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How and when to watch. In this article, you will find the full men’s Super-G start list, field analysis, season standings, and the key contenders most likely to challenge for the podium.
The final men’s Super-G of the 2025–26 World Cup season takes place in Kvitfjell, Norway on Olympiabakken, where the top 25 in the discipline standings — plus the Junior World Champion — will race for the final podium of the season.
Marco Odermatt arrives having already secured the Super-G crystal globe, along with the downhill and overall titles. With the title decided, the focus shifts to who wins the final race and how the standings behind him shake out.
Top Five – World Cup Super-G Standings (After Kitzbühel, 6/7 races)
1st 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt (SUI, 1997, Stöckli) — 425 pts
2nd 🇦🇹 Vincent Kriechmayr (AUT, 1991, Head) — −158
3rd 🇦🇹 Stefan Babinsky (AUT, 1996, Head) — −182
4th 🇦🇹 Raphael Haaser (AUT, 1997, Atomic) — −184
5th 🇮🇹 Giovanni Franzoni (ITA, 2001, Oakley) — −185
Why the standings still matter
Odermatt has already locked up the globe, but the standings still frame the race.
Only 27 points separate Kriechmayr in second from Franzoni in fifth, leaving the fight for the remaining discipline podium positions wide open. The final Super-G will determine who finishes the season as the strongest challenger behind the dominant Swiss.
Men’s World Cup Super-G Podiums – 2025–26 Season
| Venue | 1st | 2nd | 3rd |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copper Mountain (USA) | 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt | 🇦🇹 Vincent Kriechmayr | 🇦🇹 Raphael Haaser |
| Beaver Creek (USA) | 🇦🇹 Vincent Kriechmayr | 🇳🇴 Fredrik Møller | 🇦🇹 Raphael Haaser |
| Val Gardena (ITA) | 🇨🇿 Jan Zabystřan | 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt | 🇮🇹 Giovanni Franzoni |
| Livigno (ITA) | 🇦🇹 Marco Schwarz | 🇨🇭 Alexis Monney | 🇨🇭 Franjo von Allmen |
| Wengen (SUI) | 🇮🇹 Giovanni Franzoni | 🇦🇹 Stefan Babinsky | 🇨🇭 Franjo von Allmen |
| Kitzbühel (AUT) | 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt | 🇨🇭 Franjo von Allmen | 🇦🇹 Stefan Babinsky |
| Olympic Cortina | 🥇 🇨🇭 Franjo von Allmen | 🥈 🇺🇸 Ryan Cochran-Siegle | 🥉 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt |
Season breakdown (World Cup races only)
- 6 World Cup races completed
- 5 different winners
- 10 different podium finishers
- 5 nations represented
Podiums by nation (World Cup only)
- 🇦🇹 Austria — 5
- 🇨🇭 Switzerland — 4
- 🇮🇹 Italy — 2
- 🇳🇴 Norway — 1
- 🇨🇿 Czechia — 1
(Olympic results included above for context but excluded from totals.)
Austria and Switzerland have controlled the discipline, but the spread of winners shows how competitive Super-G has been throughout the season.
Top Ten – WCSL Super-G (Start Order)
Bib 6 🇮🇹 Giovanni Franzoni (ITA, 2001, Oakley) — WCSL SG Rank 6
Bib 7 🇦🇹 Raphael Haaser (AUT, 1997, Atomic) — WCSL SG Rank 4
Bib 9 🇦🇹 Vincent Kriechmayr (AUT, 1991, Head) — WCSL SG Rank 3
Bib 10 🇦🇹 Stefan Babinsky (AUT, 1996, Head) — WCSL SG Rank 7
Bib 11 🇨🇭 Franjo von Allmen (SUI, 2001, Head) — WCSL SG Rank 2
Bib 12 🇨🇿 Jan Zabystřan (CZE, 1998) — WCSL SG Rank 8
Bib 13 🇮🇹 Dominik Paris (ITA, 1989, Nordica) — WCSL SG Rank 10
Bib 14 🇨🇭 Stefan Rogentin (SUI, 1994) — WCSL SG Rank 5
Bib 15 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt (SUI, 1997, Stöckli) — WCSL SG Rank 1
Bib 17 🇫🇷 Nils Allegre (FRA, 1994) — WCSL SG Rank 9
Where in the start list will the race be won?
The final Super-G will be decided where the strongest athletes push the limit the hardest.
This bib 6–15 group contains the core contenders — the skiers who have consistently delivered results this season. The majority of race winners and podium finishers will start within this window, making it the decisive phase of the race.
Odermatt starts in the middle of this group, surrounded by his closest challengers. Even with the globe secured, he remains the benchmark.
Will the course set favor the Stifel U.S. Ski Team?
There is a key American storyline in Kvitfjell.
Johno McBride (USA) is the course setter, which could influence how the race unfolds for the Stifel U.S. Ski Team athletes:
Stifel U.S. Ski Team — Super-G Finals starters
Bib 16 🇺🇸 Ryan Cochran-Siegle (USA, 1992, Head) — Mt. Mansfield Ski Academy / Cochran’s Ski Club — World Cup SG Rank 16
Bib 24 🇺🇸 River Radamus (USA, 1998) — Ski & Snowboard Club Vail — World Cup SG Rank 25
Cochran-Siegle starts just outside the main contender group and has already shown he can deliver at the highest level, including his Olympic Super-G silver. Radamus enters as the final qualifier and will need to attack from a later start position.
Alpine Canada in the field
Alpine Canada — Super-G Finals starters
Bib 22 🇨🇦 Cameron Alexander (CAN, 1997) — World Cup SG Rank 23
Bib 23 🇨🇦 James Crawford (CAN, 1997, Head) — World Cup SG Rank 21
Both Alpine Canada athletes start later in the field and will need to push aggressively to move into the points.
Junior World Champion joins the field
🇫🇷 Victor Haghighat (FRA, 2007) enters the World Cup Finals as the reigning Junior World Champion in Super-G, starting with Bib 26.
The young French skier will have the opportunity to test himself against the world’s best on one of the biggest stages of the season, bringing a new name into a field dominated by established World Cup winners.
Final thoughts: One last chance to push the limit
The Super-G crystal globe is decided, but the race remains wide open.
With multiple winners this season and a tightly packed group behind Odermatt, the final race in Kvitfjell offers one last opportunity to make a statement.
When the race reaches bib 7 through 15, the strongest skiers will push the limit — and the final Super-G winner of the season will emerge.
Course setter: Johno McBride (USA)

Sunday’s super G takes place on March 22nd and begins at 7:30 a.m. EDT / 4:30 a.m. PDT. Fans in Great Britain can watch the race at 11:30
How to Watch
- 🇺🇸 United States: Live and replay coverage on Ski and Snowboard Live
- 🇨🇦 Canada: Live streaming on CBC Sports.
- 🇬🇧 Great Britain: Both races air live on Discovery+
Daily Program men’s super-G
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Men’s Super-G Start List























