Live ticker
21.12.2024, 10:4621.12.2024, 10:53
The start list
12 Ester Ledecka
13 Elena Curtoni
14 Marta Bassino
15 Stephanie Venier
16 Lauren Macuga
17 Laura Pirovano
18 Alice Robinson
19 Ariane Rädler
20 Michelle Gisin
21 Tooth Stuhec
22 Jasmina Suter
23 Elvedina Muzaferia
24 Priska Ming-Nufer
25 Joana Hählen
26 Karen Clement
27 Christina Ager
28 Valerie Grenier
29 Delia Durrer
30 Emma Aicher
31 Lindsey Vonn
The other Swiss women:
33 Malorie White
35 Stephanie Jenal
41 Janine Schmitt
Last week, Lindsey Vonn started as the lead driver on the descent in Beaver Creek and immediately shone with a top time measured by SRF. Now the 40-year-old American is back in the World Cup – her first race after her five-year break is the Super-G in St. Moritz. There she competes with a wildcard and is therefore allowed to start with starting number 31. Marcel Hirscher already benefited from the same rule.
Will the four-time overall World Cup winner be able to keep up with the top riders like Lara Gut-Behrami, Sofia Goggia and Cornelia Hütter? And how are the other Swiss women like Corinne Suter and MICHelle Gisin doing? You can find out here from 10.30 a.m. in the live ticker and in the SRF stream.
The last Swiss winners in the Ski World Cup
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The last Swiss winners in the Ski World Cup
Departure men: Justin Murisier trumps December 6, 2024 big and celebrates his first ever World Cup victory in the Beaver Creek downhill.
quelle: keystone / robert f. bukaty
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Video: watson
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Almost six years after her retirement, Lindsey Vonn is returning to the Ski World Cup in St. Moritz. At 40, the American is determined to push the boundaries. An artificial knee joint makes her dream, but the risk comes with it.
The 82 World Cup victories, two World Cup titles in Val d'Isère (2009) and the Olympic victory in Whistler (2010) are already quite a long way away. But the charisma of the former speed queen with the two fluffy faux fur pompoms on the hat as a trademark has remained. Never have second-class FIS races attracted as much attention as those two weeks ago in Copper Mountain, and the US Ski Association has rarely had to answer as many interview requests as in the last few weeks and now before the World Cup races in St. Moritz.
Swiss