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With 7,760 points in the FIS Brand Ranking, HEAD once again confirms its leading position in the Alpine Ski World Cup in the 2023/24 season. Lara Gut-Behrami's performance is outstanding - the Swiss athlete wins the Crystal Globe for the overall World Cup and two more Crystal Globes in the Giant Slalom and Super-G. The Downhill Crystal Globe goes to Cornelia Hütter from Austria.
Victory in the Downhill in Saalbach on Saturday sees Cornelia Hütter sensationally win the Crystal Globe in this discipline. For the Austrian athlete this is the first Crystal Globe in her career. The final deciding race for the Downhill overall rankings is an absolute cliff-hanger. The second and fourth places overall go to two other HEAD Worldcup Rebels: Lara Gut-Behrami and Stephanie Venier.
The crystal keeps on coming for Lara Gut-Behrami at the second weekend of finals in Saalbach. Finishing in seventh place in the final Super-G on Friday, the Swiss athlete wins the Crystal Globe in this discipline as well - her third after winning the overall World Cup and the Giant Slalom. Kajsa Vickhoff Lie podiums in third place for the third time this season.
Crystal ski Sunday for Lara Gut-Behrami in Saalbach! The Swiss athlete takes the Crystal Globe in Giant Slalom for the first time following the final event of the season in this discipline, as well as the Crystal Globe for the overall World Cup winner 2023/24.
Two HEAD Worldcup Rebels on the podium in the Giant Slalom in Aare on Saturday with Sara Hector in second place and Lara Gut-Behrami finishing third. The third place finish sees the Swiss athlete enter the final race in Saalbach with a 95-point lead in the Giant Slalom World Cup.
First and second places in the two Super-G races in Kvitfjell see Lara Gut-Behrami further extend her lead in the overall World Cup and the Super-G discipline. The HEAD Worldcup Rebels celebrate a double victory on Saturday with Lara Gut-Behrami and Cornelia Hütter. In Aspen, Atle Lie McGrath finishes third, returning to the Giant Slalom podium for the first time in more than three years.
Following her victory in the Downhill in Crans-Montana on Friday and third place in the Downhill on Saturday, Lara Gut-Behrami is now 205 points in front of Mikaela Shiffrin in the World Cup. The Swiss athlete also takes over the red jersey in the Downhill. Cornelia Hütter finishes in second place on Friday. Stephanie Venier celebrates her first Super-G victory on Sunday.
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There's no holding back Lara Gut-Behrami! Following her victory in the Giant Slalom on Saturday, the Swiss athlete leaves Soldeu in Andorra as the World Cup overall leader. It is the 43rd World Cup victory for the 32-year-old, and her ninth in this discipline. AJ Hurt finishes third to win her second podium in the World Cup.
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Winning by more than a second in the Giant Slalom in Kronplatz, Lara Gut-Behrami celebrates her 42nd World Cup victory, the eighth in this discipline. The Swiss athlete continues to extend her lead in the Giant Slalom World Cup. Sara Hector also races to the podium in second place.
Two Downhills and a Super-G in Cortina make three victories for the HEAD Worldcup Rebels. Friday sees Stephanie Venier celebrate her second World Cup victory in the first Downhill race of the weekend in front of Lara Gut-Behrami. On Saturday, it's Ragnhild Mowinckel who wins her first Downhill, with Lara Gut-Behrami following up on Sunday in the Super-G.
With an impressive lead of 1.52 seconds, Sara Hector wins the Giant Slalom in Jasna on Saturday for her fifth World Cup victory, all five in this discipline. Finishing in sixth place, Lara Gut-Behrami takes the lead in the Giant Slalom World Cup rankings. Anna Swenn-Larsson races to her first podium finish of the season with third place in the Slalom in Jasna on Sunday.
Sara Hector podiums in the Slalom for the first time in her career by finishing third in Flachau on Tuesday. Four more HEAD Worldcup Rebels finish in the top ten with Anna Swenn-Larsson in fifth place, Camille Rast sixth, Dzenifera Germane eighth, and Andrine Maarstöl tenth.
Cornelia Hütter, Kajsa Vickhoff Lie and Lara Gut-Behrami own the whole podium - the HEAD Worldcup Rebels race into the weekend on Friday with a brilliant triple victory in the Super-G in Altenmarkt-Zauchensee. And they leave on Sunday following an equally impressive double victory by Lara Gut-Behrami and Cornelia Hütter in the second Super-G event.
Four HEAD Worldcup Rebels in the top six in the Slalom in Kranjska Gora on Sunday! A J Hurt finishes third with bib number 38 to step up onto the World Cup podium for the first time. Lena Dürr is ahead of her in second place, with Camille Rast behind her in fourth place. Sara Hector rounds off an awesome performance by the HEAD team in sixth place.
Following four fourth places, Sara Hector is back on the podium for the first time this season with a third place in the Giant Slalom in Lienz on Thursday. Lena Dürr finishes second in the Slalom in Lienz on Friday to secure her third podium finish. In the men's Downhill and Super-G events in Bormio, the HEAD Worldcup Rebels just missed out on the top three.
Kajsa Vickhoff Lie finishes second in the Super-G in Val d'Isere on Sunday, having started with bib number 16. It is the Norwegian athlete's first podium finish this season. This second place sees her equal her previous best result in the Super-G. The HEAD Worldcup Rebels also notch up big points in both the Giant Slalom events in Alta Badia on Sunday and Monday.
In a thriller of a race that was decided by hundredths of a second, Vincent Kriechmayr takes the Super-G in Val Gardena. It is the 17th World Cup victory for the 32-year-old athlete from Upper Austria, his eighth in the Super-G. In the women's Downhill in Val d'Isere on Saturday, Cornelia Hütter finishes in third place to secure her second podium of the season.
What a historic weekend for Joan Verdu and for Andorra! The 28-year-old athlete finished third to take a World Cup podium for the first time in his career in the Giant Slalom in Val d'Isere on Saturday. This is not only his first podium, it’s also a first for his country. Podiums were also taken by HEAD Worldcup Rebels Cornelia Hütter and Lara Gut-Behrami on Friday at the Super-G in St. Moritz.
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