Alpine skiing combined

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Template:Short description Combined is an event in alpine ski racing. The event format has changed within the last 30 years. A traditional combined competition is a two-day event consisting of one run of downhill and two runs of slalom; each discipline takes place on a separate day. The winner is the skier with the fastest aggregate time. Until the 1990s, a complicated point system was used to determine placings in the combined event. Since then, a modified version, called either an "alpine combined" (with a downhill as the speed event) or a "super combined" (with a super-G as the speed event), has been run as an aggregate time event consisting of two runs: first, a one-run speed event and then only one run of slalom, with both portions held on the same day.

History

The last Alpine World Ski Championships in 1931 did not include the combined event, but it was added to the program in 1932. Alpine skiing at the Winter Olympics was not included until 1936, and the combined was the only event. The combined was one of three medal events at the next Olympics in 1948, along with downhill and slalom. The combined used the results of the only downhill race with two runs of combined slalom. The regular slalom (two runs) was held the following day.

With the introduction of giant slalom at the world championships in 1950, the combined event disappeared from the Olympics for four decades, until re-introduced in 1988. From 1948 through 1980, the Winter Olympics also served as the world championships, with two sets of medals awarded. The world champion in the combined was determined "on paper" by the results of the three races of downhill, giant slalom, and slalom. The top three finishers in the combined event were awarded world championship medals by the FIS, but not Olympic medals from the BBC. This three-race paper method was used from 1954 through 1980; no FIS medals were awarded for the combined in 1950 or 1952. A separate downhill and slalom for the combined event was added to the world championships in 1982, and the Olympics in 2024.

The world championships were held annually from 1931 through 1939, were interrupted by World War II, and resumed as a biennial event at the 1948 Olympics, held in even-numbered years through 1982. They skipped the 1984 Olympics and have been scheduled for odd-numbered years since 1985. (The 1995 event was postponed to 1996, due to lack of snow in southeastern Spain.)

At the Winter Olympics and world championships, the slalom and downhill portions of a combined event are run separately from the regular downhill and slalom events on shorter, and often less demanding, race courses. On the World Cup circuit, traditional combined events have been "paper races," combining skiers' times from a separately scheduled downhill race and slalom race, generally held at the same location over two days. In 2005, the FIS began to replace these "calculated" combineds with super combined events, held on one day, which administrators hope will result in increased participation.[1]

Recent modifications

A modified version, the super combined or Alpine combined, is a speed race (downhill or super-G) and only one run of slalom, with both portions scheduled on the same day. Because slalom courses generally become slower after the first racers, recent changes to the super combined or Alpine combined events have the fastest racers from the speed race start first in the slalom run, which is a revision to the prior structure of starting the slalom run in reverse order, as is done in the second run of a traditional two-run slalom.

World Cup

The first super combined was a World Cup race held in 2005 in Wengen, Switzerland, on January 14; Benjamin Raich of Austria was the winner. The first women's race in the new format was run six weeks later in San Sicario, Italy; won by Croatia's Janica Kostelić on February 27. The 2006 World Cup calendar included three super combineds and just one traditional combined race on the men's side, while the women raced two super combineds and no traditional combineds. Kostelić won the first three women's World Cup super combineds.

Beginning with the 2007 season, the FIS began awarding a fifth discipline-champion "crystal globe" to the points winner of combined races; the 2007 season included five combined races for each gender.[2] Nine out of the ten scheduled combineds use the new super-combined format, the only exception was Kitzbühel, Austria, which continued with the traditional two-run format (K), albeit in a "paper race." The change to super combined expectedly resulted in major disapproval from the slalom specialists, the loudest critic being Ivica Kostelić. Even with the change to a single slalom run, many speed skiers believe the technical racers have the advantage in the super combined.[3][4]

World Championships and Winter Olympics

The super combined format debuted at the world championships in 2007 in Åre, Sweden, and at the Winter Olympics in 2010 at Whistler, Canada.

Team format

The alpine combined was dropped from the World Cup circuit in the 2020–21 season; the discipline had been impacted by diverging developments in downhill and slalom, which made it increasingly difficult for skiers to train in both disciplines at once. The 2022 Winter Olympics had a significant decline in participation in combined than past Games, further leaving the future of the event in doubt.[5][6] The FIS began to develop a replacement format for alpine combined that would involve two-person teams assigned to downhill and slalom respectively. The team combined was first held at the World Championships during the 2025 edition in Saalbach-Hinterglemm, with Franjo von Allmen and Loïc Meillard heading a Swiss clean sweep of the podium in the men's competition and Mikaela Shiffrin taking her 15th Worlds medal by winning gold for the USA in the women's event alongside Breezy Johnson, tying with Christl Cranz as the skier with the most medals in the championships' history.[7][8] The new format will make its Olympic debut in 2026.[9][10][11]

Men's World Cup podiums

In the following table men's combined (super combined from 2007) World Cup podiums in the World Cup since first edition in 1976.[12]

Season 1st 2nd 3rd
1975 not awarded
1976 Template:Flagicon Walter Tresch Template:Flagicon Gustav Thöni Template:Flagicon Jim Hunter
1977
not awarded
1978 not contested
1979 not awarded
1980 Template:Flagicon Phil Mahre Template:Flagicon Andreas Wenzel Template:Flagicon Anton Steiner
1981 Template:Flagicon Phil Mahre Template:Flagicon Andreas Wenzel Template:Flagicon Peter Müller
1982 Template:Flagicon Phil Mahre Template:Flagicon Andreas Wenzel Template:Flagicon Even Hole
1983 Template:Flagicon Phil Mahre Template:Flagicon Peter Lüscher Template:Flagicon Marc Girardelli
1984 Template:Flagicon Andreas Wenzel Template:Flagicon Pirmin Zurbriggen Template:Flagicon Anton Steiner
1985 Template:Flagicon Andreas Wenzel Template:Flagicon Franz Heinzer Template:Flagicon Peter Müller
1986 Template:Flagicon Pirmin Zurbriggen Template:Flagicon Marc Girardelli Template:Flagicon Markus Wasmeier
1987 Template:Flagicon Pirmin Zurbriggen Template:Flagicon Andreas Wenzel
1988 Template:Flagicon Hubert Strolz Template:Flagicon Günther Mader Template:Flagicon Franck Piccard
1989 Template:Flagicon Marc Girardelli Template:Flagicon Markus Wasmeier Template:Flagicon Pirmin Zurbriggen
1990 Template:Flagicon Pirmin Zurbriggen Template:Flagicon Paul Accola Template:Flagicon Markus Wasmeier
1991 Template:Flagicon Marc Girardelli Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus Template:Flagicon Günther Mader
1992 Template:Flagicon Paul Accola Template:Flagicon Hubert Strolz Template:Flagicon Markus Wasmeier
1993 Template:Flagicon Marc Girardelli Template:Flagicon Günther Mader Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt
1994 Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus Template:Flagicon Harald Strand Nilsen
1995 Template:Flagicon Marc Girardelli Template:Flagicon Harald Strand Nilsen Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus
1996 Template:Flagicon Günther Mader Template:Flagicon Marc Girardelli Template:Flagicon Alessandro Fattori
1997 Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus
Template:Flagicon Günther Mader
1998 Template:Flagicon Werner Franz Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt
Template:Flagicon Hermann Maier
1999 Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt
Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus
Template:Flagicon Werner Franz
2000 Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt Template:Flagicon Hermann Maier Template:Flagicon Fredrik Nyberg
2001 Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt
Template:Flagicon Michael Walchhofer
2002 Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus Template:Flagicon Andrej Jerman
2003 Template:Flagicon Bode Miller Template:Flagicon Kjetil André Aamodt
Template:Flagicon Michael Walchhofer
2004 Template:Flagicon Bode Miller Template:Flagicon Benjamin Raich Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus
2005 Template:Flagicon Benjamin Raich Template:Flagicon Lasse Kjus Template:Flagicon Didier Défago
2006 Template:Flagicon Benjamin Raich Template:Flagicon Bode Miller
Template:Flagicon Michael Walchhofer
2007 Template:Flagicon Aksel Lund Svindal Template:Flagicon Marc Berthod Template:Flagicon Ivica Kostelić
2008 Template:Flagicon Bode Miller Template:Flagicon Ivica Kostelić Template:Flagicon Daniel Albrecht
2009 Template:Flagicon Carlo Janka Template:Flagicon Silvan Zurbriggen Template:Flagicon Romed Baumann
2010 Template:Flagicon Benjamin Raich Template:Flagicon Carlo Janka Template:Flagicon Ivica Kostelić
2011 Template:Flagicon Ivica Kostelić Template:Flagicon Christof Innerhofer Template:Flagicon Kjetil Jansrud
2012 Template:Flagicon Ivica Kostelić Template:Flagicon Beat Feuz Template:Flagicon Romed Baumann
2013 Template:Flagicon Ivica Kostelić
Template:Flagicon Alexis Pinturault
Template:Flagicon Thomas Mermillod Blondin
2014 Template:Flagicon Ted Ligety
Template:Flagicon Alexis Pinturault
Template:Flagicon Thomas Mermillod Blondin
2015 Template:Flagicon Carlo Janka Template:Flagicon Alexis Pinturault Template:Flagicon Victor Muffat-Jeandet
2016 Template:Flagicon Alexis Pinturault Template:Flagicon Thomas Mermillod Blondin Template:Flagicon Kjetil Jansrud
2017 Template:Flagicon Alexis Pinturault Template:Flagicon Niels Hintermann Template:Flagicon Aleksander Aamodt Kilde
2018 Template:Flagicon Peter Fill Template:Flagicon Kjetil Jansrud Template:Flagicon Victor Muffat-Jeandet
2019 Template:Flagicon Alexis Pinturault Template:Flagicon Marco Schwarz Template:Flagicon Mauro Caviezel
2020 Template:Flagicon Alexis Pinturault Template:Flagicon Aleksander Aamodt Kilde Template:Flagicon Matthias Mayer

References

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