Kriechmayr irks Swiss fans, denies Feuz downhill record win in disputed appearance

Vincent Kriechmayr's men's downhill victory in a sun-splashed World Cup event on Saturday came despite missing midweek training runs that are typically mandatory. He had been kept home in quarantine after testing positive for COVID-19.

Austrian skier arrived in Wengen after typically mandatory midweek training runs

Austria's Vincent Kriechmayr won Saturday's men’s downhill in two minutes 26 seconds after being cleared to compete in Wengen, Switzerland following a recent positive COVID-19 test. (Alain Grosclaude/Agence Zoom/Getty Images)

It is never easy for Switzerland to watch an Austrian downhiller win its signature ski race that is part of the Alpine nation's culture.

It was even harder to take Saturday as Vincent Kriechmayr won the classic Lauberhorn race that Swiss team officials said this week he should not have been allowed to start.

Kriechmayr's victory in a sun-splashed World Cup downhill beneath the Eiger mountain came despite missing midweek training runs that are typically mandatory. He had been kept in quarantine in Austria after testing positive for COVID-19.

He had arrived in Wengen late Wednesday, after the two training runs, but was cleared by race officials who insisted Kriechmayr — the reigning downhill world champion — had not been given special treatment under International Ski Federation rules.

"For me, it's not important what the Swiss team is saying. For me, it's important what the athletes are saying," said Kriechmayr, who asked his biggest rivals for approval, including Beat Feuz and Marco Odermatt of Switzerland.

"They think it's a good decision for the athletes. That's the only important thing for me," he told The Associated Press.

WATCH | Kriechmayr beats Swiss favourite Feuz in Wengen:

Vincent Kriechmayr wins World Cup downhill skiing competition

3 years ago
Duration 5:55
Austria's Vincent Kriechmayr finished with a time of 2:26.09 to win the men's downhill competition during the FIS Alpine World Cup in Wengen, Switzerland.

In a further twist, Kriechmayr's winning run denied Swiss favorite Feuz a record fourth win in the storied race that has been a World Cup fixture since the circuit started 55 years ago. The Lauberhorn race was first run in 1930.

The Austrian winner finished 0.34 seconds ahead of runner-up Feuz in the longest race on the World Cup circuit he also won three years ago. The key to victory this time was Kriechmayr's flawless run through the slower, twisting middle section of the tiring 4.27 kilometer (2 2/3-mile) course.

Kriechmayr's winning time at just over 2 minutes, 26 seconds was 0.44 faster than third-placed Dominik Paris of Italy, who now leads the season-long downhill standings.

The process to qualify Kriechmayr included staging an unusual "training run" on Friday morning, one day after he had competed in a World Cup super-G race on a lower section of the hill. The brief incident saw him push out of the official downhill start then stop within 10 meters (yards).

Swiss air force jets perform stunts

The symbolic training start enabled Kriechmayr to race in the Friday downhill, where he placed 12th, and again on Saturday though provoked criticism of FIS.

"In these complicated times due to the COVID-19 pandemic," skiing's governing body said in a statement, "it is important to find solutions to allow our athletes to compete as long as they can provide the necessary requirements according to the FIS COVID guidelines."

Though agreeing with the FIS aim to let racers race, Italian veteran Christof Innerhofer told the AP that "it is more easy when you have a big name" like Kriechmayr.

Before the race, display jets from the Swiss air force performed their traditional show of stunts in formation over the course circled by the Eiger, Jungfrau and Monch mountains.

A crowd of almost 19,500 spectators was more than 12,000 fewer than attended two years ago when the race was last staged before the pandemic.

They saw Switzerland's emerging ski star Odermatt place fourth, trailing by 0.46. Fifth-place Matthias Mayer clocked the fastest speed at almost 150 kilometres per hour when he was the first starter on snow that got softer on a warm day.

Swiss fans also said farewell to Carlo Janka, the 2010 overall World Cup winner who ended his racing career. Janka did not complete the race that he won in 2010.

Odermatt extended his lead in the overall World Cup standings to a big 390-point margin from Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, who was 0.98 back in seventh. Kilde had won on Friday ahead of Odermatt on a shorter Lauberhorn course.

WATCH | Kilde answers Friday after finishing behind Odermatt:

Kilde avenges loss to Odermatt with World Cup downhill win in Wengen

3 years ago
Duration 2:32
One day after Switzerland's Marco Odermatt and Norway's Aleksander Aamodt Kilde finished first and second in the World Cup super-G, Kilde reversed the order in the downhill race in Wengen, Switzerland.

Paris earned 60 points Saturday to take the lead Kilde had held in the season-long downhill standings. In a tight contest, Odermatt in sixth place is just 40 points back going into two editions next weekend of Austria's classic downhill, the Hahnenkamm at Kitzbuhel.

The Wengen meeting ends Sunday with a slalom.

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