four hundredths of a second with starting number 65.
- Wengen was also a good place for Kentaro Minagawa (rank 4 on January 15, 2006). Shortly afterwards (January 24th, 2006 in Schladming) he was ranked 6th. At the home race in Shiga Kogen on March 11th, 2006 Sasaki and Minagawa won the ranks 6th and 7th.
- For Great Britain there was a top place for Divina Galica (3rd place in the women's downhill run on January 17, 1968 in Bad Gastein) and further top ten places from her and from Gina Hathorn and Valentina Illife ; most recently it was Chemmy Alcott with rank 9 (departure Cortina on January 18, 2004); In the men's category, Konrad Bartelski's second place stood out on December 13, 1981 when he left Val Gardena; Martin Bell was 6th in the downhill run on December 5, 1986 in Val d'Isère, Alain Baxter took 7th place in the slalom in Wengen on January 14, 2001, and Finlay Mickel was tenth in the Lauberhorn downhill on January 14, 2006. Eleven Years later, on January 22nd, 2017, Dave Ryding achieved second place in the Hahnenkamm Slalom, the first British podium since 1981.
- In live broadcasts, the men's giant slalom in Adelboden was a problem child for a long time. A TV broadcast was not possible at all, the radio reporters were on duty at the start area and could only orientate themselves on the running timekeeping in order to inform the listeners how long the runners had finished the race. From January 2006 the competition in Adelboden was moved from Tuesday to the weekend (with the giant slalom on Saturday and an additional competition, the slalom, on Sunday).
- In addition to various individual disqualifications (see e.g. Hermann Maier, this one even twice, both times in Val d'Isère - in addition to the "red line" there was one before the race on December 17, 2000 because the viewing time was exceeded; Source: Among other things, Kronenzeitung from December 18, 2000) there was an even bigger one on January 9, 1988 at the women's super-G in Lech, which the Austrian media described as a "pin or safety pin affair": This race was oversized Starting numbers distributed that fluttered in the airstream. Four ÖSV women attached these to their suits with safety pins or pins. Because this violated the regulations, both the winner Sigrid Wolf and Anita Wachter (5th place), Sylvia Eder (10) and Lisi Kirchler (12) were disqualified; the race win went to Zoë Haas.
- The biggest improvements after the first round to win:
- Ladies' giant slalom: Martina Ertl (GER) ranked 17th on October 28, 2000 in Sölden
- Men's giant slalom: Cyprien Richard (FRA) from 21st place on January 8, 2011 in Adelboden
- Women's slalom: Anja Pärson (SWE) ranked 15th on December 3rd, 1998 in Mammoth Mountain
- Slalom of men Benjamin Raich (AUT) from rank 23 on January 7, 1999 in Schladming
- Men's slalom: Marc Berthod (SUI) from 27th place on January 7, 2007 in Adelboden
- Men's Alpine Combination: Mario Matt (AUT) in 30th place on January 14, 2007 in Wengen.
- In a few cases, however, there have been other "oversized" improvements, of which the following are among the most outstanding:
- Women's giant slalom:
- Daniela Merighetti from rank 29 to rank 2 on March 6, 2003 in Åre;
- Tina Maze from rank 21 to rank 2 on February 7, 2004 in Zwiesel and
- Kathrin Zettel from rank 24 to rank 3 on October 27, 2007 in Sölden .
- Men's giant slalom:
- Kjetil André Aamodt from 29th to 2nd on November 20, 1997 in Park City ;
- Gauthier de Tessières from rank 30 to rank 3 on December 13, 2008 in Val-d'Isère ;
- Christoph Gruber from rank 29 to rank 3 on December 15, 2002 in Val-d'Isère and
- Davide Simoncelli from 26 to 2nd place on December 22nd, 2002 in Alta Badia .
- Women's slalom: Karin Köllerer from rank 30 to 3 on December 29, 1999 in Lienz and Patricia Chauvet from rank 20 to 2 on December 19, 1987 in Piancavallo
- Men's slalom: Mattias Hargin from rank 30 to 3 on January 6, 2011 in Zagreb and Naoki Yuasa from 26 to 3 on December 18, 2012 in Madonna di Campiglio
- Women's giant slalom:
Series of wins in a discipline
Men's
- Departure
9 Siege Franz Klammer: saisonübergreifend: die vier letzten 1975/76 und die fünf ersten 1976/77 6 Siege Franz Klammer: 1974/75 5 Siege Jean-Claude Killy: 1967 4 Siege Roland Collombin: 1973/74 4 Siege Peter Wirnsberger: 1985/86
- Super G
4 Siege Hermann Maier: 1997/98 4 Siege Hermann Maier: 1998/99
- Giant slalom
14 Siege Ingemar Stenmark: saisonübergreifend: der letzte aus 1977/78, alle zehn in 1978/79 und die ersten drei in 1979/80 5 Siege Marcel Hirscher: 2017/18 5 Siege Ingemar Stenmark: 1980/81 4 Siege Jean-Claude Killy: 1967 4 Siege Ted Ligety: saisonübergreifend: je zwei zu Saisonende 2012/13 und zu Saisonbeginn 2013/14 4 Siege Marcel Hirscher: 2014/15 4 Siege Alexis Pinturault: 2015/16 4 Siege Marcel Hirscher: saisonübergreifend: die letzten drei in der Saison 2016/17 und der erste 2017/18
- slalom
9 Siege Alberto Tomba: saisonübergreifend: zwei Siege 1993/94 und sieben zu Beginn 1994/95 5 Siege Ingemar Stenmark: 1976/77 5 Siege Ingemar Stenmark: saisonübergreifend: vier Siege 1979/80 und einer zu Beginn 1980/81 5 Siege Marc Girardelli: 1984/85 5 Siege Giorgio Rocca: 2005/06 5 Siege Marcel Hirscher: 2017/18 4 Siege Thomas Sykora: 1996/97 4 Siege Kalle Palander: 2002/03 4 Siege Henrik Kristoffersen: 2016 4 Siege Marcel Hirscher: saisonübergreifend: zwei Siege 2017/18 und die ersten zwei 2018/19
Ladies
- Departure
11 Siege Annemarie Moser-Pröll: saisonübergreifend: acht Siege 1972/73 und drei zu Beginn 1973/74 6 Siege Picabo Street: saisonübergreifend: fünf Siege am Ende 1994/95 und einer zu Beginn 1995/96 6 Siege Lindsey Vonn: saisonübergreifend: ein Sieg am Ende 2008/09 und fünf zu Beginn 2009/10 5 Siege Marie-Theres Nadig: saisonübergreifend: drei Siege am Ende 1979/80 und zwei zu Beginn 1980/81 4 Siege Annemarie Moser-Pröll: 1971/72 4 Siege Lindsey Vonn: 2017/18
- Super G:
5 Siege Katja Seizinger: saisonübergreifend: zwei am Ende 1996/97 und drei zu Beginn 1997/98 5 Siege Lindsey Vonn: saisonübergreifend: zwei am Ende 2014/15 und drei zu Beginn 2015/16 4 Siege Lindsey Vonn: 2008/09
- Giant slalom:
8 Siege Deborah Compagnoni: saisonübergreifend: je vier zum Ende 1996/97 und zu Beginn 1997/98 5 Siege Annemarie Moser-Pröll: 1974/75 5 Siege Christa Kinshofer: 1978/79 5 Siege Hanni Wenzel: 1979/80 5 Siege Vreni Schneider: 1988/89 5 Siege Sonja Nef: 2000/01 5 Siege Anja Pärson: saisonübergreifend: vier noch 2003/04, einer zu Beginn 2004/05 5 Siege Anna Fenninger: saisonübergreifend: vier zum Ende 2013/14 und einer zu Beginn 2014/15 4 Siege Denise Karbon: 2008/09 4 Siege Tina Maze: 2012/13
- Slalom:
8 Siege Vreni Schneider: saisonübergreifend: sieben Siege 1988/89, erster Sieg 1989/90 8 Siege Janica Kostelić: 2000/01 7 Siege Mikaela Shiffrin: saisonübergreifend: drei zum Ende 2015/16 und vier zu Beginn 2016/17 7 Siege Mikaela Shiffrin: saisonübergreifend: zwei zum Ende 2017/18 und die ersten fünf 2018/19 6 Siege Erika Hess: 1980/81 6 Siege Mikaela Shiffrin: saisonübergreifend: letzte drei 2018/19 und drei zu Beginn 2019/20 5 Siege Marlies Schild: 2011/12 5 Siege Mikaela Shiffrin: saisonübergreifend: drei zum Ende 2014/15 und zwei zu Beginn 2015/16 5 Siege Mikaela Shiffrin: 2017/18 4 Siege Ingrid Lafforgue: 1969/70 4 Siege Christa Zechmeister: 1973/74 4 Siege Lise-Marie Morerod: saisonübergreifend: letzter Slalom 1974/75, die ersten drei 1975/76 4 Siege Erika Hess: 1981/82 4 Siege Ylva Nowén: 1997/98 4 Siege Anja Pärson: 2001/02 4 Siege Anja Pärson: 2003/04 4 Siege Marlies Schild: 2006/07 4 Siege Maria Riesch: 2008/09
team
- In the 1998/99 season the Austrian men's ski team achieved a nine-fold success led by Hermann Maier on December 21, 1998 at the Super-G in Innsbruck on the Patscherkofel , followed by 2nd Christian Mayer, 3rd Fritz Strobl, 4th Stephan Eberharter , 5th Rainer Salzgeber, 6th Hans Knauß, 7th Patrick Wirth, 8th Andreas Schifferer and 9th Werner Franz, which has so far remained unattainable.
The other records
- Men's
- Departure:
29. Dez. 1998: Bormio – 6-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier 5. Dez. 1997: Beaver Creek – 5-fach-Sieg Österreich, Andreas Schifferer 4. Dez. 1999: Lake Louise – 5-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hannes Trinkl 2. Feb. 2002: St. Moritz – 5-fach-Sieg Österreich, Stephan Eberharter 11. Feb. 1973: St. Moritz – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Werner Grissmann 24. Jan. 1982: Lauberhorn Wengen – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Harti Weirather 14. März 1987: Calgary (Nakiska) – 4-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Peter Müller 17. Dez. 1994: Val d’Isère – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Armin Assinger 15. Dez. 1996: Val d’Isère – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Fritz Strobl 29. Dez. 1997: Bormio – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier 15. März 2000: Bormio – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hannes Trinkl 9. Dez. 2000: Val d’Isère – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier 29. Dez. 2001: Bormio – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Fritz Strobl 29. Dez. 2001: Bormio – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hans Grugger 3. März 1967: Sestriere – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Jean-Claude Killy 11. Jan. 1969: Lauberhorn Wengen – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Karl Schranz 16. Jan. 1971: St. Moritz – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Walter Tresch 5. Jan. 1975: Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Franz Klammer 1. Feb. 1975: Megève – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Walter Vesti 8. Jan. 1977: Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Franz Klammer 21. Jan. 1984: Hahnenkamm Kitzbühel – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Franz Klammer 15. Aug. 1986: Las Leñas – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Peter Müller 7. März 1987: Aspen – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Pirmin Zurbriggen 23. Jan. 1988: Leukerbad – 3-fach-Sieg Italien, Michael Mair 6. Jan. 1989: Laax – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Leonhard Stock 17. Jan. 1992: Hahnenkamm Kitzbühel – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Franz Heinzer5 23. Jan. 1999: Hahnenkamm Kitzbühel – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hans Knauss 8. Jan. 2000: Chamonix – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier 16. Dez. 2000: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Italien, Alessandro Fattori 20. Jan. 2001: Hahnenkamm Kitzbühel – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier3 4. März 2001: Kvitfjell – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier 28. Dez. 2001: Bormio – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Christian Greber 12. Jan. 2002: Lauberhorn Wengen – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Stephan Eberharter 14. Dez. 2002: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Stephan Eberharter 6. Dez. 2003: Beaver Creek – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier 14. Feb. 2004: St. Anton – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier 19. Feb. 2005: Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Michael Walchhofer 10. Dez. 2005: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Michael Walchhofer 28. Jan. 2006: Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier 21. Feb. 2015: Saalbach-Hinterglemm – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Matthias Mayer 28. Feb. 2015: Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hannes Reichelt
- Super G:
21. Dez. 1998: Patscherkofel – 9-fach Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
12. Dez. 1982: Val d’Isère – 5-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Peter Müller
27. Nov. 1998: Aspen – 5-fach Sieg Österreich, Stephan Eberharter
27. Jan. 2003: Hahnenkamm Kitzbühel – 5-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
6. Dez. 1997: Beaver Creek – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
16. März 2000: Bormio – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier6
30. Nov. 2003: Lake Louise – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
11. März 2004: Sestriere – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
11. Jan. 1998: Schladming – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
9. Jan. 1999: Schladming – 3-fach Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
7. März 1999: Kvitfjell – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
11. März 1999: Sierra Nevada – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Christian Mayer
13. Feb. 2000: St. Anton – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, ex aequo Fritz Strobl & Werner Franz
19. Jan. 2001: Hahnenkamm Kitzbühel – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
4. März 2001: Kvitfjell – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
17. Dez. 2004: Gröden – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Stephan Eberharter
3. Dez. 2007: Beaver Creek – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hannes Reichelt
18. Dez. 2015: Gröden – 3-fach-Sieg Norwegen, Aksel Lund Svindal
- Giant slalom:
7. Jan. 1974: Berchtesgaden – 5-fach-Sieg Italien, Piero Gros
16. Dez. 1973: Saalbach-Hinterglemm – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hubert Berchtold
30. Jan. 1988: Schladming – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Rudolf Nierlich
14. Jan. 1990: Alta Badia – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Richard Kröll7
14. März 1998: Crans-Montana – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Stephan Eberharter
25. Okt. 1998: Sölden – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
16. Feb. 1969: Kranjska Gora – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Reinhard Tritscher
6. Jan. 1967: Berchtesgaden – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Georges Mauduit
8./10. März 1968: Meribel – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Georges Mauduit
11. Jan. 1983: Adelboden – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Pirmin Zurbriggen
14. Dez. 1986: Alta Badia – 3-fach-Sieg Italien, Richard Pramatton
23. Jan. 1990: Veysonnaz – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Richard Kröll
22. Dez. 1999: Saalbach-Hinterglemm – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Christian Mayer
18. März 2000: Bormio – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Benjamin Raich
10. Dez. 2000: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Hermann Maier
17. März 2012: Schladming – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Marcel Hirscher
19. März 2016: St. Moritz – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Thomas Fanara
- Slalom:
14. Jan. 2001: Wengen – 5-fach-Sieg Österreich, Benjamin Raich 5. Feb. 1967: Madonna di Campiglio – 4-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Guy Périllat 25. Jan. 1970: Megeve – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Patrick Russel 15. März 1970: Voss – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Patrick Russel 6. Jan. 1975: Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 3-fach-Sieg Italien, Piero Gros 19. Dez. 1976: Madonna di Campiglio – 3-fach-Sieg Italien, Fausto Radici 27. Jan. 1996: Sestriere – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Mario Reiter 1. März 1998: Yongpyong – 3-fach-Sieg Norwegen, Ole Christian Furuseth 19. Dez. 2000: Madonna di Campiglio – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Mario Matt
- Combination:
19. Dez. 1982: Gröden/Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Franz Heinzer 30. Jan. 1994: Chamonix – 3-fach-Sieg Norwegen, Kjetil-André Aamodt 11. Dez. 2009: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Benjamin Raich 22. Jan. 2016: Kitzbühel – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Alexis Pinturault
- Ladies
- Departure
9. März 1968: Abetone – 6-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Isabelle Mir
21. März 1970: Jackson Hole – 5-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Isabelle Mir
1. Feb. 1973: Schruns: – 5-fach-Sieg Österreich, Annemarie Pröll
15. Jan. 1970: Bad Gastein – 4-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Isabelle Mir
20. Dez. 1976: Zell am See – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Brigitte Totschnig
9. Jan. 1970: Grindelwald – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Isabelle Mir
9. Jan. 1973: Pfronten – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Annemarie Pröll
10. Jan. 1973: Pfronten – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Annemarie Pröll
16. Jan. 1973: Grindelwald – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Annemarie Pröll
10. Feb. 1973: St. Moritz – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Annemarie Pröll
6. Dez. 1973: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Annemarie Pröll
7. Jan. 1976: Hasliberg – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Brigitte Totschnig
21. Dez. 1984: Santa Caterina – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Elisabeth Kirchler
9. Jan. 1985: Bad Kleinkirchheim – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Michela Figini
10. Jan. 1985: Bad Kleinkirchheim – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Michela Figini
12. Dez. 1986: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Michela Figini
4. Dez. 1987: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Maria Walliser
16. Jan. 1988: Zinal – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Maria Walliser
24. Feb. 1989: Steamboat Springs – 3-fach Sieg Schweiz, Michela Figini
16. Dez. 1995: St. Anton – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Alexandra Meissnitzer8
27. Jan. 2007: San Sicario – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Renate Götschl
6. Dez. 2014: Lake Louise – 3-fach-Sieg USA, Lindsey Vonn
14. Jan. 2018: Bad Kleinkirchheim – 3-fach-Sieg Italien, Sofia Goggia
25. Jan. 2020: Bansko – 3-fach-Sieg Italien, Elena Curtoni
- Super G
9. Dez. 1990: Altenmarkt/Zauchensee – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Petra Kronberger 13. März 1997: Vail – 3-fach-Sieg Deutschland, Katja Seizinger 4. Jan. 2004: Mégève – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Alexandra Meissnitzer 4. Dez. 2005: Lake Louise – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Alexandra Meissnitzer
- Giant slalom
8. Jan. 1971: Oberstaufen – 5-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Michelle Jacot 18. Jan. 1987: Bischofswiesen – 4-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Maria Walliser 12. Feb. 1971: Mont Sainte-Anne – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Isabelle Mir 19. Feb. 1972: Banff – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Annemarie Pröll 22. März 1987: Sarajewo – 3-fach-Sieg Schweiz, ex aequo Maria Walliser & Vreni Schneider 15. März 1993: Hafjell – 3-fach-Sieg Deutschland, Christine Meier-Höck 2. März 1996: Narvik – 3-fach-Sieg Italien, Deborah Compagnoni 4. Jan. 2004: Megeve – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Alexandra Meissnitzer 28. Dez. 2006: Semmering – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Kathrin Zettel 25. Jan. 2009: Cortina d’Ampezzo – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Kathrin Zettel 19. Mrz. 2017: Aspen – 3-fach Sieg Italien, Federica Brignone
- slalom
10. März 1968: Abetone – 4-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Florence Steurer
4. Feb. 1971: Mürren – 4-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Britt Lafforgue
3. März 1973: Monte Saint-Anne – 4-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Patricia Emonet
6. März 1988: Aspen – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Roswitha Steiner4
13. März 1990: Vemdalen – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Petra Kronberger
26. Jan. 1967: St. Gervais – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Annie Famose
12. März 1967: Franconia – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Marielle Goitschel
14. Jan. 1971: Grindelwald – 3-fach-Sieg Frankreich, Britt Lafforgue
30. Nov. 1987: Courmayeur – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Anita Wachter
11. Nov. 2006: Levi – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Marlies Schild
- combination
8./12. Dez. 1985: Sestriere/Val d’Isère – 4-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Erika Hess 11./12. Jan. 1986: Badgastein – 4-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Maria Walliser 10./11. Jan. 1987: Mellau – 4-fach-Sieg Schweiz, Brigitte Oertli 15. Dez. 2006: Reiteralm – 4-fach-Sieg Österreich, Marlies Schild 13./14. Jan. 1990: Haus – 3-fach-Sieg Österreich, Petra Kronberger 20. Dez. 1997: Val d’Isère – 3-fach-Sieg Deutschland, Hilde Gerg 31. Jan. 1998: Åre – 3-fach-Sieg Deutschland, Hilde Gerg
- In the 1969/70 season, the French women's team took the first four places in the overall World Cup ranking, which was exceeded in the 1986/87 season by a five-fold success of the Swiss women . In the men's overall standings there were two triple successes by the Austrian ski team in the 1997/98 and 2003/04 seasons .
- If the first places in the overall standings were to be distributed among as many different nations as possible, then a new record was set for the men in the 2012/13 season and for the women in the 2013/14 season , as runners from seven different nations first seven places landed. Up until then, the highest mark was six: in the men’s 1978/79 , 1979/80 and 1988/89 runners from different nations took up the first six places, in the women’s 1978/79 and 2002/03 .
- The fact that the overall World Cup and all individual disciplines were won by the same nation in one season has already happened several times: for the men in the 1967 season by France and 1997/98 by Austria, for the women in 1969/70 by France, in 1986/87 by the Switzerland and 2006/07 through Austria.
Victories with high starting numbers
- Markus Foser from Liechtenstein and Katja Koren from Slovenia won a World Cup race in the 1993/94 World Cup season, each with starting number 66 .
- After seven races in which Foser was never able to place better than 24th, he managed one of the biggest surprises in the history of the World Cup on December 17, 1993 at the downhill race in Val Gardena . Favored by the high starting number, Foser set the best time and duped his opponents. The reason for this was that as the race progressed, the sun came out from behind the Sassolungo and the sun's rays in particular made the upper part of the route faster.
- On December 22, 1993, Koren won the Super-G in Flachau with the start number 66, just as surprisingly .
- Ivica Kostelić won the World Cup Slalom in Aspen (Colorado) on November 25, 2001 with start number 64.
- Josef Strobl won the Val-d'Isère World Cup descent on December 16, 1994 with start number 61. It was only his second World Cup race.
The highest starting numbers in giant slaloms were
- No. 40 of the French Nathalie Bouvet on November 24, 1989 in Park City,
- with the men of Piero Gros (ITA) with no. 45 on December 8, 1972 in Madonna di Campiglio.
The Austrian Hannes Trinkl wore the highest starting number of the men in a Super G victory on December 22, 1993 in Lech with the number 51. Austria's Renate Götschl was on her slalom victory on March 14, 1993 in Lillehammer with starting number 42. Ultimately, Tina Maze (SLO) also benefited from the faster conditions on February 2, 2008 when she won the downhill run in St. Moritz with No. 47. On January 13, 2017, Niels Hintermann won the Alpine Combined from Wengen with start number 51. As 22nd after the slalom, he benefited from the increasing snowfall.
Leaderboards
The following "best list" refers to the Alpine Ski World Cup, which was introduced in 1967; some of the runners listed therein had already won important races before 1967, but they did not count towards the World Cup and are therefore not included in these statistics (in particular Jean-Claude Killy and Karl Schranz). In addition, there were excellent ski racers who ended their careers before the introduction of the World Cup and therefore did not appear here at all - for example Toni Sailer , three-time Olympic champion and seven-time world champion in the years 1956-1958, and Christl Cranz , who in 1934-1939 won twelve gold medals at world championships - or who ended their careers so soon after the introduction of the world cup that they no longer had ten world cup victories to appear on this list, such as B. Marielle Goitschel , 1962–1968 two-time Olympic champion and seven-time world champion, winner of six World Cup races and, in the first World Cup year in 1967, second in the overall standings, just four points behind the winner, Nancy Greene.
Leaderboard men
rank | athlete | from | to | Victories | Departure | Super G 9 | Giant slalom |
slalom | Combi nation 10 |
Parallel race 11 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Ingemar Stenmark | 1974 | 1989 | 86 | - | - | 46 | 40 | - | - |
2. | Marcel Hirscher | 2009 | 2019 | 67 | - | 1 | 31 | 32 | - | 3 |
3. | Hermann Maier | 1997 | 2008 | 54 | 15th | 24 | 14th | - | 1 | - |
4th | Alberto Tomba | 1987 | 1998 | 50 | - | - | 15th | 35 | - | - |
5. | Marc Girardelli | 1983 | 1996 | 46 | 3 | 9 | 7th | 16 | 11 | - |
6th | Pirmin Zurbriggen | 1982 | 1990 | 40 | 10 | 10 | 7th | 2 | 11 | - |
7th | Benjamin Raich | 1999 | 2012 | 36 | - | 1 | 14th | 14th | 7th | - |
Aksel Lund Svindal | 2005 | 2018 | 14th | 17th | 4th | - | 1 | - | ||
9. | Bode Miller | 2001 | 2017 | 33 | 8th | 5 | 9 | 5 | 6th | - |
10. | Stephan Eberharter | 1998 | 2004 | 29 | 18th | 6th | 5 | - | - | - |
Alexis Pinturault | 2012 | still active | - | 1 | 14th | 3 | 10 | 1 | ||
12. | Phil Mahre | 1976 | 1983 | 27 | - | - | 7th | 9 | 11 | - |
13. | Franz Klammer | 1973 | 1984 | 26th | 25th | - | - | - | 1 | - |
Ivica Kostelić | 2001 | 2017 | - | 1 | - | 15th | 9 | 1 | ||
14th | Ted Ligety | 2006 | still active | 25th | - | - | 24 | - | 1 | - |
16. | Peter Müller | 1977 | 1988 | 24 | 19th | 2 | - | - | 3 | - |
Gustav Thöni | 1969 | 1977 | - | - | 11 | 8th | 4th | 1 | ||
18th | Michael von Grünigen | 1993 | 2003 | 23 | - | - | 23 | - | - | - |
Kjetil Jansrud | 2012 | still active | 8th | 13 | - | - | 1 | 1 | ||
20th | Kjetil André Aamodt | 1992 | 2003 | 21st | 1 | 5 | 6th | 1 | 8th | - |
Didier Cuche | 1998 | 2012 | 12 | 6th | 3 | - | - | - | ||
Henrik Kristoffersen | 2014 | still active | - | - | 4th | 17th | - | - | ||
23. | Michael Walchhofer | 2003 | 2011 | 19th | 14th | 3 | - | - | 2 | - |
24. | Jean-Claude Killy 12 | 1967 | 1968 | 18th | 6th | - | 7th | 5 | - | - |
Leave kjus | 1994 | 2005 | 10 | 2 | 2 | - | 4th | - | ||
Dominik Paris | 2008 | still active | 14th | 4th | - | - | - | - | ||
27. | Franz Heinzer | 1982 | 1993 | 17th | 15th | - | - | - | 2 | - |
28. | Jean-Noël Augert 12 | 1969 | 1973 | 15th | - | - | 2 | 13 | - | - |
Mario Matt | 2000 | 2015 | - | - | - | 14th | 1 | - | ||
30th | Günther Mader | 1986 | 1997 | 14th | 1 | 6th | 2 | 1 | 4th | - |
Kalle Palander | 2003 | 2007 | - | - | 4th | 10 | - | - | ||
Andreas Wenzel | 1978 | 1985 | - | 1 | 3 | 4th | 6th | - | ||
33. | Beat Feuz | 2011 | still active | 13 | 10 | 3 | - | - | - | - |
Kristian Ghedina | 1990 | 2001 | 12 | 1 | - | - | - | - | ||
Felix Neureuther | 2010 | 2019 | - | - | 1 | 11 | - | 1 | ||
Hannes Reichelt | 2005 | still active | 6th | 6th | 1 | - | - | - | ||
Patrick Russel | 1968 | 1971 | - | - | 4th | 9 | - | - | ||
38. | Luc Alphand | 1995 | 1997 | 12 | 10 | 2 | - | - | - | - |
Piero Gros | 1972 | 1975 | - | - | 7th | 5 | - | - | ||
Daron Rahlves | 2000 | 2006 | 9 | 3 | - | - | - | - | ||
Karl Schranz 12 | 1968 | 1972 | 8th | - | 4th | - | - | - | ||
42. | Carlo Janka | 2008 | still active | 11 | 3 | 1 | 4th | - | 3 | - |
Giorgio Rocca | 2003 | 2006 | - | - | - | 11 | - | - | ||
44. | Helmut Höflehner | 1983 | 1990 | 10 | 10 | - | - | - | - | - |
Bernhard Russi 12 | 1970 | 1977 | 9 | - | 1 | - | - | - | ||
Thomas Stangassinger | 1989 | 1999 | - | - | - | 10 | - | - | ||
Status: end of season 2019/20 |
Leaderboard women
rank | athlete | from | to | Victories | Departure | Super G 9 | Giant slalom |
slalom | Combi nation 10 |
Parallel race 11 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Lindsey Vonn | 2004 | 2018 | 82 | 43 | 28 | 4th | 2 | 5 | - |
2. | Mikaela Shiffrin | 2012 | still active | 66 | 2 | 4th | 11 | 43 | 1 | 5 |
3. | Annemarie Moser-Pröll | 1970 | 1980 | 62 | 36 | - | 16 | 3 | 7th | - |
4th | Vreni Schneider | 1984 | 1995 | 55 | - | - | 20th | 34 | 1 | - |
5. | Renate Götschl | 1993 | 2007 | 46 | 24 | 17th | - | 1 | 4th | - |
6th | Anja Pärson | 1998 | 2011 | 42 | 6th | 4th | 11 | 18th | 3 | - |
7th | Marlies shield | 2004 | 2013 | 37 | - | - | 1 | 35 | 1 | - |
8th. | Katja Seizinger | 1991 | 1998 | 36 | 16 | 16 | 4th | - | - | - |
9. | Hanni Wenzel | 1973 | 1984 | 33 | 2 | - | 12 | 11 | 8th | - |
10. | Erika Hess | 1981 | 1986 | 31 | - | - | 6th | 21st | 4th | - |
11. | Janica Kostelić | 1999 | 2006 | 30th | 1 | 1 | 2 | 20th | 6th | - |
12. | Maria Höfl-Riesch | 2004 | 2014 | 27 | 11 | 3 | - | 9 | 4th | - |
13. | Michela Figini | 1984 | 1990 | 26th | 17th | 3 | 2 | - | 4th | - |
Lara Gut-Behrami | 2008 | still active | 9 | 12 | 4th | - | 1 | - | ||
Tina Maze | 2003 | 2017 | 4th | 1 | 14th | 4th | 3 | - | ||
16. | Michaela Dorfmeister | 1995 | 2006 | 25th | 7th | 10 | 8th | - | - | - |
Maria Walliser | 1983 | 1990 | 14th | 3 | 6th | - | 2 | - | ||
18th | Lise-Marie Morerod | 1975 | 1978 | 24 | - | - | 14th | 10 | - | - |
Marie-Theres Nadig | 1975 | 1981 | 13 | - | 6th | - | 5 | - | ||
Pernilla Wiberg | 1991 | 1999 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 14th | 3 | - | ||
21st | Carole Merle | 1988 | 1993 | 22nd | - | 12 | 10 | - | - | - |
22nd | Hilde Gerg | 1994 | 2004 | 20th | 7th | 8th | - | 2 | 2 | 1 |
23. | Viktoria Rebensburg | 2010 | still active | 19th | 1 | 4th | 14th | - | - | - |
24. | Tamara McKinney | 1981 | 1987 | 18th | - | - | 9 | 9 | - | - |
Anita Wachter | 1987 | 1999 | - | 2 | 14th | 1 | 1 | - | ||
26th | Deborah Compagnoni | 1992 | 1998 | 16 | - | 2 | 13 | 1 | - | - |
Petra Kronberger | 1989 | 1992 | 6th | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | - | ||
28. | Federica Brignone | 2015 | still active | 15th | - | 3 | 7th | - | 5 | - |
Isolde Kostner | 1994 | 2004 | 12 | 3 | - | - | - | - | ||
Sonja Nef | 1996 | 2003 | - | - | 13 | 2 | - | - | ||
Perrine Pelen | 1977 | 1984 | - | - | - | 15th | - | - | ||
Anna Veith | 2011 | 2017 | - | 3 | 11 | - | 1 | - | ||
33. | Martina Ertl-Renz | 1994 | 2003 | 14th | - | 2 | 10 | 2 | - | - |
Nancy Greene 13 | 1967 | 1968 | 3 | - | 8th | 3 | - | - | ||
Alexandra Meissnitzer | 1995 | 2005 | 2 | 7th | 5 | - | - | - | ||
Petra Vlhová | 2015 | still active | - | - | 4th | 8th | - | 2 | ||
37. | Tessa Worley | 2008 | still active | 13 | - | - | 13 | - | - | - |
38. | Nicole Hosp | 2002 | 2014 | 12 | - | 1 | 5 | 5 | 1 | - |
39. | Irene Epple | 1980 | 1983 | 11 | 1 | 1 | 6th | - | 3 | - |
Tanja Poutiainen | 2004 | 2011 | - | - | 5 | 6th | - | - | ||
41. | Michèle Jacot | 1969 | 1971 | 10 | 1 | - | 6th | 3 | - | - |
Monika Kaserer | 1973 | 1977 | - | - | 8th | 1 | - | 1 | ||
Françoise Macchi | 1968 | 1972 | 2 | - | 6th | 2 | - | - | ||
Rosi Mittermaier | 1969 | 1976 | - | - | 1 | 8th | 1 | - | ||
Status: end of season 2019/20 |
Leaderboards in the individual disciplines
Departure
Status: end of season 2019/20
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Super G
Status: end of season 2019/20
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Giant slalom
Status: end of season 2019/20
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slalom
Status: end of season 2019/20
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(Super combination
Status: end of season 2019/20
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Winner in all disciplines
So far, five men and seven women have won the World Cup in all five disciplines. The super combination and the classic variant of the combination are added together.
The only irregular parallel races are usually not considered separately in these statistics. However, if they are counted as the sixth discipline, Mikaela Shiffrin has been the only person to date to have won in all six disciplines since December 2, 2018. Your five parallel victories are only included in the table as a total.
Surname | country | Victories | Departure | Super G | Giant slalom |
slalom | combi nation |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Marc Girardelli | Luxembourg | 46 | 3 | 9 | 7th | 16 | 11 | |
Pirmin Zurbriggen | Switzerland | 40 | 10 | 10 | 7th | 2 | 11 | |
Bode Miller | United States | 33 | 8th | 5 | 9 | 5 | 6th | |
Kjetil André Aamodt | Norway | 21st | 1 | 5 | 6th | 1 | 8th | |
Günther Mader | Austria | 14th | 1 | 6th | 2 | 1 | 4th | |
Status: end of season 2017/2018 |
Surname | country | Victories | Departure | Super G | Giant slalom |
slalom | combi nation |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lindsey Vonn | United States | 82 | 43 | 28 | 4th | 2 | 5 | |
Mikaela Shiffrin | United States | 66 | 2 | 4th | 11 | 43 | 1 | |
Anja Pärson | Sweden | 42 | 6th | 4th | 11 | 18th | 3 | |
Janica Kostelić | Croatia | 30th | 1 | 1 | 2 | 20th | 6th | |
Tina Maze | Slovenia | 26th | 4th | 1 | 14th | 4th | 3 | |
Pernilla Wiberg | Sweden | 24 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 14th | 3 | |
Petra Kronberger | Austria | 16 | 6th | 2 | 3 | 3 | 2 | |
Status: end of season 2019/20 |
- Remarks
- Marc Girardelli (1988/89), Petra Kronberger (1990/91), Janica Kostelić (2005/06) and Tina Maze (2012/13) celebrated victories in all disciplines in one season. Bode Miller succeeded in doing this within a calendar year (2004).
- Nobody has won the discipline world cup in all five disciplines.
- The closest came Marc Girardelli, who came second in the discipline classification three times in the Super-G and was able to win the other five World Cup classifications including the overall World Cup at least once.
- Pirmin Zurbriggen won four of the five discipline World Cups (downhill, super-G, giant slalom and combined) and the overall World Cup in 1987 in all disciplines except slalom and in 1987 as the only ski racer to date.
- Tina Maze was among the two best in all disciplines in the 2012/13 season. She won the overall World Cup, the Super G World Cup, the Giant Slalom and the Super Combination World Cup, and she just missed victory in the Downhill and Slalom World Cup with second place.
- Kjetil André Aamodt won all discipline world cups except the downhill, Maria Höfl-Riesch also won all except the giant slalom.
- Bode Miller won World Cup rankings in three disciplines (Super-G, Giant Slalom, Combination including Super Combination) and was at least runner-up in each discipline in the respective World Cup ranking.
- Lindsey Vonn has also won three discipline world cups (downhill, super-G and super combination) and was at least second in the giant slalom world cup and third in the slalom world cup.
- Jean-Claude Killy won all disciplines in 1967, but back then there were only three (downhill, slalom, giant slalom).
- Bode Miller is the first runner in World Cup history to have at least five World Cup victories in each discipline.
- In the women's category, Anja Pärson is the only female athlete to date to have at least three victories in every discipline.
- Anja Pärson is the only female athlete to date who has won a world title in all five disciplines.
- The closest to her in this category comes Janica Kostelić, who has already won all five disciplines at a major event (World Cup and Olympics).
In addition to these people, there are eight more who won in all disciplines of their time before the introduction of the Super-G in 1983:
Surname | country | Victories | Departure | Giant slalom |
slalom |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Annemarie Moser-Pröll | Austria | 62 | 36 | 16 | 3 |
Hanni Wenzel 17th | Liechtenstein | 25th | 2 | 12 | 11 |
Jean-Claude Killy | France | 18th | 6th | 7th | 5 |
Nancy Greene | Canada | 14th | 3 | 8th | 3 |
Michèle Jacot 18th | France | 10 | 1 | 6th | 3 |
Françoise Macchi | France | 10 | 2 | 6th | 2 |
Henri Duvillard | France | 6th | 3 | 2 | 1 |
Reinhard Tritscher 18th | Austria | 4th | 1 | 2 | 1 |
In addition, Annemarie Moser-Pröll was able to win the discipline world cup at least once in three of the disciplines held at her time (downhill, giant slalom and combination), in slalom she was once second in the discipline classification.
Lists of nations
(Status after the end of the 2016/17 season)
World cup race
Individual disciplines
Including all combination decisions, there were 1672 for the men and 1563 for the women, a total of 3235.
There were 10 ex aequo victories for the men and 15 for the women (two of them in triplicate ).
- Distribution according to disciplines or women and men:
- Downhill (DH): 391 races / 396 wins or 470 races / 473 wins
- Super-G (SG): 218 races / 223 wins or 198 races / 202 wins
- Giant Slalom (GS): 396 races / 401 wins or 397 races / 398 wins
- Slalom, including knockout slalom (SL): 446 races / 450 wins or 470 races / 472 wins
- City events (CE): 6 each for women and men
- Parallel slaloms (P): 3 for women and 2 for men
- Parallel giant slalom (P-GS): 2 for men
- Combinations (C): 72 conventional and 29 super or alpine station wagons or 93/34
- Most successful nations
- Ladies
- Austria 370
- Switzerland 300
- USA 189
- Germany 183
- France 156
- Sweden 84
- Italy 75
- Slovenia / Yugoslavia 55
- Liechtenstein 43
- Canada 39
- Croatia 30
- Finland 12
- Spain 11
- Norway 9
- Slovakia 7
- New Zealand, Russia and the Czech Republic / ČSSR each 5
- Australia and Poland each 1
AUS AUT BUL CAN CRO CS SVK FIN FRA GER ITA LIE LUX NOR NZE POL RUS SLO SPA SWE SUI USA C – 22 – 3 6 1 – – – 12 2 8 – – – – – 4 – 6 27 10 DH – 114 – 15 1 1 – – 24 48 18 3 – – – – 4 8 1 8 88 63 GS – 93 – 10 2 – – 6 48 49 30 14 – 4 – – – 20 7 16 77 25 SG – 55 – 5 1 – – – 23 42 13 5 – 2 – – 1 6 – 8 31 31 SL 1 85 – 6 20 3 6 6 60 30 12 13 – 3 5 1 – 17 3 45 76 58 CE – – – – – – 1 – – 1 – – – – – – – – – 1 1 2 P – 1 – – – – – – 1 1 – – – – – – – – – – – – Ges. 1 370 – 39 30 5 7 12 156 183 75 43 – 9 5 1 5 55 11 84 300 189
- Men's:
- Austria 490
- Switzerland 266
- Italy 178
- Norway 143
- France 136
- USA 126
- Sweden 118
- Luxembourg 46
- Germany 43
- Canada 37
- Croatia 26
- Liechtenstein and Slovenia / Yugoslavia each 24
- Finland 14
- Russia / Soviet Union 6
- Australia 2
- Bulgaria, Poland and Spain each 1
AUS AUT BUL CAN CRO CS SVK FIN FRA GER ITA LIE LUX NOR NZE POL RUS SLO SPA SWE SUI USA C – 22 – – 9 – – – 8 2 5 6 11 14 – – – – – – 31 19 DH 1 177 – 29 – – – – 30 6 35 3 3 39 – – 1 3 – – 117 29 GS – 102 – 2 – – – 4 34 2 49 4 7 22 – – 3 1 – 53 71 44 SG 1 75 – 6 1 – – – 5 6 14 3 9 36 – – – – – 3 34 9 SL – 111 1 – 15 – – 10 57 25 74 8 16 31 – 1 2 20 1 62 13 25 CE – 2 – – 1 – – – 1 2 – – – – – – – – – – – – P-GS – – – – – – – – 1 – – – – 1 – – – – – – – – P – 1 – – – – – – – – 1 – – – – – – – – – – – Ges. 2 490 1 37 26 – – 14 136 43 178 24 46 143 – 1 6 24 1 118 266 126
Team competitions
Team competitions (held from 2005/06)
- Total number 12
- Three wins each for Switzerland and Austria
- two each for Germany and Sweden
- one each for Italy and the Czech Republic
- Overall World Cup by nation
- Women:
- AUT 17
- SUI 12
- USA 6
- GER 4
- CRO and SWE each 3
- CAN and LIE each 2
- FRA and SLO each 1
- Men's:
- AUT 15
- SUI 7
- ITA 6
- LUX, NOR and USA 5 each
- FRA and SWE each 3
- CRO and LIE each 1
- Total:
- AUT 32
- SUI 19
- USA 11
- ITA & SWE 6 each
- LUX & NOR 5 each
- CRO & FRA & GER 4 each
- LIE 3
- CAN 2
- SLO 1
Nations Cup
The Nations Cup went to Austria for the 40th time in 2018/19, 30 of them in series (since 1989/90). Austria's men have always been able to win it since 1992/93. The women's team, on the other hand, was defeated for the first time since 1997/98 (when Germany won), whereby the success for the German team was a first.
After 51 years of the World Cup, there were only two other nations that won this overall ranking: Switzerland eight times and France five times.
With the USA, Germany and Italy (from 1973/74 to 1975/76 for the men - and 2016/17 for the women’s team) there were only three nations that were ahead in a partial ranking .
Resounding successes (both overall and women and men) were as follows:
Austria: 28; France and Switzerland three times each.
Discipline World Cups
With regard to the discipline World Cups, there were victories as follows:
- Ladies
- Total number 229
- Divided into disciplines:
- DH (including one ex aequo): 52
- SG (only from 1985/86): 32
- GS (incl. Twice ex aequo): 53
- SL (including twice ex aequo): 53
- C (once 1975/76 and from 1979/80 excluding 2003/04, including once ex aequo): 39
- Division of women by nationality:
- AUT 56
- SUI 47
- GER 33
- FRA & USA each 25
- SWE 11
- SLO (YUG) 8
- CRO 7
- LIE 6
- CAN & ITA each 4
- FIN 3
- Detail breakdown of women by discipline
- DH: AUT 18, SUI & USA 10 each, GER 7, FRA 4, ITA 2, SLO 1
- SG: GER 8, AUT & FRA 6 each, USA 5, SUI 4, SLO 2, LIE 1
- GS: AUT & SUI 12 each, GER 9, FRA 5, SWE 3, CAN & FIN & ITA & LIE & SLO (YUG) & USA 2 each
- SL: SUI 13, AUT 11, FRA 9, USA 5, GER & SWE 4 each, CRO 3, CAN & FIN & LIE & SLO 1 each
- C: AUT 9, SUI 8, GER 5, CRO & SWE 4 each, USA 3, LIE & SLO 2 each, CAN & FRA 1 each
- Men's
- Total 237
- Divided into disciplines:
- DH (including one ex aequo): 52
- SG (only from 1985/86): 32
- GS (incl. Twice ex aequo): 53
- SL (incl. Four times ex aequo): 55
- C (from 1974/75, excl. 1977/78; incl. Four times ex aequo): 46
- Breakdown of men by nationality:
- AUT 63
- SUI 40
- NOR 29
- FRA 23
- ITA 20
- USA 19th
- SWE 17
- LUX 10
- CRO 5
- GER 4
- LIE 3
- CAN & SLO (YUG) each 2
- FIN 1
- Detailed breakdown of men by discipline:
- DH: AUT 23, SUI 16, FRA & NOR 4 each, ITA & LUX 1 each, CAN 1
- SG: NOR 11, AUT 8, SUI 7, USA 2, CAN & FRA & GER & ITA 1 each
- GS: AUT 13, SUI 9, ITA & USA 8 each, SWE 7, FRA 4, NOR 3, LUX 1
- SL: AUT 13, FRA & SWE 10 each, ITA 8, LUX 3, CRO & GER & NOR & SLO (YUG) 2 each, FIN & SUI & USA 1 each
- C: NOR 9, USA 8, SUI 7, AUT 6, FRA & LUX 4 each, CRO & LIE 3, GER & ITA 1 each
- Total aggregation of the discipline ratings women and men by nationality (467 ratings)
- AUT 119
- SUI 87
- FRA 48
- USA 44
- GER 37
- NOR 29
- SWE 28
- ITA 24
- CRO 12
- LUX & SLO each 10
- LIE 9
- CAN 6
- FIN 4
Individual evidence
- ↑ Shiffrin wins Aspen Slalom with a record advantage. derStandard.at , November 28, 2015, accessed on November 29, 2015 .
- ↑ Only Kraml and Kirchler strong. Arbeiterzeitung Wien, January 20, 1981, p. 11.
- ↑ Slalom no longer exists. Arbeiterzeitung, January 22, 1981, p. 10.
- ↑ Sport Zurich.
- ↑ Arbeiterzeitung Wien, January 5, 1975, p. 12.
- ↑ E. Hess: Two victories in one day. Arbeiterzeitung Wien, March 22, 1982, p. 8.
- ↑ Arbeiterzeitung, January 19, 1987, p. 19, Glosse Sorgekind.
- ^ New rule was boycotted. Arbeiterzeitung Wien, March 12, 1985, p. 10 and Glossary Wortführer.
- ^ Kronen-Zeitung, January 10, 1988.
- ↑ Arbeiterzeitung, January 11, 1988, p. 20.
- ↑ Shiffrin achieves historic triumph. orf.at, December 2, 2018, accessed on December 2, 2018 .