American Bennett surprises favourites to win Val Gardena downhill, Canada's Crawford 5th

American skier Bryce Bennett surprised the favourites by winning the Val Gardena downhill with a late start number as the men's World Cup speed season finally opened on Thursday a month later than scheduled.

A super-G is scheduled for Friday, followed by another downhill on Saturday

A men's downhill skier is shown in mid air, above the snowy course and in front of an orange gate marker.
Bryce Bennett of the United States is shown in action during the World Cup men's downhill on Thursday in Val Gardena, Italy. (Alexis Boichard/Getty Images)

American skier Bryce Bennett surprised the favourites by winning the Val Gardena downhill with a late start number as the men's World Cup speed season finally opened on Thursday a month later than scheduled.

The previous two stops on the circuit were wiped out due to bad weather.

Bennett, who also won the Italian race two years ago, took advantage of improving light on the Saslong course with bib No. 34 and edged two-time defending downhill standings leader Aleksander Aamodt Kilde by 0.03 seconds.

Two-time defending overall World Cup winner Marco Odermatt was pushed down to third, 0.05 back.

Jack Crawford, the Canadian world champion in the super-G, was fifth.

Bennett used his tall frame to absorb the terrain in the technical Ciaslat section that characterizes the course, and crouched into an aerodynamic tuck to make up time on Kilde and Odermatt in the steep final gates.

When he saw the result, Bennett held his arms out wide in apparent disbelief and flashed a wide smile framed by his mustache.

"I didn't expect that at all. I woke up this morning and I had to let [out] all the doubt that's been kind of following me," Bennett said. "I just needed to ski. I needed to ski free and do a run that I know I'm capable of and trust myself and, yeah, it worked. That was quite the surprise to land and see green in the finish."

Kilde, who started 10th, had already celebrated as if he had won after edging Odermatt, who started sixth. Kilde and Odermatt were already giving interviews when Bennett came down, prompting them to turn around and see what happened.

Bennett, from Tahoe City, California, rode BMX bikes as a kid, so the bumps in the Ciaslat suit his style. He's never won anywhere else.

Still, it was a sharp improvement for Bennett after his best finish last season was 10th.

It was the sixth victory for the U.S. team in Val Gardena. The recently retired Steven Nyman won three downhills and Bode Miller won a super-G.

Bennett's ski technician is Leo Mussi, who used to also work with Nyman — and four-time Val Gardena downhill winner Kristian Ghedina before that.

In perfect conditions, Nils Allegre was 0.13 behind in fourth with bib No. 25 to narrowly miss out on a first career podium result.

The race was rescheduled from the yet-to-be-run Zermatt-Cervinia cross-border event last month. Speed races in Beaver Creek, Colorado, were also cancelled a couple of weeks ago.

A super-G is scheduled for Friday on the Saslong, followed by another downhill on Saturday. Then there are giant slalom races in nearby Alta Badia on Sunday and Monday for a series of five races in five days.

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