Valérie Grenier/ GEPA picture

TREMBLANT, Quebec — The women close out their Mont-Tremblant weekend on Sunday, December 7, with the second of two giant slaloms and the fourth GS of this Olympic season. After three slaloms and three GS races, Alice Robinson has won back-to-back giant slaloms, while Saturday’s bronze medalist Valerie Grenier returns to her home hill looking for another big result before the World Cup packs up and heads back to Europe for the rest of the winter.

Women’s GS podiums — 2026 season

RaceWinnerSecondThird
SöldenJulia Scheib (AUT)Paula Moltzan (USA)Lara Gut-Behrami (SUI)
Copper MountainAlice Robinson (NZL)Julia Scheib (AUT)Thea Louise Stjernesund (NOR)
Tremblant – Day 1Alice Robinson (NZL)Zrinka Ljutić (CRO)Valerie Grenier (CAN)

Robinson chases a Tremblant sweep, Ljutić looks to back up her season-best second place, and Grenier will again carry the Canadian crowd after her emotional home-snow podium on Saturday.

Top seven starters on Sunday

  • 1 – Thea Louise Stjernesund (NOR, 1996)
  • 2 – Paula Moltzan (USA, 1994)
  • 3 – Alice Robinson (NZL, 2001)
  • 4 – Julia Scheib (AUT, 1998)
  • 5 – Zrinka Ljutić (CRO, 2004, Atomic)
  • 6 – Lara Colturi (ALB, 2006)
  • 7 – Sara Hector (SWE, 1992, Head)

Any of these seven can push for the podium, with Robinson chasing a third straight GS win, Ljutić arriving with fresh confidence, and Hector’s experience keeping her in the medal conversation.

Stifel U.S. Ski Team start list

Five athletes represent the Stifel U.S. Ski Team in Sunday’s GS:

  • 2 – Paula Moltzan (1994)
  • 9 – Mikaela Shiffrin (1995, Atomic)
  • 10 – Nina O’Brien (1998)
  • 26 – Elisabeth Bocock (2005)
  • 48 – Kjersti Moritz (2004)

Canadian starters on home snow

Canada again fields a deep group in front of the home Tremblant crowd:

  • 8 – Valerie Grenier (1996)
  • 12 – Britt Richardson (2003)
  • 34 – Arianne Forget (2003, Atomic)
  • 40 – Cassidy Gray (2001, Atomic)
  • 47 – Justine Lamontagne (2002)
  • 49 – Kendra Giesbrecht (2005)

Grenier, who grew up skiing at Tremblant, will try to build on Saturday’s third place with another aggressive attack from bib 8.

Norway’s Kai Grønningsæther sets the first run, while Alessandro Colturi (ALB) sets the second run

Women’s Giant Slalom — Start Times and How to Watch

Saturday’s giant slalom takes place on December 6. Run one begins at 10:00 a.m. ET / 7:00 a.m. PT, with run two at 1:00 p.m. ET / 110:00 a.m. PT. Fans in Great Britain can watch the first run at 15:00 and the second at 18:00.


United States: Live and replay coverage on Ski and Snowboard Live.

Canada: Stream on CBC Sports.

Great Britain: Both races air live on Discovery+

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Daily Program

First Run Starlist women’s GS

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About the Author: Peter Lange

Lange is the current Publisher of Ski Racing Media. However, over 38 seasons, he enjoyed coaching athletes of all ages and abilities. Lange’s experience includes leading Team America and working with National Team athletes from the United States, Norway, Austria, Australia, and Great Britain. He was the US Ski Team Head University Coach for the two seasons the program existed. Lange says, “In the end, the real value of this sport is the relationships you make, they are priceless.”