Alpine skiing: guesswork at the World Cup downhill: Hope Weidle is looking for the error

Alpine skiing
Guessing at the World Cup downhill: Hope Weidle is looking for the error

Was disappointed at the finish: Kira Weidle. photo

© Jean-Christophe Bott/KEYSTONE/dpa

Kira Weidle looks helplessly at the slope. The new downhill world champion Jasmine Flury had done something better in Méribel. But what? Top favorite Sofia Goggia is also disappointed.

A stone on the piste might not have been so bad for Kira Weidle’s analysis this time. With this mishap, the German ski racer explained the poor performance at the start of her World Cup in the Super-G – on the descent she now looked in vain for reasons.

The Starnberg woman let out a cry of astonishment, trudged helplessly from interview to interview and shrugged her shoulders again and again after her eighth place at the Alpine World Ski Championships in France. “I can’t explain why I lose so much in the upper part, where there’s nothing in it,” said the 26-year-old, who traveled to Méribel with great ambitions after winning the World Cup two years ago.

Her gap to the surprise Swiss winner Jasmine Flury, who has only won one World Cup race in her career, was 0.61 seconds. Second was the Austrian Nina Ortlieb ahead of the Swiss title defender and Olympic champion Corinne Suter.

Next disappointment

Weidle experienced the next disappointment after her 23rd place in the Super-G, when a stone on the piste demolished the ski and slowed her progress. “Was it the sun or the wind?” – Weidle was still looking for explanations minutes after the race. “It’s a shame because it’s just not the result I wanted,” said the native of Stuttgart.

Weidle wanted gold. With a healthy dose of “mercilessness and uncompromising” the speed specialist wanted to conquer the rock made of iron, as the “Roc de Fer” slope is translated. “Everything was right in terms of attitude and aggressiveness. It was really a good and committed ride,” said the otherwise self-critical SC Starnberg athlete. It was 0.49 seconds short of third place.

Goggia slipped up

The medal window was open more than a little. Because, of all things, Weidle’s role model in terms of “attack and full throttle”, the Italian gold favorite Sofia Goggia, slipped up. The 2018 Olympic champion threaded a gate and was disqualified. At least Goggia, the dominant downhill skier in recent years, was able to avoid a fall. In contrast to Weidle’s teammate Emma Aicher, who slipped and retired.

For Weidle, the big event in Méribel ended without the hoped-for precious metal. Nevertheless, the descent made her feel positive. “In terms of skiing, that was where I want to go again. It just wasn’t enough that day,” she said. The search for the reasons initially continued.

dpa

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