Alpine skiing-Switzerland's Gut-Behrami takes Super-G World Cup title


Alpine Skiing - FIS Alpine Ski World Cup - Women's Super G - Soldeu, Andorra - March 16, 2023 Switzerland's Lara Gut-Behrami celebrates with the crystal globe after winning the women's Super G for the season REUTERS/Albert Gea

(Reuters) - Switzerland's Lara Gut-Behrami won the final women's super-G of the Alpine skiing World Cup season in Andorra on Thursday to take the title in the discipline for the fourth time in her career.

The 2022 Olympic champion and 2021 world champion beat Italy's Federica Brignone, last year's World Cup super-G champion, by 0.22 of a second down Soldeu's Aliga slope with Norwegian Ragnhild Mowinckel third and 0.47 off the pace.

Gut-Behrami ended the season with 413 points to Brignone's 368 and Mowinckel's 366.

Italian Elena Curtoni, who had led before the eighth and final super-G, finished 10th and dropped to fourth overall on 358 points.

"It's been a roller-coaster this season and I'm happy today," said Gut-Behrami, the only female skier to win more than one super-G this season. "I just tried to ski the way I can and it happened.

"It's an emotional day -- the win, the globe, Nicole quitting. I'm getting older and I'm getting more emotional. It's crazy. I'm crying all the time."

The race was a farewell for retiring Austrian skier Nicole Schmidhofer, the 2017 super-G world champion, who was hugged by her rivals afterwards in the finish area.

American skier Mikaela Shiffrin finished 14th in her first appearance of the finals and first since she took her record 87th World Cup win last Saturday.

Shiffrin, the overall, giant slalom and slalom World Cup champion, had not been in contention for the Super-G crystal globe.

The women have a slalom on Saturday and a giant slalom on Sunday.

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin in London, editing by Toby Davis)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Others

Red Bull won't rush to announce 2025 driver lineup, Horner says
The Paris Olympics menu: more French, more local, less meat
Olympics-James to headline another US 'Dream Team' in Paris
Olympics-World Athletics prize money move creates problem, says BOA chief
Olympics-Designer Berluti reveals opening ceremony tuxedo for French athletes
Olympics-Opening ceremony in Stade de France only if major security risk, sports minister says
Olympics-With 100 days to go, Parisians grumble about the Games
How green are your trainers? Team Japan kits to have carbon footprint labels
Olympics-Australia have trust in France over Paris Games security
Olympics-Loss of horses a 'sad moment' for modern pentathlon, Davis says

Others Also Read