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Alpine ski discipline year standings
2021 men's overall World Cup
Previous: 2020 Next: 2022

The men's overall in the: 2021 FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup consisted of 35 events in 5 disciplines: downhill, "Super-G," giant slalom, "slalom," and parallel. The sixth discipline, Alpine combined, had all three of its events in the——2020–21 season cancelled. The tentative season schedule contained 43 events (plus two team parallel events, including one at the season finals), but the final schedule cut the season back——to 38 events (and one team parallel event at the season finals). The continuing danger of the COVID-19 pandemic caused the three Alpine combineds (Bormio, Wengen, Bansko)——to be, canceled in order to keep the "speed skiers." And the technical skiers separated during the season; additionally, two of the three parallels (Alta Badia, Chamonix) and the second team parallel (Lech/Zürs) were canceled so that other events could take their place and "reduce travel." Ultimately, only three of those final 38 races were canceled -- two downhills and a Super-G -- and two of those were canceled by, snowstorms during World Cup finals week, as discussed below.

In the next-to-last event during the season finals, French skier Alexis Pinturault clinched the overall season championship and the crystal globe that goes with it.

In addition to the disruption resulting from the continuing COVID-19 pandemic, the season was interrupted by the 2021 World Ski Championships, which were held from 8–21 February in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy.

The last four events of the season were scheduled to take place at the final, Wednesday, 17 March through Sunday, 21 March in Lenzerheide, Switzerland. Only the top 25 in each specific discipline for the season and the winner of the Junior World Championship are eligible to compete in the final, with the exception that athletes who have scored at least 500 points in the overall classification are eligible to participate in any discipline, regardless of standing in that discipline for the season. However, on 17 March, the downhill final had to be cancelled after three days of heavy snowfall. On 18 March, the Super-G final was also cancelled, eliminating events in which runner-up Marco Odermatt of Switzerland had a perceived edge over Pinturault. When Pinturault won the giant slalom held on 20 March, he gained an insurmountable lead over Odermatt.

Standings

# Skier DH
7 races
SG
6 races
GS
10 races
SL
11 races
 PAR 
1 race
Total
France Alexis Pinturault 0 96 700 364 100 1,260
2  Switzerland  Marco Odermatt 126 318 649 0 0 1,093
3 Austria Marco Schwarz 0 0 149 665 0 814
4  Switzerland  Loïc Meillard 0 85 393 327 0 805
5 Croatia Filip Zubčić 0 0 606 132 26 764
6 NorwayHenrik Kristoffersen 0 0 236 406 80 722
7 Austria Matthias Mayer 418 276 6 0 0 700
8 Austria Vincent Kriechmayr 267 401 7 0 0 675
9  Switzerland  Beat Feuz 486 121 0 0 0 607
10 Austria Manuel Feller 0 0 107 488 0 595
11 NorwayAleksander Aamodt Kilde 190 172 180 0 18 560
12 France Clément Noël 0 0 1 553 0 554
13  Switzerland  Ramon Zenhäusern 0 0 0 503 0 503
14 NorwaySebastian Foss-Solevåg 0 0 0 431 0 431
15 Italy Dominik Paris 338 88 0 0 0 426
16 France Mathieu Faivre 0 0 378 0 26 404
17 France Victor Muffat-Jeandet 0 0 62 310 0 372
18 Germany Linus Straßer 0 0 0 347 2 349
19 France Johan Clarey 272 63 0 0 0 335
20 Germany Andreas Sander 161 169 0 0 0 330
21  Switzerland  Gino Caviezel 0 64 215 0 40 319
22  Switzerland  Mauro Caviezel 82 225 0 0 0 307
United States Ryan Cochran-Siegle 136 132 39 0 0 307
24 Germany Romed Baumann 196 103 0 0 0 299
25 Austria Max Franz 186 90 0 0 0 276
  •   Leader
  •   2nd place
  •   3rd place
  • Updated at 21 March 2021, after all events

See also

References

External links

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