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2025 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Men's super-G

Alpine ski discipline year standings From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2025 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Men's super-G
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The men's super-G in the 2025 Alpine Skiing World Cup consisted of eight events, including the final. The first event of the season did not take place until 6 December 2024 in Beaver Creek. Marco Odermatt of Switzerland, the two-time defending champion in the discipline, was the only skier with multiple race wins in the discipline and thus easily won his third straight championship.

2025 Men's Super-G World Cup
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    Marco Odermatt of Switzerland, discipline champion for the third straight season
Previous: 2024 Next: 2026

The season was interrupted for the Alpine Skiing World Championships, this time in Saalbach, Austria during 4–16 February 2025.[1] The championship in men's super-G took place on Friday, 7 February, and also was won by Odermatt.

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Season summary

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The first super-G of the season was held in Beaver Creek (Colorado), USA in December 2024, and Marco Odermatt of Switzerland, two-time defending champion in the discipline, recorded his first victory of the season over one of his principal rivals from the previous season, Cyprien Sarrazin of France.[2] The next two giant slaloms were scheduled for Italy; in the first, Italy's Mattia Casse, who had never before won a World Cup race, edged out American Jared Goldberg by 1/100 of a second to earn the victory and move into second in the discipline behind Odermatt, who finished third.[3] In the last race before New Year's Day, Norway's Fredrik Møller recorded his first World Cup victory, edging Vincent Kriechmayr of Austria, but Odermatt's fifth-place finish allowed him to retain the discipline lead by five points over Møller.[4]

The first super-G in 2025 took place in Wngen, Switzerland, and Odermatt only managed to finish seventh, his first time outside the top 5 in a super-G in almost three years (since March 2022), but his young Swiss teammate Franjo von Allmen edged Kriechmayr to provide the Swiss fans with a home winner.[5] Odermatt recovered the next week to win the super-G at Kitzbühel, Austria -- his first victory there in any discipline.[6] Building on this success, Odermatt then won the super-G World Championship by a full second over Austria's Raphael Haaser, which was the largest winning margin in a speed race (downhill of super-G) at the World Championships since 1991.[7] Odermatt then won his third consecutive super-G by prevailing at Crans Montana, building an almost insurmountable lead in the discipline for the season.[8] In the last race before finals, at Kvitfjell, Norway, Odermatt clinched the discipline championship when Casse, the only racer with a theoretical chance of catching him, was unable to start due to injuries; however, Italy's Dominik Paris, the discipline champion in 2019, came through with a victory two days after winning a downhill on the same course -- which left seven racers, including Paris, battling for the two podium steps behind Odermatt at finals.[9]

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Finals

The World Cup finals in the discipline took place on Sunday, 23 March 2025 in Sun Valley, Idaho, United States.[10] Only the top 25 skiers in the World Cup slalom discipline and the winner of the Junior World Championship in the discipline (Benno Brandis of Germany), plus any skiers who have scored at least 500 points in the World Cup overall classification for the season, were eligible to compete in the final, and only the top 15 earned World Cup points. Only one 500+-point skier who wasn't otherwise eligible (Loïc Meillard of Switzerland) entered the race, and three eligible skiers (Mattia Casse of Italy, Cameron Alexander of Canada, and Cyprien Sarrazin of France) were unable to compete due to injury, thus setting the field for finals at 24 skiers (including Brandis). In a significant upset, 23-year-old Austrian Lukas Feurstein won his first World Cup race (and the first for Austria in the entire men's season in any discipline) on the new Sun Valley speed course, which both Feurstein and fellow podium finisher Franjo von Allmen of Switzerland described as utilizing more turns than a normal men's super-G course.[11]

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Standings

Venue
7 Dec 2024
Beaver Creek
29 Dec 2024
Bormio
17 Jan 2025
Wengen
24 Jan 2025
Kitzbühel
7 Feb 2025
Saalbach

WC
23 Feb 2025
Crans Montana
9 Mar 2025
Kvitfjell
23 Mar 2025
Sun Valley
# Skier United States Italy Italy Switzerland Austria Austria Switzerland Norway United States Total
 Switzerland  Marco Odermatt 1006045361001005045 536
2  Switzerland  Stefan Rogentin 545506060153650 321
3 Austria Vincent Kriechmayr 40228080DNS144536 317
4  Switzerland  Franjo von Allmen 084010050362060 314
5 Norway Fredrik Møller 505010020DNSDNF1436 270
6 Italy Dominik Paris 16261545DNF60100DNF 262
7 Italy Mattia Casse 1510024403645DNS 260
8  Switzerland  Alexis Monney 141060297DNF8040DNF 240
9 Austria Lukas Feurstein 603DNS29DNF2918100 236
10 Austria Raphael Haaser DNFDNS80501580 225
11 Canada James Crawford DNF20DNF5032DNF8016 198
12 France Nils Allègre DNF36321118262924 176
13 Italy Giovanni Franzoni 501141426DNF01626 147
14 Canada Cameron Alexander DNF45223245DNS 144
Norway Adrian Smiseth Sejersted DNF020224040DNF22 144
16 Austria Stefan Eichberger 184DNF820DNS222940 141
17  Switzerland  Justin Murisier 1416161829DNS9818 128
18 United States Ryan Cochran-Siegle 2411924082420 120
Slovenia Miha Hrobat DNF15DNF013DNF3260DNF 120
20 United States Jared Goldberg 0802090220 113
21 Austria Stefan Babinsky DNF182616115629 111
22 Czech Republic Jan Zabystřan 2201114DNF1832DNF 97
23 Austria Daniel Hemetsberger 60361514DNS16DNS0 87
24 France Cyprien Sarrazin 80DNFDNS 80
25 Italy Christof Innerhofer 00DNS12222230 59
26 France Blaise Giezendanner 729140DNSNE 50
United States River Radamus 320DNF20313NE 50
28 France Florian Loriot 200290DNF00NE 49
Germany Romed Baumann 10070101012NE 49
30 Sweden Felix Monsen 00DNF626130NE 45
31 United States Kyle Negomir 12DNF1000DNS1110NE 43
32 Canada Jeffrey Read DNFDNF1298211NE 42
33  Switzerland  Gino Caviezel 360DNFDNSNE 36
34  Switzerland  Lars Rösti DNS32DNF0DNFDNSDNF0NE 32
 Switzerland  Loïc Meillard 5DNS815DNS400 32
36 France Adrien Théaux DNS10500DNS87NE 30
37 Austria Daniel Danklmaier 29DNFDNSNE 29
38 Austria Andreas Ploier DNS0DNFDNS244NE 28
39 Finland Elian Lehto DNS64DNF0125NE 27
40 France Alexis Pinturault 260DNSDNFDNSNE 26
United States Bryce Bennett 300112010NE 26
42 Austria Otmar Striedinger 87DNF10DNFDNS00NE 25
43 Italy Pietro Zazzi 024DNSNE 24
44 France Matthieu Bailet 1112DNF0DNFDNF00NE 23
45 Canada Brodie Seger 105DNSDNF402NE 21
46 Italy Nicolo Molteni DNF15301DNS00NE 19
47 Austria Felix Hacker DNS18DNSNE 18
Germany Luis Vogt 015DNF03DNFDNF0NE 18
49 Canada Riley Seger DNF0DNS01600NE 16
50 Italy Florian Schieder DNF0DNSDNF5DNS8DNFNE 13
51  Switzerland  Marco Kohler 306DNS00NE 9
52 Austria Vincent Wieser DNS08DNSDNFDNS0NE 8
53 France Nils Alphand 1005DNFDNFDNSNE 6
Austria Manuel Traninger DNF0DNS06DNS00NE 6
United States Sam Morse 00DNF4DNFDNS02NE 6
56  Switzerland  Arnaud Boisset DNS31DNSNE 4
57 Slovenia Martin Čater DNF200DNFDNFDNSNE 2
United States Wiley Maple DNF0DNF02DNSDNF0NE 2
59 Norway Rasmus Windingstad 001DNS0DNFDNFNE 1
Italy Matteo Franzoso DNS010NE 1
References [12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20]

Legend

  •   Winner (100 points)
  •   2nd place (80 points)
  •   3rd place (60 points)
  • DNF = Did not finish
  • DSQ = Disqualified
  •   Did not start (DNS)
  •   Not eligible for finals (NE)
  •   Race canceled (x)
  •   FIS non-World Cup race (World Championships)
  • Updated at 23 March 2025, after all events.[21]
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References

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