Market2017–18 in skiing
Company Profile

2017–18 in skiing

[[Alpine skiing]]
2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (Alpine skiing) • February 11 – 24: Alpine skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics • Men's Downhill winners: Aksel Lund Svindal; Kjetil Jansrud; Beat Feuz • Women's Downhill winners: Sofia Goggia; Ragnhild Mowinckel; Lindsey Vonn • Men's Super G winners: Matthias Mayer; Beat Feuz; Kjetil Jansrud • Women's Super G winners: Ester Ledecká; Anna Veith; Tina Weirather • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Marcel Hirscher; Henrik Kristoffersen; Alexis Pinturault • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Mikaela Shiffrin; Ragnhild Mowinckel; Federica Brignone • Men's Slalom winners: André Myhrer; Ramon Zenhäusern; Michael Matt • Women's Slalom winners: Frida Hansdotter; Wendy Holdener; Katharina Gallhuber • Men's Combined winners: Marcel Hirscher; Alexis Pinturault; Victor Muffat-Jeandet • Women's Combined winners: Michelle Gisin; Mikaela Shiffrin; Wendy Holdener • Mixed Team winners: ; ; • March 10 – 18: Alpine skiing at the 2018 Winter Paralympics • '''Men's Visually Impaired Winners:''' • Downhill: Mac Marcoux; Jakub Krako; Giacomo Bertagnolli • Super G: Jakub Krako; Giacomo Bertagnolli; Miroslav Haraus • Giant Slalom: Giacomo Bertagnolli; Jakub Krako; Mac Marcoux • Slalom: Giacomo Bertagnolli; Jakub Krako; Valery Redkozubov • Super Combined: Miroslav Haraus; Jon Santacana Maiztegui; Valery Redkozubov • '''Men's Sitting Winners:''' • Downhill: Andrew Kurka; Taiki Morii; Corey Peters • Super G: Kurt Oatway; Andrew Kurka; Frédéric François • Giant Slalom: Jesper Pedersen; Tyler Walker; Igor Sikorski • Slalom: Dino Sokolović; Tyler Walker; Frédéric François • Super Combined: Jeroen Kampschreur; Frédéric François; Jesper Pedersen • '''Men's Standing Winners:''' • Downhill: Théo Gmür; Arthur Bauchet; Markus Salcher • Super G: Théo Gmür; Arthur Bauchet; Markus Salcher • Giant Slalom: Théo Gmür; Alexey Bugaev; Alexis Guimond • Slalom: Adam Hall; Arthur Bauchet; Jamie Stanton • Super Combined: Alexey Bugaev; Arthur Bauchet; Adam Hall • '''Women's Visually Impaired Winners:''' • Downhill: Henrieta Farkašová; Millie Knight; Eléonor Sana • Super G: Henrieta Farkašová; Millie Knight; Menna Fitzpatrick • Giant Slalom: Henrieta Farkašová; Menna Fitzpatrick; Melissa Perrine • Slalom: Menna Fitzpatrick; Henrieta Farkašová; Millie Knight • Super Combined: Henrieta Farkašová; Menna Fitzpatrick; Melissa Perrine • '''Women's Sitting Winners:''' • Downhill: Anna Schaffelhuber; Momoka Muraoka; Laurie Stephens • Super G: Anna Schaffelhuber; Claudia Lösch; Momoka Muraoka • Giant Slalom: Momoka Muraoka; Linda van Impelen; Claudia Lösch • Slalom: Anna-Lena Forster; Momoka Muraoka; Heike Eder • Super Combined: Anna-Lena Forster; Anna Schaffelhuber; Momoka Muraoka • '''Women's Standing Winners:''' • Downhill: Marie Bochet; Andrea Rothfuss; Mollie Jepsen • Super G: Marie Bochet; Andrea Rothfuss; Alana Ramsay • Giant Slalom: Marie Bochet; Andrea Rothfuss; Mollie Jepsen • Slalom: Marie Bochet; Mollie Jepsen; Andrea Rothfuss • Super Combined: Mollie Jepsen; Andrea Rothfuss; Alana Ramsay FIS World Championships (AS) • August 27 – September 1, 2017: 2017 FIS Junior Grass Ski World Championships in Sauris • Giant Slalom winners: Martin Bartak (m) / Chisaki Maeda (f) • Slalom winners: Martin Bartak (m) / Chisaki Maeda (f) • Super Combined winners: Martin Bartak (m) / Adela Kettnerova (f) • Super G winners: Martin Bartak (m) / Chisaki Maeda (f) • September 5 – 10, 2017: 2017 FIS Grass Ski World Championships in Kaprun • Super G winners: Jan Gardavský (m) / Adela Kettnerova (f) • Super Combined winners: Lorenzo Gritti (m) / Chisaki Maeda (f) • Slalom winners: Michael Stocker (m) / Jacqueline Gerlach (f) • Giant Slalom winners: Jan Gardavský (m) / Jacqueline Gerlach (f) • January 29 – February 8: World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2018 in Davos • Downhill winners: Marco Odermatt (m) / Kajsa Vickhoff Lie (f) • Super G winners: Marco Odermatt (m) / Kajsa Vickhoff Lie (f) • Giant Slalom winners: Marco Odermatt (m) / Julia Scheib (f) • Slalom winners: Clement Noel (m) / Meta Hrovat (f) • Combined winners: Marco Odermatt (m) / Aline Danioth (f) • Team event winners: (Camille Rast, Marco Odermatt, Aline Danioth, Semyel Bissig) ===2017–18 Alpine Skiing World Cup=== • October 2017 • October 28 & 29: ASWC #1 in Sölden • Note: ''The Men's Giant Slalom event was cancelled due to a wind storm.'' • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Viktoria RebensburgNovember 2017 • November 11 & 12: ASWC #2 in Levi • Slalom winners: Felix Neureuther (m) / Petra Vlhová (f) • November 22 – 26: ASWC #3 in Lake Louise Ski Resort #1 • Men's Downhill winner: Beat Feuz • Men's Super G winner: Kjetil Jansrud • November 25 & 26: ASWC #4 in Killington Ski Resort • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Viktoria Rebensburg • Women's Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin • November 28 – December 3: ASWC #5 in Lake Louise Ski Resort #2 • Women's Downhill winners: Cornelia Hütter (#1) / Mikaela Shiffrin (#2) • Women's Super G winner: Tina Weirather • November 29 – December 3: ASWC #6 in Beaver Creek Resort • Men's Super G winner: Vincent Kriechmayr • Men's Downhill winner: Aksel Lund Svindal • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marcel HirscherDecember 2017 • December 8 – 10: ASWC #7 in St. Moritz • Note: Two, of three, Super G and the Alpine Combined events was cancelled. • Women's Super G winner: Jasmine Flury • December 9 & 10: ASWC #8 in Val-d'Isère #1 • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Alexis Pinturault • Men's Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • December 13 – 16: ASWC #9 in Val Gardena • Men's Super G winner: Josef Ferstl • Men's Downhill winner: Aksel Lund Svindal • December 14 – 17: ASWC #10 in Val-d'Isère #2 • Note: ''The women's downhill event here was cancelled.'' • Women's Super G winners: Lindsey Vonn (#1) / Anna Veith (#2) • December 17 & 18: ASWC #11 in Alta Badia • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner: Matts Olsson • December 19 & 20: ASWC #12 in Courchevel • Women's Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin • December 22: ASWC #13 in Madonna di Campiglio • Men's Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • December 26 – 29: ASWC #14 in Bormio • Men's Downhill winners: Dominik Paris (#1) / Matthias Mayer (#2) • Men's Alpine Combined winner: Alexis Pinturault • December 28 & 29: ASWC #15 in Lienz • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Federica Brignone • Women's Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin • January 2018 • January 1: ASWC #16 in Oslo • City Event winners: André Myhrer (m) / Mikaela Shiffrin (f) • January 3 & 4: ASWC #17 in Zagreb • Slalom winners: (m) / Mikaela Shiffrin (f) • January 6 & 7: ASWC #18 in Kranjska Gora • Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin • January 6 & 7: ASWC #19 in Adelboden • Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • January 9: ASWC #20 in Flachau • Women's Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin • January 9 – 14: ASWC #21 in Wengen • Men's Alpine Combined winner: Victor Muffat-Jeandet • Men's Downhill winners: Dominik Paris (#1) / Beat Feuz (#2) • Men's Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • January 11 – 14: ASWC #22 in Bad Kleinkirchheim • Women's Downhill winner: Sofia Goggia • Women's Super G winner: Federica Brignone • January 16 – 21: ASWC #23 in Kitzbühel • Men's Super G winner: Aksel Lund Svindal • Men's Downhill winner: Thomas Dreßen • Men's Slalom winner: Henrik Kristoffersen • January 17 – 21: ASWC #24 in Cortina d'Ampezzo • Women's Downhill winners: Sofia Goggia (#1) / Lindsey Vonn (#2) • Women's Super G winner: Lara Gut • January 23: ASWC #25 in Schladming • Men's Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • January 23: ASWC #26 in Kronplatz • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Viktoria Rebensburg • January 25 – 28: ASWC #27 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen #1 • Men's Downhill winner: Beat Feuz • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • January 26 – 28: ASWC #28 in Lenzerheide • Women's Alpine Combined winner: Wendy Holdener • Women's Super G winner: Lindsey Vonn • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Tessa Worley • Women's Slalom winner: Petra Vlhová • January 30: ASWC #29 in Stockholm • City Event winners: Ramon Zenhäusern (m) / Nina Haver-Løseth (f) • February 2018 • February 1 – 4: ASWC #30 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen #2 • Women's Downhill winner: Lindsey Vonn (2 times) • March 2018 • March 3 & 4: ASWC #31 in Crans-Montana • Women's Super G winners: Tina Weirather (#1) / Sofia Goggia (#2) • Women's Alpine Combined winner: Federica Brignone • March 3 & 4: ASWC #32 in Kranjska Gora Ski Resort • Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • March 8 – 11: ASWC #33 in Kvitfjell • Men's Downhill winner: Thomas Dreßen • Men's Super G winner: Kjetil Jansrud • March 9 & 10: ASWC #34 in Ofterschwang • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Ragnhild Mowinckel • Women's Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin • March 12 – 18: ASWC #35 (final) in Åre ski resort • Note: ''Both the men's Slalom and women's Giant Slalom events were cancelled.'' • Men's Downhill winners: Vincent Kriechmayr and Matthias Mayer (tie) • Women's Downhill winner: Lindsey Vonn • Super G winners: Vincent Kriechmayr (m) / Sofia Goggia (f) • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marcel Hirscher • Women's Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin • Women's Alpine Team Event winners: 2017 FIS Grass Skiing World Cup • June 10 & 11: GSWC #1 in Rettenbach • Giant Slalom winners: Edoardo Frau (m) / Jacqueline Gerlach (f) • Super Combined winners: Marc Zickbauer (m) / Jacqueline Gerlach (f) • July 29 & 30: GSWC #2 in Montecampione • Slalom winners: Lorenzo Gritti (m) / Adela Kettnerova (f) • Giant Slalom winners: Michael Stocker (m) / Kristin Hetfleisch (f) • August 12 & 13: GSWC #3 in Marbach • Giant Slalom winners: Stefan Portmann (m) / Barbara Míková (f) • Super G winners: Stefan Portmann (m) / Barbara Míková (f) • August 19 & 20: GSWC #4 in Předklášteří • Giant Slalom winners: Martin Bartak (m) / Barbara Míková (f) • Slalom winners: Lorenzo Gritti (m) / Barbara Míková (f) • August 24 & 25: GSWC #5 in Santa Caterina Valfurva • Slalom #1 winners: Lorenzo Gritti (m) / Jacqueline Gerlach (f) • Slalom #2 winners: Lorenzo Gritti (m) / Jacqueline Gerlach (f) 2017 FIS Australia & New Zealand Cup (AS) • August 21 – 25: A&NZ #1 in Thredbo • Giant Slalom #1 winners: Adam Barwood (m) / Sara Hector (f) • Giant Slalom #2 winners: Daniel Meier (m) / Sara Hector (f) • Slalom #1 winners: Linus Straßer (m) / Estelle Alphand (f) • Slalom #2 winners: Linus Straßer (m) / Sara Hector (f) • August 28 – 31: A&NZ #2 in Coronet Peak • Giant Slalom #1 winners: Erik Read (m) / Mina Fürst Holtmann (f) • Giant Slalom #2 winners: Erik Read (m) / Sara Hector (f) • Slalom #1 winners: Manuel Feller (m) / Estelle Alphand (f) • Slalom #2 winners: Marc Rochat (m) / Chiara Mair (f) • September 5 & 6: A&NZ #3 (final) in Mount HuttEvent cancelled. 2017–18 FIS European Cup (AS) • November 29 & 30, 2017: ECAS #1 in Funäsdalen • Women's Slalom winners: Katharina Liensberger (#1) / Marina Wallner (#2) • December 3 & 4, 2017: ECAS #2 in Hafjell • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Estelle Alphand (#1) / Meta Hrovat (#2) • December 5 & 6, 2017: ECAS #3 in Fjätervålen • Men's Slalom winners: Ramon Zenhäusern (#1) / Marc Rochat (#2) • December 7 – 9, 2017: ECAS #3 in Kvitfjell #1 • Women's Alpine combined winner: Franziska Gritsch • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Vanessa Kasper • Women's Super G winner: Kajsa Vickhoff Lie • December 8 & 9, 2017: ECAS #4 in Trysil • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Johannes Strolz (2 times) • December 13, 2017: ECAS #5 in Obereggen • Men's Slalom winner: Matej Vidović • December 14 & 15, 2017: ECAS #6 in Andalo • Note: One, of two, Giant Slalom events was cancelled. • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Meta Hrovat • December 16, 2017: ECAS #7 in Kronplatz • Parallel Slalom winners: Dominik Raschner (m) / Aline Danioth (f) • Slalom (Qualification Race) winners: Matej Vidović (m) / Franziska Gritsch (f) • December 18, 2017: ECAS #8 in Fassa Valley • Men's Slalom winner: Stefano Gross • December 20 & 21, 2017: ECAS #9 in Reiteralm • Men's Super G winners: Niklas Köck (#1) / Christoph Krenn (#2) • December 19 – 22, 2017: ECAS #10 in Fassa Valley • Women's Downhill winner: Juliana Suter (2 times) • January 5 & 6: ECAS #10 in Wengen • Note: One, of two, Super G events was cancelled. • Men's Super G winner: Emanuele Buzzi • January 8 – 12: ECAS #11 in Innerkrems • Women's Alpine combined winner: Lisa Hörnblad • Women's Super G winners: Nina Ortlieb (#1) / Franziska Gritsch (#2) • January 8 – 12: ECAS #12 in Saalbach-Hinterglemm • Men's Alpine combined winner: Marco Pfiffner • Men's Downhill winners: Daniel Hemetsberger (#1) / Henrik Roea (#2) • January 13 & 14: ECAS #13 in Zell am See • Women's Slalom winners: Magdalena Fjällström (#1) / Marina Wallner (#2) • January 14 & 15: ECAS #14 in Kirchberg • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Florian Eisath (#1) / Alex Hofer (#2) • January 15 – 19: ECAS #15 in Zauchensee • Note: Here, the downhill events competition were cancelled. • Women's Super G winner: Lisa Hörnblad • January 17 – 21: ECAS #16 in MéribelEvent cancelled. • January 22 & 23: ECAS #17 in Folgaria/Lavarone • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Stefan Brennsteiner (#1) / Marco Odermatt (#2) • January 23 & 24: ECAS #18 in ZinalEvent cancelled. • January 25 & 26: ECAS #19 in Melchsee-Frutt • Women's Slalom winners: Anna Swenn-Larsson (2 times) • January 25 & 26: ECAS #20 in Chamonix • Men's Slalom winners: Johannes Strolz (#1) / Simon Maurberger (#2) • February 16 & 17: ECAS #21 in Jaun • Men's Slalom winners: Matej Vidović (#1) / Marc Rochat (#2) • February 17 & 18: ECAS #22 in Bad Wiessee • Women's Slalom winner: Charlotta Säfvenberg (2 times) • February 19 – 23: ECAS #23 in Sarntal • Men's Downhill winners: Stian Saugestad (#1) / Adrian Smiseth Sejersted (#2) • Men's Alpine combined winner: Johannes Strolz • February 24 – 28: ECAS #24 in Crans-Montana • Women's Downhill winners: Ariane Raedler (#1 & #3) / Priska Nufer (#2) • Women's Super G winner: Jasmine Flury • February 26 & 27: ECAS #25 in St. Moritz • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Thibaut Favrot (#1) / Thomas Tumler (#2) • March 1 & 2: ECAS #26 in Zinal • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Thea Louise Stjernesund (#1) / Katharina Liensberger (#2) • March 3 – 6: ECAS #27 in Kvitfjell #2 • Men's Downhill winners: Adrian Smiseth Sejersted (#1) / Christopher Neumayer (#2) • March 8 & 9: ECAS #28 in La Molina • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Thea Louise Stjernesund (#1) / Nina Ortlieb (#2) • March 10 & 11: ECAS #29 in Berchtesgaden • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Timon Haugan • Men's Slalom winner: Marc Rochat • March 12 – 18: ECAS #30 (final) in Soldeu - El Tarter • Downhill winners: Otmar Striedinger (m) / Ariane Raedler (f) • Giant Slalom winners: Dominik Raschner (m) / Kristine Gjelsten Haugen (f) • Super G winners: Stefan Rogentin (m) / Ariane Raedler (f) • Slalom winners: Christian Hirschbuehl / Josephine Forni (f) 2017–18 Far East Cup (AS) • December 6 – 9, 2017: FEC #1 in Wanlong • Men's Slalom winners: Ondřej Berndt (2 times) • Women's Slalom winners: Asa Ando (2 times) • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Vladislav Novikov (2 times) • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Sakurako Mukogawa (#1) / Asa Ando (#2) • December 13 – 16, 2017: FEC #2 in Songhua • Men's Slalom winners: Hideyuki Narita (2 times) • Women's Slalom winners: Neja Dvornik (#1) / Sakurako Mukogawa (#2) • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Cédric Noger (2 times) • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Sakurako Mukogawa (2 times) • January 8 – 12: FEC #3 in High1 Resort • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Charlie Raposo (#1) / Cédric Noger (#2) • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Haruna Ishikawa (#1) / Mio Arai (#2) • Men's Slalom winners: Joaquim Salarich (#1) / Juan del Campo (#2) • Women's Slalom winners: Yukina Tomii (#1) / Sakurako Mukogawa (#2) • Alpine Combined winners: Matej Falat (m) / Sakurako Mukogawa (f) • Super G winners: Hideyuki Narita (m) / Sakurako Mukogawa (f) • January 14 & 15: FEC #4 in High1 Resort • Men's Slalom winners: Matej Falat (#1) / Juan del Campo (#2) • Women's Slalom winners: Sakurako Mukogawa (#1) / Haruna Ishikawa (#2) • February 5 – 7: FEC #5 in Engaru • Giant Slalom winners: Anthon Cassman (m) / Haruna Ishikawa (f) • Men's Slalom winners: Richard Leitgeb (#1) / Hideyuki Narita (#2) • Women's Slalom winners: Josephine Forni (2 times) • March 9 – 11: FEC #6 in Sapporo • Note: Here the Giant Slalom events are cancelled'. • Slalom winners: Ryunosuke Ohkoshi (m) / Sakurako Mukogawa (f) 2017–18 North American Cup (AS) • November 18 & 19, 2017: NAC #1 in Loveland Ski Area • Women's Slalom winners: Erin Mielzynski (#1) / Laurence St-Germain (#2) • November 18 – 21, 2017: NAC #2 in Copper Mountain • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Phil Brown (#1) / Trevor Philp (#2) • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Marie-Michèle Gagnon (#1) / AJ Hurt (#2) • Men's Slalom winners: Phil Brown (#1) / Jeffrey Read (#2) • December 4 – 8, 2017: NAC #3 in Lake Louise • Downhill winners: Markus Dürager (m) / Roni Remme (f) • Super G winners: Sam Mulligan (m) / Roni Remme (f) • December 9 – 16, 2017: NAC #4 in Panorama • Alpine combined winners: River Radamus (m) / Roni Remme (f) • Men's Super G winners: Jeffrey Read (#1) / River Radamus (#2) • Women's Super G winners: Roni Remme (#1) / AJ Hurt (#2) • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Brian McLaughlin (#1) / River Radamus (#2) • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Adriana Jelinkova (#1) / Alice Robinson (#2) • Men's Slalom winners: Tanguy Nef (#1) / Nolan Kasper (#2) • Women's Slalom winners: Roni Remme (2 times) • February 13 – 16: NAC #5 in Stowe Mountain Resort • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Tanguy Nef (#1) / Charlie Raposo (#2) • Men's Slalom winners: Michael Ankeny (#1) / Luke Winters (#2) • February 13 – 16: NAC #6 in Whiteface Mountain • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Mikaela Tommy (2 times) • Women's Slalom winners: Nina O'Brien (2 times) • February 26 – March 4: NAC #7 in Copper Mountain Resort • Men's Downhill winners: James Crawford (#1) / Jeffrey Read (#2) • Women's Downhill winners: Maureen Lebel (#1) / Roni Remme (#2) • Alpine combined winners: Sam Mulligan (m) / Valérie Grenier (f) • Super G winners: Broderick Thompson (m) / Valérie Grenier (f) 2017 FIS South American Cup (AS) • August 1 – 5: SAC #1 in ChapelcoThis event is cancelled. • August 7 – 11: SAC #2 in Cerro Catedral • Giant Slalom winners: ''Men's here is cancelled'' / Nicol Gastaldi (f) • Slalom winners: Sebastiano Gastaldi (m) / Kim Vanreusel (f) • August 12 – 15: SAC #3 in Antillanca (part of South American Alpine Skiing Championships) • This event is cancelled. • September 2: SAC #4 in El Colorado #1 • Giant Slalom winners: Rasmus Windingstad (m) / Anna Hofer (f) • September 3–8: SAC #5 in La Parva • Slalom winners: Martin Arene (m) / Núria Pau (f) • Downhill #1 winners: Brice Roger (m) / Ester Ledecká (f) • Downhill #2 winners: Klemen Kosi (m) / Ester Ledecká (f) • Super G winners: Thomas Dreßen (m) / Ester Ledecká (f) • September 10 – 12: SAC #6 in Chapelco • Giant Slalom #1 winners: Sebastiano Gastaldi (m) / Noelle Barahona (f) • Giant Slalom #2 winner: Sebastiano Gastaldi (Men's only) • September 13 & 14: SAC #7 in Cerro Catedral #2 • Slalom winners: Tomas Birkner De Miguel (m) / Núria Pau (f) • Giant Slalom here is cancelled. • September 18 – 22: SAC #8 (final) in El Colorado #2 • Alpine combined #1 winners: Rasmus Windingstad (m) / Núria Pau (f) • Alpine combined #2 winners: Marko Vukićević (m) / Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f) • Super G #1 winners: Klemen Kosi (m) / Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f) • Super G #2 winners: Jack Gower (m) / Iulija Pleshkova (f) • Downhill #1 winners: Marko Vukićević (m) (2 runs) / Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f) • Downhill #2 winners: Marko Vukićević (m) (2 runs) / Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f) ==Biathlon==
[[Biathlon]]
2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (Biathlon) • February 10 – 23: Biathlon at the 2018 Winter Olympics • Men's Individual winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø; Jakov Fak; Dominik Landertinger • Women's Individual winners: Hanna Öberg; Anastasiya Kuzmina; Laura Dahlmeier • Men's Sprint winners: Arnd Peiffer; Michal Krčmář; Dominik Windisch • Women's Sprint winners: Laura Dahlmeier; Marte Olsbu; Veronika Vítková • Men's Pursuit winners: Martin Fourcade; Sebastian Samuelsson; Benedikt Doll • Women's Pursuit winners: Laura Dahlmeier; Anastasiya Kuzmina; Anaïs Bescond • Men's Mass Start winners: Martin Fourcade; Simon Schempp; Emil Hegle Svendsen • Women's Mass Start winners: Anastasiya Kuzmina; Darya Domracheva; Tiril Eckhoff • Men's 4 x 7.5 km Relay winners: ; ; • Women's 4 x 6 km Relay winners: ; ; • Mixed 2 x 6 km / 2 x 7.5 km Relay winners: ; ; • March 10, 13, & 16: Biathlon at the 2018 Winter Paralympics • '''Men's Visually Impaired Winners:''' • 7.5 km: Vitaliy Lukyanenko; Yury Holub; Anatolii Kovalevskyi • 12.5 km: Yury Holub; Oleksandr Kazik; Iurii Utkin • 15 km: Vitaliy Lukyanenko; Oleksandr Kazik; Anthony Chalencon • '''Men's Sitting Winners:''' • 7.5 km: Daniel Cnossen; Dzmitry Loban; Collin Cameron • 12.5 km: Taras Rad; Daniel Cnossen; Andy Soule • 15 km: Martin Fleig; Daniel Cnossen; Collin Cameron • '''Men's Standing Winners:''' • 7.5 km: Benjamin Daviet; Mark Arendz; Ihor Reptyukh • 12.5 km: Benjamin Daviet; Ihor Reptyukh; Mark Arendz • 15 km: Mark Arendz; Benjamin Daviet; Nils Erik Ulset • '''Women's Visually Impaired Winners:''' • 6 km: Mikhalina Lysova; Oksana Shyshkova; Sviatlana Sakhanenka • 10 km: Oksana Shyshkova; Mikhalina Lysova; Clara Klug • 12.5 km: Mikhalina Lysova; Oksana Shyshkova; Clara Klug • '''Women's Sitting Winners:''' • 6 km: Kendall Gretsch; Oksana Masters; Lidziya Hrafeyeva • 10 km: Andrea Eskau; Marta Zaynullina; Irina Gulyayeva • 12.5 km: Andrea Eskau; Oksana Masters; Lidziya Hrafeyeva • '''Women's Standing Winners:''' • 6 km: Ekaterina Rumyantseva; Anna Burmistrova; Liudmyla Liashenko • 10 km: Ekaterina Rumyantseva; Anna Burmistrova; Liudmyla Liashenko • 12.5 km: Anna Burmistrova; Ekaterina Rumyantseva; Brittany Hudak International biathlon championships • January 23 – 28: 2018 IBU Open European Championships in Ridnaun-Val Ridanna • Individual winners: Felix Leitner (m) / Chloe Chevalier (f) • Sprint winners: Andrejs Rastorgujevs (m) / Iryna Varvynets (f) • Pursuit winners: Alexandr Loginov (m) / Chloe Chevalier (f) • Single mixed relay winners: (Thekla Brun-Lie & Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen) • 2x6+2x7.5 km mixed relay winners: (Yuliya Zhuravok, Iryna Varvynets, Artem Pryma, & Dmytro Pidruchnyi) • January 30 – February 4: 2018 IBU Junior Open European Championships in Pokljuka • Junior individual winners: Said Karimulla Khalili (m) / Tamara Steiner (f) • Junior sprint winners: Igor Malinovskii (m) / Valeriia Vasnetcova (f) • Junior pursuit winners: Igor Malinovskii (m) / Polina Shevnina (f) • Junior single mixed relay winners: (Jenni Keranen & Jaakko Ranta) • Junior 2x6+2x7.5 km mixed relay winners: (Polina Shevnina, Valeriia Vasnetcova, Vasilii Tomshin, & Igor Malinovskii) • February 26 – March 4: 2018 IBU Youth/Junior World Championships in Otepää • Junior individual winners: Igor Malinovskii (m) / Kamila Zuk (f) • Junior sprint winners: Vasilii Tomshin (m) / Kamila Zuk (f) • Junior pursuit winners: Sverre Dahlen Aspenes (m) / Marketa Davidova (f) • Junior Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners: (Said Karimulla Khalili, Vasilii Tomshin, Viacheslav Maleev, & Igor Malinovskii) • Junior Women's 3x6 km relay winners: (Camille Bened, Myrtille Begue, & Lou Jeanmonnot-Laurent) • Youth individual winners: Mikhail Pervushin (m) / Elvira Oeberg (f) • Youth sprint winners: Mikhail Pervushin (m) / Elvira Oeberg (f) • Youth pursuit winners: Andrei Viukhin (m) / Anastasiia Goreeva (f) • Youth Men's 3x7.5 km relay winners: (Denis Tashtimerov, Andrei Viukhin, & Mikhail Pervushin) • Youth Women's 3x6 km relay winners: (Amanda Lundstroem, Ella Halvarsson, & Elvira Oeberg) ===2017–18 Biathlon World Cup=== • November 24, 2017 – December 3, 2017: BWC #1 in Östersund • Individual winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Nadezhda Skardino (f) • Sprint winners: Tarjei Bø (m) / Denise Herrmann (f) • Pursuit winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Denise Herrmann (f) • Single mixed relay winners: (Lisa Hauser & Simon Eder) • 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners: (Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold, Tiril Eckhoff, Johannes Thingnes Bø, & Emil Hegle Svendsen) • December 5 – 10, 2017: BWC #2 in Hochfilzen • Sprint winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Darya Domracheva (f) • Pursuit winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Anastasiya Kuzmina (f) • Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners: (Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Henrik L'Abée-Lund, Erlend Bjøntegaard, & Lars Helge Birkeland) • Women's 4x6 km relay winners: (Vanessa Hinz, Franziska Hildebrand, Maren Hammerschmidt, & Laura Dahlmeier) • December 12 – 17, 2017: BWC #3 in Annecy-Le Grand-Bornand • Sprint winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Anastasiya Kuzmina (f) • Pursuit winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Laura Dahlmeier (f) • Mass Start winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Justine Braisaz (f) • January 2 – 7: BWC #4 in Oberhof • Sprint winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Anastasiya Kuzmina (f) • Pursuit winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Anastasiya Kuzmina (f) • Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners: (Martin Ponsiluoma, Jesper Nelin, Sebastian Samuelsson, & Fredrik Lindström) • Women's 4x6 km relay winners: (Anaïs Bescond, Anaïs Chevalier, Célia Aymonier, & Justine Braisaz) • January 9 – 14: BWC #5 in Ruhpolding • Individual winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Dorothea Wierer (f) • Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners: (Lars Helge Birkeland, Tarjei Bø, Emil Hegle Svendsen, & Johannes Thingnes Bø) • Women's 4x6 km relay winners: (Franziska Preuß, Denise Herrmann, Franziska Hildebrand, & Laura Dahlmeier) • Mass Start winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f) • January 16 – 21: BWC #6 in Antholz-Anterselva • Sprint winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Tiril Eckhoff (f) • Pursuit winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Laura Dahlmeier (f) • Mass Start winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Darya Domracheva (f) • March 6 – 11: BWC #7 in Kontiolahti • Sprint winners: Anton Shipulin (m) / Darya Domracheva (f) • Single mixed relay winners: (Anaïs Chevalier & Antonin Guigonnat) • 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners: (Dorothea Wierer, Lisa Vittozzi, Dominik Windisch, & Lukas Hofer) • Mass Start winners: Julian Eberhard (m) / Vanessa Hinz (f) • March 13 – 18: BWC #8 in Oslo-Holmenkollen • Sprint winners: Henrik L'Abée-Lund (m) / Anastasiya Kuzmina (f) • Pursuit winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Darya Domracheva (f) • Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners: (Lars Helge Birkeland, Henrik L'Abée-Lund, Tarjei Bø, & Johannes Thingnes Bø) • Women's 4x6 km relay winners: (Anaïs Chevalier, Célia Aymonier, Marie Dorin Habert, & Anaïs Bescond) • March 20 – 25: BWC #9 (final) in Tyumen • Sprint winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Darya Domracheva (f) • Pursuit winners: Martin Fourcade (m) / Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f) • Mass Start winners: Maxim Tsvetkov (m) / Darya Domracheva (f) 2017–18 IBU Cup • November 22 – 26, 2017: IBU Cup #1 in Sjusjøen • Men's 10 km winners: Emilien Jacquelin (#1) / Tarjei Bø (#2) • Women's 7.5 km winners: Uliana Kaisheva (#1) / Denise Herrmann (#2) • Single mixed relay winners: (Julia Simon & Antonin Guigonnat) • 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners: (Uliana Kaisheva, Irina Uslugina, Alexander Povarnitsyn, Alexey Slepov) • December 7 – 10, 2017: IBU Cup #2 in Lenzerheide • Pursuit winners: Antonin Guigonnat (m) / Uliana Kaisheva (f) • Sprint winners: Antonin Guigonnat (m) / Uliana Kaisheva (f) • Single mixed relay winners: (Thekla Brun-Lie & Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen) • 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners: (Enora Latuillière, Chloe Chevalier, Clement Dumont, & Fabien Claude) • December 13 – 17, 2017: IBU Cup #3 in Obertilliach • Individual winners: Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (m) / Monika Hojnisz (f) • Sprint winners: Dmitry Malyshko (m) / Karolin Horchler (f) • Single mixed relay winners: (Kristina Reztsova & Alexey Volkov) • 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners: (Emilie Aagheim Kalkenberg, Karoline Offigstad Knotten, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, & Vegard Gjermundshaug) • January 5 – 7: IBU Cup #4 in Brezno-Osrblie • Men's 10 km winners: Simon Fourcade (#1) / Vegard Gjermundshaug (#2) • Women's 7.5 km winner: Uliana Kaisheva (2 times) • January 10 – 13: IBU Cup #5 in Großer Arber • Individual winners: Jean-Guillaume Béatrix (m) / Nadine Horchler (f) • Sprint winners: Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (m) / Hilde Fenne (f) • February 1 – 3: IBU Cup #6 in Martell-Val Martello • Sprint winners: Alexandr Loginov (m) / Victoria Slivko (f) • Pursuit winners: Alexandr Loginov (m) / Anastasia Zagoruiko (f) • March 9 – 11: IBU Cup #7 in Uvat • Individual winners: Fabien Claude (m) / Irina Uslugina (f) • Sprint winners: Alexandr Loginov (m) / Evgeniya Pavlova (f) • March 13 – 17: IBU Cup #8 (final) in Khanty-Mansiysk • Super Sprint winners: Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (m) / Karolin Horchler (f) • Sprint winners: Alexey Slepov (m) / Julia Schwaiger (f) • Pursuit winners: Alexandr Loginov (m) / Irina Uslugina (f) 2017–18 IBU Junior Cup • December 8 – 10, 2017: IBUJC #1 in Obertilliach • Junior Sprint #1 winners: Hugo Rivail (m) / Myrtille Begue (f) • Junior Sprint #2 winners: Emilien Claude (m) / Sophia Schneider (f) • December 14 – 16, 2017: IBUJC #2 in Ridnaun-Val Ridanna • Junior Individual winners: Vasilii Tomshin (m) / Irene Lardschneider (f) • Junior Sprint winners: Dzmitry Lazouski (m) / Marina Sauter (f) • January 25 – 27: IBUJC #3 (final) in Nové Město na Moravě • Note: This event was supposed to be held in Duszniki-Zdrój, but it was moved due to unexplained reasons. • Junior Sprint #1 winners: Emilien Claude (m) / Lou Jeanmonnot-Laurent (f) • Junior Sprint #2 winners: Martin Perrillat Bottonet (m) / Sophia Schneider (f) ==Cross-country skiing==
[[Cross-country skiing (sport)|Cross-country skiing]]
2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (XC) • February 10 – 25: Cross-country skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics • Men's 15 km Freestyle winners: Dario Cologna; Simen Hegstad Krüger; Denis Spitsov • Women's 10 km Freestyle winners: Ragnhild Haga; Charlotte Kalla; Marit Bjørgen; Krista Pärmäkoski • Men's 30 km Skiathlon winners: Simen Hegstad Krüger; Martin Johnsrud Sundby; Hans Christer Holund • Women's 15 km Skiathlon winners: Charlotte Kalla; Marit Bjørgen; Krista Pärmäkoski • Men's 50 km Classical winners: Iivo Niskanen; Aleksandr Bolshunov; Andrey Larkov • Women's 30 km Classical winners: Marit Bjørgen; Krista Pärmäkoski; Stina Nilsson • Men's 4 x 10 km Relay winners: ; ; • Women's 4 x 5 km Relay winners: ; ; • Men's Sprint Classical winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo; Federico Pellegrino; Alexander Bolshunov • Women's Sprint Classical winners: Stina Nilsson; Maiken Caspersen Falla; Yulia Belorukova • Men's Team Sprint Freestyle winners: (Martin Johnsrud Sundby & Johannes Høsflot Klæbo); (Denis Spitsov & Aleksandr Bolshunov); (Maurice Manificat & Richard Jouve) • Women's Team Sprint Freestyle winners: (Kikkan Randall & Jessie Diggins); (Charlotte Kalla & Stina Nilsson); (Marit Bjørgen & Maiken Caspersen Falla) • March 11 – 18: Cross-country skiing at the 2018 Winter Paralympics • '''Men's Visually Impaired Winners:''' • Sprint: Brian McKeever; Zebastian Modin; Eirik Bye • 10 km: Brian McKeever; Jake Adicoff; Yury Holub • 20 km Freestyle: Brian McKeever; Yury Holub; Thomas Clarion • '''Men's Sitting Winners:''' • Sprint: Andy Soule; Dzmitry Loban; Daniel Cnossen • 7.5 km: Sin Eui-hyun; Daniel Cnossen; Maksym Yarovyi • 15 km: Maksym Yarovyi; Daniel Cnossen; Sin Eui-hyun • '''Men's Standing Winners:''' • Sprint: Alexandr Kolyadin; Yoshihiro Nitta; Mark Arendz; Ilkka Tuomisto • 10 km: Yoshihiro Nitta; Grygorii Vovchynskyi; Mark Arendz • 20 km Freestyle: Ihor Reptyukh; Benjamin Daviet; Håkon Olsrud • '''Women's Visually Impaired Winners:''' • Sprint: Sviatlana Sakhanenka; Mikhalina Lysova; Oksana Shyshkova • 7.5 km: Sviatlana Sakhanenka; Mikhalina Lysova; Carina Edlinger • 15 km Freestyle: Sviatlana Sakhanenka; Oksana Shyshkova; Mikhalina Lysova • '''Women's Sitting Winners:''' • Sprint: Oksana Masters; Andrea Eskau; Marta Zaynullina • 5 km: Oksana Masters; Andrea Eskau; Marta Zaynullina • 12 km: Kendall Gretsch; Andrea Eskau; Oksana Masters • '''Women's Standing Winners:''' • Sprint: Anna Burmistrova; Vilde Nilsen; Natalie Wilkie • 7.5 km: Natalie Wilkie; Ekaterina Rumyantseva; Emily Young • 15 km Freestyle: Ekaterina Rumyantseva; Anna Burmistrova; Liudmyla LiashenkoRelays • 4 x 2.5 km Mixed Relay winners: ; ; • 4 x 2.5 km Open Relay winners: ; ; ===2017–18 Tour de Ski=== • December 30, 2017 – January 1, 2018: TdS #1 in Lenzerheide • Sprint Freestyle winners: Sergey Ustiugov (m) / Laurien van der Graaff (f) • Classical winners: Dario Cologna (m) / Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f) • Freestyle Pursuit winners: Dario Cologna (m) / Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f) • January 3 & 4: TdS #2 in Oberstdorf • Note: The sprint classical events here was cancelled, due to a thunderstorm. • Freestyle Mass Start winners: Emil Iversen (m) / Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f) • January 6 & 7: TdS #3 (final) in Fiemme Valley • Classical Mass Start winners: Alexey Poltoranin (m) / Heidi Weng (f) • Freestyle Pursuit winners: Dario Cologna (m) / Heidi Weng (f) ===2017–18 FIS Cross-Country World Cup=== • November 24 – 26, 2017: CCWC #1 in Kuusamo (Ruka) • Classical winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Marit Bjørgen (f) • Sprint Classical winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Stina Nilsson (f) • Freestyle Pursuit winners: Maurice Manificat (m) / Ragnhild Haga (f) • December 2 & 3, 2017: CCWC #2 in Lillehammer • Sprint Classical winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Maiken Caspersen Falla (f) • Skiathlon winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Charlotte Kalla (f) • December 9 & 10, 2017: CCWC #3 in Davos • Freestyle winners: Maurice Manificat (m) / Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f) • Sprint Freestyle winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Stina Nilsson (f) • December 16 & 17, 2017: CCWC #4 in Toblach • Classical Pursuit winners: Alexey Poltoranin (m) / Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f) • Freestyle winners: Simen Hegstad Krüger (m) / Charlotte Kalla (f) • January 13 & 14: CCWC #5 in Dresden • Sprint Freestyle winners: Federico Pellegrino (m) / Hanna Falk (f) • Team Sprint Freestyle winners: (Dietmar Nöckler & Federico Pellegrino) (m) / (Ida Ingemarsdotter & Maja Dahlqvist) (f) • January 20 & 21: CCWC #6 in Planica • Sprint Classical winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Stina Nilsson (f) • Classical winners: Alexey Poltoranin (m) / Krista Pärmäkoski (f) • January 27 & 28: CCWC #7 in Seefeld in Tirol • Sprint Freestyle winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Sophie Caldwell (f) • Freestyle Mass Start winners: Dario Cologna (m) / Jessie Diggins (f) • March 3 & 4: CCWC #8 in Lahti • Sprint Freestyle winners: Federico Pellegrino (m) / Maiken Caspersen Falla (f) • Classical winners: Alexey Poltoranin (m) / Krista Pärmäkoski (f) • March 7: CCWC #9 in Drammen • Sprint Classical winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Maiken Caspersen Falla (f) • March 10 & 11: CCWC #10 in Oslo • Freestyle Mass Start winners: Dario Cologna (m) / Marit Bjørgen (f) • March 16 – 18: CCWC #11 (final) in Falun • Sprint Freestyle winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Hanna Falk (f) • Classical Mass Start winners: Alexander Bolshunov (m) / Krista Pärmäkoski (f) • Freestyle Pursuit winners: Alexander Bolshunov (m) / Marit Bjørgen (f) 2017–18 East European Cup (XC) • November 20 – 24, 2017: Khakasia Cup in Vershina Tea • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Stanislav Volzhentsev • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Svetlana Nikolaeva • Men's 1.7 km Speed Freestyle winner: Andrey Parfenov • Women's 1.3 km Speed Freestyle winner: Tatiana Aleshina • Men's 1.7 km Classic winner: Ermil Vokuev • Women's 1.3 km Classic winner: Polina Nekrasova • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Artem Nikolaev • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Daria Storozhilova • December 20 – 22, 2017: EEC #2 in Syanki • 1,6 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Aliaksandr Saladkou (m) / Darya Blashko (f) • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Veselin Tzinzov • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Maryna Antsybor • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Veselin Tzinzov • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Tetyana Antypenko • December 23 – 27, 2017: EEC #3 in KrasnogorskEvent cancelled. • January 8 – 12: EEC #4 in Raubichi/MinskEvent cancelled. • February 9: EEC #5 in Krasnogorsk • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Maxim Vylegzhanin • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Polina Kalsina • February 11: EEC #6 in Moscow • 1.4 km Freestyle winners: Gleb Retivykh (m) / Natalya Matveyeva (f) • February 24 – 28: EEC #7 in Kononovskaya • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Artem Maltsev • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Mariya Istomina • Men's 1.4 km Classic winner: Gleb Retivykh • Women's 1.2 km Classic winner: Natalya Matveyeva • Men's Skiathlon winner: Stanislav Volzhentsev • Women's Skiathlon winner: Polina Kalsina 2017–18 Far East Cross Country Cup (XC) • December 26 & 27, 2017: FAC #1 in Otoineppu • Men's 10 km Classic winners: Keishin Yoshida (#1) / Naoto Baba (#2) • Women's 5 km Classic winners: Masako Ishida (2 times) • January 6 & 7: FAC #2 & #3 in Sapporo • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Hiroyuki Miyazawa • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Masako Ishida • 1.4 Sprint Classic winners: Hiroyuki Miyazawa (m) / Kozue Takizawa (f) • January 11 & 12: FAC #4 in Alpensia Resort • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Hiroyuki Miyazawa • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Lee Chae-won • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Hiroyuki Miyazawa • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Lee Chae-won 2017–18 Scandinavian Cup (XC) • December 15 – 17, 2017: SCAN #1 in Vuokatti • Men's 15 km Sprint Freestyle winner: Daniel Stock • Women's 10 km Sprint Freestyle winner: Tiril Udnes Weng • Sprint Freestyle winners: Sindre Bjørnestad Skar (m) / Tiril Udnes Weng (f) • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Ristomatti Hakola • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Johanna Matintalo • January 5 – 7: SCAN #2 in Piteå • 1 km Sprint Classic winners: Eirik Brandsdal (m) / Lotta Udnes Weng (f) • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Eirik Sverdrup Augdal • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Charlotte Kalla • Men's 30 km Classic Must Start winner: Mattis Stenshagen • Women's 20 km Classic Must Start winner: Johanna Matintalo • February 23 – 25: SCAN #3 in Trondheim • Men's 1.5 km Sprint Freestyle winner: Sindre Bjørnestad Skar • Women's 1.3 km Sprint Freestyle winner: Anne Kjersti Kalvå • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Paal Golberg • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Thea Krokan Murud • Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Magne Haga • Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Tiril Udnes Weng 2017–18 Slavic Cup (XC) • December 16 & 17, 2017: SC #1 (Tatra Cup) in Štrbské pleso • Men's 1.6 km Classic winner: Peter Mlynár • Women's 1.4 km Classic winner: Kateryna Serdyuk • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Peter Mlynár • Women's 7.5 km Freestyle winner: Tetyana Antypenko • December 29 & 30, 2017: SC #2 (Memoriál 24 padlých hrdinov SNP) in Štrbské pleso • 1.6 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Kamil Bury (m) / Justyna Kowalczyk (f) • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Yury Astapenka • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Justyna Kowalczyk • March 3 & 4: SC #3 in Wisla • 1.5 km Classic winners: Mateusz Haratyk (m) / Eliza Rucka (f) • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Mateusz Haratyk • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Eliza Rucka 2018 FIS Balkan Cup (XC) • January 13 & 14: BC #1 in Ravna Gora • Note: Here Sprint Freestyle competitions is cancelled. • 2.5 Freestyle winners: Edi Dadić (m) / Antoniya Grigorova-Burgova (f) • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Yordan Chuchuganov • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Anja Žavbi Kunaver • January 19 – 21: BC #2 in Erzurum • Men's 10 km Classic winners: Edi Dadić (2 times) • Women's 5 km Classic winners: Antoniya Grigorova-Burgova (#1) / Nansi Okoro (#2) • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Damir Rastić • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Sandra Schuetzova • February 3 & 4: BC #3 in Naousa • Men's 10 km Freestyle winners: Florin Robert Dolhăscu (#1) / Petrică Hogiu (#2) • Women's 5 km Freestyle winners: Maria Danou (#1) / Nansi Okoro (#2) • February 28 & March 1: BC #4 in Zlatibor • 1.2 Freestyle winners: Nikolay Viyachev (m) / Nansi Okoro (f) • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Damir Rastić • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Nansi Okoro 2017–18 Cross Country Continental Cup (XC) • December 9 & 10, 2017: OPA #1 in Les Tuffes • Note: The second set of 15 km and 10 km cross country events here was cancelled, due to heavy snow. • Men's 15 km winners: Ivan Perrillat Boiteux (#1) • Women's 10 km winners: Kateřina Beroušková (#1) • December 15 – 17, 2017: OPA #2 in St. Ulrich/Pillersee Valley • Men's 1.4 km Sprint Freestyle winner: Simi Hamilton • Women's 1.2 km Sprint Freestyle winner: Sophie Caldwell • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Alexis Jeannerod • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Elena Soboleva • Men's 15 km Freestyle Must Start winner: Beda Klee • Women's 10 km Freestyle Must Start winner: Julia Belger • January 5 – 7: OPA #3 in Campra • Men's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winner: Maicol Rastelli • Women's 1.4 km Sprint Classic winner: Anne Winkler • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Clément Arnault • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Sara Pellegrini • Skiathlon winners: Sergio Rigoni (m) / Sara Pellegrini (f) • February 16 – 18: OPA #4 in Zwiesel • Men's 1.8 km Sprint Classic winner: Giacomo Gabrielli • Women's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winner: Laura Gimmler • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Valentin Chauvin • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Antonia Fraebel • Men's 20 km Freestyle Must Start winner: Robin Duvillard • Women's 10 km Freestyle Must Start winner: Antonia Fraebel • March 3 & 4: OPA #5 in Cogne • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Adrien Backscheider • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Rosie Frankowski • 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winners: Adrien Backscheider (m) / Rosie Frankowski 2017 FIS Australia & New Zealand Cup (CC) • July 22 & 23: ANZC #1 in Perisher Valley • 1 km Freestyle speed: Phillip Bellingham (m) / Barbara Jezeršek (f) • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Philippe Nicollier • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Katerina Paul • August 19 & 20: ANZC #2 in Falls Creek (part of Australian Cross Country Skiing Championships) • 1 km Classic winners: Phillip Bellingham (m) / Barbara Jezeršek (f) • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Phillip Bellingham • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Barbara Jezeršek • September 7 – 9: ANZC #3 in Snow Farm • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Benjamin Lustgarten • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Jessie Diggins • 1.6 km Sprint Classic winners: Ben Saxton (m) / Sophie Caldwell (f) • Men's 15 km Classic Mass Start winner: Benjamin Lustgarten • Women's 10 km Classic Mass Start winner: Jessie Diggins 2017–18 USA Super Tour (XC) • December 2 & 3, 2017: UST #1 in Rendezvous Ski Trails • 1,3 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Nick Michaud (m) / Annie Hart (f) • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Brian Gregg • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Hedda Bångman • January 26 – 28: UST #2 in Craftsbury • 1,3 Sprint Classic winners: Forrest Mahlen (m) / Kaitlynn Miller (f) • Men's Individual 10 km Freestyle winner: David Norris • Women's Individual 5 km Freestyle winner: Becca Rorabaugh • February 15 – 18: UST #3 in Al Quaal Recreation Area • 1,6 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Kevin Bolger (m) / Anikken Gjerde-Alnaes (f) • Men's 20 km Freestyle Must Start winner: David Norris • Women's 15 km Freestyle Must Start winner: Chelsea Holmes • Men's 10 km Classic winner: David Norris • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Kaitlynn Miller 2017–18 North American Cup (XC) • December 9 & 10: NAC #1 in Vernon • 1,3 km Classic winners: Bob Thompson (m) / Kaitlynn Miller (f) • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Ian Torchia • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Caitlin Patterson • December 15 – 17: NAC #2 in Rossland • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Brian Gregg • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Caitlin Compton Gregg • 1,3 km Freestyle winners: Julien Locke (m) / Zina Kocher (f) • Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Brian Gregg • Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Caitlin Compton Gregg • January 5 – 10: NAC #3 in Mont-Sainte-Anne • Sprint Classique winners: Julien Locke (m) / Dahria Beatty (f) • Skiathlon winners: Knute Johnsgaard (m) / Cendrine Browne (f) • Sprint Freestyle winners: Jesse Cockney (m) / Dahria Beatty (f) • Men's Individual 15 km winner: Ricardo Izquierdo-Bernier • Women's Individual 10 km winner: Cendrine Browne • January 19 – 21: NAC #4 in Red Deer, Alberta • 1.2 km Sprint Freestryle winners: Jesse Cockney (m) / Olivia Bouffard-Nesbitt (f) • Men's 15 km Classic Must Start winner: Andy Shields • Women's 10 km Classic Must Start winner: Annika Hicks • February 2 – 4: NAC #5 in Nakkertok • 1,4 km Classic winners: Benjamin Saxton (m) / Becca Rorabaugh (f) • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: John Hegman • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Rosie Frankowski • Men's 15 km Classic Pursuit winner: David Norris • Women's 10 km Classic Pursuit winner: Rosie Frankowski 2017 FIS Roller Skiing World Cup & 2017 FIS Roller Skiing Junior World Cup • July 7 – 9: RSWC #1 & RSJWC #1 in Oroslavje • Men's 16 km Freestyle Must Start: Emanuele Becchis • Women's 12 km Freestyle Must Start: Lisa Bolzan • Men's Junior 16 km Freestyle Must Start: Francesco Becchis • Women's Junior 12 km Freestyle Must Start: Anna-Maria Dietze • 7 km Cross Uphill winners: Robin Norum (m) / Sandra Olsson (f) • Junior 7 km Cross Uphill winners: Hugo Jacobsson (m) / Kristina Axelsson (f) • 0.2 km Speed Freestyle winners: Dmitriy Voronin (m) / Anna Bolzan (f) • Junior 0.2 km Speed Freestyle winners: Nico Rieckhoff (m) / Anna Bolzan (f) • August 3 – 6: RSWC #2 & RSJWC #2 in Sollefteå (part of 2017 FIS Rollerski World Championships) • Men's 22.5 km Freestyle winner: Anders Svanebo • Women's 18 km Freestyle winner: Linn Sömskar • Men's Junior 18 km Freestyle winner: Alexander Grigoriev • Women's Junior 13.5 km Freestyle winner: Anna Zherebyateva • 0.2 km Freestyle winners: Emanuele Becchis (m) / Olga Letucheva (f) • Junior 0.2 km Freestyle winners: Adam Persson (m) / Alba Mortagna (f) • Men's 20 km Freestyle Must Start: Alexander Bolshunov • Women's 16 km Freestyle Must Start: Linn Sömskar • Men's Junior 16 km Freestyle Must Start: Leo Johansson • Women's Junior 12 km Freestyle Must Start: Anna Zherebyateva • Team Sprint Freestyle winners: (Even Sæteren Hippe, Ragnar Bragvin Andresen) (m) / (Maja Dahlqvist, Linn Sömskar) (f) • Junior Team Sprint Freestyle winners: (Mattia Armellini, Francesco Becchis) (m) / Kristin Austgulen Fosnæs, Amalie Honerud Olsen) • August 11 – 13: RSWC #3 & RSJWC #3 in Madona • 0.2 km Speed winners: Emanuele Becchis (m) / Alena Procházková (f) • Junior 0.2 km Speed winners: Dmitriy Karakosov (m) / Alba Mortagna (f) • Men's 7.5 km Classic winner: Robin Norum • Men's Junior 7.5 km Classic winner: Gabriel Strid • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Alena Procházková • Women's Junior 5 km Classic winner: Yuliia Krol • Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Robin Norum • Men's Junior 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Raimo Vigants • Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Alena Procházková • Women's Junior 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Yuliia Krol • Overall Standing winners: Robin Norum (m) / Alena Procházková (f) • Overall Standing Junior winners: Raimo Vigants (m) / Yuliia Krol (f) • September 8 – 10: RSWC #4 & RSJWC #4 in Trento/Monte Bondone • 0.165 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Emanuele Becchis (m) / Alena Procházková (f) • Junior 0.165 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Raimo Vigants (m) / Alba Mortagna (f) • Men's 8.5 km Classic winner: Irineu Esteve Altimiras • Women's 4.7 km Classic winner: Helene Söderlund • Juniors 4.7 km Classic winners: Luca Curti (m) / Chiara Becchis (f) • Men's 10.8 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Paul Constantin Pepene • Women's 6.9 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Helene Söderlund • Juniors 6.9 km Freestyle Pursuit winners: Gabriel Strid (m) / Hanna Abrahamsson (f) ==Freestyle skiing==
[[Freestyle skiing]]
2018 Winter Olympics (Freestyle) • February 9 – 23: Freestyle skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics • Men's Aerials winners: Oleksandr Abramenko; Jia Zongyang; Ilya Burov • Women's Aerials winners: Hanna Huskova; Zhang Xin; Kong Fanyu • Men's Halfpipe winners: David Wise; Alex Ferreira; Nico Porteous • Women's Halfpipe winners: Cassie Sharpe; Marie Martinod; Brita Sigourney • Men's Moguls winners: Mikaël Kingsbury; Matt Graham; Daichi Hara • Women's Moguls winners: Perrine Laffont; Justine Dufour-Lapointe; Yuliya Galysheva • Men's Slopestyle winners: Øystein Bråten; Nick Goepper; Alex Beaulieu-Marchand • Women's Slopestyle winners: Sarah Höfflin; Mathilde Gremaud; Isabel Atkin • Men's Ski Cross winners: Brady Leman; Marc Bischofberger; Sergey Ridzik • Women's Ski Cross winners: Kelsey Serwa; Brittany Phelan; Fanny Smith World and Continental events • March 2: 2018 Asian Cup (Halfpipe) in Pyeongchang • Halfpipe winners: Lee Kang-bok (m) / Jang Yu-jin (f) • FIS Junior Freestyle Ski World Championships ===2017–18 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup=== • August 26, 2017 – March 25, 2018: 2017–18 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Schedule ;Moguls and Aerials • December 9, 2017: MAWC #1 in Rukatunturi (Kuusamo) • Moguls winners: Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Britteny Cox (f) • December 16 & 17, 2017: MAWC #2 in Genting Resort Secret Garden (Chongli District. Zhangjiakou) • Men's aerials winner: Jia Zongyang (2 times) • Women's aerials winners: Hanna Huskova (#1) / Danielle Scott (#2) • Team aerials winners: (Xu Mengtao, Qi Guangpu, & Jia Zongyang) • December 21 & 22, 2017: MAWC #3 in Thaiwoo (Chongli District, Zhangjiakou) • Men's moguls winner: Mikaël Kingsbury (2 times) • Women's moguls winners: Jaelin Kauf (#1) / Yuliya Galysheva (#2) • January 6: MAWC #4 in Moscow • Aerials winners: Anton Kushnir (m) / Kiley McKinnon (f) • January 6: MAWC #5 in Calgary • Moguls winners: Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Britteny Cox (f) • January 10 – 12: MAWC #6 in Deer Valley • Men's moguls winner: Mikaël Kingsbury (2 times) • Women's moguls winners: Perrine Laffont (#1) / Jaelin Kauf (#2) • Aerials winners: Maxim Burov (m) / Xu Mengtao (f) • January 19 & 20: MAWC #7 in Lake Placid, New York • Men's aerials winners: Jia Zongyang (#1) / Maxim Burov (#2) • Women's aerials winners: Lydia Lassila (#1) / Xu Mengtao (#2) • January 20: MAWC #8 in Mont Tremblant Resort • Moguls winners: Ikuma Horishima (m) / Justine Dufour-Lapointe (f) • March 3 & 4: MAWC #9 in Tazawako • Moguls winners: Ikuma Horishima (m) / Perrine Laffont (f) • Dual moguls winners: Ikuma Horishima (m) / Tess Johnson (f) • March 10: MAWC #10 in AiroloEvent cancelled. • March 18: MAWC #11 (final) in Megève • Dual moguls winners: Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Jaelin Kauf (f) ;Half-pipe, Big air, and Slopestyle • August 26 – September 1, 2017: HB&SWC #1 in Cardrona Alpine Resort • Slopestyle winners: James Woods (m) / Kelly Sildaru (f) • Half-pipe winners: Alex Ferreira (m) / Cassie Sharpe (f) • November 3, 2017: HB&SWC #2 in CopenhagenEvent cancelled. • November 18, 2017: HB&SWC #3 in Milan • Big Air winners: Elias Ambühl (m) / Coline Ballet Baz (f) • November 24 – 26, 2017: HB&SWC #4 in Stubai Alps • Slopestyle winners: Øystein Bråten (m) / Jennie-Lee Burmansson (f) • December 1, 2017: HB&SWC #5 in Mönchengladbach • Big Air winners: Christian Nummedal (m) / Giulia Tanno (f) • December 6 & 8, 2017: HB&SWC #6 in Copper Mountain • Half-pipe winners: David Wise (m) / Marie Martinod (f) • December 20 & 22, 2017: HB&SWC #7 in Genting Resort Secret Garden (Chongli District, Zhangjiakou) • Half-pipe winners: Thomas Krief (m) / ZHANG Kexin (f) • December 21 – 23, 2017: HB&SWC #8 in Font-Romeu • Slopestyle winners: Oscar Wester (m) / Tess Ledeux (f) • January 10 – 13: HB&SWC #9 in Snowmass • Half-pipe winners: David Wise (m) / Cassie Sharpe (f) • Slopestyle winners: Andri Ragettli (m) / Johanne Killi (f) • January 17 – 21: HB&SWC #10 in Mammoth Mountain Ski Area • Half-pipe winners: Kyle Smaine (m) / Brita Sigourney (f) • Slopestyle winners: Teal Harle (m) / Tiril Sjåstad Christiansen (f) • March 2 & 3: HB&SWC #11 in Silvaplana • Slopestyle winners: Alexander Hall (m) / Tess Ledeux (f) • March 14 & 16: HB&SWC #12 in Seiser Alm • Slopestyle winners: Nicholas Goepper (m) / Caroline Claire (f) • March 21 & 22: HB&SWC #13 in Tignes • Half-pipe winners: Noah Bowman (m) / Cassie Sharpe (f) • March 22 & 24: HB&SWC #14 (final) in Stoneham Mountain Resort • Note: The slopestyle event here has been cancelled. • Big Air winners: Christian Nummedal (m) / Dara Howell (f) ;Ski cross • December 7 & 9, 2017: SCWC #1 in Val Thorens • Note: The second set of ski cross events here was cancelled, due to heavy snow. • Ski cross winners: Christopher Del Bosco (m) / Sandra Näslund (f) • December 12, 2017: SCWC #2 in Arosa • Ski cross winners: Viktor Andersson (m) / Sandra Näslund (f) • December 15, 2017: SCWC #3 in Montafon • Ski cross winners: Sergey Ridzik (m) / Fanny Smith (f) • December 20 – 22, 2017: SCWC #4 in Innichen • Men's ski cross winner: Marc Bischofberger (2 times) • Women's ski cross winners: Heidi Zacher (#1) / Sandra Näslund (#2) • January 12 – 14: SCWC #5 in Idre • Men's ski cross winners: Alex Fiva (#1) / Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (#2) • Women's ski cross winner: Sandra Näslund (2 times) • January 19 & 20: SCWC #6 in Nakiska • Ski cross winners: Paul Eckert (m) / Sandra Näslund (f) • March 2 – 4: SCWC #7 (final) in Sunny Valley Ski Resort (Miass) • Men's ski cross winners: Jonas Lenherr (#1) / Kevin Drury (#2) • Women's ski cross winners: Fanny Smith (#1) / Sandra Näslund (#2) • March 17: SCWC #8 in Megève • Event cancelled. 2017–18 European Cup (FS) • November 26, 2017: ECFS #1 in St. Leonhard im Pitztal • Ski Cross winners: Jonas Lenherr (m) / Georgia Simmerling (f) • December 1 & 2, 2017: ECFS #2 in Rukatunturi (Super Continental Cup) • Men's Aerials winners: Oleksandr Abramenko (2 times) • Women's Aerials winners: Laura Peel (#1) / Danielle Scott (#2) • December 9 – 16, 2017: ECFS #3 in Kaprun • Halfpipe winners: Lukas Müllauer (m) / Elisabeth Gram (f) • Slopestyle winners: Petter Ulsletten (m) / Sandra Moestue Eie (f) • December 21 – 23, 2017: ECFS #4 in Val Thorens • Men's Ski Cross winners: Cornel Renn (#1) / Ryan Regez (#2) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Zoé Cheli (2 times) • January 17 – 20: ECFS #4 in Megève • Men's Moguls winners: Oskar Elofsson (2 times) • Women's Moguls winners: Clara Månsson (2 times) • Dual Moguls winners: Oskar Elofsson (m) / Ksenia Kuznetsova (f) • January 19 & 20: ECFS #5 in Idre Fjäll • Men's Ski Cross winners: Franz Pietzko (2 times) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Alexandra Edebo (2 times) • January 25 & 26: ECFS #6 in Lenk im Simmental • Men's Ski Cross winners: Ryan Regez (2 times) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Alexandra Edebo (2 times) • January 26 – 28: ECFS #7 in St Anton am ArlbergEvent was cancelled. • January 31 – February 1: ECFS #8 in Krasnoe Ozero • Moguls winners: Andrey Uglovski (m) / Anastasiia Smirnova (f) • Dual Moguls winners: Oskar Elofsson (m) / Anastasiia Smirnova (f) • January 31 – February 3: ECFS #9 in St. Francois • Men's Ski Cross winners: Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (#1) / Morgan Guipponi Barfety (#2) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Alizée Baron (2 times) • February 4 & 5: ECFS #10 in Jyväskylä • Moguls winners: Topi Kanninen (m) / Ksenia Kuznetsova (f) • Dual Moguls winners: Oskar Elofsson (m) / Frida Lundblad (f) • February 6 & 7: ECFS #11 in Méribel • Slopestyle winners: Javier Lliso (m) / Tora Johansen (f) • February 10 & 11: ECFS #12 in Åre • Moguls winners: Topi Kanninen (m) / Clara Månsson (f) • Dual Moguls winners: Loke Nilsson (m) / Ksenia Kuznetsova (f) • February 16 – 18: ECFS #13 in Minsk • Men's Aerials winners: Dzmitry Mazurkevich (#1) / Pavel Dzik (#2) / Kirill Samorodov (#3) • Women's Aerials winners: Carol Bouvard (#1 & #3) / Emma Weiß (#2) • Team Aerials winners: 2 (Denis Osipau, Artsiom Bashlakou, Yana Yarmashevich) • February 23 – 25: ECFS #14 in Davos • Big Air winners: Kim Gubser (m) / Sophia Insam (f) • Halfpipe winners: Mario Grob (m) / Isabelle Hanssen (f) • February 24 & 25: ECFS #15 in Grasgehren • Men's Ski Cross winners: Ryan Regez (2 times) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Alexandra Edebo (#1) / Abby McEwen (#2) • March 1 – 3: ECFS #16 in Mittenwald • Men's Ski Cross winners: Ryan Regez (2 times) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Zoe Chore (#1) / Alexandra Edebo (#2) • March 2 & 3: ECFS #17 in Götschen • Big Air winners: Hannes Rudigier (m) / Sophia Insam (f) • March 3 & 4: ECFS #18 in Krispl • Men's Moguls winners: Oskar Elofsson (#1) / Nikita Novitckii (#2) • Women's Moguls winners: Frida Lundblad (2 times) 2017–18 North American Cup (FS) • December 15 & 16, 2017: NAC #1 in Copper Mountain • Men's Halfpipe winners: Cassidy Jarrell (#1) / Hunter Hess (#2) • Women's Halfpipe winners: Abigale Hansen (2 times) • December 16 & 17, 2017: NAC #2 in Utah Olympic Park • Men's Aerials winners: Justin Schoenefeld (#1) / Zachary Surdell (#2) • Women's Aerials winners: Karena Elliott (#1) / Madison Varmette (#2) • January 21 – 23: NAC #3 in Nakiska • Men's Ski Cross winners: Reece Howden (2 times) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Reina Umehara (2 times) • January 27 & 28: NAC #4 in Val Saint-Côme • Moguls winners: Kerrian Chunlaud (m) / Berkley Brown (f) • Dual Moguls winners: Dylan Walczyk (m) / Avital Shimko (f) • February 3 & 4: NAC #5 in Killington Ski Resort • Moguls winners: Dylan Walczyk (m) / Valerie Gilbert (f) • Dual Moguls winners: Dylan Walczyk (m) / Avital Shimko (f) • February 9 – 11: NAC #6 in Calgary • Slopestyle winners: Philippe Langevin (m) / Megan Oldham (f) • Men's Halfpipe winners: Birk Irving (2 times) • Women's Halfpipe winners: Abigale Hansen (#1) / Carly Margulies (#2) • February 12 – 15: NAC #7 in Sunday River • Men's Ski Cross winners: Reece Howden (#1) / Mathieu Leduc (#2) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Tiana Gairns (2 times) • February 17 & 18: NAC #8 in Lake PlacidEvent was cancelled. • February 17 – 19: NAC #9 in Calabogie Peaks • Men's Ski Cross winners: Brant Crossan (#1) / Zach Belczyk (#2) • Women's Ski Cross winners: Zoe Chore (#1) / Abby McEwen (#2) • February 23 & 24: NAC #10 in Le Relais, QC • Men's Aerials winners: Justin Schoenefeld (2 times) • Women's Aerials winners: Kaila Kuhn (2 times) • February 22 – 24: NAC #11 in Aspen / Buttermilk • Big Air winners: Noah Morrison (m) / Rell Harwood (f) • Slopestyle winners: William Borm (m) / Marin Hamill (f) • Halfpipe winners: Birk Irving (m) / Abigale Hansen (f) • February 24 & 25: NAC #12 in Calgary, AB • Moguls winners: Laurent Dumais (m) / Avital Shimko (f) • Dual Moguls winners: Laurent Dumais (m) / Elizabeth O'Connell (f) • February 27 – March 4: NAC #13 in Park City • Moguls winners: Hunter Bailey (m) / Hannah Soar (f) • Dual Moguls winners: Jesse Andringa (m) / Berkley Brown (f) • March 1 & 2: NAC #14 in Utah Olympic Park • Men's Aerials winners: Jasper Holcomb (#1) / Harrison Smith (#2) • Women's Aerials winners: Madison Varmette (#1) / Kaila Kuhn (#2) 2017 South American Cup (FS) • August 11 & 12: SAC #1 in La Parva #1 • Slopestyle #1 winners: Alex Hall (m) / Melanie Kraizel (f) • Slopestyle #2 winners: Nathan Miceli (m) / Dominique Ohaco (f) • August 24 – 26: SAC #2 in La Parva #2 • This event is cancelled. • September 17 & 18: SAC #3 in Cerro Catedral • Big Air #1 winners: Nahuel Medrano (m) / Josefina Vitiello (f) • Big Air #2 winners: Ivan Kuray (m) / Maria Cabanillas (f) 2017 Australia & New Zealand Cup (FS) • July 31 – August 4: ANCFS #1 in Mount Buller #1 • Ski Cross #1 winners: Doug Crawford (m) / Sami Kennedy-Sim (f) • Ski Cross #2 winners: Doug Crawford (m) / Sami Kennedy-Sim (f) • August 15 – 17: ANCFS #2 in Cardrona (part of FIS Continental Cup) • Halfpipe winners: Nico Porteous (m) / Sabrina Cakmakli (f) • Slopestyle winners: Birk Ruud (m) / Mee-hyun Lee (f) • August 24 – 27: ANCFS #3 in Mount Hotham • Ski Cross #1 winners: Jamie Prebble (m) / Sami Kennedy-Sim (f) • Ski Cross #2 winners: Tyler Wallasch (m) / Sami Kennedy-Sim (f) • August 29 – 30: ANCFS #4 in Perisher Ski Resort • Moguls #1 winners: Matthew Graham (m) / Perrine Laffont (f) • Moguls #2 winners: Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Britteny Cox (f) • September 2: ANCFS #5 in Mount Buller #2 • Dual Moguls winners: Matt Graham (m) / Nicole Parks (f) ==Nordic combined==
[[Nordic combined]]
2018 Winter Olympics (NC) • February 14, 20, & 22: Nordic combined at the 2018 Winter Olympics • Men's individual large hill/10 km winners: Johannes Rydzek; Fabian Rießle; Eric Frenzel • Men's individual normal hill/10 km winners: Eric Frenzel; Akito Watabe; Lukas Klapfer • Men's team large hill/4 x 5 km winners: ; ; 2018 FIS Junior World Ski Championships • January 30 – February 3: 2018 FIS Junior World Ski Championships (NC) in Kandersteg-Goms, Valais • Men's individual winners: Ondrej Pazout (#1) / Vid Vrhovnik (#2) • Men's team winners: (Johannes Lamparter, Florian Dagn, Dominik Terzer, & Mika Vermeulen) ===2017–18 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup=== • November 24 – 26, 2017: NCWC #1 in Rukatunturi (Kuusamo) • Men's individual winners: Espen Andersen (#1) / Akito Watabe (#2) / Johannes Rydzek (#3) • December 2 & 3, 2017: NCWC #2 in Lillehammer • Men's individual winner: Espen Andersen • Men's team winners: (Jan Schmid, Espen Andersen, Jarl Magnus Riiber, & Jørgen Graabak) • December 16 & 17, 2017: NCWC #3 in Ramsau am Dachstein • Men's individual winners: Eric Frenzel (#1) / Fabian Rießle (#2) • January 6 & 7: NCWC #4 in OtepääEvent cancelled. • January 12 – 14: NCWC #5 in Fiemme Valley • Men's individual winners: Jørgen Graabak (#1) / Jan Schmid (#2) • Men's team winners: (Eric Frenzel & Vinzenz Geiger) • January 20 & 21: NCWC #6 in Chaux-Neuve • Men's individual winner: Jan Schmid • Men's team winners: (Jan Schmid, Espen Andersen, Jarl Magnus Riiber, & Jørgen Graabak) • January 26 – 28: NCWC #7 in Seefeld in Tirol • Men's individual winner: Akito Watabe (3 times) • February 3 & 4: NCWC #8 in Hakuba • Men's individual winners: Akito Watabe (#1) / Jan Schmid (#2) • March 3 & 4: NCWC #9 in Lahti • Men's individual winner: Johannes Rydzek • Men's team winners: (Wilhelm Denifl & Bernhard Gruber) • March 10: NCWC #10 in Oslo • Men's individual winner: Akito Watabe • March 13 & 14: NCWC #11 in Trondheim • Men's individual winners: Eric Frenzel (#1) / Fabian Rießle (#2) • March 17 & 18: NCWC #12 in Klingenthal • Men's individual winner: Fabian Rießle (2 times) • March 24 & 25: NCWC #13 (final) in Schonach im Schwarzwald • Men's individual winner: Akito Watabe (2 times) 2017–18 Continental Cup (NK) • December 15 – 27, 2017: CCNK #1 in Steamboat Springs, Colorado • Men's winners: Mikko Kokslien (3 times) • January 5 – 7: CCNK #2 in Klingenthal • Men's winners: Antoine Gérard (#1) / Franz-Josef Rehrl (#2) / François Braud (#3) • January 6 & 7: CCNK #3 in Otepää • This event is cancelled. • January 12 – 14: CCNK #4 in Rukatunturi • Men's winners: Bernhard Flaschberger (#1) / Sindre Ure Søtvik (#2) / Thomas Jöbstl (#3) • January 20 & 21: CCNK #5 in Rena • Men's winners: Thomas Jöbstl (#1) / Dominik Terzer (#2) • Women's winners: Stefaniya Nadymova (#1) / Ayane Miyazaki (#2) • February 3 & 4: CCNK #6 in Planica • Men's winners: Bryan Fletcher (2 times) • February 9 – 11: CCNK #7 in Eisenerz • Men's winners: Mika Vermeulen (#1) / Mikko Kokslien (#2) • March 9 – 11: CCNK #8 in Nizhny Tagil • Men's winners: Lukas Runggaldier (#1) / Laurent Muhlethaler (#2) • Women's winners: Stefaniya Nadymova (2 times) • Men's Mass Start winner: Bernhard Flaschberger 2017 Grand Prix (NK) • August 19 & 20, 2017: GPNK #1 in Oberwiesenthal • Men's winner: Mario Seidl • Team winners: I (Tomáš Portyk, Miroslav Dvořák) • August 23, 2017: GPNK #2 in Tschagguns • Men's winner: Fabian Rießle • August 25 & 26, 2017: GPNK #3 in Oberstdorf • Men's winners: Eric Frenzel (#1) / Mario Seidl (#2) • September 30 & October 1, 2017: GPNK #4 in Planica • Men's winners: Magnus Moan (2 times) 2017–18 OPA Alpen Cup (NK) ;Summer • August 7, 2017: ACNK #1 in Klingenthal • Women's winner: Lena Prinoth • August 11, 2017: ACNK #2 in Bischofsgrün • Women's winner: Jenny Nowak • September 9 & 10, 2017: ANCK #3 in Kandersteg • Men's winners: Florian Dagn (#1) / Lilian Vaxelaire (#2) • September 23, 2017: ANCK #4 in Predazzo • Women's winner: Lena Prinoth • September 23 & 24, 2017: ANCK #5 in Winterberg • Men's winners: Justin Moczarski (2 times) ;Winter • December 16 & 17, 2017: ANCK #6 in Seefeld in Tirol • Men's winners: Ondřej Pažout (#1) / Edgar Vallet (#2) • Women's winners: Jenny Nowak (2 times) • January 13 & 14: ANCK #7 in Schonach • Men's winners: Mika Vermeulen (2 times) • Women's winners: Jenny Nowak (2 times) • February 17 & 18: ANCK #8 in Baiersbronn • Men's winners: Johannes Lamparter (#1) / Florian Dagn (#2) • Women's winners: Annika Sieff (#1) / Jenny Nowak (#2) • February 24 & 25: ANCK #9 in Planica • Men's winners: Iacopo Bortolas (#1) / Johannes Lamparter (#2) • Women's winners: Marie Naehring (#1) / Jenny Nowak (#2) • Teams winners: (Stefan Rettenegger, Fabian Hafner, Manuel Einkemmer, Johannes Lamparter) (m) / (Sophia Maurus, Marie Naehring, Jenny Nowak) • March 10 & 11: ANCK #10 in Chaux-Neuve • Men's winners: Johannes Lamparter (2 times) • Women's winners: Annika Sieff (2 times) ==Ski jumping==
[[Ski jumping]]
2018 Winter Olympics (SJ) • February 10 – 19: Ski jumping at the 2018 Winter Olympics • Men's Individual Normal Hill winners: Andreas Wellinger; Johann André Forfang; Robert Johansson • Men's Individual Large Hill winners: Kamil Stoch; Andreas Wellinger; Robert Johansson • Men's Team Large Hill winners: ; ; • Women's Individual Normal Hill winners: Maren Lundby; Katharina Althaus; Sara Takanashi World ski jumping championships • January 19 – 21: FIS Ski Flying World Championships 2018 in Oberstdorf • Men's individual winner: Daniel-André Tande • Men's team winners: (Robert Johansson, Andreas Stjernen, Johann André Forfang, & Daniel-André Tande) • February 1 – 4: 2018 FIS Junior World Ski Championships (SJ) in Kandersteg-Goms, Valais • Individual winners: Marius Lindvik (m) / Nika Kriznar (f) • Men's team winners: (Philipp Raimund, Justin Lisso, Cedrik Weigel, & Constantin Schmid) • Women's team winners: (Jerneja Brecl, Nika Kriznar, Katra Komar, & Ema Klinec) • Mixed team winners: (Silje Opseth, Fredrik Villumstad, Anna Odine Strøm, & Marius Lindvik) ===2017–18 Four Hills Tournament=== • December 29 & 30, 2017: FHT #1 in Oberstdorf • Winner: Kamil Stoch • December 31, 2017 & January 1, 2018: FHT #2 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen • Winner: Kamil Stoch • January 3 & 4: FHT #3 in Innsbruck • Winner: Kamil Stoch • January 5 & 6: FHT #4 (final) in Bischofshofen • Winner: Kamil Stoch ===Raw Air 2018=== • March 9 – 11: RA #1 in Oslo (SJWC #18) • Individual winners: Daniel-André Tande (m) / Maren Lundby (f) • Men's team winners: (Daniel-André Tande, Andreas Stjernen, Johann André Forfang, & Robert Johansson) • March 12 & 13: RA #2 in Lillehammer (SJWC #19) • Men's individual winner: Kamil Stoch • March 14 & 15: RA #3 in Trondheim (SJWC #20) • Men's individual winner: Kamil Stoch • March 16 – 18: RA #4 (final) in Vikersund (SJWC #21) • Men's individual winner: Robert Johansson • Men's team winners: (Daniel-André Tande, Johann André Forfang, Andreas Stjernen, & Robert Johansson) ===2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup=== • November 17 – 19, 2017: SJWC #1 in Wisła • Men's individual winner: Junshirō Kobayashi • Men's team winners: (Johann André Forfang, Anders Fannemel, Daniel-André Tande, & Robert Johansson) • November 24 – 26, 2017: SJWC #2 in Ruka (Kuusamo) • Men's individual winner: Jernej Damjan • Men's team winners: (Robert Johansson, Anders Fannemel, Daniel-André Tande, & Johann André Forfang) • November 30 – December 3, 2017: SJWC #3 in Lillehammer • Women's individual winners: Maren Lundby (#1) / Katharina Althaus (#2; 2 times) • December 1 – 3, 2017: SJWC #4 in Nizhny Tagil • Men's individual winners: Richard Freitag (#1) / Andreas Wellinger (#2) • December 9 & 10, 2017: SJWC #5 in Titisee-Neustadt • Men's individual winner: Richard Freitag • Men's team winners: (Robert Johansson, Daniel-André Tande, Anders Fannemel, & Johann André Forfang) • December 15 – 17, 2017: SJWC #6 in Engelberg • Men's individual winners: Anders Fannemel (#1) / Richard Freitag (#2) • December 15 – 17, 2017: SJWC #7 in Hinterzarten • Women's individual winner: Maren Lundby • Women's team winners: (Yuki Ito, Kaori Iwabuchi, Yūka Setō, & Sara Takanashi) • January 5 – 7: SJWC #8 in RâșnovEvent cancelled (moved to March 2 – 4). • January 12 – 14: SJWC #9 in Sapporo • Women's individual winner: Maren Lundby (2 times) • January 12 – 14: SJWC #10 in Tauplitz-Bad Mitterndorf • Note: ''The second men's individual event was cancelled.'' • Men's individual winner: Andreas Stjernen • January 18 – 21: SJWC #11 in Zaō, Miyagi • Women's individual winner: Maren Lundby (2 times) • Women's team winners: (Kaori Iwabuchi, Yūka Setō, Yuki Ito, & Sara Takanashi) • January 26 – 28: SJWC #12 in Ljubno ob Savinji • Women's individual winners: Maren Lundby (#1) / Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (#2) • January 26 – 28: SJWC #13 in Zakopane • Men's individual winner: Anže Semenič • Men's team winners: (Maciej Kot, Stefan Hula Jr., Dawid Kubacki, & Kamil Stoch) • February 2 – 4: SJWC #14 in HinzenbachEvent cancelled. • February 2 – 4: SJWC #15 in Willingen • Men's individual winners: Daniel-André Tande (#1) / Johann André Forfang (#2) • March 2 – 4: SJWC #16 in Lahti • Men's individual winner: Kamil Stoch • Men's team winners: (Karl Geiger, Markus Eisenbichler, Richard Freitag, & Andreas Wellinger) • March 2 – 4: SJWC #17 in Râșnov • Women's individual winners: Katharina Althaus (#1) / Maren Lundby (#2) • March 22 – 25: SJWC #22 in Planica • Men's individual winner: Kamil Stoch (2 times) • Men's team winners: (Daniel-André Tande, Andreas Stjernen, Robert Johansson, & Johann André Forfang) • March 23 – 25: SJWC #23 (final) in Oberstdorf • Women's individual winner: Sara Takanashi (2 times) ===2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup=== ;Summer • July 7 & 8, 2017: #1 in Kranj • Men's winners: Klemens Murańka (2 times) • August 18, 2017: #2 in Szczyrk • Men's winner: Aleksander Zniszczoł • August 18 & 19, 2017: #3 in Oberwiesenthal • Women's winners: Ramona Straub (#1) / Kamila Karpiel (#2) • August 18 & 19: #4 Frenštát pod Radhoštěm • Women's winners: Yuki Ito (#1) / Sara Takanashi (#2) • August 19, 2017: #5 in Wisła • Men's winner: Miran Zupančič • August 20, 2017: #6 in Frenštát pod Radhoštěm (Men's only) • Men's winner: Maximilian Steiner • September 9 & 10, 2017: #7 in Stams • Men's winners: Stefan Kraft (#1) / Daniel Huber (#2) • September 16 & 17, 2017: #8 in Trondheim • Men's winners: Pius Paschke (#1) / Timi Zajc (#2) • Women's winners: Juliane Seyfarth (2 times) • September 23 & 24, 2017: #9 in Râșnov • Men's winners: Pius Paschke (2 times) • September 30 & October 1, 2017: #10 in Klingenthal • Men's winners: Joachim Hauer (#1) / Tilen Bartol (#2) ;Winter • December 9 & 10, 2017: CC#11 in Whistler • Men's winners: Tomasz Pilch (#1) / Andreas Wank (#2) • December 15 & 16, 2017: CC #12 in Notodden • Women's winners: Lidiia Iakovleva (#1) / Aleksandra Barantceva (#2) • December 16 & 17, 2017: CC #13 in Rukatunturi • Men's winners: Tomasz Pilch (#1) / Jurij Tepeš (#2) • December 27 & 28, 2017: CC #14 in Engelberg • Men's winners: Jonathan Learoyd (#1) / Ulrich Wohlgenannt (#2) • January 6 & 7: CC #15 in Titisee-Neustadt • Men's winners: Marius Lindvik (#1) / David Siegel (#2) • January 10 & 11: CC #16 in Bischofshofen • Men's winners: Tom Hilde (#1) / David Siegel (#2) • January 20: CC #17 in Erzurum • Men's winners: David Siegel (#1) / Anže Lanišek (#2) • January 20 & 21: CC #18 in Planica #1 • Women's winners: Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (2 times) • January 26 & 29: CC #19 in Sapporo • Men's winners: Robert Kranjec (2 times) / Daniel Huber (#2) • February 3 & 4: CC #19 in Planica #2 • Men's winners: Anže Lanišek (2 times) • February 10 & 11: CC #20 in Iron Mountain, Michigan • Men's winners: Marius Lindvik (#1) / Halvor Egner Granerud (#2) ===2017 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix=== • July 13 – 15: #1 in Wisła • Men's winner: Dawid Kubacki • Teams winners: (Piotr Żyła, Kamil Stoch, Dawid Kubacki, Maciej Kot) • July 28 & 29: #2 in Hinterzarten • Men's winner: Dawid Kubacki • August 10 – 12: #3 in Courchevel • Winners: Dawid Kubacki (m) / Katharina Althaus (f) • August 25 – 27: #4 in Hakuba • Men's winners: Junshirō Kobayashi (2 times) • September 8 – 10: #5 in Chaykovsky • Men's winners: Anže Lanišek (2 times) • Women's winners: Sara Takanashi (2 times) • September 30 – October 1: #6 in Hinzenbach • Men's winners: Dawid Kubacki • October 2 & 3: #7 in Klingenthal • Men's winners: Dawid Kubacki ===2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup=== ;Summer • August 6 & 7, 2017: OPA #1 in Klingenthal • Women's winners: Julia Mühlbacher (#1) / Alexandra Seifert (#2) • August 9 & 10, 2017: OPA #2 in Pöhla • Women's winners: Lisa Eder (2 times) • August 11 & 12, 2017: OPA #3 in Bischofsgrün (Women's only) • Women's winners: Katra Komar (#1) / Lisa Eder (#2) • September 9 & 10, 2017: OPA #4 in Kandersteg • Men's winners: Aljaž Osterc (#1) / Sandro Hauswirth (#2) • September 23 & 24, 2017: OPA #5 in Predazzo • Men's winners: Justin Lisso (2 times) • Women's winners: Océane Paillard (2 times) ;Winter • December 15 – 17, 2017: OPA #6 in Seefeld in Tirol • Note: ''Second women's event here is cancelled''. • Men's winners: Clemens Leitner (#1) / Sandro Hauswirth (#2) • Women's winners: Jenny Nowak (#1) • January 13 & 14: OPA #7 in Hinterzarten • Men's winners: Jan Hoerl (2 times) • Women's winners: Jerneja Brecl (2 times) ===2017–18 FIS Cup=== ;Summer • July 1 & 2, 2017: FC #1 in Villach • Men's winners: Timi Zajc (#1) / Lukas Wagner (#2) • Women's winners: Nika Križnar (2 times) • August 12 & 13, 2017: FC #2 in Kuopio • Men's winners: Timi Zajc (2 times) • September 16 & 17, 2017: FC #3 in Kandersteg • Men's winners: Timi Zajc (#1) / Masamitsu Itō (#2) • Women's winners: Léa Lemare (#1) / Nika Križnar (#2) • September 21 & 22, 2017: FC #4 in Râșnov • Men's winners: Markus Rupitsch (#1) / Dominik Mayländer (#2) • Women's winners: Daniela Haralambie (2 times) ;Winter • December 7 & 8, 2017: FC #5 in Whistler • Men's winners: Elias Tollinger (#1) / Nejc Dežman (#2) • Women's winners: Abigail Strate (2 times) • December 15 & 16, 2017: FC #6 in Notodden • Men's winners: Sondre Ringen (#1) / Ulrich Wohlgenannt (#2) • January 13 & 14: FC #7 in Zakopane • Men's winners: Maximilian Steiner (#1) / Stefan Huber (#2) • January 20 & 21: FC #8 in Planica • Men's winners: Markus Schiffner (#1) / Dominik Mayländer (#2) • February 10 & 11: FC #9 in Breitenberg/Rastbüchl • Men's winners: Tomasz Pilch (2 times) • Women's winners: Agnes Reisch (2 times) ==Snowboarding==
[[Snowboarding]]
2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (SB) • February 10 – 24: Snowboarding at the 2018 Winter Olympics • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Nevin Galmarini; Lee Sang-ho; Žan Košir • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Ester Ledecká; Selina Jörg; Ramona Theresia Hofmeister • Men's Halfpipe winners: Shaun White; Ayumu Hirano; Scott James • Women's Halfpipe winners: Chloe Kim; Liu Jiayu; Arielle Gold • Men's Big Air winners: Sébastien Toutant; Kyle Mack; Billy Morgan • Women's Big Air winners: Anna Gasser; Jamie Anderson; Zoi Sadowski-Synnott • Men's Slopestyle winners: Redmond Gerard; Maxence Parrot; Mark McMorris • Women's Slopestyle winners: Jamie Anderson; Laurie Blouin; Enni Rukajärvi • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Pierre Vaultier; Jarryd Hughes; Regino Hernández • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Michela Moioli; Julia Pereira de Sousa Mabileau; Eva Samková • March 12 & 16: Snowboarding at the 2018 Winter Paralympics • '''Men's Banked Slalom winners:''' • SB-UL: Mike Minor; Patrick Mayrhofer; Simon Patmore • SB-LL1: Noah Elliott; Mike Schultz; Bruno Bošnjak • SB-LL2: Gurimu Narita; Evan Strong; Matti Suur-Hamari • '''Men's Snowboard Cross winners:''' • SB-UL: Simon Patmore; Manuel Pozzerle; Mike Minor • SB-LL1: Mike Schultz; Chris Vos; Noah Elliott • SB-LL2: Matti Suur-Hamari; Keith Gabel; Gurimu Narita • '''Women's Banked Slalom winners:''' • SB-LL1: Brenna Huckaby; Cécile Hernandez; Amy Purdy • SB-LL2: Bibian Mentel; Brittani Coury; Lisa Bunschoten • '''Women's Snowboard Cross winners:''' • SB-LL1: Brenna Huckaby; Amy Purdy; Cécile Hernandez • SB-LL2: Bibian Mentel; Lisa Bunschoten; Astrid Fina International events • March 2: Asian Cup (Snowboard) in Pyeongchang • Halfpipe winners: Lee Kwang-ki (m) / Sunoo Kwon (f) Alpine snowboarding • December 14, 2017: ASWC #1 in Carezza • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Andrey Sobolev (m) / Ester Ledecká (f) • December 15 & 16, 2017: ASWC #2 in Cortina d'Ampezzo • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Alexander Payer (m) / Ester Ledecká (f) • Parallel Slalom winners: Roland Fischnaller (m) / Sabine Schöffmann (f) • January 5: ASWC #3 in Lackenhof • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Nevin Galmarini (m) / Ester Ledecká (f) • January 12: ASWC #4 in Bad Gastein • Parallel Slalom winners: Dmitry Loginov (m) / Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (f) • January 20 & 21: ASWC #5 in Rogla Ski Resort • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Andreas Prommegger (#1) / Benjamin Karl (#2) • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Ester Ledecká (#1) / Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (#2) • January 26 & 28: ASWC #6 in Bansko • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Jasey-Jay Anderson (#1) / Nevin Galmarini (#2) • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Ester Ledecká (#1) / Julia Dujmovits (#2) • March 3: ASWC #7 in Kayseri • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Stefan Baumeister (m) / Milena Bykova (f) • March 10: ASWC #8 in Scuol • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Tim Mastnak (m) / Ester Ledecká (f) • March 17: ASWC #9 (final) in Winterberg • Parallel Slalom winners: Roland Fischnaller (m) / Selina Jörg (f) Snowboard cross • September 8 – 10, 2017: SBXWC #1 in Cerro Catedral • Men's Snowboard cross winner: Alex Pullin (2 times) • Women's Snowboard cross winners: Chloé Trespeuch (#1) / Lindsey Jacobellis (#2) • December 12 & 13, 2017: SBXWC #2 in Val Thorens • Snowboard cross winners: Paul Berg (m) / Lindsey Jacobellis (f) • December 15 – 17, 2017: SBXWC #3 in Montafon • Men's Snowboard cross winner: Jarryd Hughes • Women's Snowboard cross winner: Michela Moioli • Team winners: (Regino Hernández & Lucas Eguibar) (m) / (Chloé Trespeuch & Nelly Moenne Loccoz) (f) • December 21 & 22, 2017: SBXWC #4 in Breuil-Cervinia • Snowboard cross winners: Omar Visintin (m) / Michela Moioli (f) • January 20 & 21: SBXWC #5 in Erzurum • Snowboard cross winners: Omar Visintin (m) / Eva Samková (f) • Team winners: (Emanuel Perathoner & Omar Visintin) (m) / (Nelly Moenne Loccoz & Chloé Trespeuch) (f) • January 27: SBXWC #6 in Bansko • Snowboard cross winners: Pierre Vaultier (m) / Charlotte Bankes (f) • February 2 – 4: SBXWC #7 in Feldberg • Men's Snowboard cross winners: Julian Lueftner (#1) / Pierre Vaultier (#2) • Women's Snowboard cross winner: Michela Moioli (2 times) • March 2 & 3: SBXWC #8 in La Molina • Snowboard Cross winners: Alessandro Hämmerle (m) / Eva Samková (f) • March 10 & 11: SBXWC #9 in Moscow • Snowboard Cross winners: Alessandro Hämmerle (m) / Eva Samková (f) • Team winners: (Emanuel Perathoner & Omar Visintin) (m) / (Nelly Moenne Loccoz & Chloé Trespeuch) (f) • March 16 – 18: SBXWC #10 (final) in Veysonnaz • Snowboard Cross winners: Nate Holland (m) / Michela Moioli (f) • Team winners: (Paul Berg & Konstantin Schad) (m) / (Nelly Moenne Loccoz & Chloé Trespeuch) (f) Freestyle snowboarding • September 3 – 9, 2017: FSWC #1 in Cardrona Alpine Resort • Slopestyle winners: Marcus Kleveland (m) / Jamie Anderson (f) • Half-pipe winners: Yuto Totsuka (m) / Chloe Kim (f) • November 4, 2017: FSWC #2 in CopenhagenEvent cancelled. • November 11, 2017: FSWC #3 in Milan • Big Air winners: Chris Corning (m) / Anna Gasser (f) • November 24 & 25, 2017: FSWC #4 in Beijing • Big Air winners: Mark McMorris (m) / Anna Gasser (f) • December 2, 2017: FSWC #5 in Mönchengladbach • Big Air winners: Marcus Kleveland (m) / Carla Somaini (f) • December 7 – 10, 2017: FSWC #6 in Copper Mountain • Big Air winners: Mons Røisland (m) / Reira Iwabuchi (f) • Half-pipe winners: Ayumu Hirano (m) / Chloe Kim (f) • December 19 & 21, 2017: FSWC #7 in Genting Resort Secret Garden • Half-pipe winners: Ayumu Hirano (m) / Liu Jiayu (f) • January 10 – 13: FSWC #8 in Snowmass • Slopestyle winners: Redmond Gerard (m) / Christy Prior (f) • Half-pipe winners: Shaun White (m) / Queralt Castellet (f) • January 17 – 20: FSWC #9 in Laax • Note: The slopestyle events here were cancelled. • Half-pipe winners: Iouri Podladtchikov (m) / Liu Jiayu (f) • March 15 – 17: FSWC #10 in Seiser Alm • Slopestyle winners: Chris Corning (m) / Sofya Fyodorova (f) • March 23 & 24: FSWC #11 (final) in Stoneham Mountain Resort • Big Air winners: Maxence Parrot (m) / Julia Marino (f) 2017–18 European Cup (SB) • November 22 – 23, 2017: SBEC #1 in Landgraaf • Men's Slopestyle winners: Erik Bastiaansen (two times) • Women's Slopestyle winners: Evy Poppe (#1) / Annika Morgan (#2) • November 25 & 26, 2017: SBEC #2 in KaunertalEvent cancelled. • November 29 & 30, 2017: SBEC #3 in Sankt Leonhard im Pitztal • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Julian Lüftner (#1) / Nick Baumgartner (#2) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Rosina Mancari (#1) / Faye Gulini (#2) • December 9 & 10, 2017: SBEC #4 in Hochfügen • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Patrick Bussler (#1) / Michał Nowaczyk (#2) • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Selina Jörg (#1) / Sabine Schöffmann (#2) • January 13 & 14: SBEC #5 in Jasna • Men's Slopestyle winners: Gian Andrea Sutter (#1) / Noah Vicktor (#2) • Women's Slopestyle winners: Annika Morgan (2 times) • January 13 & 14: SBEC #6 in Isola 2000 • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Ken Vuagnoux (#1) / Jakob Dusek (#2) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Holly Roberts (#1) / Muriel Jost (#2) • January 19 & 21: SBEC #7 in Font Romeu • Big Air winners: Leon Vockensperger (m) / Lea Jugovac (f) • Slopestyle winners: Leon Vockensperger (m) / Lea Jugovac (f) • January 20 & 21: SBEC #8 in Lachtal • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Daniele Bagozza (2 times) • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Jemima Juritz (#1) / Alexandra Vlasenko (#2) • January 23 & 24: SBEC #9 in Vars • Slopestyle winners: Gian Andrea Sutter (m) / Ariane Burri (f) • Big Air winners: Leon Vockensperger (m) / Katarzyna Rusin (f) • January 27 & 28: SBEC #10 in Crans-Montana • Halfpipe winners: Elias Allenspach (m) / Kaja Verdnik (f) • Big Air winners: Enzo Valax (m) / Lia-Mara Bösch (f) • January 27 & 28: SBEC #11 in Grasgehren • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Florian Gregor (#1) / Jakob Dusek (#2) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Alexia Queyrel (#1) / Sofia Belingheri (#2) • January 3 & 4: SBEC #12 in Puy-Saint-Vincent • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Jakob Dusek (#1) / Luca Hämmerle (#2) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Muriel Jost (2 times) • February 10 & 11: SBEC #13 in PamporovoThis event was cancelled. • February 10 & 11: SBEC #14 in Lenzerheide • Men's Parallel Slalom winners: Maurizio Bormolini (#1) / Daniele Bagozza (#2) • Women's Parallel Slalom winners: Larissa Gasser (#1) / Jemima Juritz (#2) • February 18: SBEC #15 in Sarajevo • Big Air winners: Enzo Valax (m) / Thalie Larochaix (f) • February 23 & 24: SBEC #16 in Davos • Halfpipe winners: Viktor Ivanov (m) / Verena Rohrer (f) • February 25 & 26: SBEC #17 in Kopaonik • Men's Big Air winners: Enzo Valax (#1) • Women's Big Air winners: Lea Jugovac (#1) • Note: Second events of Big Air here is cancelled. • March 1 – 3: SBEC #18 in Götschen • Big Air winners: Leon Vockensperger (m) / Loranne Smans (f) • March 10: SBEC #19 in Pec pod Sněžkou • Slopestyle winners: Nicola Liviero (m) / Katarzyna Rusin (f) • March 9 – 11: SBEC #20 in Lenk • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Matthew Thomas (2 times) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Hanna Ihedioha (#1) / Alexia Queyrel (#2) • March 10 & 11: SBEC #21 in Tauplitz • Men's Parallel Slalom winners: Johann Stefaner (2 times) • Women's Parallel Slalom winners: Maria Valova (#1) / Jemima Juritz (#2) 2017–18 North American Cup (SB) • December 9 & 10, 2017: NAC #1 in Steamboat Ski Resort • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Steven MacCutcheon (m) / Millie Bongiorno • Parallel Slalom winners: Christian De Oliveira (m) / Jennifer Hawkrigg (f) • December 11 – 16, 2017:: NAC #2 in Copper Mountain • Men's Halfpipe winners: Raibu Katayama (#1) / Yūto Totsuka (#2) • Women's Halfpipe winners: Torah Bright (#1) / Kurumi Imai (#2) • December 15 – 17, 2017:: NAC #3 in Buck Hill • Men's Parallel Slalom winners: William Taylor (#1) / Richard-Riley Kilmer-Choi (#2) / Dylan Udolf (#3) • Women's Parallel Slalom winners: Jennifer Hawkrigg (2 times) / Karina Bladon (#3) • January 3 – 5: NAC #4 in Le Relais • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Michael Nazwaski (#1) / Arnaud Gaudet (#2) • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Millie Bongiorno (#1) / Jennifer Hawkrigg (#2) • January 23 & 24: NAC #5 in Sun Peaks Resort • Men's Slopestyle winners: Liam Gill (#1) / Liam Brearley (#2) • Women's Slopestyle winners: Jasmine Baird (#1) / Sommer Gendron (#2) • January 26 – 28: NAC #6 in Big White Ski Resort • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Danny Bourgeois (2 times) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Emilie-Kate Robinson-Leith (2 times) • January 31 – February 2: NAC #7 in Holiday Valley • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Arnaud Gaudet (#1) / Jules Lefebvre (#2) • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Megan Farrell (2 times) • February 4 – 9: NAC #8 in Blue Mountain Resort • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Darren Gardner (m) / Megan Farrell (f) • Parallel Slalom winners: Sebastien Beaulieu (m) / Megan Farrell (f) • February 7 – 9: NAC #9 in Craigleith • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Senna Leith (2 times) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Elise Turner (#1) / Stacy Gaskill (#2) • February 8 – 10: NAC #10 in Mount St-Louis Moonstone • Slopestyle winners: Nicolas Laframboise (m) / Jasmine Baird (f) • Halfpipe winners: Jack Collins (m) / Taylor Obregon (f) • February 12 – 15: NAC #11 in Sunday River • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Danny Bourgeois (2 times) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Emily Boyce (#1) / Anna Miller (#2) • February 20 – 22: NAC #12 in Toronto • Men's Parallel Slalom winners: Robert Burns (2 times) • Women's Parallel Slalom winners: Megan Farrell (2 times) • February 21 – 23: NAC #13 in Mont Original • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Liam Moffatt (#1) / Danny Bourgeois (#2) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Danielle Steinhoff (#1) / Emily Boyce (#2) • February 27 & 28: NAC #14 in Park City • Halfpipe winners: Chase Blackwell (m) / Anna Valentine (f) • Slopestyle winners: Lyon Farrell (m) / Courtney Rummel (f) • March 5 – 8: NAC #15 in Sugarloaf • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Henry Collins (#1) / Danny Bourgeois (#2) • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Stacy Gaskill (#1) / Anna Miller (#2) • March 5 – 11: NAC #16 in Canada Olympic Park, AB • Halfpipe winners: Shawn Fair (m) / Calynn Irwin (f) • Slopestyle winners: William Buffey (m) / Jasmine Baird (f) 2017 South American Cup (SB) • August 11 & 12: SAC #1 in La Parva #1 • Slopestyle #1 winners: Federico Chiaradio (m) / Antonia Yáñez (f) • Slopestyle #2 winners: Matias Schmitt (m) / Antonia Yáñez (f) • August 25 & 26: SAC #2 in La Parva #2 • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Kevin Hill (m) / Meryeta Odine (f) • Snowboardcross #2 here is cancelled • September 4 & 5: SAC #3 in Corralco (part of XXIII Brazilian Snowboard Championships) • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Markus Schairer (m) / Isabel Clark Ribeiro (f) • Snowboardcross #2 here is cancelled • September 12 & 13: SAC #4 in Cerro Catedral • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Danny Bourgeois (m) / Simona Meiler (f) • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Danny Bourgeois (m) / Anna Miller (f) • September 17 & 18: SAC #5 in Cerro Catedral • Big Air #1 winners: Martín Jaureguialzo (m) / Macarena Valle (f) • Big Air #2 winners: Martín Jaureguialzo (m) / Sandra Isabel Hillen Rodriguez (f) 2017 Australia & New Zealand Cup (SB) • July 26 – 28: SBANC #1 in Mount Hotham #1 • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Cameron Bolton (m) / Georgia Baff (f) • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Alex Pullin (m) / Georgia Baff (f) • August 15 – 17: SBANC #2 in Cardrona (part of FIS Continental Cup) • Halfpipe winners: Naito Ando (m) / Emily Arthur (f) • Slopestyle winners: Matthew Cox (m) / Reira Iwabuchi (f) • August 24 – 27: SBANC #3 in Mount Hotham #2 • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Alex Pullin (m) / Emily Boyce (f) • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Alex Pullin (m) / Emily Boyce (f) ==Telemark skiing==
[[Telemark skiing]]
FIS Telemark Junior World Ski Championships • March 19 – 25: 2018 FIS Junior World Ski Championships (TS) in Mürren-Schilthorn • Sprint winners: Romain Beney (m) / Kaja Bjoernstad Konow (f) • Classic winners: Noe Claye (m) / Chloe Blyth (f) • Parallel Sprint winners: Louis Uber (m) / Goril Strom Eriksen (f) • Mixed Team Parallel Sprint winners: 2017–18 FIS Telemark World Cup • December 1 – 3, 2017: TSWC #1 in Hintertux • Men's Sprint winners: Bastien Dayer (#1) / Nicolas Michel (#2) • Women's Sprint winners: Beatrice Zimmermann (#1) / Johanna Holzmann (#2) • Parallel Sprint winners: Bastien Dayer (m) / Johanna Holzmann (f) • January 12 & 13: TSWC #2 in Pralognan-la-Vanoise • Sprint winners: Nicolas Michel (m) / Johanna Holzmann (f) • Classic winners: Stefan Matter (m) / Argeline Tan Bouquet (f) • January 20 – 22: TSWC #3 in Suicide Six • Men's Sprint winners: Jure Ales (#1) / Nicolas Michel (#2) • Women's Sprint winners: Jasmin Taylor (#1) / Simone Oehrli (#2) • Parallel Sprint winners: Nicolas Michel (m) / Johanna Holzmann (f) • January 24 – 26: TSWC #4 in Sugarbush Resort • Classic #1 winners: Jure Ales (m) / Jasmin Taylor (f) • Classic #2 winners: Philippe Lau (m) / Argeline Tan Bouquet (f) • Sprint winners: Philippe Lau (m) / Argeline Tan Bouquet (f) • February 3 & 4: TSWC #5 in Bad Hindelang-Oberjoch • Sprint winners: Philippe Lau (m) / Beatrice Zimmermann (f) • Parallel Sprint winners: Nicolas Michel (m) / Johanna Holzmann (f) • February 7 & 8: TSWC #6 in Krvavec Ski Resort • Note: The sprint events here were cancelled. • Parallel Sprint winners: Stefan Matter (m) / Jasmin Taylor (f) • March 14 – 17: TSWC #7 in Rjukan • Sprint #1 winners: Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) / Martina Wyss (f) • Sprint #2 winners: Philippe Lau (m) / Argeline Tan Bouquet (f) • Men's Parallel Sprint winners: Trym Nygaard Loeken (#1) / Jure Ales (#2) • Women's Parallel Sprint winner: Johanna Holzmann (2 times) • March 19 – 25: TSWC #8 (final) in Mürren-Schilthorn (part of FIS Telemark Junior World Championships) • Sprint winners: Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) / Johanna Holzmann (f) • Classic winners: Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) / Beatrice Zimmermann (f) • Parallel Sprint winners: Philippe Lau (m) / Jasmin Taylor (f) • Mixed Team Parallel Sprint winners: ==References==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com