Alpine skiing –
Marco Odermatt faces competition with a thousand faces
The genius of Swiss skiing sees a slew of new adversaries appear.
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Undisputed master of alpine skiing for three seasons, the Swiss Marco Odermatt sees a slew of new opponents appear just as he approaches the January classics, decisive in refining his legend.
At only 27 years old, the crack player from Nidwalden will seek his fourth victory in a row on Saturday in the Adelboden giant, in front of his home crowd, a feat achieved only by the Swede Ingemar Stenmark (between 1979 and 1982).
“I no longer have anything to prove there, I can simply enjoy”, put the N into perspective on Sunday.o 1 in the world with 41 World Cup successes, sweeping away all pressure when tackling the formidable Chuenisbärgli.
In the books of men’s skiing, five myths still stand before him: Stenmark and his 86 victories, the Austrians Marcel Hirscher (67), whose return to the circuit this season was cut short after a serious knee injury, and Hermann Maier (54), the Italian Alberto Tomba (50) and the Luxembourger Marc Girardelli (46).
“Odi” chases the last tracks
Before being thirsty for numbers, “Odi” is especially chasing the last tracks that are missing from his record in the three disciplines he competes in, the giant, the downhill and the super-G, of which he already dominates the three provisional rankings.
From the off-season, the tall blond had therefore ticked a date: Saturday January 25, the day of the Kitzbühel descent, where he had to lose twice last season against a Cyprien Sarrazin in a state of grace.
But the Frenchman fell violently at the end of December during official training in Bormio (Italy): seriously injured in the head, he will begin a long convalescence and the rest of his career is very uncertain.
The Norwegian Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, winner of the 2022 and 2023 downhill globes, had to draw a line under the season: after a heavy fall in January 2024 during the descent of Wengen (Switzerland), he had to undergo fall a new operation to treat a shoulder infection.
Orphaned by his two great rivals in speed, who offered the public the most beautiful battles of recent seasons, Odermatt on the other hand sees a myriad of new faces flourishing on the podiums.
Of the ten events contested by the Swiss since the start of the season, he has certainly won four (the super-G of Beaver Creek, the descent of Val Gardena which until then had always eluded him, and the giants of Val-d ‘Isère and Alta Badia).
But five of these races crowned skiers who had never before achieved success on the world circuit, an extremely rare influx of new winners mixing veterans and young guns on the circuit.
A big scare
Thus, the Swiss Thomas Tumler (35 years old) and Justin Murisier (33 years old) won the giant of Sölden then the descent of Beaver Creek, the Italian Mattia Casse (34 years old) dominated the super-G of Val Gardena, and the young Friborg Alexis Monney, 25, and Norwegian Fredrik Moeller, 24, respectively won the downhill and super-G in Bormio.
None seem consistent enough to thwart Odermatt’s race for a fourth big globe in a row – he is already 270 points ahead of Norwegian Henrik Kristoffersen.
But they all show that the genius of skiing can be taken in a race, especially given the accumulation of injuries around him – he is close to Kilde and Sarrazin and his teammate Gino Caviezel also injured his knee and back. shoulder in Bormio – can limit its risk-taking.
“On days like this, hundredths don’t count. I’m just relieved not to have been seriously injured,” he commented after a big scare on the descent from Bormio (5e upon arrival).
AFP
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