Alpine skiing: Hirscher wins World Cup giant slalom at Beaver Creek

FAN Editor
Alpine Skiing: 2017 FIS Birds of Prey World Cup Skiing
Dec 3, 2017; Avon, CO, USA; Marcel Hirscher of Austria celebrates on the podium after the men’s giant slalom race in the 2017 FIS alpine skiing World Cup at Beaver Creek. Mandatory Credit: Michael Madrid-USA TODAY Sports

December 3, 2017

By Rory Carroll

(Reuters) – Austrian Marcel Hirscher dominated the World Cup giant slalom event at Beaver Creek on Sunday, winning his 23rd career race in the discipline on a windy and warm day at the Birds of Prey course in Colorado.

Showing no lingering issues from the left ankle fracture he suffered in a training fall in August, the 28-year-old completed his two runs in two minutes 37.30 seconds, nearly a second faster than second-place finisher, Norway’s Henrik Kristoffersen (2:38.18).

Germany’s Stefan Luitz (2:38.33) finished third.

“The last two weeks have been really intense trying to find my speed and my confidence, because when you’re injured you lose a lot of confidence,” Hirscher said.

“It is really unbelievable but it’s just one step further on the way back.”

The win puts Hirscher one career World Cup win behind American Ted Ligety, his longtime rival who is still trying to find his form since coming back from back surgery in January.

Ligety (2:38.66), whose shaky second trip down the course landed him with a disappointing seventh-place finish, said his back felt fine during the race but he was undone by the course’s slow, “grippy” snow on an unusually warm day.

With two months to go before the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, Hirscher will hope his giant slalom dominance will translate into Olympic gold.

Despite being the winner of a record six straight overall World Cup season titles, Hirscher has just one Olympic medal to his name, a silver in slalom from the Sochi Games in 2014.

(Reporting by Rory Carroll; editing by Clare Fallon)

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