The Oakland Press

Flury wins downhill for second World Cup victory. Goggia takes discipline lead from absent Shiffrin

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Jasmine Flury claimed only her second World Cup win as the Swiss skier triumphed in a downhill race on Saturday, while Sofia Goggia moved to the top of the discipline standings in the absence of Mikaela Shiffrin.

Flury was 0.22 seconds ahead of compatriot Joana Haehlen and 0.24 faster than Austrian skier Cornelia Huetter in a race that was delayed because of a horrific crash for Stefanie Fleckenste­in.

Flury’s only other World Cup win in her career was a super-G in her native Switzerlan­d six years ago although the 30-year-old recorded a surprise victory in the world championsh­ips in February.

“After the world championsh­ip, now to win also a World Cup race, it takes a little bit of pressure again off me and I’m just really happy,” Flury said.

“It was a wild run. It was really tricky, the slope was a little bit more bumpy than yesterday and I just tried to have a good pressure on the outside ski and go until the finish line.”

Racing with bib No. 6 and with most of the prerace favorites skiing after her, it seemed unlikely Flury would remain in the

leader’s chair but none of them even managed to make the podium.

Haehlen equaled her career-best World Cup result in any discipline by finishing second for the third time.

“It’s perfect, to share the podium with Jasmine is what you dream when you’re a young racer,” the 31-year-old said.

Standout downhill racer Goggia, who admitted afterward that she was far from her best form and was also suffering from a cold, was fourth, 0.44 behind Flury after a mistake in the second part of the O.K. course, which is named after French skiing greats Henri Oreiller and JeanClaude Killy.

Goggia neverthele­ss moved into the discipline lead. The Italian, who has topped the World Cup downhill standings in each of the past three seasons, has 17 more points than Flury and 20 more than Huetter.

Shiffrin, who won the only other downhill so far this season last week, is 30 points behind Goggia. The American is selective picking her downhills — to fit a race and training schedule that prioritize­s slalom and giant slalom — and opted to skip Saturday’s race.

 ?? GIOVANNI AULETTA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The winner Switzerlan­d’s Jasmine Flury with the cow she was presented after an alpine ski, women’s World Cup downhill race, in Val d’Isere, France on Saturday.
GIOVANNI AULETTA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The winner Switzerlan­d’s Jasmine Flury with the cow she was presented after an alpine ski, women’s World Cup downhill race, in Val d’Isere, France on Saturday.

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