Odermatt wins 4th World Cup title of the season after downhill finale cancelled due to weather

Swiss standout Marco Odermatt earned his fourth World Cup Crystal Globe of the season Sunday in anticlimactic circumstances as the final race was cancelled due to bad weather in Saalbach, Austria.

Swiss standout had also earned 3rd straight overall championship

A men's skier - wearing a black tuque, red ski suit with white bib, and medal draped around his nexk - poses for a photograph while holding a clear, globe-shaped trophy in one hand, while the other hand cradles his skis.
Switzerland's Marco Odermatt poses with his Crystal Globe trophy on the podium in Saalbach, Austria, after the men's downhill final event was cancelled due to bad weather conditions, on Sunday. (Joe Klamar/AFP via Getty Images)

Swiss standout Marco Odermatt earned his fourth World Cup Crystal Globe of the season Sunday in anticlimactic circumstances as the final race was cancelled due to bad weather in Saalbach, Austria.

The start of the men's downhill was initially pushed back several times because of snow and wind, while organisers continued to work on the course in Saalbach, Austria. But it was officially cancelled more than an hour after it was scheduled to start.

"Unfortunately due to the present weather situation with wind and snowfall affecting the track conditions, to insure the safety of the athletes, todays Men's DH had been cancelled," the ski federation said on X, formerly Twitter.

The cancellation handed Odermatt his first World Cup downhill title as his 42-point lead over French skier Cyprien Sarrazin, the only man who could catch him in the standings, proved enough.

But it denied the 26-year-old the chance to set a men's record points total. Victory in the downhill would have given Odermatt 100 points and lifted him five points beyond his record 2,042 tally set last season.

Odermatt locked up his third straight overall championship and the giant slalom title weeks ago and lifted the super-G Crystal Globe on Friday.

Aleksander Aamodt Kilde had won the downhill crystal globe the previous two years but his season was prematurely ended when he was among a slew of World Cup, Olympic and world champions to crash hard in a packed January program.

Sunday's weather was a contrast to the women's downhill, which took place under blue skies and with a temperature of 15 C the previous day.

Odermatt's compatriot Lara Gut-Behrami was also chasing a quadruple but Cornelia Huetter pipped her to the downhill title for her first crystal globe.

Add some “good” to your morning and evening.

Get up to speed on what's happening in sports. Delivered weekdays.

...

The next issue of The Buzzer will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in the Subscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.