Breakpoints

No Retina
Retina
XS Screen (480px)
SM+ Screen
SM Screen (768px)
SM- Screen
MD+ Screen
MD Screen (992px)
MD- Screen
LG+ Screen
LG Screen (1200px)
LG- Screen
XL+ Screen (1600px)

Ganong Eighth; Leads Three Into Top 20 at Unforgiving Bormio Downhill

By Megan Harrod
December, 28 2021
Ganong Eighth in Bormio Downhill
On another dark, bumpy, difficult day on the ominous and notoriously unforgiving Stelvio track in Bormio, Italy, Travis Ganong led three Americans into the top 20, grabbing his best downhill result of the season so far, in eighth place. (Mattia Ozbot - Getty Images)

Travis Ganong led three Americans into the top 20 on the ominous, unforgiving Stelvio track in Bormio, Italy in eighth, his best downhill of the season so far.

Despite dark and difficult conditions, Italy’s fearless racehorse Dominik Paris was once again victorious in Bormio, with Swiss powerhouse Marco Odermatt in second, and teammate Niels Hinterman in third—his second consecutive third-place finish in downhill. The victory is Paris’ sixth career World Cup downhill win in Bormio, including 2012 and four successive between 2017 and 2019. This surpasses the men's record for most World Cup downhill wins at a specific ski resort, which was previously five by the Swiss legend Didier Cuche in Kitzbuehel, Austria.

There’s such a high level of skiing on the men’s speed circuit, that when the athletes encounter a track as ominous as the Stelvio, success follows the guys that got up and were willing to ski and push. Tuesday’s race unfolded as anticipated, with Paris executing on his home hill and taking the decisive victory. Surprisingly, Switzerland’s Beat Feuz skied out, making it the first time he’s DNFed in a World Cup downhill since Kitzbuehel in 2017. 

“It's so icy and so different from all of the downhills we've been on all season, so it's like the first real test of the year in downhill,” reflected Ganong. “It's gnarly, it's scary, it's bumpy—people pulled out of the race because of the conditions...classic Bormio style."

Ganong tested a new pair of skis, with a new plate and a new binding, after skiing on them in the second training run. He said, "...it was different but in a good way. After one run on them, I thought 'OK, I know what to expect now,' and it was the right choice, obviously, because I had a good feeling on the snow today and I felt like I could play with the hill, which is not easy to do in Bormio because most of the time you're just playing catch-up and not in charge, and it's a fight. The feeling I had today was more like I was in charge and I was able to play with the hill. In one section, particularly coming into the traverse...I totally changed my plan mid-turn and went dead-straight, threw the skis sideways for a sec and locked in and from there down I was second from that split all the way to the finish behind Odermatt.”

”It was a really solid run," Ganong added. “I think Bormio is where I had my first top 10 in my career and my first World Cup points, I believe, in downhill...I've had a lot of good races here over the years."

Jared Goldberg snagged 15th, making it his best result of the season so far, while Ryan Cochran-Siegle landed in 20th. Steven Nyman finished just outside of the points, in 31st by one-hundredth of a second. Erik Arvidsson was 37th, Bryce Bennett 39th, and Sam Morse 46th. 

Up next, the men will take on back-to-back super-G races on the Stelvio. Cochran-Siegle won last season's super-G in Bormio. This marks the American men's only World Cup super-G win in the last 15 years. AfterBennett's win in the Val Gardena, Italy downhill, the American men could win a men's downhill and super-G event in a single World Cup season for the first time since the 2007 season.

RESULTS
Men’s downhill

STANDINGS
Downhill
Overall

HOW TO WATCH
*All times EST.

Wednesday, Dec. 29, 2021
4:00 a.m. FIS Alpine World Cup Women's Slalom, run 1 - LIVE, Lienz, AUT, Streaming Peacock
5:30 a.m. FIS Alpine World Cup Men's Super-G - LIVE, Bormio, ITA, Streaming Ski and Snowboard Live, Streaming Peacock
7:00 a.m. FIS Alpine World Cup Women's Slalom, run 2 - LIVE, Lienz, AUT, Streaming Peacock

Thursday, Dec. 30, 2021
5:30 a.m. FIS Alpine World Cup Men's Super-G - LIVE, Bormio, ITA, Streaming Peacock

Current television broadcast and streaming schedules for all sports are available here. For more information on how to watch broadcasts and streaming, visit our full "how to watch" breakdown.

Please note: Streaming services and apps are third-party services and subject to such parties’ terms of use and data privacy. U.S. Ski & Snowboard disclaims any and all liability for use of third-party services and apps.

 

World Cup Development Opportunities: an Interview with Rising Coach and Tech, Kristen Bourne

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
December, 27 2021
The Team behind the Team
The team behind the podium in Dresden. From left to right, physical therapist Ana Robinson, rising tech and coach Kristen Bourne, Jessie Diggins, and Julia Kern.

Women’s Sports Foundation Van DerVeer Fellow grant recipient Kristen Bourne, who is an assistant cross country coach at the College of St. Scholastica (CSS) in Duluth, MN, joined the Davis U.S. Cross Country Team for a couple of weeks on the FIS World Cup circuit in Davos, Switzerland, and Dresden, Germany, recently.

From coaching to driving athletes, and waxing skis Bourne was introduced to an  “intensive course” on all things World Cup. Faster Skier's Rachel Perkins caught up with Bourne and featured her in the following story...

World Cup Development Opportunities: an Interview with Rising Coach and Tech, Kristen Bourne

 

Shiffrin Sidelined for Lienz

By Megan Harrod
December, 27 2021
Mikaela Out for Lienz
Two-time Olympic champion and six-time world champion Mikaela Shiffrin announced Monday she has tested positive for COVID-19 and will sit out the next FIS Ski World Cup event—a giant slalom and slalom race—in Lienz, Austria. (Mike Dawsy - U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

Two-time Olympic champion and six-time world champion Mikaela Shiffrin announced Monday she has tested positive for COVID-19 and will sit out the next FIS Ski World Cup event—a giant slalom and slalom race—in Lienz, Austria. Shiffrin is currently leading in both the overall standings and giant slalom standings and is second in the slalom standings to Slovakian rival Petra Vlhova. 

NBC Sports Podcast: How can winter sports become more diverse and inclusive?

By Megan Harrod
December, 24 2021
Diversity in Winter Sport

NBC Sports' The Podium podcast recently spent time talking with U.S. Ski Team alumnus Andre Horton, a pioneer among black skiers who, during the early 2000s became the first able-bodied Black American to join the U.S. Ski Team.

As the article says, 

Winter sports are popular activities for many Americans, but access to ski resorts isn't equal for everyone. According to data from the National Ski Areas Association, about 88% of visitors to ski areas in the U.S. during the 2019-20 season were white, while less than 2% were Black.

There are many factors leading to this disparity — the high cost of participation, geographic and logistical restrictions, and a lack of marketing toward Black Americans all contribute.

In the latest episode of The Podium podcast from NBC Sports (below), this issue of equal access to the slopes was explored in further detail.

Andre Horton, a pioneer among Black skiers, is one of the athletes featured on the podcast. During the early 2000s, he became the first able-bodied Black American to join the U.S. Ski Team, and as he traveled around the country to compete, it was rare for him to see other skiers who looked like him.

Some organizations, such as the National Brotherhood of Skiers, are working to change this by finding promising Black athletes and supporting them in their development. One such athlete is Brian Rice, an up-and-coming 17-year-old snowboarder from Michigan who is targeting the 2026 Winter Olympics.

On the podcast, Horton and Rice discussed their personal experiences, the tight-knit friendships they've formed within the Black ski and snowboard community, and what steps can be taken to get more young kids of color into the pipeline for winter sports and eventually onto the podium. Listen to the full episode below.

Listen to The Podium podcast episode featuring Andre Horton.

HomeLight Launches #PoweredByHomeLight Athlete Spotlight Series

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
December, 24 2021
Paula Moltzan HomeLight
Paula Moltzan celebrates in the finish at the HomeLight Killington Cup slalom at Killington Resort in Vermont. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — HomeLight, the real estate technology platform transforming the home buying and selling process for the top real estate agents and their clients, today announced the launch of #PoweredByHomeLight, a first-of-its-kind sponsorship series to support today's up-and-coming and established athletes and sports teams. The first athlete to be announced as #PoweredByHomeLight is Paula Moltzan, an American World Cup alpine ski racer on the U.S. Ski Team, with other athletes to be officially announced in the coming weeks.

As a part of this invite-only spotlight series, HomeLight's sponsorship empowers athletes to attend and participate in major competitions and events around the world and do what they do best: pursuing their goals of winning. Athletes in this series will have the opportunity to be featured in their own HomeLight commercials and will don HomeLight-branded uniforms while competing.

Paula Moltzan, the first athlete to be announced in the #PoweredByHomeLight athlete spotlight series, is known as a rising star on the U.S. Ski Team making a name for herself on the World Cup circuit. Moltzan scored her first World Cup points in 2015, won gold in the slalom at the Junior World Championships the same year, raced collegiately for the University of Vermont in Burlington, and won the NCAA title in slalom in 2017. She rejoined the World Cup circuit for the 2018-19 season and finished 18th in slalom at the World Championships in 2019. Moltzan finished the 2021 season ranked 11th in slalom and with a podium finish in Lech, Austria. Moltzan is currently racing on the World Cup circuit and preparing for the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics in February.

For Moltzan, partnering with HomeLight goes beyond skiing. "HomeLight is more than just the company sponsoring and supporting my athletic journey this season," says Paula Moltzan, U.S. Ski Team slalom and giant slalom skier. "I'm proud to share that I'm trusting HomeLight to help me during one of my life's most important moments: buying my first home. It's an honor to be #PoweredByHomeLight and team up with a company that supports me for monumental moments, whether that's competing on the slopes or competing for a home."

While this is the first time HomeLight has sponsored individual athletes, the organization has supported the building of world-class teams for years. Since 2019, HomeLight has been the title sponsor of the HomeLight Killington Cup, the widely-anticipated women's World Cup event on Thanksgiving weekend. For the 2021-2022 season in addition to sponsoring individual athletes, HomeLight is furthering its investment in U.S. Ski and Snowboard by sponsoring the HomeLight Foundation Series aimed at creating opportunities for emerging athletes. The HomeLight Foundation Series events include the U.S. leg of the FIS NorAm for both alpine and freestyle skiing and the HomeLight U.S. Revolution Tour for freeski and snowboard halfpipe, slopestyle, and big air.

"At HomeLight, we are all about supporting the individuals and teams inspiring their communities. With the launch of this series, being #PoweredByHomeLight doesn't only apply to the best real estate agents in the United States – it's bigger than that," said John Van Slyke III, Senior Vice President of Growth at HomeLight. "We recognize the skill, dedication, preparation, and commitment it takes to be the best, and we're excited to sponsor athletes like Paula as they continue to make a name for themselves, their teams, and our country."

For more information about Moltzan's upcoming competitions, visit usskiandsnowboard.org/athletes/paula-moltzan.

For more information about HomeLight, visit homelight.com.

###

About HomeLight
HomeLight is building the future of real estate — today. Our vision is a world where every real estate transaction is simple, certain, and satisfying for all.

The best real estate agents rely on HomeLight's platform to deliver better outcomes to homebuyers and sellers during every step of the real estate journey, whether that's enabling an all-cash offer, unlocking liquidity of their existing home to buy a new one, or creating certainty through a modern closing process. Each year, HomeLight facilitates billions of dollars of residential real estate business on its platform for thousands of agents.

Founded in 2012, HomeLight is a privately held company with offices in Scottsdale, San Francisco, New York, and Seattle, with backing from prominent investors including Zeev Ventures, Menlo Ventures, Group 11, Crosslink Capital, Bullpen Capital, Montage Ventures, Citi Ventures, Google Ventures, and others.

For additional information and images: homelight.com/press

Media Contact
Lizzie Ryan, HomeLight, (415) 508-4198, lizzie.ryan@homelight.com

 

Release Courtesy of HomeLight

U.S. Cross Country Team Looks To Carry Period 1 Momentum Into Tour de Ski

By Tom Horrocks
December, 22 2021
Tour de Ski
The annual Tour de Ski concludes with a 10k freestyle mass start hill climb up the lower slopes at Val de Fiemme, Italy. (Nordic Focus)

Coming in hot on the heels of one of the best starts to the season in recent memory, 14 members of the Davis U.S. Cross Country Ski Team will kick off Period 2 of the FIS World Cup season with the annual FIS Tour de Ski Tuesday in Lenzerheide, Switzerland. With the Olympics less than five weeks away, this year’s Tour de Ski will feature six stages over eight days instead of the usual eight stages over 10 days.

Defending Tour de Ski champion Jessie Diggins is among the scheduled starters. She looks to not only protect her TdS title but pick up valuable World Cup points toward defending the overall World Cup title and the World Cup distance title. Diggins is currently fifth in the overall World Cup standings with 319 points. Rosie Brennan is fourth overall (328), but like overall leader Maja Dahlqvist (464) of Sweden, and Therese Johaug (375) of Norway, who is currently third overall, has opted to skip the event. Sweden’s Frida Karlsson (400), now second overall, and will start the Tour alongside Diggins.

Diggins plans to use the Tour de Ski as an opportunity not only to increase her on-snow racing time but prep for the upcoming Olympic Games in Beijing. This season, she has already surprised herself with two podiums and a win during the opening spring qualification round. The Tour de Ski provides yet another opportunity to prove her form.

“All of this racing is how I get in shape,” Diggins said following the Davos races. “Because racing that hard gets you in shape pretty fast. So for me, it’s using the Tour de Ski as part of my preparation for the Olympics, but also – whether or not I’m working into the season, whether or not it’s part of the intentional prep phase – for me, every single race I hit it as hard as I can. And as you probably saw in Davos, I crossed the finish line, and there was nothing left.”

The U.S. women currently sit third overall in the Nations Cup behind Sweden and Norway, thanks to podium results from Diggins and Brennan and top 30 results from Hailey Swirbul, Julia Kern, Hannah Halvorsen, Novie McCabe, and Sophia Laukli. Meanwhile, the men’s team is seventh in the Nations Cup, following top results from JC Schoonmaker, Ben Ogden, Gus Schumacher, Kevin Bolger, and Luke Jager. 

“Period 1 was very successful for us,” noted Davis U.S. Cross Country Team Director Chris Grover. “I’m a little surprised due to our lack of on-snow training…but I think we’ll start to click a little more at the Tour de Ski. And I expect some standout results.”

While the women’s team continues to make headlines, the men’s team has started to write an excellent sprint story, with Schoonmaker, Ogden, and Jager all posting career-best results in Period 1. “For JC to be ranked 10th (in the overall World Cup sprint standings) is really quite awesome,” Grover said. “He is getting it figured out and gaining some confidence.” 

Schoonmaker has opted to skip the TdS and, like Brennan, will race at the L.L.Bean U.S. Cross Country Championships at Soldier Hollow January 2-6. However, Ogden, Jager, Bolger, Logan Hanneman, and Zak Ketterson will bring plenty of sprint power to the Tour, while Schumacher will be gunning for top results in the distance events. And speaking of distance, both Laukli and McCabe will be bringing some serious climbing power to the stage 6 final climb up the lower slopes of Val di Fiemme, Italy, on Jan. 4.

“Both of them are excellent climbers, and I expect we’ll see a top performance from each of them,” Grover said. 

The Tour de Ski kicks off Tuesday in Lenzerheide, Switzerland, with stage 1 freestyle sprint, followed by stage 2 classic individual starts Wednesday. The Tour rolls into Oberstdorf, Germany for stage 3, a freestyle mass start on Friday, Dec. 31, and a stage 4 classic sprint on Saturday, Jan. 1. The tour moves to Val di Fiemme, Italy, on Monday, Jan. 3, with a stage 5 classic mass start, and concludes on Tuesday, Jan. 4 with a mass start freestyle hill climb. NBC's Peacock will stream all events.

Tour de Ski Schedule

Tuesday, Dec. 28
Men and Women’s Freestyle Sprint, Lenzerheide, Switzerland

Wednesday, Dec 29
Women’s 10k Classic Individual Start, Lenzerheide, Switzerland
Men’s 15k Classic Individual Start, Lenzerheide, Switzerland

Friday, Dec. 31
Women’s 10k Freestyle Mass Start, Oberstdorf, Germany
Men’s 10k Freestyle Mass Start, Oberstdorf, Germany

Saturday, Jan. 1
Men and Women’s Classic Sprint, Oberstdorf, Germany

Monday, Jan. 3
Women’s 10k Classic Mass Start, Val di Fiemme, Italy
Men’s 15k Classic Mass Start, Val di Fiemme, Italy

Tuesday, Jan. 4
Women’s 10k Freestyle Mass Start, Val di Fiemme, Italy
Men’s 10k Freestyle Mass Start, Val di Fiemme, Italy

 The complete Broadcast and Streaming schedule is available here!

Davis U.S. Cross Country Team athletes scheduled to start the Tour de Ski:

MEN

  • Zak Ketterson
  • Ben Ogden
  • Kevin Bolger
  • Gus Schumacher
  • Luke Jager
  • Logan Hanneman

WOMEN

  • Alayna Sonnesyn
  • Jessie Diggins
  • Hailey Swirbul
  • Julia Kern
  • Hannah Halvorsen
  • Sophia Laukli 
  • Novie McCabe
  • Katharine Ogden

Don’t Miss a Moment of Mikaela Shiffrin’s Olympic Season With ‘Passion & Purpose’

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
December, 22 2021
Passion and Purpose: Mikaela Shiffrin
Outside’s Mikaela Shiffrin: Passion & Purpose premiered December 21 on Outside+ and follows World Cup and Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin throughout the winter. 

Outside’s Mikaela Shiffrin: Passion & Purpose premiered December 21 on Outside+ and follows World Cup and Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin throughout the winter. The series is available exclusively for Outside+ members, so join today and download the app to start streaming.

The hero’s journey is a familiar arc in literature, film, and television: A protagonist faces a seemingly insurmountable challenge and, against all odds and with the help of others, overcomes it. Many people travel a similar arc in real life, but those stories don’t always tie up nicely with a bow like in the movies. Such is the case with American ski racing phenom Mikaela Shiffrin, whose journey is detailed in the new Outside series Mikaela Shiffrin: Passion & Purpose. (Watch the trailer, below.)

Shiffrin—one of the most accomplished ski racers of all time—was at a competitive peak in 2020 when her father died suddenly. Jeff Shiffrin was a pillar in Mikaela’s life, and her devastation was total. It took nearly a year for her to return to the World Cup stage, and the 2020/21 campaign was inconsistent by her own lofty standards. But there’s no time to dwell on that as Mikaela Shiffrin: Passion & Purpose begins—not with the 2022 Winter Olympic Games right around the corner.

At this point, Shiffrin hardly needs an introduction. The two-time Olympic gold medalist and six-time World Champion has won 72 World Cups, which puts her behind only Lindsey Vonn and Ingemar Stenmark on the all-time list. She did it all with a blend of raw talent, fierce determination, and humility that makes her, in the minds of many, the greatest skier currently competing. But, with the loss of her father still with her every day, the first episode of Mikaela Shiffrin: Passion & Purpose introduces a Shiffrin who may be unrecognizable to her fans—a podium favorite who comes off vulnerable and tentative. 

Through interviews with her mother, her trainer, her coach, and her boyfriend, two-time World Cup Champion Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, the first episode focuses on the process of emotional recovery and physical preparation for the World Cup season that’s already underway. It’s the interviews with Shiffrin herself, however, that give the show emotional stakes that will hook fans of ski racing and even those who just love a great hero’s journey, alike.

NOTE: Episode 1 will be available online for international viewers starting February 1, 2022. 
 

 

Release courtesy SKI Magazine

Bristol Mountain to Host 2022 Toyota Aerials Freestyle National Championships March 19

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
December, 22 2021
Mikey's Jump
Mikey's Jump will once again be the site of U.S. Aerials Freestyle Championships, now scheduled for March 19, 2022.

Bristol Mountain and U.S. Ski & Snowboard are excited to announce that the Toyota 2022 U.S. Aerials Freestyle Championships will take place Saturday, March 19, 2022. Originally scheduled for Friday, December 31, the event was moved to later in the season to accommodate more snowmaking opportunities.

“We’re so excited to have the U.S. Aerials Freestyle Championships back at Bristol,” stated Bristol Mountain Vice President Steven Fuller. “We look forward to having spectators cheer on these incredible athletes. What an opportunity to have the best in the world competing right here in Rochester, NY.”

The event will welcome the United States’ top aerial skiers to compete for the National Championship. Over four days, including training, the championships will culminate with finals on Saturday, March 19, 2022, providing spectators ample opportunity to cheer as athletes soar to heights of more than 50 feet above the Bristol Valley. The 2021 U.S. Aerials Freestyle Champions were Bristol Mountain Freestyle Alum Christopher Lillis and three-time Olympian Ashley Caldwell from Ashburn, Virginia.

“Bristol has a spectacular venue to host this national competition,” said U.S. Ski & Snowboard Freestyle Director Jeremy Forster. “The whole team is very excited to be back and competing in Canandaigua, New York. The athletes can’t wait to showcase their talent as they end the 2022 season.”

Bristol Mountain was host to the 2020 U.S. Aerial Freestyle Championships on March 14, 2020, where Eric Loughran and Ashley Caldwell were named U.S. National Champions. View the full replay of the 2020 event on Bristol Mountain’s YouTube Channel (youtube.com/BristolMountain).

Information on attending the event will be made available on BristolMountain.com in the coming weeks.

Members of the press interested in covering the event will need credentials to access the site. Please contact Meg Fuller to obtain credentials to the event, mfuller@bristolmt.com, or (585) 455-4186.

The 2022 Toyota Aerials Freestyle National Championships and spectator access protocols are contingent on local and state health department approvals based on existing and future COVID-19 rules and regulations. U.S. Ski & Snowboard, the local organizing committee, and Bristol Mountain Resort are taking a unified approach consistent with guidance from federal, state, and local health authorities.

Second Podium in Two Days for Shiffrin; Moltzan 13th in Courchevel

By Courtney Harkins
December, 22 2021

Mikaela Shiffrin stepped on the giant slalom podium for the second time in two days in Courchevel, France, taking second place and her seventh World Cup top-three of the season. With the second fastest second run, Paula Moltzan was 13th.

It was another gorgeous day in France with the race replacing a canceled GS from November in Killington, Vermont. Finishing ahead of Shiffrin was Sara Hector of Sweden, who was second in Tuesday’s GS and hadn’t won a World Cup in seven years due to injury. It was the first time a Swedish skier had won a World Cup since 2017. Marta Bassino of Italy was third.

“Sharing the podium yesterday with Michelle [Gisin] and Sara yesterday and Marta and Sara winning today—those are two really special podiums,” said Shiffrin. “Amazing athletes and amazing women—they’re some of the most positive and kind people on the World Cup circuit.”

The snow was rough and bumpy on the Emile Allais slope, named after the famous French skier, which caused a few back spasms for Shiffrin on first run. But she gritted it out to third place and did some dry needling and physical therapy for second run to put the pain at bay. And it worked—she came out swinging and put down an aggressive and fast second run to move her up to second place.

Shiffrin was open about battling fatigue throughout the race series. The beginning of her season has been packed with events—Courchevel was her 13th World Cup start this season and her third race in four days. “No more energy!” she laughed. “Even yesterday after the first run, I was like ‘Oh my gosh, I have to do this three more times?’ Today was a big physical challenge and it’s also mentally tough too…I knew it was going to be like that after the last weeks, but it’s always a little bit surprising when you get to this point and you feel just totally gassed.”

But Shiffrin knew that she is stronger this season than she’s been before and that she’s skiing close to her potential. She’s had eight podiums over those 13 starts and to pull off another while being this exhausted was remarkable. “To have four runs the last two days that were a lot of really good skiing—today there was some scrappy skiing as well—but even coming close of what I’m able to do was really special,” she added.

After finishing 28th first run and only just qualifying for a second run, Moltzan threw down an unbelievable second run to move up to 13th place. Her second run was the second fastest, beating even Hector and Shiffrin by a few tenths. It was her best giant slalom finish since she first scored points in the 2020-21 season in Soelden, Austria.

AJ Hurt qualified for a second run—finishing an impressive 19th first run—but got late and crashed out of the course. Nina O’Brien did not finish first run. Both are OK. Katie Hensien did not qualify for second run.

The U.S. Alpine Ski Team leads the giant slalom and slalom FIS Nations Cups for the first time since 1983—an unbelievable feat showing a new depth on this tech team.

Shiffrin also maintains the lead of the overall World Cup of 115 points over Italian Sofia Goggia, who did not finish first run.

The women get a holiday break before returning to Lienz, Austria for a slalom and a giant slalom after Christmas.

RESULTS
Women’s giant slalom

2021 U.S. Moguls Selections Presented by HomeLight

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
December, 21 2021
Elizabeth Lemley
Elizabeth Lemley competes at 2021 U.S. Moguls Selections Presented by HomeLight in Winter Park, Colo.

The Winter Park Competition Center in Winter Park Resort, Colo., played a perfect host to the 2021 U.S. Moguls Selections Presented by HomeLight. Selections provides American mogul skiers the opportunity to prove themselves on course and qualify for domestic World Cup starts. 

Eight U.S. Ski Team athletes competed: Kasey Hogg, Elizabeth Lemley, Alli Macuga, Joel Hedrick, Jesse Andringa, Alex Lewis, Landon Wendler and Dylan Marcellini. 

This year’s selections featured three events over a week of training and competition Dec. 15-21. Saturday kicked things off with the first of two moguls competitions. Avital Carroll won for the women, and was joined on the podium by Elizabeth Lemley in second and Kylie Kariotis in third. George McQuinn won for the men, Jackson Crockett came in second and Jackson Harvey came in third. 

Carroll topped the podium again on Monday, Lemley took her second second place and Hogg rounded out the women’s podium in third. McQuinn also repeated a winning performance and won Monday’s men’s event, Andringa came in second and Lewis came in third. 

Tuesday closed out competition with dual moguls. Lemley battled her way to first, Macuga earned second and Zoe Dwinelle came in third. Hedrick won the men’s event, Andringa placed second and Lewis rounded out the podium in third. 

RESULTS
Sat., Dec 18, Women’s Moguls Results
Sat., Dec 18, Men’s Mogul Results
Mon., Dec 20, Women’s Mogul Results
Mon., Dec 20, Men’s Mogul Results
Tues., Dec 21, Women’s Dual Mogul Results
Tues., Dec 21, Men’s Dual Mogul Results