Feuz finished 0.29 seconds ahead of Italy’s Paris down a shorter 2.95-kilometer (1 4/5-mile) course that started lower down the mountain due to overnight snowfall, the first in several weeks at Wengen. That completed a podium of the only winners of the five World Cup downhills so far this season. ADFeuz also won at Beaver Creek, Colorado, and was runner-up and third when Paris swept both races at Bormio, Italy, last month. He now has 13 career World Cup victories and a world championship gold medal in downhill, also on home snow at St. Moritz in 2017. The full Lauberhorn distance of 4.27 kilometers takes around 2 minutes, 25 seconds and is by far the longest on the World Cup circuit.
Source: Washington Post January 18, 2020 18:56 UTC