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2024 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Men's slalom

Alpine ski discipline year standings From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2024 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Men's slalom
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The men's slalom in the 2024 FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup consisted of ten events, including the discipline final. Due to three prior cancellations in other disciplines, the first men's race of the entire season was the slalom held at Gurgl, Austria on 18 November 2023. The original season schedule called for 13 events, but during the season (as discussed below) three slaloms were canceled and not rescheduled. In an upset, Manuel Feller of Austria won his first career discipline title.

2024 Men's Slalom World Cup
Previous: 2023 Next: 2025
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Season summary

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On 27 October 2023, two days before the scheduled opening of the men's World Cup season, Lucas Braathen, the 23-year-old Norwegian who was the defending champion in the slalom discipline, announced his retirement from professional Alpine skiing, as part of a dispute with the Norwegian ski federation over his individual commercial rights.[1][2] The surprising aftermath of that decision was an Austrian podium sweep in Gurgl, the first race of the season, with Manuel Feller defeating Marco Schwarz and Michael Matt.[3] The Austrian victory ended a streak of 17 slaloms without an Austrian victory, dating back to January 2022.[3] However, the next scheduled race, in Val d'Isère on 10 December, was canceled due to a mix of overnight rain followed by new snow and high winds.[4] When the second race was finally held in Madonna di Campiglio, Marco Schwarz won it, coming from sixth after the first run, and took over the season lead in both the discipline and the overall men's World Cup.[5] By the next slalom, Schwarz had suffered a season-ending injury, but Feller won by .02 seconds to maintain the Austrian domination and also regain the overall lead for the season.[2]

In the next two slaloms, at the downhill/slalom festivals in Wengen (SUI) and Kitzbühel (AUT), Feller won[6] and then finished fourth (behind German Linus Straßer, who grew up and learned to ski at Kitzbühel), opening up an almost 200-point lead in the discipline.[7] Straßer also won the night slalom at Schlamding, less than 100 miles away, four days later to move into second overall in the discipline for the season.[8]

The next race, held in poor snow conditions in Chamonix, France after two prior races had already been canceled due to warm temperatures, featured a history-making comeback by Swiss slalom specialist Daniel Yule. Yule made a huge blunder on the first run and was the last of the 30 racers who qualified for the second run, meaning that he would start first, almost two seconds behind the leader; however, he put down a great second run and then sat in the leader's chair as all 29 remaining racers came down the increasingly melting and rutted course, with only two (his countryman Loïc Meillard and first-run leader Clément Noël of France) even managing to get within 0.3 of his total time, thus making Yule the first World Cup men's slalom skier ever to advance from 30th after the first run to 1st after the second run.[9].The race in Bansko the next week was then canceled after 31 skiers had completed the first run, because visibility was compromised by fog while the course had deteriorated due to persistent heavy rain.[10]

The following two races were held in the US, and Feller pulled off a come-from-behind triumph in the first (at Palisades Tahoe) to establish a 204-point lead over Straßer, who dropped from first to third on the second run, with just three races to go.[11] When the slalom scheduled the next weekend in Kranjska Gora was canceled due to heavy rains, Feller clinched the season title over Straßer.[12]

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Finals

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The World Cup discipline finals took place on Sunday, 17 March 2024, in Saalbach-Hinterglemm, Austria.[13] Only the top 25 in the slalom discipline ranking and the winner of the Junior World Championship were eligible to compete in the final, except that all skiers who have scored at least 500 points in the overall classification were eligible to compete in any discipline. Because of the reduced field size, only the top 15 finishers in the discipline final scored points. In the finals, no skier with at least 500 points who wasn't otherwise eligible chose to compete, and one skier who qualified (Schwarz) was injured, leaving 25 racers at the start.

Since Feller and Straßer had already clinched the top two spots on the discipline podium, the only battle left was for third, and Timon Haugan of Norway jumped out to a big lead after the first run, then held off Feller, Straßer, and Meillard on the second run to claim that podium spot.[14] However, the bigger news was that immediate past champion Lucas Braathen announced his "un-retirement" and return for the 2025 season, but now skiing for Brazil (his mother's homeland) instead of Norway, where he will have full control over his individual commercial rights.[15]

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Standings

Venue
18 Nov 2023
Gurgl
10 Dec 2023
Val d'Isère
7 Jan 2024
Adelboden
14 Jan 2024
Wengen
21 Jan 2024
Kitzbühel
24 Jan 2024
Schladming
4 Feb 2024
Chamonix
11 Feb 2024
Bansko
25 Feb 2024
Palisades Tahoe
3 Mar 2024
Aspen
10 Mar 2024
Kranjska Gora
17 Mar 2024
Saalbach
# Skier Austria France Italy Switzerland Switzerland Austria Austria France Bulgaria United States United States Slovenia Austria Total
Austria Manuel Feller 100x45100100504550x10045x80 715
2 Germany Linus Straßer 29x2950DNF110010018x6080x60 526
3 Norway Timon Haugan 40x502929DNF28032x5040x100 450
4  Switzerland  Loïc Meillard DNF2x362245321580x29100x50 409
5 France Clément Noël 22x80DNF150DNF26060x80DNF2x45 397
6 Norway Henrik Kristoffersen 36x40DSQ260104045x3260x36 359
7 United Kingdom Dave Ryding 50x601022451824x736x16 288
 Switzerland  Daniel Yule 45xDNF226226032100xDNF23x0 288
9  Switzerland  Marc Rochat 12x84540265013xDNF124x40 258
10 Sweden Kristoffer Jakobsen 24xDNF1DNF1DNF1803612x45DNF1x20 217
11 Norway Atle Lie McGrath DSQ1x328080DNF1DNF21x22DNF1x0 215
12 Austria Fabio Gstrein 32x22DNQ32DNF12620x3626x0 194
13 France Steven Amiez DNQxDNQ2424401329x2429xDNF1 183
Austria Johannes Strolz DNF1x151316161418x1550x26 183
15 Austria Marco Schwarz 80x100DNS 180
16 Austria Dominik Raschner 14x1160DNF136DNF245xDNF213x0 179
17 Italy Tommaso Sala DNQxDNQ361429295x815x22 158
18 Italy Alex Vinatzer 5x9DNF1515DNF226x4013x32 145
19  Switzerland  Luca Aerni 11x2032DNF1DNF1169x1418x18 138
20 Croatia Samuel Kolega 9xDNQ4015DNF1836x26DNF1x0 134
21 Austria Michael Matt 60x16DNF236DSQ1DNS12xDNQ5x0 129
22 Norway Alexander Steen Olsen 13x20DNF2DNF1DNF12415xDNQ20x24 116
23 Greece AJ Ginnis DNF1x26DNF1DNF1182022xDNF1DNF1x29 115
24 Bulgaria Albert Popov 26x2416DNF1DNF1225x18DNF1x0 111
25 Germany Sebastian Holzmann 16x42018912DNF1xDNQ7xDNF2 86
26 Croatia Istok Rodeš DNQx5142624DNF1DNF1xDNF116xNE 85
27  Switzerland  Ramon Zenhäusern 9x1418DNF2DNSDNF114x10DNF1xNE 65
28 Croatia Filip Zubčić 18xDSQ2DNF110DNF1DNF28x208xNE 64
29  Switzerland  Tanguy Nef 11x12DNF212DNF1DNQ7x11DNF1xNE 53
30 United Kingdom Billy Major 15xDNF1DNQ1320DNQDNQxDNF2DNF1xNE 48
Belgium Armand Marchant DNF1x13DNQDNF1DSQ2DNF2DNQx1322xNE 48
32 Austria Adrian Pertl DNF2xDNF1931592x9DNF1xNE 47
33 United Kingdom Laurie Taylor DNF2xDNF1DNF1DNF112DNQDNQxDNQ32xNE 44
34 Italy Tobias Kastlunger 20xDNF1157DNF1DNF1DNQxDNF2DNQxNE 42
35 Spain Juan del Campo 7xDNQDNF167DNQDNQxDNQ14xNE 34
Norway Sebastian Foss-Solevåg 6xDNQ7DNQDNF110DNQxDNQ11xNE 34
37 France Paco Rassat DNF1xDNQDNS922DNF1DNQxDNQDNF1xNE 31
38 Italy Stefano Gross DSQ1xDNF244DNF1DNQ10x12DNQxNE 30
39 Belgium Sam Maes DNQxDNF1DNF18DNF111DNF1x6DNF1xNE 25
United States Jett Seymour DNF1xDNF1DNQDNQDNQDNF23x166xNE 25
41 United States Benjamin Ritchie DNF1xDNQ811DNF1DNF1DNF1xDNF14xNE 23
42 Germany Anton Tremmel DNF1x10DNF1DNF18DNQDNQxDNQDSQ1xNE 18
43 Canada Erik Read DNQx611DNQDNF1DNF1DNQxDNQDNQxNE 17
44 Austria Joshua Sturm DNSxDNSDNQDNF1DNQDNQ6xDNF210xNE 16
45 Norway Eirik Hystad Solberg DNSxDNS13DNQDNQxDNSxNE 13
46 United States River Radamus DNSxDNS12DNF1DNF1DNQDNSxDNF1DNQxNE 12
47 Sweden Fabian Ax Swartz DNF1xDNQDNQDNS11DNQDNQxDNQDNF1xNE 11
48 Austria Kilian Pramstaller DNSxDNSDNF1DNF1DNSxDNQ9xNE 9
49 France Hugo Desgrippes DNF1x7DNF1DNF1DNF2DNQDNQxDNQDNQxNE 7
50 Norway Theodor Brækken DNQxDNF1DNS6DNQDNSxDNQDNF1xNE 6
Spain Joaquim Salarich DNF1xDNF16DNQDNF1DNF1DNQxDNQDNQxNE 6
52 France Léo Anguenot DNSxDNS5DNQDNF1DNQDNQxDNQDNF1xNE 5
53 Austria Simon Rüland 4xDNQDNQDNSDNQDNSxNE 4
54 Japan Seigo Katō DNF1xDNSDNF12DNF1DNQDNF1DNSDNQDNSxNE 2
References [16][4][17][18][19][20][21][22][10][23][24][12][25]

Legend

  •   Winner (100 points)
  •   2nd place (80 points)
  •   3rd place (60 points)
  • DNQ = Did not qualify for run 2
  • DNF1 = Did not finish run 1
  • DSQ1 = Disqualified run 1
  • DNF2 = Did not finish run 2
  • DSQ2 = Disqualified run 2
  • DNS2 = Did not start run 2
  •   Did not start (DNS)
  •   Not eligible for finals (NE)
  •   Race canceled (x)
  • Updated at 17 March 2024, after all events[26]
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References

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