2016–17 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup

(Redirected from Alpine Ski World Cup 2017)

The International Ski Federation (FIS) Alpine Skiing World Cup is the premier circuit for alpine skiing competition. The inaugural FIS World Cup season launched 57 years ago in January 1967 and this 51st season began on 22 October 2016 in Sölden, Austria, and concluded in the United States at Aspen on 19 March 2017. The biennial World Championships interrupted the tour in early February in Saint Moritz, Switzerland.[1] The season-ending finals in March were held in North America for the first time in two decades: the last finale in the U.S. was in 1997 at Vail.

2016–17 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup champions
Discipline Men Women
Overall Austria Marcel Hirscher United States Mikaela Shiffrin
Downhill Italy Peter Fill Slovenia Ilka Štuhec
Super-G Norway Kjetil Jansrud Liechtenstein Tina Weirather
Giant slalom Austria Marcel Hirscher France Tessa Worley
Slalom Austria Marcel Hirscher United States Mikaela Shiffrin
Alpine combined France Alexis Pinturault Slovenia Ilka Štuhec
Nations Cup Austria Austria Italy Italy
Nations Cup Overall Austria Austria
Competition
Locations 17 venues 19 venues
Individual 36 events 37 events
Mixed 1 event 1 event
Cancelled 6 events 1 event
Rescheduled 5 events 1 event

Chief Race Director for the WC Tour, Markus Waldner, offered his pre-season thoughts on the pending 2016-17 tour in an early October interview. He addressed: early season scheduling and weather considerations, the growing global interest in alpine skiing beyond the core market in Europe and Scandinavia, the balance between what disciplines were scheduled and the marketability concerns each present, course construction that is safely competitive and manages risk, and a new change to regulation that allows top qualifiers to pick their starting position across a much wider range of bibs between 1 and 19.[2]

Former overall World Cup champion Tina Maze of Slovenia, who missed the entire 2015-16 World Cup season, retired in January 2017.[3] At the end of the season, former two-time overall World Cup champion Bode Miller of the United States, who had not raced in the last two seasons, also officially retired.[4]

Men's overall champion
Marcel Hirscher won the overall title for the sixth successive year.
Summary

Calendar

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Event key: DH – Downhill, SL – Slalom, GS – Giant slalom, SG – Super giant slalom, AC – Alpine combined, CE – City Event (Parallel), PG – Parallel giant slalom
Race Season Date Place Type Winner Second Third Details
1637 1 23 October 2016     Sölden[5] GS 390    Alexis Pinturault   Marcel Hirscher   Felix Neureuther [6][7]
1638 2 13 November 2016     Levi[8] SL 460    Marcel Hirscher   Michael Matt   Manfred Mölgg [9][10]
26 November 2016     Lake Louise[11] DH cnx  warm temperatures and lack of snow on lower course; replaced in Kvitfjell on 24 February 2017[12]
27 November 2016   SG cnx  warm temperatures and lack of snow on lower course; replaced in Santa Caterina on 27 December 2016
2 December 2016     Beaver Creek[13] DH cnx  warm temperatures and lack of snow; replaced in Val d'Isère on 3 December 2016[14]
3 December 2016   SG cnx  warm temperatures and lack of snow; replaced in Val d'Isère on 2 December 2016
4 December 2016   GS cnx  warm temperatures and lack of snow; replaced in Val d'Isère on 4 December 2016
1639 3 2 December 2016     Val d'Isère[15][16] SG 193    Kjetil Jansrud   Aksel Lund Svindal   Dominik Paris [17][18]
1640 4 3 December 2016   DH 463    Kjetil Jansrud   Peter Fill   Aksel Lund Svindal [19][20]
1641 5 4 December 2016   GS 391    Mathieu Faivre   Marcel Hirscher   Alexis Pinturault [21][22]
1642 6 10 December 2016   GS 392    Alexis Pinturault   Marcel Hirscher   Henrik Kristoffersen [23][24]
1643 7 11 December 2016   SL 461    Henrik Kristoffersen   Marcel Hirscher   Aleksandr Khoroshilov [25][26]
1644 8 16 December 2016     Val Gardena[27] SG 194    Kjetil Jansrud   Aleksander Aamodt Kilde   Erik Guay [28][29]
1645 9 17 December 2016   DH 464    Max Franz   Aksel Lund Svindal   Steven Nyman [30][31]
1646 10 18 December 2016     Alta Badia[32] GS 393    Marcel Hirscher   Mathieu Faivre   Florian Eisath [33][34]
1647 11 19 December 2016   PG 002    Cyprien Sarrazin     Carlo Janka   Kjetil Jansrud [35][36]
1648 12 22 December 2016     Madonna di Campiglio[37] SL 462    Henrik Kristoffersen   Marcel Hirscher   Stefano Gross [38][39]
1649 13 27 December 2016     Santa Caterina[40][41] SG 195    Kjetil Jansrud   Hannes Reichelt   Dominik Paris [42][43]
28 December 2016   DH cnx  excessive high winds[44]
1650 14 29 December 2016   AC 126    Alexis Pinturault   Marcel Hirscher   Aleksander Aamodt Kilde [45][46]
1651 15 5 January 2017     Zagreb[47] SL 463    Manfred Mölgg   Felix Neureuther   Henrik Kristoffersen [48][49]
1652 16 7 January 2017       Adelboden[50][51] GS 394    Alexis Pinturault   Marcel Hirscher   Philipp Schörghofer [52][53]
1653 17 8 January 2017   SL 464    Henrik Kristoffersen   Manfred Mölgg   Marcel Hirscher [54][55]
1654 18 13 January 2017       Wengen[56][57][58] AC 127      Niels Hintermann   Maxence Muzaton   Frederic Berthold [59][60]
14 January 2017   DH cnx  excess snow; replaced in Garmisch-Partenkirchen on 27 January 2017[61]
1655 19 15 January 2017   SL 465    Henrik Kristoffersen   Marcel Hirscher   Felix Neureuther [62]
1656 20 20 January 2017     Kitzbühel[63] SG 196    Matthias Mayer   Christof Innerhofer     Beat Feuz [64]
1657 21 21 January 2017   DH 465    Dominik Paris   Valentin Giraud Moine   Johan Clarey [65]
1658 22 22 January 2017   SL 466    Marcel Hirscher   Dave Ryding   Aleksandr Khoroshilov [66]
1659 23 24 January 2017     Schladming[67] SL 467    Henrik Kristoffersen   Marcel Hirscher   Aleksandr Khoroshilov [68]
1660 24 27 January 2017     Garmisch-Partenkirchen[69] DH 466    Travis Ganong   Kjetil Jansrud   Peter Fill [70]
1661 25 28 January 2017   DH 467    Hannes Reichelt   Peter Fill     Beat Feuz [71]
1662 26 29 January 2017   GS 395    Marcel Hirscher   Matts Olsson   Stefan Luitz [72]
1663 27 31 January 2017     Stockholm[73] CE 006    Linus Straßer   Alexis Pinturault   Mattias Hargin [74]
World Championships (6–19 February)
1664 28 24 February 2017     Kvitfjell[75][76] DH 468    Boštjan Kline   Matthias Mayer   Kjetil Jansrud [77]
1665 29 25 February 2017   DH 469    Kjetil Jansrud   Peter Fill     Beat Feuz [78]
1666 30 26 February 2017   SG 197    Peter Fill   Hannes Reichelt   Erik Guay [79]
1667 31 4 March 2017     Kranjska Gora[80] GS 396    Marcel Hirscher   Leif Kristian Haugen   Matts Olsson [81]
1668 32 5 March 2017   SL 468    Michael Matt   Stefano Gross   Felix Neureuther [82]
1669 33 15 March 2017     Aspen[83] DH 470    Dominik Paris   Peter Fill     Carlo Janka [84]
1670 34 16 March 2017   SG 198    Hannes Reichelt   Dominik Paris     Mauro Caviezel
  Aleksander Aamodt Kilde
[85]
1671 35 18 March 2017   GS 397    Marcel Hirscher   Felix Neureuther   Mathieu Faivre [86]
1672 36 19 March 2017   SL 469    André Myhrer   Felix Neureuther   Michael Matt [87]

Rankings

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Women

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Summary
Women's overall champion
Mikaela Shiffrin. First American female to capture the Overall since 2012.

The women typically have had technical events in the U.S. in late November in Colorado at Aspen, but instead stopped this season in Vermont at Killington for its first effort as a World Cup venue. The most recent World Cup races in the Eastern U.S. were over a quarter century earlier, in March 1991 at Waterville Valley Resort, New Hampshire [94] and the last World Cup races in Vermont were in 1978 at Stratton Mountain Resort.[95][96] The women also had two Olympic venue orientation speed events in South Korea at the Jeongseon Alpine Centre in March, which produced identical podiums led by Sofia Goggia.

Injuries continued to affect several of the top racers. Two-time overall champion Anna Veith (née Fenninger) and three-time overall champion Lindsey Vonn both missed the first half of the season due to injuries suffered during the previous season, although both returned by mid-January and competed in the World Championships in early February.[97][98] However, Veith then missed the end of the season as well to recover further from her injuries.[99] In addition, defending overall champion Lara Gut suffered a season-ending injury during the World Championships, costing her a chance to repeat.[100]

At the end of the season, Mikaela Shiffrin, who also won the slalom discipline for the fourth time and was second in the giant slalom, became the third American woman and fifth American overall to win the overall World Cup championship, joining men's champions Phil Mahre and Bode Miller and women's champions Tamara McKinney and Vonn.[101] Additionally, women's super G champion Tina Weirather became a second-generation discipline champion, as her father (Harti Weirather) was downhill discipline champion in 1981 and both her mother (Hanni Wenzel) and uncle (Andreas Wenzel) won the overall World Cup championship. Weirather and her mother thus became the first mother-daughter pair to win season trophies in World Cup competition.[102]

Calendar

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Event key: DH – Downhill, SL – Slalom, GS – Giant slalom, SG – Super giant slalom, AC – Alpine combined, CE – City Event (Parallel)
Race Season Date Place Type Winner Second Third Details
1527 1 22 October 2016     Sölden[5] GS 388      Lara Gut   Mikaela Shiffrin   Marta Bassino [103][104]
1528 2 12 November 2016     Levi[8] SL 437    Mikaela Shiffrin     Wendy Holdener   Petra Vlhová [105][106]
1529 3 26 November 2016     Killington[107][108][109] GS 389    Tessa Worley   Nina Løseth   Sofia Goggia [110]
1530 4 27 November 2016   SL 438    Mikaela Shiffrin   Veronika Velez-Zuzulová     Wendy Holdener [111]
1531 5 2 December 2016     Lake Louise[11] DH 386    Ilka Štuhec   Sofia Goggia   Kajsa Kling [112]
1532 6 3 December 2016   DH 387    Ilka Štuhec     Lara Gut   Edit Miklós [113]
1533 7 4 December 2016   SG 212      Lara Gut   Tina Weirather   Sofia Goggia [114]
1534 8 10 December 2016     Sestriere[115][116][117] GS 390    Tessa Worley   Sofia Goggia     Lara Gut [118]
1535 9 11 December 2016   SL 439    Mikaela Shiffrin   Veronika Velez-Zuzulová     Wendy Holdener [119]
1536 10 16 December 2016     Val d'Isère[120] AC 099    Ilka Štuhec     Michelle Gisin   Sofia Goggia [121]
1537 11 17 December 2016   DH 388    Ilka Štuhec   Cornelia Hütter   Sofia Goggia [122]
1538 12 18 December 2016   SG 213      Lara Gut   Tina Weirather   Elena Curtoni [123]
20 December 2016     Courchevel[124] GS cnx  terminated and excessive wind after race started; replaced in Semmering on 27 December 2016[125]
1539 13 27 December 2016     Semmering[126][127] GS 391    Mikaela Shiffrin   Tessa Worley   Manuela Mölgg [128]
1540 14 28 December 2016   GS 392    Mikaela Shiffrin   Tessa Worley   Viktoria Rebensburg [129]
1541 15 29 December 2016   SL 440    Mikaela Shiffrin   Veronika Velez-Zuzulová     Wendy Holdener [130]
1542 16 3 January 2017     Zagreb[47] SL 441    Veronika Velez-Zuzulová   Petra Vlhová   Šárka Strachová [131]
1543 17 7 January 2017     Maribor[132] GS 393    Tessa Worley   Sofia Goggia     Lara Gut [133]
1544 18 8 January 2017   SL 442    Mikaela Shiffrin     Wendy Holdener   Frida Hansdotter [134]
1545 19 10 January 2017     Flachau[135] SL 443    Frida Hansdotter   Nina Løseth     Wendy Holdener
  Mikaela Shiffrin
[136][137]
14 January 2017     Altenmarkt-Zauchensee[138] DH cnx  postponed to following day; replaced in Altenmarkt-Zauchensee on 15 January 2017
1546 20 15 January 2017   DH 389    Christine Scheyer   Tina Weirather   Jacqueline Wiles [139]
15 January 2017   AC cnx  postponed over switch with downhill; replaced in Crans-Montana on 24 February 2017[140]
1547 21 21 January 2017     Garmisch-Partenkirchen[69] DH 390    Lindsey Vonn     Lara Gut   Viktoria Rebensburg [141]
1548 22 22 January 2017   SG 214      Lara Gut   Stephanie Venier   Tina Weirather [142]
1549 23 24 January 2017     Kronplatz[143] GS 394    Federica Brignone   Tessa Worley   Marta Bassino [144]
1550 24 28 January 2017     Cortina d'Ampezzo[145] DH 391      Lara Gut   Sofia Goggia   Ilka Štuhec [146]
1551 25 29 January 2017   SG 215    Ilka Štuhec   Sofia Goggia   Anna Veith [147]
1552 26 31 January 2017     Stockholm[73] CE 006    Mikaela Shiffrin   Veronika Velez-Zuzulová   Nina Løseth [148]
World Championships (6–19 February)
1553 27 24 February 2017      Crans-Montana[149] AC 100    Federica Brignone   Ilka Štuhec   Michaela Kirchgasser [150]
1554 28 25 February 2017   SG 216    Ilka Štuhec   Elena Curtoni   Stephanie Venier [151]
1555 29 26 February 2017   AC 101    Mikaela Shiffrin   Federica Brignone   Ilka Štuhec [152]
1556 30 4 March 2017     Jeongseon[153] DH 392    Sofia Goggia   Lindsey Vonn   Ilka Štuhec [154]
1557 31 5 March 2017   SG 217    Sofia Goggia   Lindsey Vonn   Ilka Štuhec [155]
1558 32 10 March 2017     Squaw Valley[156][157] GS 395    Mikaela Shiffrin   Federica Brignone   Tessa Worley [158]
1559 33 11 March 2017   SL 444    Mikaela Shiffrin   Šárka Strachová   Bernadette Schild [159]
1560 34 15 March 2017     Aspen[83] DH 393    Ilka Štuhec   Lindsey Vonn   Sofia Goggia [160]
1561 35 16 March 2017   SG 218    Tina Weirather   Ilka Štuhec   Federica Brignone [161]
1562 36 18 March 2017   SL 445    Petra Vlhová   Mikaela Shiffrin   Frida Hansdotter [162]
1563 37 19 March 2017   GS 396    Federica Brignone   Sofia Goggia   Marta Bassino [163]

Rankings

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Alpine team event

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Event key: PG – Parallel giant slalom
Race Season Date Place Type Winner Second Third Details
12 1 17 March 2017     Aspen[83] PG 009    Sweden
Frida Hansdotter
Maria Pietilä Holmner
Emelie Wikström
Mattias Hargin
André Myhrer
Matts Olsson
  Germany
Lena Dürr
Christina Geiger
Marina Wallner
Stefan Luitz
Felix Neureuther
Linus Straßer
  France
Adeline Baud Mugnier
Coralie Frasse Sombet
Jean-Baptiste Grange
Julien Lizeroux
Cyprien Sarrazin
 
[170]

Nations Cup

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Prize money

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References

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edit
- "World Cup Home Page at International Ski Federation".
- "Ski Coverage at FOX Sports Network"
- "Social Media Hub at International Ski Federation". Archived from the original on 2016-01-11. Retrieved 2016-01-10.
- "Female Competitors at International Ski Federation". Archived from the original on 2016-01-28. Retrieved 2016-01-10.
- "Male Competitors at International Ski Federation". Archived from the original on 2016-01-28. Retrieved 2016-01-10.
- "Slopes, Venues, Access, and Arena Ticketing at International Ski Federation". Archived from the original on 2016-01-20. Retrieved 2016-01-10.
- "Current Reporting about this season at Ski Racing Magazine (online)".
- "Latest News and Multi-Media at International Ski Federation". Archived from the original on 2016-01-06. Retrieved 2016-01-10. or "RSS Feed". Archived from the original on 2016-01-20. Retrieved 2016-01-10.
- "Documents, Rules & Guidelines at International Ski Federation". Archived from the original on 2017-02-01. Retrieved 2016-01-10.