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2023–24 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup

The 2023–24 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, organised by the International Ski Federation (FIS) was the 58th World Cup season in alpine skiing for men and women.

The season started on 28 October 2023 in Sölden, Austria, and concluded on 24 March 2024 at the finals in Saalbach, Austria.

Marco Odermatt and Mikaela Shiffrin were the reigning overall champions from the last two seasons. Odermatt successfully defended the title, while Shiffrin finished the season in 3rd place. Lara Gut-Behrami won the women’s overall title for the second time in her career.

On 25 October, FIS prolonged the suspension of the Russian and Belarusian national team from competitions due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Season overview

On 9 December, Joan Verdú took third place in the men's giant slalom at Val d'Isère, which was the first World Cup podium for Andorra.

For the first time ever in a Women's World Cup and first time since 2018 (Men's Super-G in Beaver Creek), five skiers stood on the podium (Downhill in Cortina d'Ampezzo).

During the season, many skiers who have victories in the World Cup were injured during training or the competition itself and had to end the season, including: Marco Schwarz, Wendy Holdener, Alexis Pinturault, Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, Petra Vlhová, Corinne Suter, Sofia Goggia and Elena Curtoni.

For the first time in the history of the World Cup, during the slalom in Chamonix, Daniel Yule won the competition, taking 30th place after the first run, thus breaking the record of Lucas Braathen, who won the slalom in Wengen after being in 29th place after the first run.

This season, 21 races have been canceled due to weather conditions.

Map of world cup hosts

All 37 locations hosting world cup events for men (21), women (22), and shared (8) this season.

<small>Women</small> <small>Men</small> <small>Shared</small>

Men

The number of races in the World Cup history

<small>after SG in Saalbach (22 March 2024)</small>

Calendar

Overall leaders

Rankings

Overall

Downhill

Super-G

Giant slalom

Slalom

Women

The number of races in the World Cup history

<small>after DH in Saalbach (23 March 2024)</small>

Calendar

Overall leaders

Rankings

Overall

Downhill

Super-G

Giant slalom

Slalom

Nations Cup

Overall

Men

Women

Prize money

Top-5 men

Top-5 women

Podium table by nation

Table showing the World Cup podium places (gold–1st place, silver–2nd place, bronze–3rd place) by the countries represented by the athletes.

Achievements

First World Cup career victory:
Men
  • Nils Allègre (30), in his 9th season – Super-G in Garmisch-Partenkirchen
  • Timon Haugan (27), in his 7th season – Slalom in Saalbach
  • &nbsp;&nbsp; Stefan Rogentin (29), in his 8th season – Super-G in Saalbach
Women
First World Cup podium:
Men
  • Nils Allègre (30), in his 9th season – Super-G in Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 1st place
  • Guglielmo Bosca (30), in his 8th season – Super-G in Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 2nd place
  • Jeffrey Read (26), in his 7th season – Super-G in Kvitfjell – 2nd place
  • Joan Verdú (28), in his 6th season – Giant Slalom in Val d'Isère – 3rd place
  • &nbsp;&nbsp; Franjo von Allmen (22), in his 2nd season – Super-G in Garmisch-Partenkirchen – 3rd place
  • River Radamus (26), in his 7th season – Giant Slalom in Palisades Tahoe – 3rd place
  • &nbsp;&nbsp; Arnaud Boisset (25), in his 1st season – Super-G in Saalbach – 3rd place
Women
  • AJ Hurt (23), in her 7th season – Slalom in Kranjska Gora – 3rd place
  • Christina Ager (28), in her 10th season – Downhill in Cortina d'Ampezzo – 3rd place
Number of wins this season (in brackets are all-time wins):
Men
Women

Retirements

The following notable skiers, who competed in the World Cup, announced their retirement during or after the 2023–24 season:

Men
Women

See also

Notes

References