2020 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Women's super-G

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2020 Women's super-G World Cup
Previous: 2019 Next: 2021

The women's super-G in the 2020 FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup involved 6 events, which produced six different winners from five different countries.

Defending champion Mikaela Shiffrin from the United States was leading the discipline standings when her father Jeff suffered what proved to be a fatal head injury at the start of February; Shiffrin immediately went home to Colorado and ended up missing the remainder of the season.[1] Eventually, Swiss skier Corinne Suter, who held a slim 19-point lead over Federica Brignone of Italy with just the finals remaining, won the discipline title for 2020 when the finals, scheduled for Thursday, 19 March in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy.[2][3]

Standings[edit]

# Skier
08 Dec 2019
Lake Louise

Canada
14 Dec 2019
St. Moritz

 Switzerland 
26 Jan 2020
Bansko

Bulgaria
02 Feb 2020
Rosa Khutor

Russia

Germany
29 Feb 2020
La Thuile

Italy
19 Mar 2020
Cortina d'Ampezzo

Italy
Total
 Switzerland  Corinne Suter 60 40 50 50 100 60 x 360
2 Italy Federica Brignone 36 80 DNF 100 45 80 x 341
3 Austria Nicole Schmidhofer 32 50 20 24 80 11 x 217
4  Switzerland  Lara Gut-Behrami 22 45 60 40 16 26 x 209
5 Austria Stephanie Venier 50 18 32 45 40 20 x 205
6 Austria Nina Ortlieb DNF 40 29 22 DNF 100 x 191
7 United States Mikaela Shiffrin 26 60 100 DNS x 186
8 Italy Sofia Goggia DNF 100 DNS 80 DNF DNS x 180
Germany Viktoria Rebensburg 100 26 22 32 DNF DNS x 180
10 Italy Marta Bassino DNS 13 80 DNS 26 45 x 164
11 Italy Elena Curtoni 15 16 36 20 20 36 x 143
12 France Romane Miradoli 14 15 24 29 32 24 x 138
13  Switzerland  Joana Hählen DNF 0 14 60 24 32 x 130
14 Slovakia Petra Vlhová DNS 40 DNS 29 50 x 119
15  Switzerland  Wendy Holdener DNS 22 DNS 60 29 x 111
16 Liechtenstein Tina Weirather 29 DNF 45 DNF 5 18 x 97
17  Switzerland  Michelle Gisin 9 22 3 DNS 36 22 x 92
18 Austria Tamara Tippler 40 24 DNF 11 7 6 x 88
19 Italy Nicol Delago 80 7 DNF DNF DNS 0 x 87
20 Norway Kajsa Vickhoff Lie 18 40 16 10 DNF DNS x 84
21 Czech Republic Ester Ledecká 1 0 DNS 26 14 40 x 81
22 Italy Francesca Marsaglia 13 14 DNF 18 15 16 x 76
23 France Tiffany Gauthier DNS 10 13 50 DNF x 73
24 Austria Anna Veith DNS 5 26 36 DNF DNS x 67
25 Austria Mirjam Puchner 45 6 4 6 3 DNS x 64
References [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [3]
  •   Winner
  •   2nd place
  •   3rd place
  • DNF = Did Not Finish
  • DNS = Did Not Start
  • Updated at 18 March 2020, after all events.[10]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Meyer, John (3 February 2020). "Jeff Shiffrin, father of Colorado skier Mikaela Shiffrin, dies". Denver Post. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  2. ^ "Suter earns Super-G crystal globe". International Ski Federation. 8 March 2020. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  3. ^ a b Wiegand, Jenny (13 March 2020). "Coronavirus Brings Alpine World Cup Season to Abrupt End". Ski. Retrieved 3 April 2021.
  4. ^ "Audi FIS Ski World Cup Lake Louise Women SG (USA)" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com.
  5. ^ "Audi FIS Ski World Cup St. Moritz Women SG (SUI)" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com.
  6. ^ "Audi FIS Ski World Cup Bansko Women SG (BUL)" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com.
  7. ^ "Audi FIS Ski World Cup Rosa Khutor Women SG (RUS)" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com.
  8. ^ "Audi FIS Ski World Cup Garmisch-Partenkirchen Women SG (GER)" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com.
  9. ^ "Audi FIS Ski World Cup La Thuile Women SG (ITA)" (PDF). www.fis-ski.com.
  10. ^ "Official FIS 2020 women's season standings". fis-ski.com. Retrieved 3 April 2021.

External links[edit]