Sports
Huetter win denies Gut-Behrami 4th season title
On a surprising final day of the women's World Cup season, Cornelia Huetter won the downhill race to clinch her first season title and deny Lara Gut-Behrami her fourth this week.
On a surprising final day of the women's World Cup season, Cornelia Huetter won the downhill race to clinch her first season title and deny Lara Gut-Behrami her fourth this week.
Huetter had started Saturday's race fourth in the discipline standings, behind Austrian teammate Stephanie Venier, the injured Sofia Goggia and Gut-Behrami, who needed to finish ninth or better to protect her lead in the standings.
Huetter was 12th out the starting gate, and after she soared into the lead with a time of 1 minute, 45.08 seconds, all eyes turned to Gut-Behrami.
Having already won the overall, giant slalom and super-G titles over the past week at the World Cup finals, Gut-Behrami was expected to become the fourth female skier to win four classifications in one season, joining Lindsey Vonn, Tina Maze and, most recently, Mikaela Shiffrin.
However, the Swiss standout was perhaps too cautious and ended up crossing the line in 11th, and Huetter was immediately surrounded by her jubilant teammates.
It still wasn't over as Huetter, 31, then faced an anxious wait to make sure none of the remaining skiers were faster, which would have denied Huetter the 100 points for the win that she needed to beat Gut-Behrami to the title.
Ilka Stuhec and Nicol Delago went nerve-crushingly close -- starting 17th and 18th, respectively -- and Huetter had her head in her hands after Stuhec finished just 0.17 seconds behind for second place. Delago was third, 0.49 seconds behind Huetter.
This was Huetter's second World Cup downhill win and came more than six years after her first, at Lake Louise in December 2017.
"I'm really speechless," said Huetter. "It's amazing to have a home race with this ending, I never can imagine it. I slept so bad, and I woke up and I thought, 'Give your best, it's the last chance today for this season,' and I did it."
Gut-Behrami dropped to 17th and out of the points, finishing 28 points behind Huetter. She is the first Swiss female skier since Vreni Schneider in 1995 to win three globes in a single season.
"Today Cornelia was clearly better," a nevertheless smiling Gut-Behrami told Italian television RAI. "At the end of the day, to win a World Cup, you have to be the best during the season and be able to adapt to all types of snow. I struggled with that today and lost the cup.
"But as always, there's nothing prewritten, nothing that has to happen. You have to try to do your best to win something, and I think that's clear. That's what's being talked about at the last race, but to turn everything to a negative seems definitely absurd to me."
Goggia finished third in the standings despite having to end her season at the beginning of February after breaking two bones in her right leg in a training crash.
The race was also a farewell to Norway's retiring Ragnhild Mowinckel, the 2018 Olympic downhill silver medalist. It was Mowinckel's 248th World Cup start, and she was greeted with a huge round of applause after she crossed the line as the five skiers who had already competed rushed to embrace the 31-year-old Norwegian. Her family was in tears.
Mowinckel finished last, 3.32 seconds behind Huetter.
Gut-Behrami's Swiss compatriot Marco Odermatt will also be looking to complete a quadruple in the men's downhill that brings the season to a close on Sunday.
Odermatt, 26, locked up his third straight overall championship and the giant slalom title weeks ago and lifted the super-G crystal globe on Friday. He leads Cyprien Sarrazin by 42 points in downhill.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
Huetter had started Saturday's race fourth in the discipline standings, behind Austrian teammate Stephanie Venier, the injured Sofia Goggia and Gut-Behrami, who needed to finish ninth or better to protect her lead in the standings.
Huetter was 12th out the starting gate, and after she soared into the lead with a time of 1 minute, 45.08 seconds, all eyes turned to Gut-Behrami.
Having already won the overall, giant slalom and super-G titles over the past week at the World Cup finals, Gut-Behrami was expected to become the fourth female skier to win four classifications in one season, joining Lindsey Vonn, Tina Maze and, most recently, Mikaela Shiffrin.
However, the Swiss standout was perhaps too cautious and ended up crossing the line in 11th, and Huetter was immediately surrounded by her jubilant teammates.
It still wasn't over as Huetter, 31, then faced an anxious wait to make sure none of the remaining skiers were faster, which would have denied Huetter the 100 points for the win that she needed to beat Gut-Behrami to the title.
Ilka Stuhec and Nicol Delago went nerve-crushingly close -- starting 17th and 18th, respectively -- and Huetter had her head in her hands after Stuhec finished just 0.17 seconds behind for second place. Delago was third, 0.49 seconds behind Huetter.
This was Huetter's second World Cup downhill win and came more than six years after her first, at Lake Louise in December 2017.
"I'm really speechless," said Huetter. "It's amazing to have a home race with this ending, I never can imagine it. I slept so bad, and I woke up and I thought, 'Give your best, it's the last chance today for this season,' and I did it."
Gut-Behrami dropped to 17th and out of the points, finishing 28 points behind Huetter. She is the first Swiss female skier since Vreni Schneider in 1995 to win three globes in a single season.
"Today Cornelia was clearly better," a nevertheless smiling Gut-Behrami told Italian television RAI. "At the end of the day, to win a World Cup, you have to be the best during the season and be able to adapt to all types of snow. I struggled with that today and lost the cup.
"But as always, there's nothing prewritten, nothing that has to happen. You have to try to do your best to win something, and I think that's clear. That's what's being talked about at the last race, but to turn everything to a negative seems definitely absurd to me."
Goggia finished third in the standings despite having to end her season at the beginning of February after breaking two bones in her right leg in a training crash.
The race was also a farewell to Norway's retiring Ragnhild Mowinckel, the 2018 Olympic downhill silver medalist. It was Mowinckel's 248th World Cup start, and she was greeted with a huge round of applause after she crossed the line as the five skiers who had already competed rushed to embrace the 31-year-old Norwegian. Her family was in tears.
Mowinckel finished last, 3.32 seconds behind Huetter.
Gut-Behrami's Swiss compatriot Marco Odermatt will also be looking to complete a quadruple in the men's downhill that brings the season to a close on Sunday.
Odermatt, 26, locked up his third straight overall championship and the giant slalom title weeks ago and lifted the super-G crystal globe on Friday. He leads Cyprien Sarrazin by 42 points in downhill.
The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.
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