Men's super combined at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2015 | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Venue | Birds of Prey Beaver Creek, Colorado, U.S. | |||||||||
Date | February 8, 2015 | |||||||||
Competitors | 47 from 21 nations | |||||||||
Winning time | 2:36.10 | |||||||||
Medalists | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
Alpine skiing at the World Ski Championships 2015 | ||
---|---|---|
Combined | men | women |
Downhill | men | women |
Giant slalom | men | women |
Slalom | men | women |
Super-G | men | women |
Team | mixed | |
The Men's super combined competition at the 2015 World Championships was held on Sunday, February 8. [1] [2]
Marcel Hirscher won the gold medal, despite originally finishing in 31st position after the downhill leg. Ondřej Bank however, fell on the final jump and, although the original results had Bank in 25th place, the jury disqualified him after the run ended and as a result, Hirscher was able to start first in the slalom leg instead of starting after the top 30. With a clean track he was able to rise all the way from 30th to 1st. Kjetil Jansrud took silver for Norway after leading the downhill leg. Bronze medalist Ted Ligety commenting on the race conditions and result, said, "It was dumb luck. If I was a half-second faster in the downhill, I wouldn’t have been able to get a medal at all. That’s how big of a difference I thought running early was." [3]
The downhill run was started at 10:00 MST [4] and the slalom run at 14:15. [5]
Rank | Bib | Name | Nation | Downhill | Rank | Slalom | Rank | Total | Diff |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9 | Marcel Hirscher | Austria | 1:46.17 | 30 | 49.93 | 1 | 2:36.10 | ||
13 | Kjetil Jansrud | Norway | 1:43.01 | 1 | 53.28 | 17 | 2:36.29 | +0.19 | |
20 | Ted Ligety | United States | 1:46.04 | 29 | 50.36 | 2 | 2:36.40 | +0.30 | |
4 | 12 | Romed Baumann | Austria | 1:43.70 | 4 | 52.78 | 16 | 2:36.48 | +0.38 |
5 | 21 | Alexis Pinturault | France | 1:45.65 | 23 | 50.86 | 3 | 2:36.51 | +0.41 |
6 | 22 | Carlo Janka | Switzerland | 1:44.18 | 6 | 52.62 | 14 | 2:36.80 | +0.70 |
7 | 23 | Andreas Romar | Finland | 1:44.96 | 18 | 51.97 | 5 | 2:36.93 | +0.83 |
8 | 39 | Aleksander Aamodt Kilde | Norway | 1:44.53 | 11 | 52.43 | 12 | 2:36.96 | +0.86 |
9 | 10 | Thomas Mermillod Blondin | France | 1:44.89 | 16 | 52.10 | 8 | 2:36.99 | +0.89 |
10 | 25 | Dominik Paris | Italy | 1:44.75 | 14 | 52.38 | 11 | 2:37.13 | +1.03 |
11 | 8 | Matthias Mayer | Austria | 1:43.75 | 5 | 53.39 | 19 | 2:37.14 | +1.04 |
12 | 17 | Ivica Kostelić | Croatia | 1:46.03 | 28 | 51.12 | 4 | 2:37.15 | +1.05 |
13 | 11 | Mauro Caviezel | Switzerland | 1:44.92 | 17 | 52.25 | 10 | 2:37.17 | +1.07 |
14 | 29 | Beat Feuz | Switzerland | 1:43.10 | 2 | 54.37 | 29 | 2:37.27 | +1.17 |
15 | 4 | Silvan Zurbriggen | Switzerland | 1:45.24 | 22 | 52.05 | 7 | 2:37.29 | +1.19 |
16 | 2 | Klemen Kosi | Slovenia | 1:45.18 | 20 | 52.58 | 13 | 2:37.76 | +1.66 |
17 | 24 | Tim Jitloff | United States | 1:46.01 | 28 | 52.12 | 9 | 2:38.13 | +2.03 |
18 | 14 | Christof Innerhofer | Italy | 1:44.31 | 8 | 53.99 | 24 | 2:38.30 | +2.20 |
19 | 15 | Adam Žampa | Slovakia | 1:46.37 | 33 | 51.97 | 5 | 2:38.34 | +2.24 |
20 | 3 | Martin Cater | Slovenia | 1:44.74 | 13 | 53.63 | 21 | 2:38.37 | +2.27 |
21 | 38 | Steven Nyman | United States | 1:44.64 | 12 | 53.89 | 23 | 2:38.53 | +2.43 |
22 | 6 | Andrew Weibrecht | United States | 1:44.31 | 8 | 54.26 | 27 | 2:38.57 | +2.47 |
23 | 34 | Andreas Sander | Germany | 1:44.28 | 7 | 55.01 | 32 | 2:39.29 | +3.19 |
24 | 33 | Pavel Trikhichev | Russia | 1:46.23 | 32 | 53.30 | 18 | 2:39.33 | +3.23 |
25 | 27 | Josef Ferstl | Germany | 1:45.21 | 21 | 54.34 | 28 | 2:39.55 | +3.45 |
26 | 30 | Kryštof Krýzl | Czech Republic | 1:47.02 | 38 | 52.74 | 15 | 2:39.76 | +3.66 |
27 | 1 | Maciej Bydliński | Poland | 1:46.42 | 34 | 54.12 | 25 | 2:40.54 | +4.44 |
28 | 42 | Max Ullrich | Croatia | 1:46.55 | 35 | 54.73 | 30 | 2:41.28 | +5.18 |
29 | 5 | Jared Goldberg | United States | 1:43.69 | 3 | 57.63 | 37 | 2:41.32 | +5.22 |
30 | 26 | Martin Vráblík | Czech Republic | 1:48.41 | 40 | 53.63 | 21 | 2:42.04 | +5.94 |
31 | 48 | Christoffer Faarup | Denmark | 1:46.94 | 37 | 56.03 | 33 | 2:42.97 | +6.87 |
32 | 7 | Matteo Marsaglia | Italy | 1:44.76 | 15 | 58.47 | 38 | 2:43.23 | +7.13 |
32 | 45 | Henrik von Appen | Chile | 1:46.86 | 36 | 56.37 | 36 | 2:43.23 | +7.13 |
34 | 44 | Arnaud Alessandria | Monaco | 1:47.45 | 39 | 56.03 | 33 | 2:43.48 | +7.38 |
35 | 31 | Cristian Javier Simari Birkner | Argentina | 1:49.82 | 43 | 54.14 | 26 | 2:43.96 | +7.86 |
36 | 36 | Istok Rodeš | Croatia | 1:50.73 | 46 | 53.56 | 20 | 2:44.29 | +8.19 |
37 | 41 | Willis Feasey | New Zealand | 1:48.71 | 41 | 56.03 | 35 | 2:44.74 | +8.64 |
38 | 28 | Maxence Muzaton | France | 1:44.50 | 10 | 1:00.83 | 39 | 2:45.33 | +9.23 |
39 | 46 | Andreas Žampa | Slovakia | 1:50.58 | 45 | 54.91 | 31 | 2:45.49 | +9.39 |
18 | Natko Zrnčić-Dim | Croatia | 1:45.72 | 24 | DNF | ||||
32 | Morgan Pridy | Canada | 1:45.14 | 19 | DNF | ||||
35 | Otmar Striedinger | Austria | 1:45.92 | 25 | DNF | ||||
40 | Igor Zakurdayev | Kazakhstan | 1:49.80 | 42 | DNF | ||||
43 | Nick Prebble | New Zealand | 1:50.11 | 44 | DNF | ||||
37 | Boštjan Kline | Slovenia | 1:45.99 | 26 | DQ | ||||
47 | Marvin van Heek | Netherlands | DNS | ||||||
49 | Ioan Valeriu Achiriloaie | Romania | DNS | ||||||
16 | Victor Muffat-Jeandet | France | DNF | ||||||
19 | Ondřej Bank | Czech Republic | DQ |
Hermann Maier is an Austrian former World Cup champion alpine ski racer and Olympic gold medalist. Nicknamed the "Herminator", Maier ranks among the greatest alpine ski racers in history, with four overall World Cup titles, two Olympic gold medals, and three World Championship titles. His 54 World Cup race victories – 24 super-G, 15 downhills, 14 giant slaloms, and 1 combined – rank third on the men's all-time list behind Ingemar Stenmark's 86 victories and Marcel Hirscher's 67 victories. As of 2013, he holds the record for the most points in one season by a male alpine skier, with 2000 points from the 2000 season. From 2000–2013 he also held the title of most points in one season by any alpine skier, until Tina Maze scored 2414 points in the 2013 season.
Samuel Bode Miller is an American former World Cup alpine ski racer. He is an Olympic and World Championship gold medalist, a two-time overall World Cup champion in 2005 and 2008, and the most successful male American alpine ski racer of all time. He is also considered one of the greatest World Cup racers of all time with 33 race victories and being one of five men to win World Cup events in all five disciplines. He is the only skier with five or more victories in each discipline. In 2008, Miller and Lindsey Vonn won the overall World Cup titles for the first U.S. sweep in 25 years.
Tina Maze is a retired Slovenian World Cup alpine ski racer.
Marc Girardelli is an Austrian and Luxembourgish former alpine ski racer, a five-time World Cup overall champion who excelled in all five alpine disciplines.
Ivica Kostelić is a former World Cup alpine ski racer from Croatia. He specialized in slalom and combined, but was also one of the few alpine World Cup ski racers able to score points in all disciplines. He is the brother of skiing champion Janica Kostelić. In his career he was coached by his father Ante Kostelić, as well as by Kristian Ghedina and Tomislav Krstičević.
Lindsey Caroline Vonn is an American former World Cup alpine ski racer on the US Ski Team. She won four World Cup overall championships—one of only two female skiers to do so, along with Annemarie Moser-Pröll—with three consecutive titles in 2008, 2009, and 2010, plus another in 2012. Vonn won the gold medal in downhill at the 2010 Winter Olympics, the first one for an American woman. She also won a record eight World Cup season titles in the downhill discipline, five titles in super-G, and three consecutive titles in the combined (2010–2012). In 2016, she won her 20th World Cup crystal globe title, the overall record for men or women, surpassing Ingemar Stenmark of Sweden, who won 19 globes from 1975 to 1984. She has the second highest super ranking of all skiers, men or women.
Theodore Sharp Ligety is a retired American alpine ski racer, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, and an entrepreneur, having cofounded Shred Optics. Ligety won the combined event at the 2006 Olympics in Turin and the giant slalom race at the 2014 Olympics in Sochi. He is also a five-time World Cup champion in giant slalom. Ligety won the gold medal in the giant slalom at the 2011 World Championships. He successfully defended his world title in giant slalom in 2013 in Schladming, Austria, where he also won an unexpected gold medal in the super-G and a third gold medal in the super combined. Through October, 2015, he has 25 victories and 52 podiums in World Cup competition.
Anna Veith is an Austrian former alpine ski racer and Olympic gold medalist. She was the overall World Cup champion for the 2014 and 2015 seasons.
Marcel Hirscher is an Austrian former World Cup alpine ski racer. Hirscher made his World Cup debut in March 2007. He competed primarily in slalom and giant slalom, as well as combined and occasionally in super G. Winner of a record eight consecutive World Cup titles, Hirscher has also won 11 medals at the Alpine Skiing World Championships, seven of them gold, a silver medal in slalom at the 2014 Winter Olympics, and two gold medals in the combined and giant slalom at the 2018 Winter Olympics. Due to his record number of overall titles and many years of extreme dominance of both slalom and giant slalom, he is considered by many, including his former rivals Henrik Kristoffersen, Kjetil Jansrud and Alexis Pinturault, to be one of the best alpine skiers in history. He won a total of 67 World Cup races, ranking second in the male all-time list.
David "Dave" Ryding is a World Cup alpine ski racer from Great Britain who specialises in slalom. He has competed in three Olympics, four World Championships, and won the Europa Cup. His best World Cup results have been runner-up positions, in the slalom in Kitzbühel in 2017 and the parallel slalom in Oslo in 2019, also as third in Adelboden, 10th January 2021.
Alexis Pinturault is a French World Cup alpine ski racer and Olympic medalist.
Beat Feuz is a Swiss World Cup alpine ski racer, specializing in the speed events of downhill and super-G.
The 47th World Cup season began on 27 October 2012, in Sölden, Austria, and concluded on 17 March 2013, at the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide, Switzerland. The overall titles were won by Marcel Hirscher of Austria and Tina Maze of Slovenia.
Mikaela Pauline Shiffrin is an American two-time Olympic Gold Medalist and World Cup alpine skier. She is a three-time Overall World Cup champion, the four-time reigning world champion in slalom, and a six-time winner of the World Cup discipline title in that event. Shiffrin is the youngest slalom champion in Olympic alpine skiing history, at 18 years and 345 days.
The 48th World Cup season began on 26 October 2013, in Sölden, Austria, and concluded on 16 March 2014 at the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide, Switzerland. The defending overall champions from the 2013 season were Marcel Hirscher of Austria and Tina Maze of Slovenia. The overall titles were won by Hirscher and Anna Fenninger, also of Austria. The season was interrupted by the 2014 Winter Olympics that took place from 7 to 23 February in Sochi, Russia, with the alpine events at Rosa Khutor.
The Men's Giant Slalom competition at the 2013 World Championships ran on Friday, February 15 at 10:00 local time and 13:30, the ninth race of the championships. 99 athletes from 55 countries competed in the main race while 132 athletes from 53 countries competed in the qualification race on Thursday, February 14.
From October 25, 2014 to April 4, 2015, the following skiing events took place at various locations around the world.
From August 19, 2013 to March 23, 2014, the following skiing events took place at various locations around the world.
The men's combined competition of the PyeongChang 2018 Olympics was held on 13 February 2018 at the Jeongseon Alpine Centre and the Yongpyong Alpine Centre at the Alpensia Sports Park in PyeongChang.
The International Ski Federation (FIS) Alpine Ski World Cup was the premier circuit for alpine skiing competition. The inaugural season launched in January 1967, and the 2018–19 season marks the 53rd consecutive year for the FIS World Cup.