<
>

Marco Odermatt finally gets first World Cup downhill win

WENGEN, Switzerland -- Marco Odermatt finally won a World Cup downhill Thursday in his 36th attempt, following eight previous second-place finishes.

The Swiss star, who has 29 World Cup wins in giant slalom and super-G, was close to flawless in ideal racing conditions on his home nation's signature downhill track to be 0.58 seconds faster than Cyprien Sarrazin. Aleksander Aamodt Kilde was third, trailing 0.81 behind his long-time rival.

"It's a dream, finally, my first win in downhill and here at home," Odermatt told Swiss broadcaster RTS. "I was very motivated for today. I skied with lots of risk."

Odermatt took gold in downhill at the world championships last season yet had eight runner-up results -- including twice at Wengen -- without a win in the marquee discipline on the World Cup circuit.

His 30th career World Cup race win, and his sixth this season, followed 18 in giant slalom and 11 in super-G. He also won Olympic gold in giant slalom in in Beijing in 2022.

The result was unofficial as lower-ranked racers prepared to start after foggy clouds rolled across the storied Lauberhorn hill.

Odermatt was set to earn 100 World Cup points which would extend the two-time defending overall champion's lead in the standings to 372 points ahead of Marco Schwarz, whose season was ended by a crash in downhill last month at Bormio, Italy. Kilde, the 2020 overall champion, is third.

The top three placings Thursday mirrored the season-long downhill standings, which Kilde won for the past two seasons.

The extra downhill race beneath the Eiger and Jungfrau mountains at Wengen replaced a race canceled because of poor weather last month at Beaver Creek, Colorado.

It used a shortened 1.83-mile course starting just above the signature Hundschopf jump that launched racers up to 45 yards through the air.

The top-ranked racers went down in sunshine and temperatures of about 25 degrees Fahrenheit with clear blue skies above the clouds at a finish-area altitude of about 4,250 feet.

Odermatt excelled by being fast through the tricky S-shaped bends midway through the course where racer speeds dip to about 44 mph.

Odermatt's top speed on the later Hanneggschuss straight was close to 89mph. Fifth-placed Dominik Paris topped 90 mph on the section where Johan Clarey set a World Cup speed record in 2013 of 100.6 mph.

The extended four-race weekend at Wengen continues Friday with a super-G before the classic Lauberhorn downhill on Saturday that is the longest race on the World Cup circuit. The full distance of about 2 ¾ miles takes close to 2 ½ minutes to complete.