Alpine
It's anybody's game at the races in Whistler - but hopes have never been higher for Canadians to medal.
by JAMES CHRISTIE
Alpine skiing has always been the
Austrian stronghold at the Winter
Olympics. This team that also wears
red and white collected 14 medals in Torino,
and it has 101 pieces of Olympic hardware in
its history. But Austria’s level of domination at
the Olympics seems ready to end. Make way
for the Swiss, the Americans, the French, a
Norwegian and, yes, the host Canadians on the
podiums of Whistler in 2010.
Hermann Maier’s knees would go no
further. Renate Götschl, at 34, retired into
the real world of pregnancy. Former overall
winner Nicole Hosp is struggling to return
from serious injuries. The burden passes to
technical specialist Benjamin Raich—with
one overall World Cup globe and four runner-up
fi nishes in the past five seasons—and to
Michael Walchhofer, Kathrin Zettel and Maria
Schild. But it’s a load to carry.
The Swiss, with Didier Cuche and Carlo
Janka are a force in men’s speed events and
even benefit from an internal rivalry—the
French speakers driving the German speakers.
Their depth is one thing that even coaches
have to reckon with. Cuche was asked at
Beaver Creek what possessed him to enter
a kombi, a downhill and a GS on the same
weekend. “It’s like this at every stop. The
body hurts on Monday,” he said. But the truth
is, the ultimatum for Swiss skiers is they
must have at least two top-15 finishes in a
discipline to be considered for an Olympic
berth.
Somehow the Americans are always a
factor at the Olympics, and this time Lindsey
Vonn seems destined to break her Olympic
goose egg, ready to compete at Whistler in
five events with two World Cup titles and
two World Championships, while Ted Ligety,
kombi winner in Torino and 2008 World Cup GS
winner, has supplanted Bode Miller as the top
U.S. male skier.
The French have been strong in technical
events, with Jean-Baptiste Grange and Julien
Lizeroux solid in slalom. And no roll-call
of potential medallists would be complete
without Norway’s Aksel Lund Svindal, a two-time
overall World Cup champion, four-time
World Cup discipline winner and owner of five
World Championship medals.
Canadian men will be a factor, with Manuel
Osborne-Paradis an early-season winner of the
super-G at Lake Louise, where Erik Guay boosted
his confidence and new bright light Robbie
Dixon, who grew up on the hills of Blackcomb
and Whistler, also finished in the top five.
Dixon benefited from the calamity of
a broken leg that befell downhill World
Champion John Kucera in November, the latest
in a series of injuries that also will play a role
in the changing of the guard.
“Injuries are part of the game,” said Max
Gartner, Alpine Canada’s athletic director.
François Bourque missed most of last year
after tearing up his knee and, sadly, did it
again December 18. Jan Hudec will try one
more time to summon up his skills and courage
to push the limits for the Olympics after
rehabbing from a fifth knee reconstruction.
Last January at Kitzbühel, Swiss star Daniel
Albrecht suffered brain and lung injuries in
a 130-kph crash and was kept in an induced
coma for three weeks. Swiss teenage star Lara
Gut, a double medallist at last year’s Worlds,
had a severely dislocated hip that may not let
her qualify for the Games.
“The Swiss and the Austrians…everybody’s
worst nightmare is to lose one of your top
guys or girls,” Gartner told reporters. “There
are only so many contenders.”
MEN ’S DOWNHILL
FEBRUARY 13,11:45 A.M.
Until the end of November, when John
Kucera suffered his broken leg, this race was
anticipated as the one where Canada might
finally break the Olympic gold medal shutout
at home. Canada has home advantage and the
most experience on the icy Dave Murray run,
but the absence of World Champion Kucera
makes it a different contest now.
Depth in speed events is Canada’s long
suit. In 2009, no country on the World Cup
had more top-10 finishes (17) in downhill.
But Austria had a world-leading eight
podiums.
Watch for Swiss Didier Cuche and Carlo
Janka, who were on Kucera’s heels at the
Worlds, to challenge for the podium. Local
knowledge may be an edge for Manuel
Osborne-Paradis and fast-rising Robbie Dixon,
who both skied Whistler from childhood. It’s
a run that has a little of everything, so don’t
count out Italy’s Werner Heel and Austria’s
Michael Walchhofer, twice winner of the
downhill World Cup, and Klaus Kroell.
WOMEN ’S DOWNHILL
FEBRUARY 17,11:00 A.M.
It’s Lindsey Vonn’s to lose, after winning six
World Cup downhill medals and the World
Championship last season and getting away
to a fast start this year. The rest are looking
for colours other than gold.
The Austrian team had five individuals
in the top-10 totals, Andrea Fischbacher
alone five times. Maria Riesch was a six-time
top-10 performer for Germany, and Anja
Paerson medalled three times for Sweden.
Switzerland, unfortunately, expects to be
without injured teen star Lara Gut—or at
best she’ll be skiing Whistler below her
excellent standard.
The Canadian women shook off a
mediocre 2009 season of nagging injuries
when Emily Brydon scored a silver behind
Vonn at Lake Louise in December and
Britt Janyk was 4th. High hopes for Kelly
VanderBeek were dashed after she blew out
her knee in mid-December.
MEN ’S SUPER
COMBINATION
FEBRUARY 16,10:00 A.M.(DOWNHILL)
AND 1:30 P.M.(SLALOM)
A betting man might wager heavily on 23-year-old
Swiss star Carlo Janko. The winner of the
2009 points race for the combination on the
World Cup circuit won twice and placed 3rd in
the downhill-slalom combination in calendar
2009. He held the overall World Cup lead this
season after he slalomed past countryman
Didier Defago at the Birds of Prey stop. It was
his third podium in four World Cup races, and
all the medals had come in different disciplines.
Janko has to be close after the downhill,
however, since he’s failed to fi nish any of the
five World Cup slaloms he’s entered since 2007.
Besides Defago, there’s another Swiss, Didier
Cuche, who could be on the medal stand if he
stays on course. French slalom specialist Jean-Baptiste
Grange, Austrians Romed Baumann
and Benjamin Raich, and Silvan Zurbriggen of
Switzerland could also be in the mix. Croatian
Natko Zrncic-Dim won a World Championship
bronze in 2009 behind gold medallist Aksel
Lund Svindal.
WOMEN ’S SUPER
COMBINATION
FEBRUARY 14,10:00 A.M.(DOWNHILL)
AND 1:30 P.M.(SLALOM)

This could be the first of a fistful of hardware
for American Lindsey Vonn, but the top of the
podium should be a three-way race with Vonn,
Maria Riesch of Germany and last season’s top
combination performer Anja Paerson of Sweden.
Vonn won the past two downhill World Cup
titles and likes speed, but has been runner-up
the last two seasons in kombi. Paerson, 29, is
slipping in slalom but has been one of the top
three combined skiers in four of the past five
seasons. Riesch, Vonn’s close friend on tour,
won the kombi standing two seasons ago and
slalom last year and is competitive in downhill,
though not of Vonn’s stature. The American has
worked on her slalom the past two seasons, but
will need a big lead in downhill to survive any
lingering defi ciencies in the technical half of
the event.
MEN ’S SUPER-G
FEBRUARY 19,11:30 A.M.
Placing three of the Canadian Cowboys in
the top five at Lake Louise—winner Manuel
Osborne-Paradis, Erik Guay and Robbie
Dixon—brightens Canada’s Olympic medal
chances, even on the heels of John Kucera’s
season-ending broken leg. Europeans and
Americans may grumble about the scarcity
of training access to Whistler, but Osborne-Paradis
says Canadians know Whistler so well
they could ski it blindfolded if asked.
But the Canadians sure won’t be alone.
Aksel Lund Svindal of Norway was the 2009
World Cup super-G champion and also the
overall World Cup champion. Switzerland’s
Didier Cuche was World Champion. Add
in Austria’s Benjamin Raich and Michael
Walchhofer, and two more Swiss in Carlo
Janka and Didier Defago, and it’s an alpine
who’s-who and a fast crowd.
Eight of the top-10 racers at the World
Championships in Val d’Isère were in the top
12 of 2009 World Cup overall rankings, which
means these are all skiers who rise to the
occasion for a big event. Canada’s advantage
is familiarity. Many of the others haven’t seen
Whistler in two years.
WOMEN ’S SUPER-G
FEBRUARY 20,10:00 A.M.
This is another race that should, in theory, be a
walk-over for American Lindsey Vonn. She won
the World Cup event handily during the 2008-
09 season and collected five golds, including
the World Championship super-G. If she hasn’t
spread herself too thinly for the Olympics at
Whistler, Vonn should be dominant.
Several super-G races are scheduled before
the Games. Last season on the World Cup, deep
Switzerland had 21 total top-10s in super-G,
led by Fabienne Suter who finished 3rd in the
standings. Five different Italian women had
top-10s and Nadia Fanchini was the best of
them, placing 2nd in the World Cup. At the
World Championships, France’s Marie Marchand-Arvier
was 2nd to Vonn, with Austria’s Andrea
Fischbacher close behind in 3rd.
Canadians should contend here and grab one
of the three medals Alpine Canada predicts.
Emily Brydon ended her personal frustrations
with a downhill silver at Lake Louise and is
focusing on speed races. Britt Janyk grew up
pursuing faster male racers down Whistler,
and VanderBeek, who placed 4th in the Torino
super-G, is now out with a three-ligament tear
in the knee.
MEN ’S GIANT SLALOM
FEBRUARY 21,10:00 A.M.AND 1:45 P.M.
This is to be relished as a battle of the
heavyweights—Swiss against Austrians.
Switzerland’s Didier Cuche, close runner-up in
last season’s overall World Cup, led the early-season
ranking for GS and if he isn’t burnt
out by qualifying for several events on a deep
Swiss team, should go into the Olympics as
the favourite.
Right behind him, however, are countryman
Carlo Janka, American Ted Ligety—already an
Olympic kombi gold medallist—and Austrian
Benjamin Raich, heir to the Hermann Maier
mantle.
Janka moved up in the Swiss pecking order
after the serious head injury suffered by
Daniel Albrecht last season and won the GS
World Championship at Val d’Isère, but close
behind was Austrian Raich—winner of three
World Cup GS races—and Ligety.
WOMEN ’S GIANT SLALOM
FEBRUARY 24,10:00 A.M.AND 1:15 P.M.
Finn Tanja Poutiainen eked out a slim GS
win over Austria’s Kathrin Zettel to start this
season, but then Zettel and Germany’s Kathrin
Hölzl dueled on the World Cup circuit to make
it a strong three-horse race. Hölzl is really on
the rise in this event after finishing 13th in
last season’s GS standing.
Italy’s Denise Karbon suffered a torn
meniscus in her right knee at a race in Aspen
and surgery in December sidelined her for
the balance of 2009. Making it back for the
Olympics is a tall order.
Zettel ruled the event in 2009 with four
golds and two other top-10s. Tina Maze had
two golds for Slovenia and four other top 10
fi nishes. Vonn had six of the eight top-10s
by the U.S., reason enough to consider her a
contender in a North American venue.
Sweden’s Maria Pietilae-Holmner could
figure, but it would require one of the
favourites to mess up or be injured just before
the Games.
MEN ’S SLALOM
FEBRUARY 27,10:00 A.M.AND 1:45 P.M.

French slalom specialist Jean-Baptiste Grange should resume the smooth rhythm that won
him the season title last year by a comfortable 87 points over Ivica Kostelic of Croatia. Grange
opened the season in a GS, a little out of his depth against 2008 World Cup GS champion
and Olympic combined champ Ted Ligety, Swiss veteran Didier Cuche and Carlo Janka. “But in
slalom, it’s not the same thing. I know I can ski well,” he tells blog readers. Six of Grange’s 12
career podiums have been victories, including the Levi slalom last season.
Canadian Michael Janyk was a surprise bronze winner in the last World Championship, so
don’t count him out. Whistler is a home game on a home hill for him.
WOMEN ’S SLALOM
FEBRUARY 26,10:00 A.M.AND 1:30 P.M.
Germany’s Maria Riesch won the World Cup slalom crown and the slalom World Championship last
season and is obviously a factor, as she and Czech Sarka Zahrobska dueled for supremacy early in the
season. Riesch is a big-game skier with four World Cup wins among her nine top-10 placings last
season.
Marlies Schild of Austria has rebounded from injury to get back in the game and pushing her are
Susanne Riesch of Germany and America’s all-everything Lindsey Vonn, who has been so comfortable
and dominant in Canada at Lake Louise speed events.
Finn Tanja Poutiainen also had nine top-10s in slalom last season, but prefers GS. She’s been in the
top-five overall twice, a major accomplishment for a skier who broke her leg twice early in her career.
Canada’s Anna Goodman could make the second round, but the podium isn’t in view.
Features Archives |