Lethbridge Herald

Austrian wins second straight at Lake Louise

VETERAN SKIER OFF TO A STRONG START

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A woman who waited over a decade for her first World Cup victory in ski racing won her second in as many days Saturday.

Nicole Schmidhofe­r of Austria doubled up on downhills in Lake Louise, skiing faster Saturday than she did to win Friday’s season-opener.

“It’s unbelievab­le for me,” the 29-year-old veteran said. “I’m excited and a little bit surprised that I started the season so great.”

Schmidhofe­r, who raced her first World Cup for Austria in 2007, was over four-tenths of a second quicker Saturday posting a time of one minute 47.68 seconds.

Her teammate Cornelia Huetter, who won a downhill here in 2017, was .44 of a second back in second.

“I skied much better than yesterday,” Huetter said. “I like Canada. I was here in 2011 the first time and that impressed me so much. Every year when I come back, it’s so amazing.

“It’s not easy to be focused because everything is so beautiful. It’s really hard.”

Friday’s runner-up Michelle Gisin of Switzerlan­d was third just under half a second behind Schmidhofe­r.

Defending overall World Cup champion Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S. was fourth. Roni Remme of Collingwoo­d, Ont., was the top Canadian in 36th.

Sunny skies made for better visibility for all the women after Friday’s cloudy skies and flat light.

In both downhills, Schmidhofe­r nailed a section of the course where the rest of the field struggled — Fall Away into Gun Barrel — with cleaner, higher lines that allowed the five-foottwo skier to carry speed into the bottom section.

“She told me today was better and that’s unbelievab­le,” Huetter said.

Slovenia’s Ilka Stuhec, the last woman to win both downhills in Lake Louise in 2016, was 14th.

Today’s super-G race concludes the World Cup. Lindsey Vonn of the U.S. swept all three races in 2015, 2012 and 2011.

But the American was not able to race at her favourite venue, where she has won 14 downhills, because of injuries she sustained in November training for a super-G race.

Schmidhofe­r won the women’s world super-G title in 2017, but she wasn’t feeling confident in that discipline.

“At this time, my performanc­e in downhill is much better than super-G, so I hope for a top-five five tomorrow,” she said.

“That will be awesome for me.”

Shiffrin, a two-time Olympic gold medallist in slalom, was first and third last year in Lake Louise.

The 23-year-old has raced only a handful of downhills in her career, however, so her speed discipline­s are still a work in progress.

“After last year, I know how it’s supposed to feel,” Shiffrin said. “That doesn’t mean that I can do it every time, but at least I know how it’s supposed to feel.

“Today’s race versus yesterday’s race, it was a lot closer to that feeling of attacking and letting my skis run.

“That doesn’t always guarantee a win or even a podium, but it does guarantee that I’m making progress and getting better on my speed skis.”

The Canadian women had late start numbers with Remme kicking out of the start hut third-last.

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