FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 – Men's super-G

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Men's super-G
at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019
VenueÅre ski resort
LocationÅre, Sweden
Dates6 February
Competitors70 from 33 nations
Winning time1:24.20
Medalists
gold medal    Italy
silver medal    France
silver medal    Austria
← 2017
2021 →
Men's Super-G
LocationÅre, Sweden
Vertical   637 m (2,090 ft)
Top elevation1,033 m (3,389 ft)
Base elevation   396 m (1,299 ft)

The Men's super-G competition at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 was held on 6 February.[1][2][3][4]

Results[]

The race was started at 12:30.[5]

Rank Bib Name Country Time Diff
1st place, gold medalist(s) 3 Dominik Paris  Italy 1:24.20
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 14 Johan Clarey  France 1:24.29 +0.09
2nd place, silver medalist(s) 9 Vincent Kriechmayr  Austria 1:24.29 +0.09
4 18 Christof Innerhofer  Italy 1:24.55 +0.35
5 20 Adrien Théaux  France 1:24.57 +0.37
6 15 Josef Ferstl  Germany 1:24.59 +0.39
7 4 Brice Roger  France 1:24.61 +0.41
8 30 Mattia Casse  Italy 1:24.70 +0.50
8 23 Steven Nyman  United States 1:24.70 +0.50
8 8 Adrian Smiseth Sejersted  Norway 1:24.70 +0.50
11 24 Ryan Cochran-Siegle  United States 1:24.73 +0.53
12 16 Marco Odermatt   Switzerland 1:24.78 +0.58
13 28 Martin Čater  Slovenia 1:24.79 +0.59
14 25 Nils Allègre  France 1:24.84 +0.64
15 21 Dominik Schwaiger  Germany 1:24.87 +0.67
16 11 Aksel Lund Svindal  Norway 1:25.12 +0.92
17 27 Benjamin Thomsen  Canada 1:25.13 +0.93
18 1 Beat Feuz   Switzerland 1:25.20 +1.00
19 37 Felix Monsén  Sweden 1:25.25 +1.05
20 36 Alexander Köll  Sweden 1:25.28 +1.08
20 29  Austria 1.25.28 +1.08
22 7 Kjetil Jansrud  Norway 1:25.38 +1.18
23 50 Bryce Bennett  United States 1:25.82 +1.62
24 5 Aleksander Aamodt Kilde  Norway 1:25.83 +1.63
25 45 Mattias Rönngren  Sweden 1:25.98 +1.78
26 39 Christoffer Faarup  Denmark 1:26.01 +1.81
27 34 Brodie Seger  Canada 1:26.05 +1.85
28 40 Henrik von Appen  Chile 1:26.16 +1.96
29 42 Filip Zubčić  Croatia 1:26.28 +2.08
30 43 Natko Zrnčić-Dim  Croatia 1:26.37 +2.17
31 47 Ivan Kuznetsov  Russia 1:26.39 +2.19
31 38 Maarten Meiners  Netherlands 1:26.39 +2.19
33 57 Pavel Trikhichev  Russia 1:26.99 +2.79
34 58 Olle Sundin  Sweden 1:27.15 +2.95
35 46 Marc Oliveras  Andorra 1:27.69 +3.49
36 59 Arnaud Alessandria  Monaco 1:28.06 +3.86
37 31 James Crawford  Canada 1:28.13 +3.93
38 54 Harry Laidlaw  Australia 1:28.27 +4.27
39 53 Martin Bendík  Slovakia 1:28.47 +4.39
40 60  Czech Republic 1:28.59 +4.07
41 56 Simon Breitfuss Kammerlander  Bolivia 1:28.68 +4.48
42 55 Kryštof Krýzl  Czech Republic 1:29.22 +5.02
43 32 Jack Gower  Great Britain 1:29.58 +5.38
44 61  Chile 1:30.12 +5.92
45 26 Matteo Marsaglia  Italy 1:30.94 +6.74
46 65  Latvia 1:31.34 +7.14
47 68 Albin Tahiri  Kosovo 1:31.72 +7.52
48 67 Yuri Danilochkin  Belarus 1:32.98 +8.78
49 66 Andrej Drukarov  Lithuania 1:33.33 +9.13
50 63 Ivan Kovbasnyuk  Ukraine 1:33.61 +9.41
51 69  Kazakhstan 1:35.66 +11.46
2 Thomas Tumler   Switzerland Did not finish
6 Boštjan Kline  Slovenia
10 Dustin Cook  Canada
12 Travis Ganong  United States
13 Matthias Mayer  Austria
17 Mauro Caviezel   Switzerland
19 Hannes Reichelt  Austria
22 Klemen Kosi  Slovenia
33 Miha Hrobat  Slovenia
35 Marko Vukićević  Serbia
41 Manuel Schmid  Germany
44  Liechtenstein
48  Slovakia
49 Ondřej Berndt  Czech Republic
51 Andreas Romar  Finland
52 Jan Zabystřan  Czech Republic
62 Adur Etxezarreta  Spain
64 Ioan Valeriu Achiriloaie  Romania
70  Belarus

References[]

  1. ^ "Schedule" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-01-17. Retrieved 2019-02-02.
  2. ^ Start list
  3. ^ "Dominik Paris is the new super-g World Champion". FIS-Ski.com. 6 February 2019. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
  4. ^ "From tending sheep to death metal, Paris now a ski champion". ESPN. Associated Press. 6 February 2019. Retrieved 14 February 2019.
  5. ^ Final results
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