Gut-Behrami’s veteran skills win tricky St. Anton SG

By Published On: January 10th, 2021Comments Off on Gut-Behrami’s veteran skills win tricky St. Anton SG

ST. ANTON, Austria – It took the veteran skills of Lara Gut-Behrami to win a tricky World Cup super-G on Sunday.

Even Gut-Behrami veered off the best racing line before making two gates on a fast, twisting course as she finished 0.16 ahead of Marta Bassino of Italy. World Cup super-G champion Corinne Suter was third, trailing her Switzerland teammate by 0.20. 

Lara Gut-Behrami (SUI).

Racing early with the No. 5 bib, Gut-Behrami took a route few could follow – 11 of the first 25 top-ranked starters failed to complete the course.

They included Sofia Goggia, the winner of Saturday’s downhill, who lasted barely 10 seconds before skiing out.

Gut-Behrami’s 13th win in World Cup super-G came more than 12 years after her debut victory in a discipline that demands speed and technical ability to improvise.

Lara Gut-Behrami (SUI).

“Super-G was always the key to find the easiness again,” she said. “I need confidence and I need to have the instincts when I’m skiing, and super-G is exactly that.”

Super-G differs from downhill because racers do not get a training run on the course. They see the gate-setting up close in an early-morning course inspection.

The track Sunday had 36 turning gates designed by a France team coach.

French racer Tiffany Gauthier was among two top-20 starters disqualified for going straight through the second-last gate. They carried too much speed to adjust their direct approach ahead of the finish.

“I knew it already at inspection, you will have some speed and then really (at) turns you have to take speed a little bit out,” Suter said. “It was so hard to find this mix.”

Marta Bassino (ITA), Lara Gut-Behrami and Corinne Suter (SUI).

The race conditions – bright sunshine and icy minus-11 Celsius (12 Fahrenheit) temperatures – were suited to fast skiing.

Gut-Behrami’s top speed approaching 122 kph (76 mph) was the same clocked by some downhill racers one day earlier.

Now 29, the 2016 World Cup overall champion won both of her career season-long discipline titles in super-G.

Gut-Behrami rose to fifth in the overall standings, ahead of three-time champion Mikaela Shiffrin. The American star is skipping speed races to focus on slalom and giant slalom. 

Laurenne Ross and Isabella Wright (USA).

Isabella Wright led the Americans in 24th, a personal best, just one day after scoring her career-first FIS Ski World Cup points.

“Today in the super-G I felt really calm and happy in the start, and ready. I skied exactly how I wanted on the top part of the course and was very mellow in my head, but attacking at the same time…and just skiing and enjoying more turns. I loved how technical it was…that’s my favorite kind of super-G,” Wright told the ski team. “When I got towards the bottom I hooked my shoulder on a gate and didn’t think I was going to make it for a quick second, but I am grateful I crossed the finish line and I was happy with a lot of my skiing out there today.”

Teammate AJ Hurt started in her first career super-G race and landed in 27th, grabbing her first World Cup points in the discipline — her third time in the points this season, across three disciplines (parallel, giant slalom, and now super-G).

Overall leader Petra Vlhova, who also specializes in technical rather than speed races, placed 19th.

Shiffrin and Vlhova will be favored in a slalom Tuesday under the night lights at Flachau, Austria.

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About the Author: Associated Press