Odermatt beats rising star Franjo von Allmen in Switzerland's classic World Cup downhill

Marco Odermatt, the 27-year-old superstar of men's skiing, raced down the longest and quirkiest World Cup downhill course to edge teammate Franjo von Allmen for victory in the classic Lauberhorn race in Wengen, Switzerland.

Canada's Cam Alexander finishes 5th, teammate Jack Crawford places 9th in Wengen

A male alpine skier pumps both fists while shouting in celebration at the end of a downhill course.
Swiss superstar Marco Odermatt celebrates his victory in the men's downhill World Cup event on Saturday in Wengen, Switzerland. (Alain Grosclaude/Agence Zoom/Getty Images)

It surely ranked among the best and most joyous five minutes in Alpine skiing history for the Swiss men's team and fans at the race they prize above all.

Marco Odermatt, the 27-year-old superstar of men's skiing, raced down the longest and quirkiest World Cup downhill course to edge teammate Franjo von Allmen for victory in the classic Lauberhorn race in Wengen, Switzerland.

As Odermatt waited at the start gate, the 23-year-old Von Allmen delighted a noisy crowd of 40,000 with the latest standout display of his breakout season to set the fastest time, one day after getting his first World Cup win in a super-G.

Odermatt would not be denied on a near-perfect day for downhill racing on fast, hard snow under sunshine and blue skies in temperatures of 2 Celsius (36 degrees F) at the finish.

"This is my house!" Odermatt declared in English on seeing he was 0.37 seconds faster than Von Allmen. Third-place Miha Hrobat was 0.57 back after setting a fast target as the first starter. The result was unofficial with low-ranked skiers yet to race.

WATCH | Odermatt wins Wengen downhill:

Marco Odermatt earns 3rd-career World Cup downhill win in Wengen

10 hours ago
Duration 4:00
The Swiss sensation's time of 2:22.58 bested the field for his second downhill victory of the season during the FIS Alpine Ski World Cup stop in Wengen, Switzerland.

The celebration was a shoutout to Daniel Yule, Odermatt said later of his Swiss teammate with British parents who said the same on winning a slalom at nearby Adelboden in 2020.

Von Allmen then hugged Odermatt and shared exuberant smiles as he gave up his seat in the courseside leader's box to his good friend.

Cameron Alexander of North Vancouver, B.C., was the top Canadian in fifth place, four spots ahead of Toronto's Jack Crawford.

WATCH | Alexander cracks top-5 in Wengen:

B.C.'s Cameron Alexander cracks top-5 at World Cup downhill in Wengen

10 hours ago
Duration 3:00
The North Vancouver, B.C. skier scored a time of 2:23.29 to place fifth in the men's downhill event during the FIS Alpine Ski World Cup stop in Wengen, Switzerland.

Odermatt's house

Wengen is fast becoming Odermatt's house, after winning both downhills on the course one year ago and being runner-up behind Aleksander Aamodt Kilde in the two previous years. Kilde is skipping this season to recover from injuries suffered crashing near the finish at Wengen last year.

"It's the most important race for me this year," Odermatt told Swiss broadcaster RTS of the Lauberhorn downhill now in its 95th year. It is a standout event in Switzerland's sports and social calendar.

"It's super cool. Today the skiing is perfect, the course, the snow. The feeling on my feet was fantastic," said the three-time defending overall World Cup champion who extended his lead in the standings.

WATCH | Full replay of Saturday's men's downhill:

FIS Alpine Ski World Cup Wengen: Men's downhill

14 hours ago
Duration 2:57:02
Watch the men's downhill event from the FIS Alpine Ski World Cup stop in Wengen, Switzerland

Fast conditions

The snow conditions set up for fast skiing and Italian veteran Dominik Paris was clocked at 154.99 kph (96 mph) on the straight Haneggschuss section two minutes into the run. It was there in 2013 that Johan Clarey of France set the World Cup record speed of 161.9 kph (100.6 mph). Paris finished fourth.

Still, the 4.45-kilometres (2 3/4-mile) course that twists beneath the Eiger, Jungfrau and Mönch mountain peaks is always tiring and two-time Lauberhorn winner Vincent Kriechmayr crashed hard into safety fences before the final turn.

Kriechmayr stood up and later was seen limping with a right leg injury that the Austrian team confirmed was "a severe strain" to a knee ligament.

French racer Blaise Giezendanner was airlifted from the course after crashing midway down his run. The French team later said Giezendanner tore the ACL in his right knee.

Odermatt also leads the downhill standings from Von Allmen who has been runner-up in three straight downhills.

In a discipline where racers often peak in their 30s, Von Allmen shapes already as an elite racer in just his second year competing at Wengen. He placed 14th last year in both of Odermatt's wins.

Von Allmen was saluted in the finish area by International Ski Federation president Johan Eliasch, who also owns the Head ski brand the Swiss prospect uses.

Swiss men have now placed 1-2 in all four World Cup downhills this season. Odermatt has won two, with Justin Murisier and Alexis Monney winning the others.

"It's incredible, you have to give it to them," Eliasch said. "The dominance in speed across the board is something for everybody else to aspire to."

Austria's classic race is next Saturday for the downhillers, the Hahnenkamm at Kitzbuhel that is a shorter course than Wengen but the most feared.

With files from CBC Sports

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