
Swiss sweep again as Von Allmen beats Odermatt in World Cup downhill, takes title race to U.S. finale
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In yet another Swiss duel in World Cup men's downhills, Franjo von Allmen edged teammate Marco Odermatt to win Saturday and send their season-long title contest to the final race in the United States.
Von Allmen, the new world champion aged just 23, finished 0.28 seconds ahead of Odermatt, who needed an agile recovery midway down the 1994 Olympics slope at Kvitfjell, Norway to stay upright.
Stefan Rogentin completed a Swiss sweep of the podium in third, trailing 0.38 behind Von Allmen.
Toronto's Jack Crawford (1:46.33) finished eighth as the top Canadian, 0.87 seconds off the pace.
WATCH l Crawford finishes 8th at Kvitfjell:
Canada's James Crawford finishes 8th at Kvitfjell World Cup downhill race
43 minutes ago
Duration 2:19
Toronto's James Crawford was the top Canadian in the men's downhill race from Kvitfjell, Norway.
Switzerland waited 29 years to finish 1-2-3 in a World Cup men's downhill at Crans-Montana on Feb. 22. The next one came just 14 days later.
Both times Von Allmen won and Odermatt was runner-up. Odermatt smiled in the finish area Saturday and as a show of respect pointed toward his good friend sitting course-side in the leader's box.
In both of Odermatt's downhill wins this season — at Val Gardena, Italy in December and storied Swiss venue Wengen in January — Von Allmen was second.
Von Allmen earned 100 World Cup points and Odermatt got 80. That cut Odermatt's lead in the downhill standings to 83 and he needs just a top-14 result on March 22 at Sun Valley, Idaho, to retain his downhill title.
"The fight is almost lost," Von Allmen acknowledged, "but everything can happen. We will see what Marco shows us and what I can show in Sun Valley."
Odermatt is cruising toward a fourth straight overall World Cup title with a 520-point lead over Henrik Kristoffersen, who races only in slalom and giant slalom. The 27-year-old Odermatt can confirm his title Sunday by winning a scheduled super-G.
Von Allmen's breakout season now counts two wins in World Cup downhills, one in super-G and two worlds gold medals last month at Saalbach, Austria, in downhill and team combined.
He clocked the fastest speed Saturday at close to 130 kph (81 mph) — slicker than the squirrels caught on camera scampering across the snow to the forest behind the safety fences — on the 3.04-kilometer (1.9-mile) course used at the 1994 Lillehammer Winter Games.
Von Allmen said he was more at ease than when finishing fourth in the downhill on Friday, racing then on softer snow in the sunshine, when he landed a wild, long jump.
"Today with the cold temperatures and compact snow it felt much better," he said.
Italian star Dominik Paris had denied Switzerland victory in Friday's downhill when Odermatt was second and Rogentin third. Paris placed sixth Saturday trailing 0.59 behind Von Allmen.
Sun Valley stages the week-long World Cup finals meeting for men and women from March 22-27 — returning to the circuit for the first time since 1977, when just slalom and giant slalom were raced.

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Article content For Canadian soccer fans, the Iceteca was more than just the seminal moment in Canada's incipient and unexpected run to the World Cup. It was magical. Article content Cyle Larin's brace. Sam Adekugbe's effervescent leap into the pile of sideline snow. The -9°C temperatures. The first win in 45 years over Mexico in a World Cup qualifier. The emergence as The Team to beat in North America. Article content The 2-1 triumph, the first over Mexico in 20 years, boosted Les Rouges atop the qualifying table. It was 376 days before Canada would ultimately kick off against Belgium at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, their first trip to the tournament since 1986. Article content Article content Article content The one-year countdown to the 2026 World Cup ticked over in a grand ceremony and clock unveiling at B.C. Place this past Wednesday, the same stadium Canada will play its first game of the Gold Cup tournament against Honduras on Tuesday. Article content Article content The stakes are different this time. In 2021, it was excitement and a team oozing with confidence, having overcome incredible odds to emerge as the region's best team. Article content The confidence is still there, but those plucky, fabulous underdogs have grown up. Article content 'A lot of the guys have experience from the last World Cup and we just need to keep that same rhythm we had throughout that year and bring it in to the World Cup. … We want to do something special there,' said forward Cyle Larin. 'I think the more you do well, the more that people expect. When you start playing better, doing well, scoring goals, winning games … it's (raised) expectations. And the more we go up in the rankings in the world … people expect more. That's the level we want.' Article content Article content In qualifying for the last World Cup, Canada had to basically start from scratch when the process was changed because of COVID. The top four-ranked CONCACAF teams got a bye into the final round — the eight-team Octagonal — while Canada had to scratch and claw its way through two preliminary rounds. The team responded by setting a slew of records, including an unprecedented 17-game unbeaten streak, as they stormed through the field, eventually finishing as Kings of CONCACAF. Article content Article content As a host nation for 2026, there will be no qualifying drama. Their spot is assured. Their focus is solely on winning, momentum and peaking in the summer of 2026. Article content 'I think everybody knows how important this summer is and what it means for next summer,' head coach Jesse Marsch said. 'I've explained my feelings about this tournament to the team over the last months, but I didn't really have to. They all said to me, 'We're coming. We want to win it.' And so that's a big statement, but that's how they feel. And I'm glad that I coach a team that feels that way.'