Movatterモバイル変換
[0]
ホーム
URL:
画像なし
夜間モード
Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Contents
Current events
Random article
About Wikipedia
Contact us
Contribute
Help
Learn to edit
Community portal
Recent changes
Upload file
Special pages
Search
Search
Appearance
Donate
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Donate
Create account
Log in
Contents
move to sidebar
hide
(Top)
1
Alpine skiing
Toggle Alpine skiing subsection
1.1
FIS World Championships (AS)
1.2
2018–19 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup
1.3
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing European Cup
1.4
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing Nor-Am Cup
1.5
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing Far East Cup
1.6
2018 FIS Alpine Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
1.7
2018 FIS Alpine Skiing South American Cup
1.8
2018 FIS Grass Skiing World Cup & Junior World Championship
2
Biathlon
Toggle Biathlon subsection
2.1
International biathlon championships
2.2
2018–19 Biathlon World Cup
2.3
2018–19 IBU Cup
2.4
2018–19 IBU Junior Cup
3
Cross-country skiing
Toggle Cross-country skiing subsection
3.1
International cross-country skiing events
3.2
2018–19 Tour de Ski
3.3
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country World Cup
3.4
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Alpen Cup
3.5
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Eastern Europe Cup
3.6
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing US Super Tour
3.7
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Nor-Am Cup
3.8
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Slavic Cup
3.9
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Far East Cup
3.10
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Scandinavian Cup
3.11
2019 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Balkan Cup
3.12
2018 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
4
Freestyle skiing
Toggle Freestyle skiing subsection
4.1
World championships (Freestyle)
4.2
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup
4.2.1
Moguls and Aerials
4.2.2
Half-pipe, Big air, and Slopestyle
4.2.3
Ski cross
4.3
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing Europa Cup
4.4
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing Nor-Am Cup
4.5
2018 FIS Freestyle Skiing South American Cup
4.6
2018 FIS Freestyle Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
5
Nordic combined
Toggle Nordic combined subsection
5.1
International Nordic combined events
5.2
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup
5.3
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined Continental Cup
5.4
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined Alpen Cup
5.5
2018 FIS Nordic Combined Grand Prix
6
Nordic skiing
7
Ski jumping
Toggle Ski jumping subsection
7.1
International ski jumping events
7.2
2018–19 Four Hills Tournament
7.3
Raw Air 2019
7.4
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
7.5
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup
7.6
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup
7.7
2018 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix
7.8
2018 FIS Ski Jumping Cup
7.9
Other ski jumping events
8
Snowboarding
Toggle Snowboarding subsection
8.1
Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships
8.2
Alpine snowboarding
8.3
Snowboard cross
8.4
Freestyle snowboarding
8.5
2018–19 FIS Snowboard Europa Cup
8.6
2018–19 FIS Snowboard Nor-Am Cup
8.7
2018 FIS Snowboard South American Cup
8.8
2018 FIS Snowboard Australia & New Zealand Cup
9
Telemark skiing
Toggle Telemark skiing subsection
9.1
Telemark Skiing World Championships
9.2
2019 Telemark Skiing World Cup
10
References
11
External links
Toggle the table of contents
2018–19 in skiing
Add languages
Add links
Article
Talk
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Permanent link
Page information
Cite this page
Get shortened URL
Download QR code
Print/export
Download as PDF
Printable version
In other projects
Wikidata item
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from
2019 in skiing
)
This article is about the 2018–19 snow skiing events and results. For other sports' results, see
2019 in sports
.
Overview of the events of 2019 in skiing
Years in skiing
←
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
→
2019 in sports
Air sports
American football
Aquatic sports
Association football
Athletics
Australian rules football
Badminton
Baseball
Basketball
Canadian football
Chess
Climbing
Combat sports
Sumo
Cricket
2018–19
2019
2019–20
Cycling
Dance sports
Darts
Equestrianism
Esports
Field hockey
Flying disc
Golf
Gymnastics
Handball
Ice hockey
Ice sports
Korfball
Lumberjack sports
Mind sports
Modern pentathlon
Motorsport
Orienteering
Paralympic sports
Precision sports
Shooting
Racquetball
Roller sports
Sailing
Skiing
Speedway
Rugby league
Rugby union
Snooker
2018–19
2019–20
Strength sports
Weightlifting
Squash
Table tennis
Tennis
Triathlon
Volleyball
Alpine skiing
[
edit
]
FIS World Championships (AS)
[
edit
]
February 5 – 17:
FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019
in
Åre
[
1
]
[
2
]
Alpine Combined winners:
Alexis Pinturault
(m) /
Wendy Holdener
(f)
Downhill winners:
Kjetil Jansrud
(m) /
Ilka Štuhec
(f)
Giant Slalom winners:
Henrik Kristoffersen
(m) /
Petra Vlhová
(f)
Slalom winners:
Marcel Hirscher
(m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin
(f)
Super G winners:
Dominik Paris
(m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
Alpine Team Event winners:
Switzerland
(
Aline Danioth
, Wendy Holdener,
Daniel Yule
, &
Ramon Zenhäusern
)
February 18 – 27:
World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2019
in
Fassa Valley
[
3
]
[
4
]
Junior Giant Slalom winners:
River Radamus (m) /
Alice Robinson
(f)
Junior Slalom winners:
Alex Vinatzer
(m) /
Meta Hrovat
(f)
Junior Downhill winners:
Lars Roesti (m) /
Juliana Suter (f)
Junior Super G winners:
River Radamus (m) /
Hannah Saethereng (f)
Junior Alpine Combined winners:
Tobias Hedstroem (m) /
Nicole Good (f)
Junior Mixed Alpine Team Event winners:
France
(Marie Lamure, Jeremie Lagier, Doriane Escane, & Augustin Bianchini)
2018–19 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
October 2018
October 27 & 28: ASWC #1 in
Sölden
Note:
The men's giant slalom event was cancelled, due to huge amounts of snow.
[
5
]
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Tessa Worley
November 2018
November 17 & 18: ASWC #2 in
Levi
Slalom winners:
Marcel Hirscher
(m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin
(f)
November 21 – 25: ASWC #3 in
Lake Louise Ski Resort
#1
Men's Downhill winner:
Max Franz
Men's Super G winner:
Kjetil Jansrud
November 24 & 25: ASWC #4 in
Killington Ski Resort
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Federica Brignone
Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
November 27 – December 2: ASWC #5 in
Lake Louise Ski Resort #2
Women's Downhill winner:
Nicole Schmidhofer
(2 times)
Women's Super G winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
November 27 – December 2: ASWC #6 in
Beaver Creek Resort
Men's Super G winner:
Max Franz
Men's Downhill winner:
Beat Feuz
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Stefan Luitz
December 2018
December 8 & 9: ASWC #8 in
Val-d'Isère
#1
Note:
The men's slalom event was cancelled.
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
December 8 & 9: ASWC #7 in
St. Moritz
Women's Super G & Parallel Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
December 12 – 15: ASWC #9 in
Val Gardena
#1
Men's Super G winner:
Aksel Lund Svindal
Men's Downhill winner:
Aleksander Aamodt Kilde
December 16 & 17: ASWC #10 in
Alta Badia
Men's Giant Slalom & Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
December 17 – 20: ASWC #11 in
Val Gardena #2
Note:
The women's alpine combined event was cancelled.
Women's Downhill & Super G winner:
Ilka Štuhec
December 19 & 20: ASWC #12 in
Saalbach-Hinterglemm
[
6
]
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Žan Kranjec
Men's Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
December 21 & 22: ASWC #13 in
Courchevel
Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
December 22: ASWC #14 in
Madonna di Campiglio
Men's Slalom winner:
Daniel Yule
December 26 – 29: ASWC #15 in
Bormio
Men's Downhill & Super G winner:
Dominik Paris
December 28 & 29: ASWC #16 in
Semmering
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
January 2019
January 1: ASWC #17 in
Oslo
City Event winners:
Marco Schwarz
(m) /
Petra Vlhová (f)
January 5 & 6: ASWC #18 in
Zagreb
Slalom winners:
Marcel Hirscher (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
January 8: ASWC #19 in
Flachau
Women's Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
January 10 – 13: ASWC #20 in
St Anton am Arlberg
Event cancelled.
January 12 & 13: ASWC #21 in
Adelboden
Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
January 15: ASWC #22 in
Kronplatz
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
January 15 – 20: ASWC #23 in
Wengen
Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Marco Schwarz
Men's Downhill winner:
Vincent Kriechmayr
Men's Slalom winner:
Clément Noël
January 17 – 20: ASWC #24 in
Cortina d'Ampezzo
Women's Downhill winner:
Ramona Siebenhofer
(2 times)
Women's Super G winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
January 22 – 27: ASWC #25 in
Kitzbühel
Men's Downhill winner:
Dominik Paris
Men's Slalom winner:
Clément Noël
Men's Super G winner:
Josef Ferstl
January 24 – 27: ASWC #26 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
#1
Women's Super G winner:
Nicole Schmidhofer
Women's Downhill winner:
Stephanie Venier
January 29: ASWC #27 in
Schladming
Men's Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
January 31 – February 3: ASWC #28 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen #2
Event cancelled.
February 2019
February 1 & 2: ASWC #29 in
Maribor
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
February 19: ASWC #30 in
Stockholm
City Event winners:
Ramon Zenhäusern
(m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
February 21 – 24: ASWC #31 in
Crans-Montana
Women's Downhill winner:
Sofia Goggia
Women's Alpine Combined winner:
Federica Brignone
February 22 – 24: ASWC #32 in
Bansko
Note:
The men's super G event here was cancelled.
Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Alexis Pinturault
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Henrik Kristoffersen
February 27 – March 3: ASWC #33 in
Rosa Khutor Alpine Resort
Event cancelled.
February 28 – March 3: ASWC #34 in
Kvitfjell
Note:
The second men's downhill event here was cancelled.
Men's Downhill & Super G winner:
Dominik Paris
March 2019
March 8 & 9: ASWC #35 in
Špindlerův Mlýn
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
March 9 & 10: ASWC #36 in
Kranjska Gora Ski Resort
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Henrik Kristoffersen
Men's Slalom winner:
Ramon Zenhäusern
March 11 – 17: ASWC #37 (final) in
Soldeu
Downhill winners:
Dominik Paris (m) /
Mirjam Puchner
(f)
Super G winners:
Dominik Paris (m) /
Viktoria Rebensburg
(f)
Team Alpine Event winners:
Switzerland
(
Aline Danioth
,
Wendy Holdener
, Daniel Yule, & Ramon Zenhäusern)
Giant Slalom winners:
Alexis Pinturault (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
Slalom winners:
Clément Noël (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing European Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
November 2018
November 29 & 30: ECAS #1 in
Levi
Men's Slalom winners:
Sandro Simonet (#1) /
Alex Vinatzer
(#2)
November 30 & December 1: ECAS #2 in
Funäsdalen
#1
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Kristine Gjelsten Haugen
(#1) /
Julia Scheib (#2)
December 2018
December 3 & 4: ECAS #3 in
Trysil
Women's Slalom winners:
Ylva Staalnacke (#1) /
Nastasia Noens
(#2)
December 4 & 5: ECAS #4 in
Funäsdalen #2
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Simon Maurberger (#1) /
Fabian Wilkens Solheim
(#2)
December 6 & 7: ECAS #5 in
Kvitfjell
Women's Super G winner:
Christina Ager
Women's Alpine Combined winner:
Anne-Sophie Barthet
December 11 & 12: ECAS #6 in
St. Moritz
Note:
The men's alpine combined event here was cancelled.
Men's Super G winners:
Marco Odermatt
(#1) /
Stefan Rogentin (#2)
December 13 & 14: ECAS #7 in
Andalo
-
Paganella
#1
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Maryna Gąsienica-Daniel
(2 times)
December 17 & 18: ECAS #8 in
Andalo-Paganella #2
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Cedric Noger (#1) /
Lucas Braathen
(#2)
December 17 – 21: ECAS #9 in
Zauchensee
Women's Downhill winner:
Nadia Delago (2 times)
Women's Super G winner:
Elisabeth Reisinger
Men's Super G winners:
Gino Caviezel
(#1) /
Stefan Babinsky (#2)
December 19: ECAS #10 in
Obereggen
Men's Slalom winner:
Istok Rodeš
December 21 & 22: ECAS #11 in
Saalbach-Hinterglemm
Event cancelled.
January 2019
January 6 & 7: ECAS #12 in
Val-Cenis
Men's Slalom winner:
Simon Maurberger (2 times)
January 9 – 12: ECAS #13 in
Wengen
Note:
The second men's downhill event here was cancelled.
Men's Downhill winner:
Mattia Casse
January 11 & 12: ECAS #14 in
Göstling
-
Hochkar
Event cancelled.
January 14 & 15: ECAS #15 in
Reiteralm
Event cancelled.
January 15 – 18: ECAS #16 in
Fassa Valley
Women's Downhill winners:
Elisabeth Reisinger (#1) /
Nadia Delago (#2)
January 17: ECAS #17 in
Kronplatz
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Lucas Braathen
January 19 – 21: ECAS #18 in
Kitzbühel
Men's Downhill winner:
Daniel Danklmaier
January 21 & 22: ECAS #19 in
Zinal
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Franziska Gritsch (#1) /
Ylva Staalnacke (#2)
January 23 & 24: ECAS #20 in
Courchevel
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Lucas Braathen (#1) /
Stefan Brennsteiner
(#2)
January 24 & 25: ECAS #21 in
Melchsee-Frutt
Women's Slalom winners:
Meta Hrovat
(#1) /
Marlene Schmotz (#2)
January 27 – 30: ECAS #22 in
Chamonix
Men's Downhill winner:
Victor Schuller (2 times)
January 28 & 29: ECAS #23 in
Les Diablerets
Women's Alpine Combined winner:
Nicole Good
Women's Super G winner:
Elisabeth Reisinger (2 times)
January 31 & February 1: ECAS #24 in
Tignes
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Lindy Etzensperger
Parallel Slalom winners:
Pirmin Hacker (m) /
Marie Lamure (f)
February 2019
February 4 & 5: ECAS #25 in
Gstaad
-Saanenland
Men's Slalom winners:
Istok Rodeš (#1) /
Jonathan Nordbotten
(#2)
February 4 & 5: ECAS #26 in
Obdach
Women's Slalom winners:
Katharina Huber (#1) /
Gabriela Capová
(#2)
February 9 & 10: ECAS #27 in
Berchtesgaden
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Alice Robinson
(#1) /
Kaja Norbye (#2)
February 11 – 15: ECAS #28 in
Sarntal
Men's Downhill winners:
Thomas Biesemeyer
(#1) /
Christopher Neumayer (#2)
Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Christof Brandner
Men's Super G winner:
Davide Cazzaniga
February 14 – 17: ECAS #29 in
Crans-Montana
Women's Downhill winner:
Elisabeth Reisinger (2 times)
February 28 – March 2: ECAS #30 in
Oberjoch
Note:
Both men's slalom events here were cancelled.
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Andrea Ballerin
March 2019
March 2 & 3: ECAS #31 in
Jasná
Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
March 5 – 7: ECAS #32 in
Hinterstoder
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Bjørnar Neteland
March 11 & 12: ECAS #33 in
Kranjska Gora
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Hannes Zingerle
Men's Slalom winner:
Jonathan Nordbotten
March 11 – 17: ECAS #34 in
Sella Nevea
Men's Super G winner:
Roy Piccard (2 times)
Women's Super G winner:
Roberta Melesi
Downhill winners:
Urs Kryenbühl
(m) /
Priska Nufer
(f)
Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Simon Maurberger
March 16 & 17: ECAS #35 (final) in
Folgaria
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Julia Scheib
Women's Slalom winner:
Charlie Guest
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing Nor-Am Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 3 – 7, 2018: SNAC #1 in
Lake Louise Ski Resort
Note:
The alpine combined events here were cancelled.
Men's Downhill winner:
James Crawford (2 times)
Women's Downhill winner:
A.J. Hurt (2 times)
Super G winners:
Samuel Dupratt (m) /
A.J. Hurt (f)
December 10 – 16, 2018: SNAC #2 in
Panorama Mountain Village
Alpine Combined winners:
Jeffery Read (m) /
A.J. Hurt (f)
Men's Super G winners:
Samuel Dupratt (#1) /
Sam Mulligan (#2)
Women's Super G winners:
Nina O'Brien (#1) /
A.J. Hurt (#2)
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Simon Fournier (#1) /
Nicholas Krause (#2)
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Nina O'Brien (#1) /
Patricia Mangan
(#2)
Men's Slalom winners:
Mark Engel
(#1) /
Simon Fournier (#2)
Women's Slalom winners:
Foreste Peterson (#1) /
Katie Hensien (#2)
January 2 & 3: SNAC #3 in
Georgian Peaks Club
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Nina O'Brien (2 times)
January 3 – 5: SNAC #4 in
Camp Fortune
Men's Slalom winners:
Simon Fournier (#1) /
Benjamin Ritchie (#2)
January 4: SNAC #5 in
Alpine Ski Club
Women's Parallel Slalom winner:
Tuva Norbye
January 4 – 6: SNAC #6 in
Osler Bluff
Women's Slalom winners:
Katie Hensien (#1) /
Nina O'Brien (#2)
January 5 – 7: SNAC #7 in
Mont Ste. Marie
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Aage Solheim (#1) /
Nicholas Krause (#2)
Men's Parallel Slalom winner:
Tobias Kogler
February 5 – 8: SNAC #8 in
Sun Valley
Men's Slalom winners:
Luke Winters (#1) /
Tobias Kogler (#2)
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Max Roeisland (#1) /
River Radamus (#2)
February 5 – 8: SNAC #9 in
Snow King Mountain
Women's Slalom winner:
Amelia Smart (2 times)
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Keely Cashman (#1) /
Adriana Jelinkova
(#2)
March 12 – 15: SNAC #10 in
Stowe Mountain Resort
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Mikaela Tommy
(#1) /
Adriana Jelinkova (#2)
Women's Slalom winners:
Amelia Smart (#1) /
Nina O'Brien (#2)
March 12 – 15: SNAC #11 in
Burke Mountain Ski Area
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Tanguy Nef (2 times)
Men's Slalom winners:
Kyle Negomir (#1) /
Fritz Dopfer
(#2)
March 16 – 21: SNAC #12 (final) in
Sugarloaf
Men's Downhill winners:
Thomas Biesemeyer
(#1) /
Ryan Cochran-Siegle
(#2)
Women's Downhill winners:
Nina O'Brien (#1) /
Alice Merryweather
(#2)
Alpine Combined winners:
Luke Winters (m) /
Nina O'Brien (f)
Men's Super G winners:
Ryan Cochran-Siegle (#1) /
River Radamus (#2)
Women's Super G winners:
Keely Cashman (#1) /
Nina O'Brien (#2)
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing Far East Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 4 – 7, 2018: FEC #1 in
Wanlong Ski Resorts
Men's Slalom winners:
Jan Zabystřan
(#1) /
Jung Dong-hyun
(#2)
Women's Slalom winners:
Asa Ando
(#1) /
Liv Ceder (#2)
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Jung Dong-hyun (2 times)
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Asa Ando (#1) /
Piera Hudson
(#2)
December 10 – 13, 2018: FEC #2 in
Taiwoo Ski Resorts
Men's Slalom winners:
Kamen Zlatkov
(#1) /
Jung Dong-hyun (#2)
Women's Slalom winners:
Liv Ceder (#1) /
Piera Hudson (#2)
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Jung Dong-hyun (2 times)
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Piera Hudson (2 times)
February 7 – 9: FEC #3 in
Yongpyong Resort
Note:
The Super G events here were cancelled.
Slalom winners:
Jung Dong-hyun (m) /
Gim So-hui
(f)
Giant Slalom winners:
Jung Dong-hyun (m) /
Kang Young-seo
(f)
February 12 – 15: FEC #4 in
Bears Town Resort
Men's Slalom winners:
Hideyuki Narita (#1) /
Yohei Koyama (#2)
Women's Slalom winner:
Makiko Arai (2 times)
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Noel von Gruenigen (#1) /
Seigo Kato (#2)
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Konatsu Hasumi (#1) /
Kang Young-seo (#2)
February 24 – 27: FEC #5 in
Hanawa
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Reto Schmidiger
(2 times)
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Asa Ando (2 times)
Slalom winners:
Reto Schmidiger (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
March 2 – 5: FEC #6 in
Engaru
Giant Slalom winners:
Reto Schmidiger (m) /
Mio Arai (f)
Men's Slalom winner:
Reto Schmidiger (2 times)
Women's Slalom winner:
Michelle Kerven (2 times)
March 19 – 25: FEC #7 (final) in
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
Men's Super G winners:
Ivan Kuznetsov
(#1) /
Jan Zabystřan (#2)
Women's Super G winner:
Iulija Pleshkova (2 times)
Alpine Combined winners:
Ivan Kuznetsov (m) /
Nevena Ignjatović
(f)
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Pavel Trikhichev
(2 times)
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Ana Bucik
(2 times)
Men's Slalom winners:
Pavel Trikhichev (#1) /
Jan Zabystřan (#2)
Women's Slalom winners:
Maruša Ferk
(#1) /
Ana Bucik (#2)
2018 FIS Alpine Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
August 20 – 24: A&NZ #1 in
Hotham Alpine Resort
Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Adam Žampa
(2 times)
Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Lena Dürr
(2 times)
Men's Slalom winners:
Steffan Winkelhorst (#1) /
Adam Žampa (#2)
Women's Slalom winners:
Charlotte Chable
(#1) /
Neja Dvornik (#2)
August 27 – 30: A&NZ #2 in
Coronet Peak
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Adam Žampa (#1) /
Sam Maes
(#2)
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Alice Robinson
(#1) /
Katharina Truppe
(#2)
Men's Slalom winners:
Marc Rochat (#1) /
Adam Žampa (#2)
Women's Slalom winners:
Charlotte Chable (#1) /
Charlie Guest
(#2)
September 3 – 6: A&NZ #3 (final) in
Mount Hutt
Men's Super G winner:
Maarten Meiners
(2 times)
Women's Super G winner:
Alice Robinson (2 times)
2018 FIS Alpine Skiing South American Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
August 14 – 17: SAC #1 in
Cerro Catedral
Note:
The second set of Giant Slalom and Slalom events were cancelled.
Slalom winners:
Tomas Birkner De Miguel
(m) /
Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (f)
Giant Slalom winners:
Vito Cottineau (m) /
Carolina Blaquier (f)
August 25 – 28: SAC #2 in
Las Leñas
Note:
The Super G events were cancelled.
Slalom winners:
Enrique Evia y Roca (m) /
Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (f)
Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Diego Holscher (#1) /
Cristian Javier Simari Birkner
(#2)
Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (#1) /
Andrea Ellenberger (#2)
September 1: SAC #3 in
El Colorado #1
Giant Slalom winners:
Rasmus Windingstad
(m) /
Kajsa Vickhoff Lie (f)
September 2 – 7: SAC #4 in
La Parva
Slalom winners:
Ondřej Berndt
(m) /
Kristin Lysdahl
(f)
Men's Downhill winners:
Klemen Kosi
(#1) /
Dominik Schwaiger (#2)
Women's Downhill winner:
Aleksandra Prokopyeva
(2 times)
Men's Super G winners:
Johan Clarey
(#1) /
Andreas Sander
(#2)
Women's Super G winner:
Aleksandra Prokopyeva (2 times)
September 10 – 13: SAC #5 in
El Colorado #2
Note:
All other alpine skiing events, except for the Super G ones, were cancelled.
Men's Super G winners:
Manuel Schmid (#1) /
Klemen Kosi (#2)
Women's Super G winners:
Ilka Štuhec
(#1) /
Cande Moreno Becerra (#2)
September 17 – 20: SAC #6 (final) in
Cerro Castor
Men's Slalom winners:
Jean-Baptiste Grange
(#1) /
Simon Maurberger (#2)
Women's Slalom winner:
Mireia Gutiérrez
(2 times)
Giant Slalom winners:
Pavel Trikhichev
(m) /
Tessa Worley
(f)
2018 FIS Grass Skiing World Cup & Junior World Championship
[
edit
]
Note 1:
For the FIS page about the World Cup events, click
here.
Note 2:
For the FIS page about the Junior World Championships event, click
here.
June 16 & 17, 2018: GSWC #1 in
Rettenbach
Giant Slalom winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
Super Combined winners:
Mirko Hüppi (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
Super G winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
June 30 & July 1, 2018: GSWC #2 in
Předklášteří
Giant Slalom winners:
Hannes Angerer (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
Slalom winners:
Mirko Hüppi (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
July 28 & 29, 2018: GSWC #3 in
Montecampione
Giant Slalom winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
Slalom winners:
Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
July 30 – August 4, 2018: 2018 FIS Grass Ski Junior World Championships in
Montecampione
Giant Slalom winners:
Martin Barták (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
Slalom winners:
Martin Barták (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
Super Combined winners:
Martin Barták (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
Super G winners:
Martin Barták (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
August 18 & 19: GSWC #4 in
San Sicario
Super Combined winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
Super G winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
Giant Slalom winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
August 31 – September 2: GSWC #5 in
Santa Caterina di Valfurva
Note:
The men's & women's parallel slalom events here were cancelled.
Men's Slalom winner:
Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (2 times)
Women's Slalom winners:
Lisa Wusits (#1) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (#2)
September 13 – 16: GSWC #6 (final) in
Sauris
Giant Slalom winners:
Stefan Portmann (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
Slalom winners:
Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
Super Combined winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
Super G winners:
Stefan Portmann (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
Biathlon
[
edit
]
International biathlon championships
[
edit
]
August 21 – 26, 2018: 2018 IBU Summer Biathlon World Championships in
Nové Město na Moravě
Sprint winners:
Michal Krčmář
(m) /
Paulína Fialková
(f)
Junior Sprint winners:
Jakub Stvrtecky (m) /
Kamila Żuk
(f)
Pursuit winners:
Ondřej Moravec
(m) /
Veronika Vítková
(f)
Junior Pursuit winners:
Viacheslav Maleev (m) /
Valeriia Vasnetcova (f)
Mixed Relay winners:
Russia
(
Ekaterina Yurlova-Percht
, Margarita Vasileva, Nikita Porshnev, & Yury Shopin)
Junior Mixed Relay winners:
Czech Republic
(Petra Sucha, Tereza Vobornikova, Jakub Stvrtecky, & Vitezslav Hornig)
January 26 – February 3:
2019 IBU Youth/Junior World Championships
in
Brezno
-
Osrblie
Junior Individual winners:
Martin Bourgeois Republique (m) /
MENG Fanqi (f)
Junior Sprint winners:
Vebjoern Soerum (m) /
Ekaterina Bekh (f)
Junior Pursuit winners:
Vebjoern Soerum (m) /
Ekaterina Bekh (f)
Junior Men's Relay winners:
Russia
(Said Karimulla Khalili, Ilnaz Mukhamedzianov, Vadim Istamgulov, & Vasilii Tomshin)
Junior Women's Relay winners:
France
(Camille Bened, Sophie Chauveau, & Lou Jeanmonnot)
Youth Individual winners:
Niklas Hartweg (m) /
Ukaleq Astri Slettemark (f)
Youth Sprint winners:
Alex Cisar (m) /
Maren Bakken (f)
Youth Pursuit winners:
Alex Cisar (m) /
Amy Baserga (f)
Youth Men's Relay winners:
Germany
(Hendrik Rudolph, Darius Philipp Lodl, & Hans Koellner)
Youth Women's Relay winners:
Norway
(Maren Bakken, Marte Moeller, & Anne de Besche)
February 18 – 24: 2019 IBU Open European Championships in
Minsk
-Raubichi
Individual winners:
Krasimir Anev
(m) /
Hanna Öberg
(f)
Sprint winners:
Tarjei Bø
(m) /
Mona Brorsson
(f)
Pursuit winners:
Tarjei Bø (m) /
Ekaterina Yurlova-Percht (f)
Single Mixed Relay winners:
Russia
(Evgeniya Pavlova &
Dmitry Malyshko
)
Mixed Relay winners:
Sweden
(
Emma Nilsson
, Mona Brorsson,
Martin Ponsiluoma
, &
Sebastian Samuelsson
)
March 4 – 10: 2019 IBU Junior Open European Championships in
Sjusjøen
Junior Individual winners:
Tim Grotian (m) /
Camille Bened (f)
Junior Sprint winners:
Sivert Guttorm Bakken (m) /
Camille Bened (f)
Junior Pursuit winners:
Julian Hollandt (m) /
Juliane Frühwirt
(f)
Junior Single Mixed Relay winners:
Russia
(Ksenia Dovgaya & Igor Malinovskii)
Junior Mixed Relay winners:
Russia
(Anastasiia Goreeva, Alina Klevtsova, Aleksandr Bektuganov, & Said Karimulla Khalili)
March 7 – 17:
Biathlon World Championships 2019
in
Östersund
Individual winners:
Arnd Peiffer
(m) /
Hanna Öberg (f)
Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø
(m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina
(f)
Pursuit winners:
Dmytro Pidruchnyi
(m) /
Denise Herrmann
(f)
Men's Relay winners:
Norway
(
Lars Helge Birkeland
,
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen
, Tarjei Bø, & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
Women's Relay winners:
Norway
(
Synnøve Solemdal
,
Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold
,
Tiril Eckhoff
,
Marte Olsbu Røiseland
)
Single Mixed Relay winners:
Norway
(Marte Olsbu Røiseland & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
Mixed Relay winners:
Norway
(Marte Olsbu Røiseland, Tiril Eckhoff, Johannes Thingnes Bø, & Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen)
Mass Start winners:
Dominik Windisch
(m) /
Dorothea Wierer
(f)
2018–19 Biathlon World Cup
[
edit
]
November 30 – December 9, 2018: BWC #1 in
Pokljuka
Individual winners:
Martin Fourcade
(m) /
Yuliia Dzhima
(f)
Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø
(m) /
Kaisa Mäkäräinen
(f)
Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f)
Single Mixed Relay winners:
Norway
(Thekla Brun-Lie &
Lars Helge Birkeland
)
Mixed Relay winners:
France
(
Anaïs Bescond
,
Justine Braisaz
, Martin Fourcade, &
Simon Desthieux
)
December 10 – 16, 2018: BWC #2 in
Hochfilzen
Pursuit winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f)
Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Dorothea Wierer
(f)
Men's Relay winners:
Sweden
(
Peppe Femling
,
Martin Ponsiluoma
,
Torstein Stenersen
, &
Sebastian Samuelsson
)
Women's Relay winners:
Italy
(
Lisa Vittozzi
,
Alexia Runggaldier
, Dorothea Wierer, &
Federica Sanfilippo
)
December 17 – 23, 2018: BWC #3 in
Nové Město na Moravě
Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Marte Olsbu Røiseland
(f)
Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Marte Olsbu Røiseland (f)
Mass Start winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina
(f)
January 7 – 13: BWC #4 in
Oberhof
Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Lisa Vittozzi (f)
Sprint winners:
Alexandr Loginov
(m) /
Lisa Vittozzi (f)
Men's Relay winners:
Russia
(
Maxim Tsvetkov
,
Evgeniy Garanichev
,
Dmitry Malyshko
, & Alexandr Loginov)
Women's Relay winners:
Russia
(Evgeniya Pavlova, Margarita Vasileva, Larisa Kuklina, &
Ekaterina Yurlova-Percht
)
January 14 – 20: BWC #5 in
Ruhpolding
Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
Men's Relay winners:
Norway
(Lars Helge Birkeland,
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen
,
Tarjei Bø
, & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
Women's Relay winners:
France
(
Julia Simon
, Anaïs Bescond, Justine Braisaz, &
Anaïs Chevalier
)
Mass Start winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Franziska Preuß
(f)
January 21 – 27: BWC #6 in
Antholz-Anterselva
Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Dorothea Wierer (f)
Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Markéta Davidová
(f)
Mass Start winners:
Quentin Fillon Maillet
(m) /
Laura Dahlmeier
(f)
February 4 – 10: BWC #7 in
Canmore
Note:
The men's and women's sprint events here were cancelled.
Short Individual winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Tiril Eckhoff
(f)
Men's Relay winners:
Norway
(Lars Helge Birkeland, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen,
Erlend Bjøntegaard
, & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
Women's Relay winners:
Germany
(
Vanessa Hinz
,
Franziska Hildebrand
,
Denise Herrmann
, & Laura Dahlmeier)
February 11 – 17: BWC #8 in
Soldier Hollow
Sprint winners:
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (m) /
Marte Olsbu Røiseland (f)
Pursuit winners:
Quentin Fillon Maillet (m) /
Denise Herrmann (f)
Single Mixed Relay winners:
Italy
(
Lukas Hofer
& Dorothea Wierer)
Mixed Relay winners:
France
(Quentin Fillon Maillet, Simon Desthieux,
Célia Aymonier
, & Anaïs Chevalier)
March 18 – 24: BWC #9 (final) in
Oslo
-
Holmenkollen
Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
Mass Start winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Hanna Öberg
(f)
2018–19 IBU Cup
[
edit
]
November 26 – December 2, 2018: IBU Cup #1 in
Idre
Pursuit winners:
Philipp Nawrath (m) /
Svetlana Mironova (f)
Men's Sprint winners:
Anton Babikov
(#1) /
Aristide Begue (#2)
Women's Sprint winners:
Ingela Andersson
(#1) /
Elisabeth Högberg
(#2)
December 10 – 16, 2018: IBU Cup #2 in
Ridnaun-Val Ridanna
Pursuit winners:
Johannes Dale (m) /
Anastasiia Morozova (f)
Sprint winners:
Johannes Dale (m) /
Anastasiia Morozova (f)
Single Mixed Relay winners:
Russia
(Anastasiia Morozova & Sergey Korastylev)
Mixed Relay winners:
Russia
(Irina Kazakevich, Svetlana Mironova, Yury Shopin, & Anton Babikov)
December 17 – 22, 2018: IBU Cup #3 in
Obertilliach
Individual winners:
Simon Fourcade
(m) /
Caroline Colombo (f)
Sprint winners:
Sivert Guttorm Bakken (m) /
Nadia Moser (f)
Super Sprint winners:
Sindre Pettersen (m) /
Felicia Lindqvist (f)
January 7 – 13: IBU Cup #4 in
Duszniki-Zdrój
Men's Sprint winners:
Alexander Povarnitsyn (#1) /
Philipp Horn (#2)
Women's Sprint winner:
Natalia Gerbulova (2 times)
January 14 – 20: IBU Cup #5 in
Großer Arber
Short Individual winners:
Alexander Povarnitsyn (m) /
Yuliya Zhuravok
(f)
Sprint winners:
Aristide Begue (m) /
Victoria Slivko (f)
Pursuit winners:
Anton Babikov (m) /
Victoria Slivko (f)
January 21 – 27: IBU Cup #6 in
Lenzerheide
Sprint winners:
Fabien Claude (m) /
Victoria Slivko (f)
Pursuit winners:
Fabien Claude (m) /
Uliana Kaisheva
(f)
Single Mixed Relay winners:
Russia
(Sergey Korastylev & Uliana Kaisheva)
Mixed Relay winners:
Russia
(Anton Babikov, Alexey Slepov, Valeriia Vasnetcova, & Victoria Slivko)
February 25 – March 2: IBU Cup #7 in
Otepää
Super Sprint winners:
Endre Stroemsheim (m) /
Anna Weidel (f)
Sprint winners:
David Zobel (m) /
Chloe Chevalier (f)
March 11 – 17: IBU Cup #8 (final) in
Martell
-Val Martello
Men's Sprint winners:
Johannes Dale (#1) /
Lucas Fratzscher (#2)
Women's Sprint winners:
Olga Abramova
(#1) /
Caroline Colombo (#2)
Mass Start winners:
Aristide Begue (m) /
Caroline Colombo (f)
2018–19 IBU Junior Cup
[
edit
]
December 10 – 16, 2018: IBUJC #1 in
Lenzerheide
Junior Individual winners:
Patrick Braunhofer (m) /
Camille Bened (f)
Junior Sprint winners:
Viacheslav Maleev (m) /
Paula Botet (f)
December 17 – 22, 2018: IBUJC #2 in
Les Rousses
Junior Pursuit winners:
Said Karimulla Khalili (m) /
Juliane Frühwirt
(f)
Junior Sprint winners:
Sebastian Stalder (m) /
Anastasiia Kaisheva (f)
Junior Single Mixed Relay winners:
Slovenia
(Alex Cisar & Nika Vindisar)
Junior Mixed Relay winners:
France
(Sebastien Mahon, Pierre Monney, Gilonne Guigonnat, & Paula Botet)
February 25 – March 3: IBUJC #3 (final) in
Sjusjøen
Note:
This event was supposed to be held in
Torsby
, but it was moved to the new location here.
Junior Men's Sprint winners:
Alex Cisar (#1) /
Tim Grotian (#2)
Junior Women's Sprint winners:
Amanda Lundstroem (#1) /
Anastasiia Goreeva (#2)
Cross-country skiing
[
edit
]
International cross-country skiing events
[
edit
]
January 19 – 27: Part of the
2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships
in
Lahti
[
7
]
Sprint Classical winners:
Alexander Terentev (m) /
Kristine Stavaas Skistad
(f)
Freestyle winners:
Jules Chappaz (m) /
Frida Karlsson
(f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Luca del Fabbro (m) /
Frida Karlsson (f)
Men's Mass Start Relay winners:
United States
(Luke Jager, Ben Ogden, Johnny Hagenbuch, & Gus Schumacher)
Women's Mass Start Relay winners:
Norway
(Kristin Austgulen Fosnaes, Astrid Stav, Helene Marie Fossesholm, &
Kristine Stavaas Skistad
)
February 19 – March 3: Part of the
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019
in
Seefeld
[
8
]
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo
(m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla
(f)
Skiathlon winners:
Sjur Røthe
(m) /
Therese Johaug
(f)
Men's Team Sprint Classical winners:
Norway
(
Emil Iversen
& Johannes Høsflot Klæbo)
Women's Team Sprint Classical winners:
Sweden
(
Stina Nilsson
&
Maja Dahlqvist
)
Classical winners:
Martin Johnsrud Sundby
(m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
Men's 4×10 km Relay winners:
Norway
(Emil Iversen, Martin Johnsrud Sundby, Sjur Røthe, & Johannes Høsflot Klæbo)
Women's 4×5 km Relay winners:
Sweden
(
Ebba Andersson
, Frida Karlsson,
Charlotte Kalla
, & Stina Nilsson)
Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Hans Christer Holund
(m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
2018–19 Tour de Ski
[
edit
]
December 29 & 30, 2018: TdS #1 in
Toblach
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo
(m) /
Stina Nilsson
(f)
Freestyle winners:
Sergey Ustiugov
(m) /
Natalya Nepryaeva
(f)
January 1: TdS #2 in
Val Müstair
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
January 2 & 3: TdS #3 in
Oberstdorf
Classical Mass Start winners:
Emil Iversen
(m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg
(f)
Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
January 5 & 6: TdS #4 (final) in
Fiemme Valley
Classical Mass Start winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
Final Climb winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country World Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
November 24 & 25, 2018: CCWC #1 in
Ruka
Classical winners:
Alexander Bolshunov
(m) /
Therese Johaug
(f)
Sprint Classical winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Yuliya Belorukova
(f)
November 30 – December 2, 2018: CCWC #2 in
Lillehammer
Freestyle winners:
Sjur Røthe
(m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Federico Pellegrino
(m) /
Jonna Sundling
(f)
Classical Pursuit winners:
Didrik Tønseth
(m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
December 8 & 9, 2018: CCWC #3 in
Beitostølen
Freestyle winners:
Sjur Røthe (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
Men's Mass Start Relay winners:
Norway
(
Emil Iversen
,
Martin Johnsrud Sundby
, Sjur Røthe, &
Finn Hågen Krogh
)
Women's Mass Start Relay winners:
Norway
(
Heidi Weng
, Therese Johaug,
Ragnhild Haga
, &
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg
)
December 15 & 16, 2018: CCWC #4 in
Davos
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo
(m) /
Stina Nilsson
(f)
Freestyle winners:
Evgeniy Belov
(m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
January 12 & 13: CCWC #5 in
Dresden
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Sindre Bjørnestad Skar
(m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
Men's Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
Norway
(
Erik Valnes
& Sindre Bjørnestad Skar)
Women's Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
Sweden
(Stina Nilsson &
Maja Dahlqvist
)
January 19 & 20: CCWC #6 in
Otepää
Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla
(f)
Classical winners:
Iivo Niskanen
(m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
January 26 & 27: CCWC #7 in
Ulricehamn
Freestyle winners:
Maurice Manificat
(m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
Men's Mass Start Relay winners:
Russia
(Evgeniy Belov,
Alexander Bessmertnykh
,
Denis Spitsov
, &
Artem Maltsev
)
Women's Mass Start Relay winners:
Norway
(Heidi Weng, Therese Johaug,
Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen
, & Ingvild Flugstad Østberg)
February 9 & 10: CCWC #8 in
Lahti
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
Men's Team Sprint Classical winners:
Norway
(Emil Iversen & Johannes Høsflot Klæbo)
Women's Team Sprint Classical winners:
Sweden
(
Ida Ingemarsdotter
& Maja Dahlqvist)
February 16 & 17: CCWC #9 in
Cogne
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Federico Pellegrino (m) /
Jessie Diggins
(f)
Classical winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Kerttu Niskanen
(f)
March 9 & 10: CCWC #10 in
Oslo
Classical Mass Start winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
March 12: CCWC #11 in
Drammen
Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
March 16 & 17: CCWC #12 in
Falun
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
Freestyle winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
March 22 – 24: CCWC #13 (final) in
Quebec City
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Alpen Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 8 & 9, 2018: CCSAC #1 in
Prémanon
Event cancelled.
December 21 – 23, 2018: CCSAC #2 in
Valdidentro
-Isolaccia
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Richard Jouve
(m) /
Laurien van der Graaff
(f)
Freestyle winners:
Andreas Katz
(m) /
Elisa Brocard
(f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Maurice Manificat
(m) /
Antonia Fraebel (f)
January 4 – 6: CCSAC #3 in
Nové Město na Moravě
Sprint Classical winners:
Valentin Chauvin (m) /
Antonia Fraebel (f)
Freestyle winners:
Robin Duvillard
(m) /
Antonia Fraebel (f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Valentin Chauvin (m) /
Antonia Fraebel (f)
February 8 – 10: CCSAC #4 in
Planica
Men's Sprint Freestyle winners:
Jules Chappaz (#1) /
Claudio Muller (#2)
Women's Sprint Freestyle winners:
Anna-Maria Dietze (#1) /
Ilaria Debertolis
(#2)
Men's Classical winners:
Jules Chappaz (#1) /
Alexey Poltoranin
(#2)
Women's Classical winners:
Lisa Lohmann (#1) /
Lucia Scardoni
(#2)
Men's Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Jules Chappaz (#1) /
Max Hauke
(#2)
Women's Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Barbora Havlíčková
(#1) /
Ilaria Debertolis (#2)
March 2 & 3: CCSAC #5 in
Le Brassus
Freestyle winners:
Hugo Lapalus (m) /
Laura Chamiot Maitral (f)
Classical Pursuit winners:
Valentin Chauvin (m) /
Julia Belger (f)
March 15 – 17: CCSAC #6 (final) in
Oberwiesenthal
Men's Sprint Freestyle winners:
Davide Graz (#1) /
Janik Riebli (#2)
Women's Sprint Freestyle winners:
Lisa Lohmann (#1) /
Katerina Janatova (#2)
Men's Classical Mass Start winners:
Luca del Fabbro (#1) /
Valentin Chauvin (#2)
Women's Classical Mass Start winners:
Barbora Havlíčková (#1) /
Antonia Fraebel (#2)
Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Clement Arnault (m) /
Kateřina Razýmová
(f)
Men's Freestyle Relay winners:
France
(Theo Schely, Victor Lovera, & Jules Chappaz)
Women's Freestyle Relay winners:
Czech Republic
(Pavlina Votockova, Zuzana Holikova, & Barbora Havlíčková)
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Eastern Europe Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
November 22 – 26, 2018: EEC #1 in
Vershina Tea
Sprint Classical winners:
Ilia Poroshkin (m) /
Olga Tsareva (f)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Alexander Terentev (m) /
Olga Tsareva (f)
Classical winners:
Sergey Ardashev (m) /
Diana Golovan (f)
Freestyle winners:
Alexander Bessmertnykh
(m) /
Anna Nechaevskaya
(f)
December 22 – 26, 2018: EEC #2 in
Krasnogorsk
#1
Sprint Classical winners:
Ermil Vokuev (m) /
Natalia Matveeva (f)
Freestyle winners:
Ivan Yakimushkin (m) /
Tatiana Aleshina (f)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Ivan Yakimushkin (m) /
Natalia Matveeva (f)
Classical winners:
Alexander Bessmertnykh (m) /
Alisa Zhambalova
(f)
January 10 – 13: EEC #3 in
Raubichi
Sprint Classical winners:
Ilia Semikov (m) /
Anastasia Kirillova
(f)
Classical winners:
Ermil Vokuev (m) /
Alisa Zhambalova (f)
Freestyle winners:
Ilia Poroshkin (m) /
Alisa Zhambalova (f)
February 8 – 10: EEC #4 in
Krasnogorsk #2
Classical winners:
Andrey Parfenov
(m) /
Alisa Zhambalova (f)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Andrey Parfenov (m) /
Anastasia Vlasova (f)
February 23 – 27: EEC #5 (final) in
Syktyvkar
Classical winners:
Ilia Semikov (m) /
Yevgeniya Shapovalova
(f)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Andrey Parfenov (m) /
Aida Bayazitova (f)
Skiathlon winners:
Alexey Vitsenko
(m) /
Svetlana Plotnikova (f)
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing US Super Tour
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 1 & 2, 2018: UST #1 in
Rendezvous Ski Trails (
West Yellowstone
)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Andrew Newell
(m) /
Julia Kern (f)
Freestyle winners:
Benjamin Lustgarten (m) /
Rosie Frankowski
(f)
January 25 – 27: UST #2 in
Mount Van Hoevenberg
(
Lake Placid
)
Freestyle winners:
Kyle Bratrud
(m) /
Jessica Yeaton
(f)
Sprint Classical winners:
Antoine Briand (m) /
Sophie Caldwell
(f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Kyle Bratrud (m) /
Kaitlynn Miller (f)
February 15 – 17: UST #3 in
Theodore Wirth Park
(
Minneapolis
)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Antoine Briand (m) /
Alayna Sonnesyn (f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Zak Ketterson (m) /
Kaitlynn Miller (f)
Freestyle winners:
Matthew Edward Liebsch (m) /
Nicole Schneider (f)
March 28 – April 2: UST #4 (final) in
Presque Isle
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Simi Hamilton
(m) /
Sadie Bjornsen
(f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Erik Bjornsen
(m) /
Sadie Bjornsen (f)
Mass Start Mixed Relay winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Nor-Am Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 8 & 9, 2018: SNAC #1 in
Vernon
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Andrew Newell
(m) /
Julia Kern (f)
Classical winners:
Kyle Bratrud
(m) /
Katherine Stewart-Jones
(f)
December 13 – 16, 2018: SNAC #2 in
Canmore Nordic Centre
Sprint Classical winners:
Bob Thompson (m) /
Dahria Beatty
(f)
Freestyle winners:
Russell Kennedy
(m) /
Dahria Beatty (f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Bob Thompson (m) /
Dahria Beatty (f)
January 18 – 20: SNAC #3 in
Sherbrooke
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Russell Kennedy (m) / (f)
Classical winners:
Scott James Hill (m) /
Katherine Stewart-Jones (f)
Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Russell Kennedy (m) /
Katherine Stewart-Jones (f)
February 1 – 3: SNAC #4 (final) in
Duntroon
Sprint Classical winners:
Julien Locke (m) /
Zoe Williams (f)
Classical winners:
Alexis Dumas (m) /
Zoe Williams (f)
Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Jack Carlyle (m) /
Laura Leclair (f)
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Slavic Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 15 & 16, 2018: SSC #1 in
Štrbské Pleso
#1
Classical winners:
Peter Mlynár
(m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk
(f)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Paweł Klisz
(m) /
Eliza Rucka (f)
December 29 & 30, 2018: SSC #2 in
Štrbské Pleso #2
Freestyle winners:
Jan Koristek (m) /
Izabela Marcisz (f)
Classical winners:
Jan Koristek (m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
February 2 & 3: SSC #3 in
Zakopane
Classical winners:
Jan Koristek (m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
Freestyle winners:
Jan Koristek (m) /
Izabela Marcisz (f)
March 9 & 10: SSC #4 in
Wisła
Kubalonka
Sprint Classical winners:
Maciej Staręga
(m) /
Alena Procházková
(f)
Freestyle winners:
Dominik Bury
(m) /
Izabela Marcisz (f)
March 23 & 24: SSC #5 (final) in
Kremnica
-
Skalksa
Classical winners:
Dominik Bury (m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Dominik Bury (m) /
Izabela Marcisz (f)
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Far East Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 16 & 17, 2018: FEC #1 in
Alpensia Cross-Country and Biathlon Centre
#1
Classical winners:
Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) /
Yukari Tanaka (f)
Freestyle winners:
Hikari Fujinoki (m) /
Lee Chae-won
(f)
December 25 – 27, 2018: FEC #2 in
Otoineppu
Classical winners:
Naoto Baba (m) /
Chika Kobayashi (f)
Freestyle winners:
Naoto Baba (m) /
Miki Kodama (f)
January 6 – 8: FEC #3, FEC #4, & FEC #5 in
Sapporo
Classical winners:
Takanori Ebina (m) /
Kozue Takizawa (f)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) /
Yuka Watanabe (f)
Freestyle winners:
Naoto Baba (m) /
Miki Kodama (f)
January 16 & 17: FEC #6 in
Alpensia Cross-Country and Biathlon Centre #2
Classical winners:
Hikari Fujinoki (m) /
Yukari Tanaka (f)
Freestyle winners:
Hikari Fujinoki (m) /
Lee Chae-won (f)
March 2 & 3: FEC #7 (final) in
Shiramine
Sprint Classical winners:
Hikari Fujinoki (m) /
Yukari Tanaka (f)
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Tomoki Sato (m) /
Yukari Tanaka (f)
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Scandinavian Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 14 – 16, 2018: CCSC #1 in
Östersund
Note:
The classical events here were cancelled.
Sprint Classical winners:
Paal Troean Aune (m) /
Anna Svendsen (f)
Freestyle winners:
Daniel Rickardsson
(m) /
Astrid Oeyre Slind (f)
January 4 – 6: CCSC #2 in
Vuokatti
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Erik Valnes
(m) /
Johanna Hagström (f)
Classical winners:
Livo Niskanen (m) /
Frida Karlsson
(f)
Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Mattis Stenshagen (m) /
Frida Karlsson (f)
March 1 – 3: CCSC #3 (final) in
Madona
Sprint Freestyle winners:
Gjoeran Tefre (m) /
Moa Lundgren (f)
Classical winners:
Daniel Stock (m) /
Johanna Hagström (f)
Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Martin Loewstroem Nyenget (m) /
Moa Lundgren (f)
2019 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Balkan Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
January 12 & 13: BC #1 in
Ravna Gora
Event cancelled.
February 2 & 3: BC #2 in
Pigadia
Men's Freestyle winner:
Martin Penchev (2 times)
Women's Freestyle winner:
Vedrana Malec
(2 times)
February 9 & 10: BC #3 in
Sjenica
Men's Freestyle winner:
Strahinja Eric (2 times)
Women's Freestyle winner:
Sanja Kusmuk (2 times)
February 13 & 14: BC #4 in
Mavrovo
Note:
The second men's and women's freestyle events here was cancelled.
Freestyle winners:
Edi Dadić
(m) /
Vedrana Malec (f)
March 2 & 3: BC #5 in
Ravna Gora
Men's Classical & Freestyle winner:
Tobias Habenicht
Women's Classical & Freestyle winner:
Nika Jagecic
March 9 & 10: BC #6 in
Dvorista
Men's Freestyle winner:
Edi Dadić (2 times)
Women's Freestyle winner:
Vedrana Malec (2 times)
March 17 & 18: BC #7 in
Borovets
Event cancelled.
March 23 & 24: BC #8 (final) in
Bolu
-
Gerede
Classical winners:
Paul Constantin Pepene
(m) /
Vedrana Malec (f)
Freestyle winners:
Petrică Hogiu
(m) /
Vedrana Malec (f)
2018 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
July 21 & 22: ANZC #1 in
Perisher Valley
Classical winners:
Phillip Bellingham
(m) /
Chelsea Moore (f)
Freestyle winners:
Callum Watson
(m) /
Barbara Jezeršek
(f)
August 18 & 19: ANZC #2 in
Falls Creek
Sprint 1 km Freestyle winners:
Ole Jacob Forsmo (m) /
Emily Champion (f)
Classical winners:
Phillip Bellingham (m) /
Casey Wright
(f)
September 4 – 6: ANZC #3 (final) in
Snow Farm
Freestyle winners:
Kyle Bratrud
(m) /
Jessie Diggins
(f)
Sprint 1.6 km Freestyle winners:
Kevin Bolger (m) /
Sophie Caldwell
(f)
Classical Mass Start winners:
Benjamin Saxton (m) /
Jessie Diggins (f)
Freestyle skiing
[
edit
]
World championships (Freestyle)
[
edit
]
August 24 – September 8, 2018: Part of the FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2018 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
[
9
]
Big Air winners:
Mac Forehand (m) /
Anastasia Tatalina
(f)
Ski Cross winners:
Oliver Davies (m) /
Mikayla Martin (f)
Slopestyle winners:
Oliwer Magnusson
(m) /
Kelly Sildaru
(f)
Halfpipe winners:
Nico Porteous
(m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
January 26 – April 14: FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2019 (Freestyle) in
Leysin
,
Reiteralm
,
Chiesa in Valmalenco
, &
Klaeppen
[
10
]
Leysin
(January 26 & 27)
Halfpipe winners:
Connor Ladd (m) /
Constance Brogden (f)
Reiteralm
(March 28 & 29)
Ski Cross winners:
David Mobaerg (m) /
Zoe Chore (f)
Chiesa in Valmalenco
(April 1 – 6)
Aerials winners:
Viachaslau Tsimertsau (m) /
Sniazhana Drabiankova (f)
Moguls winners:
Nikita Novitckii (m) /
Sabrina Cass (f)
Dual Moguls winners:
Elliot Vaillancourt (m) /
Anastasia Smirnova
(f)
Klaeppen
(April 4 – 14)
Slopestyle winners:
Edouard Therriault (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
Big Air winners:
Ulrik Samnoey (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
February 1 – 10: Part of the
FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019
in
Park City
,
Deer Valley
, &
Solitude Mountain Resort
[
11
]
[
12
]
The women's slopestyle event here was cancelled.
Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury
(m) /
Yuliya Galysheva
(f)
Dual Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont
(f)
Aerials winners:
Maxim Burov
(m) /
Aliaksandra Ramanouskaya
(f)
Team Aerials winners:
Switzerland
(Carol Bouvard,
Nicolas Gygax
, &
Noé Roth
)
Big Air winners:
Fabian Bösch
(m) /
Tess Ledeux
(f)
Halfpipe winners:
Aaron Blunck
(m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
Men's Slopestyle winner:
James Woods
Ski Cross winners:
François Place
(m) /
Marielle Thompson
(f)
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup
[
edit
]
September 5, 2018 – March 30, 2019: 2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Schedule
[
13
]
Moguls
and Aerials
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 7, 2018: MAWC #1 in
Ruka
Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury
(m) /
Perrine Laffont
(f)
December 15 & 16, 2018: MAWC #2 in
Thaiwoo (
Chongli District
,
Zhangjiakou
)
Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Jaelin Kauf
(f)
Dual Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Jaelin Kauf (f)
January 11 & 12: MAWC #3 in
Calgary
Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Yuliya Galysheva
(f)
January 17 – 19: MAWC #4 in
Lake Placid
Moguls winners:
Benjamin Cavet
(m) /
Jakara Anthony
(f)
Aerials winners:
Maxim Burov
(m) /
Xu Mengtao
(f)
January 26: MAWC #5 in
Mont Tremblant Resort
Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
February 16: MAWC #6 in
Moscow
Aerials winners:
Stanislav Nikitin
(m) /
Aliaksandra Ramanouskaya
(f)
February 23: MAWC #7 in
Minsk
Aerials winners:
Maxim Burov (m) /
Xu Mengtao (f)
February 23 & 24: MAWC #8 in
Tazawako
Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
Dual Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
March 2 & 3: MAWC #9 (co-final) in
Shymbulak
Note:
The men's and women's dual moguls events here were cancelled.
Moguls winners:
Ikuma Horishima
(m) /
Yuliya Galysheva (f)
March 2 & 3: MAWC #10 (co-final) in
Shimao Lotus Mountain
Men's Aerials winner:
Sun Jiaxu
(2 times)
Women's Aerials winners:
Laura Peel
(#1) /
Xu Mengtao (#2)
Team Aerials winners:
China
Half-pipe
,
Big air
, and
Slopestyle
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
September 5 – 7, 2018: HB&SWC #1 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
Big Air winners:
Andri Ragettli
(m) /
Elena Gaskell (f)
November 4, 2018: HB&SWC #2 in
Modena
SKIPASS
Big Air winners:
Birk Ruud (m) /
Mathilde Gremaud
(f)
November 22 – 24, 2018: HB&SWC #3 in
Stubai Alps
Slopestyle winners:
Henrik Harlaut
(m) /
Kelly Sildaru
(f)
December 5 & 7, 2018: HB&SWC #4 in
Copper Mountain
Halfpipe winners:
Aaron Blunck
(m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
December 20 – 22, 2018: HB&SWC #5 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden (Chongli District. Zhangjiakou)
Halfpipe winners:
Simon d'Artois
(m) /
Zhang Kexin
(f)
January 10 – 12: HB&SWC #6 in
Font-Romeu
Slopestyle winners:
Alex Hall
(m) /
Sarah Höfflin
(f)
January 25 – 27: HB&SWC #7 in
Seiser Alm
Slopestyle winners:
Max Moffatt (m) /
Eileen Gu (f)
February 14 – 16: HB&SWC #8 in
Calgary
Halfpipe winners:
David Wise
(m) /
Cassie Sharpe
(f)
March 6 – 9: HB&SWC #9 in
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
Halfpipe winners:
Birk Irving (m) /
Cassie Sharpe (f)
Slopestyle winners:
Mac Forehand (m) /
Mathilde Gremaud (f)
March 14 – 17: HB&SWC #10 in
Quebec City
Note:
The slopestyle events here was cancelled.
Big Air winners:
Lukas Müllauer
(m) /
Mathilde Gremaud (f)
March 20 & 21: HB&SWC #11 in
Tignes
Event cancelled.
March 23: HB&SWC #12 in
Oslo
Event cancelled.
March 29 & 30: HB&SWC #13 (final) in
Silvaplana
Slopestyle winners:
Andri Ragettli (m) /
Megan Oldham (f)
Ski cross
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 6 – 8, 2018: SCWC #1 in
Val Thorens
Event cancelled.
December 13 – 15, 2018: SCWC #2 in
Montafon
Event cancelled.
December 16 & 17, 2018: SCWC #3 in
Arosa
Ski Cross winners:
Jonas Lenherr
(m) /
Fanny Smith
(f)
December 20 – 22, 2018: SCWC #4 in
Innichen
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Jonathan Midol
(#1) /
Joos Berry (#2)
Women's Ski Cross winners:
Fanny Smith (#1) /
Sandra Näslund
(#2)
January 18 – 20: SCWC #5 in
Idre
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Alex Fiva
(#1) /
Jean-Frédéric Chapuis
(#2)
Women's Ski Cross winners:
Heidi Zacher
(#1) /
Fanny Smith (#2)
January 25 & 26: SCWC #6 in
Blue Mountain
Ski Cross winners:
Brady Leman
(m) /
Fanny Smith (f)
February 15 – 17: SCWC #7 in
Feldberg
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Ryan Regez (#1) /
Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (#2)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Sandra Näslund (2 times)
February 22 – 24: SCWC #8 in
Sunny Valley Ski Resort (
Miass
)
Men's Ski Cross winner:
Bastien Midol
(2 times)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Fanny Smith (2 times)
March 17: SCWC #9 (final) in
Veysonnaz
Ski Cross winners:
Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (m) /
Marielle Thompson
(f)
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing Europa Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
November 2018
November 24 & 25, 2018: FSEC #1 in
Pitztal
Ski Cross winners:
Jonas Lenherr
(m) /
Marielle Thompson
(f)
November 30 & December 1, 2018: FSEC #2 in
Ruka
Men's Aerials winners:
Noé Roth
(#1) /
Dimitri Isler
(#2)
Women's Aerials winners:
Iori Usui (#1) /
Laura Peel
(#2)
January 2019
January 11: FSEC #3 in
Villars-sur-Ollon
Ski Cross winners:
Romain Detraz (m) /
Fanny Smith
(f)
January 16 & 17: FSEC #4 in
Kreischberg
Slopestyle winners:
Hannes Rudigier (m) /
Maialen Oiartzabal (f; default)
Big Air winners:
Kuura Koivisto (m) /
Maialen Oiartzabal (f; default)
January 17 – 19: FSEC #5 in
Val Thorens
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Youri Duplessis Kergomard (#1) /
Gil Martin (#2)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Amelie Schneider (2 times)
January 20 – 23: FSEC #6 in
Vars
Slopestyle winners:
Nils Rhyner (m) /
Lou Barin
(f)
January 24 – 26: FSEC #7 in
Lenk im Simmental
Men's Ski Cross winner:
Niki Lehikoinen (2 times)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Katrin Ofner
(2 times)
January 26 & 27: FSEC #8 in
Moscow
Men's Aerials winners:
Ilya Harelik (#1) /
Ruslan Katmanov (#2)
Women's Aerials winner:
Sniazhana Drabiankova (2 times)
January 26 & 27: FSEC #9 in
St Anton am Arlberg
Slopestyle winners:
Simo Peltola (m) /
Ruzena Cermakova (f; default)
Big Air winners:
Matej Svancer (m) /
Ruzena Cermakova (f; default)
January 26 & 27: FSEC #8 in
Krasnoe Ozero
Event cancelled.
January 31 – February 2: FSEC #11 in
Saint François Longchamp
Note:
The second ski cross events for men and women here were cancelled.
Ski Cross winners:
Youri Duplessis Kergomard (m) /
Amelie Schneider (f)
February 2019
February 1 & 2: FSEC #12 in
Taivalvaara
Moguls winners:
Viacheslav Tcvetkov (m) /
Anna Gerasimova (f)
Dual moguls winners:
Maxim Kudryavtsev (m) /
Anna Gerasimova (f)
February 5 & 6: FSEC #13 in
Jyväskylä
Moguls winners:
Miska Mustonen (m) /
Lulu Shaffer (f)
Dual moguls winners:
Johannes Suikkari (m) /
Anna Gerasimova (f)
February 5 – 7: FSEC #14 in
La Clusaz
Slopestyle winners:
Kuura Koivisto (m) /
Lou Barin (f)
February 9 & 10: FSEC #15 in
Grasgehren
Note:
The second ski cross events for men and women were cancelled.
Ski Cross winners:
Florian Wilmsmann
(m) /
Heidi Zacher
(f)
February 9 & 10: FSEC #16 in
Bygdsiljum
Moguls winners:
Johannes Suikkari (m) /
Fantine Degroote (f)
Dual moguls winners:
Albin Holmgren (m) /
My Bjerkman (f)
February 15 – 17: FSEC #17 in
Minsk
Men's Aerials winners:
Ihar Drabiankou (#1) /
Makar Mitrafanau (#2)
Women's Aerials winner:
Sniazhana Drabiankova (2 times)
Team Aerials winners:
February 16: FSEC #18 in
Kotelnica Bialczanska
Big Air winners:
Hannes Rudigier (m) /
Elvira Marie Ros (f)
February 22 & 23: FSEC #19 in
Davos
Big Air winners:
Kim Gubser (m) /
Kea Kühnel
(f)
February 23: FSEC #20 in
Deštné v Orlických horách
Slopestyle winners:
Orest Kovalenko (m) /
Tora Johansen (f)
March 2019
March 1: FSEC #21 in
Dolní Morava
Ski Cross winners:
Ryan Regez (m) /
Ekaterina Maltseva (f)
March 2 & 3: FSEC #22 in
Krispl
Event cancelled.
March 12 & 13: FSEC #23 in
Tignes
Moguls winners:
Nicolas Degaches (m) /
Josefina Wersen (f)
Dual Moguls winners:
Nicolas Degaches (m) /
My Bjerkman (f)
March 15 – 18: FSEC #24 in
Gudauri
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Igor Omelin
(#1) /
Youri Duplessis Kergomard (#2)
Women's Ski Cross winners:
Ekaterina Maltseva (#1) /
Mikayla Martin (#2)
March 16 & 17: FSEC #25 in
Jasná
Slopestyle winners:
Vojtěch Bresky (m) /
Kateryna Kotsar (f)
March 17 – 19: FSEC #26 in
Airolo
#1
Moguls winners:
Thomas Gerken Schofield (m) /
My Bjerkman (f)
Men's Dual Moguls winners:
Thomas Gerken Schofield (#1) /
Miska Mustonen (#2)
Women's Dual Moguls winners:
Thea Wallberg (#1) /
Makayla Gerken Schofield (#2)
March 21 – 24: FSEC #27 in
Reiteralm
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Cornel Renn (#1) /
Tobias Müller (#2)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
India Sherret
(2 times)
March 22 & 23: FSEC #28 in
Goetschen
Big Air winners:
Simo Peltola (m) /
Tora Johansen (f)
March 22 – 24: FSEC #29 in
Airolo #2
Men's Aerials winner:
Noé Roth (2 times)
Women's Aerials winners:
Sniazhana Drabiankova (#1) /
Volha Chromova (#2)
Team Aerials winners:
March 25 & 26: FSEC #30 in
Livigno
Men's Slopestyle winners:
Kim Gubser (#1) /
Matej Svancer (#2)
Women's Slopestyle winners:
Kirsty Muir (#1) /
Elisa Maria Nakab (#2)
March 31 & April 1: FSEC #31 (final) in
Chiesa in Valmalenco
Men's Aerials winner:
Noé Roth (2 times)
Women's Aerials winners:
Sniazhana Drabiankova (#1) /
Karyl Loeb (#2)
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing Nor-Am Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 2018
December 14 & 15, 2018: FSNA #1 in
Copper Mountain
Men's Halfpipe winners:
Cassidy Jarrell (#1) /
Sam McKeown (#2)
Women's Halfpipe winner:
Zoe Atkin (2 times)
January 2019
January 5 & 6: FSNA #2 in
Utah Olympic Park
Men's Aerials winners:
Jonathon Lillis
(#1) /
Christopher Lillis (#2)
Women's Aerials winners:
Olga Polyuk
(#1) /
Madison Varmette (#2)
January 17 & 18: FSNA #3 in
Waterville Valley Resort
Men's Slopestyle winners:
Deven Fagan (#1) /
Hunter Henderson (#2)
Women's Slopestyle winners:
Marin Hamill (#1) /
Skye Clarke (#2)
January 17 – 20: FSNA #4 in
Calabogie Peaks
#1
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Gavin Rowell (#1) /
Jared Schmidt (#2)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Zoe Chore (2 times)
January 27 – 29: FSNA #5 in
Lake Placid
Note:
The second aerials events for men and women were cancelled.
Aerials winners:
Noé Roth
(m) /
Brittany George (f)
February 2019
February 1 & 2: FSNA #6 in
Calabogie Peaks #2
Men's Ski Cross winner:
Jared Schmidt (2 times)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Zoe Chore (2 times)
February 1 & 2: FSNA #7 in
Le Relais
#1
Men's Aerials winners:
Miha Fontaine (#1) /
Quinn Dehlinger (#2)
Women's Aerials winner:
Megan Smallhouse (2 times)
February 2 & 3: FSNA #8 in
Stratton Mountain Resort
Moguls winners:
George McQuinn (m) /
Kasey Hogg (f)
Dual moguls winners:
Sō Matsuda (m) /
Kenzie Radway (f)
February 8 – 10: FSNA #9 in
Calgary
Halfpipe winners:
Hunter Hess (m) /
Svea Irving (f)
Slopestyle winners:
Étienne Geoffroy Gagnon (m) /
Marin Hamill (f)
February 9 & 10: FSNA #10 in
Val Saint-Côme
Moguls winners:
Alex Lewis (m) /
Ali Kariotis (f)
Dual moguls winners:
Gabriel Dufresne (m) /
Florence Delsame (f)
February 14 – 16: FSNA #11 in
Aspen/Snowmass
Note:
The women's big air event here was cancelled.
Slopestyle winners:
Rylan Evans (m) /
Megan Oldham (f)
Men's Big Air winner:
Ryan Stevenson
Halfpipe winners:
Samson Schuiling (m) /
Zoe Atkin (f)
February 18 – 23: FSNA #12 in
Ski Cooper
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Gavin Rowell (#1) /
Carson Cook (#2)
Women's Ski Cross winners:
Zoe Chore (#1) /
Hannah Schmidt (#2)
February 21 – 24: FSNA #13 in
Steamboat Ski Resort
Moguls winners:
Jack Kariotis (m) /
Kai Owens (f)
Dual moguls winners:
Elliot Vaillancourt (m) /
Kenzie Radway (f)
March & April 2019
March 2 & 3: FSNA #14 in
Apex Mountain Resort
Moguls winners:
Nick Page (m) /
Shunka Fukushima (f)
Dual moguls winners:
Sō Matsuda (m) /
Kai Owens (f)
March 12 – 17: FSNA #15 in
Holiday Valley
Men's Ski Cross winner:
Phillip Tremblay (2 times)
Women's Ski Cross winners: (#1) / (#2)
March 16 & 17: FSNA #16 in
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
Halfpipe winners:
Dylan Ladd (m) /
Svea Irving (f)
Slopestyle winners:
Hunter Henderson (m) /
Marin Hamill (f)
March 26: FSNA #17 in
Stoneham Mountain Resort
Halfpipe winners:
Jaxin Hoerter (m) /
Svea Irving (f)
March 29 & 30: FSNA #18 in
Le Relais #2
Slopestyle winners:
Hunter Henderson (m) /
Amy Fraser (f)
April 13 & 14: FSNA #19 (final) in
Banff Sunshine
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Reece Howden (#1) /
Brady Leman
(#2)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Kelsey Serwa
(2 times)
2018 FIS Freestyle Skiing South American Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
August 3 – 5: SAC #1 in
La Parva
#1
Note:
The second Women's slopestyle event was cancelled.
Men's Slopestyle winner:
Mateo Bonacalza (2 times)
Women's Slopestyle winner:
Dominique Ohaco
August 10 – 12: SAC #2 in
La Parva #2
Men's Ski Cross winner:
Joaquin Valdes (2 times)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Saga Goni (2 times)
September 14 & 15: SAC #3 in
Cerro Catedral
Men's Big Air winner:
Luke Price (2 times)
Women's Big Air winners:
Abril Melisa Bertzky (#1) /
Josefina Vitiello (#2)
September 18 – 20: SAC #4 (final) in
Cerro Castor
Big Air winners:
Luke Price (m) /
Josefina Vitiello (f)
Slopestyle winners:
Ivan Kuray (m) /
Josefina Vitiello (f)
2018 FIS Freestyle Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
August 14 – 16: ANCFS #1 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
Slopestyle winners:
Taisei Yamamoto
(m) /
Eileen Gu (f)
Half-pipe winners:
Sam Ward (m) /
Zoe Atkin (f)
August 15 – 18: ANCFS #2 in
Falls Creek
Men's Ski Cross winner:
Oliver Davies (2 times)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Sami Kennedy-Sim
(2 times)
August 28 & 29: ANCFS #3 in
Perisher Ski Resort
Men's Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury
(#1) /
Ikuma Horishima
(#2)
Women's Moguls winner:
Junko Hoshino
(#1) /
Jakara Anthony
(#2)
September 1: ANCFS #4 in
Mount Buller Alpine Resort
Dual Moguls winners:
James Matheson
(m) /
Jakara Anthony (f)
September 3 – 6: ANCFS #5 (final) in
Mount Hotham
Men's Ski Cross winners:
Douglas Crawford (#1) /
Robbie Morrison (#2)
Women's Ski Cross winner:
Sami Kennedy-Sim (2 times)
Nordic combined
[
edit
]
International Nordic combined events
[
edit
]
January 19 – 27: Part of the
2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships
in
Lahti
[
14
]
Men's individual winners:
Julian Schmid (#1) /
Johannes Lamparter (#2)
Women's individual winner:
Ayane Miyazaki
Men's team winners:
Germany
(Luis Lehnert, Simon Huettel, David Mach, & Julian Schmid)
February 20 – March 3: Part of the
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019
in
Seefeld
[
15
]
Men's individual winners:
Eric Frenzel
(#1) /
Jarl Magnus Riiber
(#2)
Men's team winners:
Norway
(
Espen Bjørnstad
,
Jan Schmid
,
Jørgen Graabak
, & Jarl Magnus Riiber)
Men's team sprint winners:
Germany
(Eric Frenzel &
Fabian Rießle
)
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
November 23 – 25, 2018: NCWC #1 in
Ruka
Men's individual winner:
Mario Seidl
Men's team winners:
Germany
(
Eric Frenzel
,
Fabian Rießle
,
Johannes Rydzek
, &
Vinzenz Geiger
)
November 29 – December 2, 2018: NCWC #2 in
Lillehammer
Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber
(2 times)
Men's Mass Start winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber
December 21 – 23, 2018: NCWC #3 in
Ramsau am Dachstein
Men's individual winners:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (#1) /
Jørgen Graabak
(#2)
January 4 – 6: NCWC #4 in
Otepää
Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times)
January 10 – 13: NCWC #5 in
Fiemme Valley
Men's individual winners:
Johannes Rydzek (#1) /
Vinzenz Geiger (#2)
Men's team winners:
Norway
(
Jan Schmid
& Jørgen Graabak)
January 17 – 20: NCWC #6 in
Chaux-Neuve
Men's individual winners:
Franz-Josef Rehrl
(#1; 2 times) /
Mario Seidl (#2)
January 25 – 27: NCWC #7 in
Trondheim
Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times)
February 1 – 3: NCWC #8 in
Klingenthal
Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times)
February 8 – 10: NCWC #9 in
Lahti
Men's individual winner:
Jørgen Graabak
Men's team winners:
Finland
(
Ilkka Herola
&
Eero Hirvonen
)
March 8 & 9: NCWC #10 in
Oslo
Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber
March 15 – 17: NCWC #11 (final) in
Schonach im Schwarzwald
Men's individual winners:
Bernhard Gruber
(#1) /
Jarl Magnus Riiber (#2)
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined Continental Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 14 & 15, 2018: CCNC #1 in
Steamboat Ski Resort
Men's individual winners:
Taylor Fletcher
(#1) /
Paul Gerstgraser
(#2)
Women's individual winner:
Tara Geraghty-Moats
(2 times)
December 19 & 20, 2018: CCNC #2 in
Utah Olympic Park
Men's individual winners:
Lukas Runggaldier
(#1) /
Taylor Fletcher (#2)
Women's individual winners:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (#1) /
Gyda Westvold Hansen (#2)
January 4 – 6: CCNC #3 in
Klingenthal
Note:
The men's team event here was cancelled.
Men's individual winner:
Jens Lurås Oftebro
(2 times)
January 5 & 6: CCNC #4 in
Otepää
Women's individual winner:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
January 11 – 13: CCNC #5 in
Ruka
Men's individual winner:
Leif Torbjoern Naesvold
Men's team winners:
Norway
(Simen Tiller, Sindre Ure Soetvik,
Harald Johnas Riiber
, & Leif Torbjoern Naesvold)
Men's Mass Start winner:
Leif Torbjoern Naesvold
January 26 & 27: CCNC #6 in
Planica
Men's individual winners:
Leif Torbjoern Naesvold (#1) /
Paul Gerstgraser (#2)
February 8 – 10: CCNC #7 in
Eisenerz
Men's individual winners:
Paul Gerstgraser (2 times)
Men's team winners:
Austria
(
Philipp Orter
, Christian Deuschl, Florian Dagn, & Paul Gerstgraser)
February 16 & 17: CCNC #8 in
Rena
Men's individual winner:
Paul Gerstgraser (2 times)
Women's individual winner:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
March 8 – 10: CCNC #9 (final) in
Nizhny Tagil
Men's individual winners:
Luis Lehnert (#1) /
Thomas Joebstl (#2)
Women's individual winner:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
Mass Start winners:
Thomas Joebstl (m) /
Tara Geraghty-Moats (f)
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined Alpen Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
August 6, 2018: ACNC #1 in
Klingenthal
Women's individual winner:
Daniela Dejori
August 10, 2018: ACNC #2 in
Bischofsgrün
Women's individual winner:
Lisa Hirner
September 8 – 10, 2018: ACNC #3 in
Winterberg
Men's individual winners:
Rok Jelen (#1) /
Manuel Einkemmer (#2)
October 5 – 7, 2018: ACNC #4 in
Fiemme Valley
-
Predazzo
Men's individual winners:
David Mach (#1) /
Johannes Lamparter (#2)
Women's individual winners:
Jenny Nowak (#1) /
Lisa Hirner (#2)
December 21 – 23, 2018: ACNC #5 in
Villach
Men's individual winners:
Luis Lehnert (#1) /
Thomas Rettenegger (#2)
Women's individual winner:
Lisa Hirner (2 times)
January 12 & 13: ACNC #6 in
Schonach im Schwarzwald
Men's individual winners:
Edgar Vallet (#1) /
Max Teeling (#2)
Women's individual winners:
Ema Volavsek (#1) /
Annika Sieff (#2)
February 8 – 10: ACNC #7 in
Kandersteg
Men's individual winners:
Severin Reiter (#1) /
Nicolas Pfandl (#2)
Men's team winners:
Women's individual winners:
Cindy Haasch (#1) /
Lisa Hirner (#2)
Women's team winners:
February 16 & 17: ACNC #8 in
Kranj
Men's individual winners:
Vid Vrhovnik
(#1) /
Christian Frank (#2)
March 9 & 10: ACNC #9 (final) in
Chaux-Neuve
Men's individual winners:
Max Teeling (#1) /
Rok Jelen (#2)
Women's individual winners:
Daniela Dejori (#1) /
Annika Sieff (#2)
2018 FIS Nordic Combined Grand Prix
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
August 17 – 19: GPNC #1 in
Oberwiesenthal
Men's individual winner:
Johannes Rydzek
Men's team winners:
Austria
(
Franz-Josef Rehrl
&
Mario Seidl
)
Women's individual winners:
Stefaniya Nadymova (#1) /
Tara Geraghty-Moats
(#2)
August 21 & 22: GPNC #2 in
Villach
Men's individual winner:
Ilkka Herola
August 23 – 25: GPNC #3 in
Oberstdorf
Men's individual winners:
Vinzenz Geiger
(#1) /
Akito Watabe
(#2)
September 21 – 23: GPNC #4 (final) in
Planica
Men's individual winner:
Mario Seidl (2 times)
Nordic skiing
[
edit
]
January 19 – 27:
2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships
in
Lahti
[
16
]
Russia
won the gold medal tally.
Norway
won the overall medal tally.
February 19 – March 3:
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019
in
Seefeld
[
17
]
Norway
won both the gold and overall medal tallies.
Ski jumping
[
edit
]
International ski jumping events
[
edit
]
January 19 – 27: Part of the
2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships
in
Lahti
[
18
]
Individual winners:
Thomas Aasen Markeng (m) /
Anna Shpyneva (f)
Men's team winners:
Germany
(Luca Roth, Kilian Maerkl, Philipp Raimund, & Constantin Schmid)
Women's team winners:
Russia
(Mariia Iakovleva, Aleksandra Barantceva, Anna Shpyneva, &
Lidiia Iakovleva
)
Mixed team winners:
Russia
(Anna Shpyneva, Mikhail Purtov, Lidiia Iakovleva, & Maksim Sergeev)
February 20 – March 3: Part of the
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019
in
Seefeld
[
19
]
Men's individual winners:
Markus Eisenbichler
(#1) /
Dawid Kubacki
(#2)
Men's team winners:
Germany
(
Karl Geiger
,
Richard Freitag
,
Stephan Leyhe
, & Markus Eisenbichler)
Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby
Women's team winners:
Germany
(
Juliane Seyfarth
,
Ramona Straub
,
Carina Vogt
, &
Katharina Althaus
)
Mixed team winners:
Germany
(Katharina Althaus, Markus Eisenbichler, Juliane Seyfarth, & Karl Geiger)
2018–19 Four Hills Tournament
[
edit
]
December 29 & 30, 2018: FHT #1 in
Oberstdorf
Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
December 31, 2018 & January 1, 2019: FHT #2 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
January 3 & 4: FHT #3 in
Innsbruck
Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
January 5 & 6: FHT #4 (final) in
Bischofshofen
Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
Raw Air 2019
[
edit
]
March 8 – 10: RA #1 in
Oslo
(SJWC #20)
Individual winners:
Robert Johansson
(m) /
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz
(f)
Men's team winners:
Norway
(
Johann André Forfang
,
Robin Pedersen
,
Marius Lindvik
, & Robert Johansson)
March 11 & 12: RA #2 in
Lillehammer
(SJWC #21)
Individual winners:
Stefan Kraft
(m) /
Maren Lundby
(f)
March 13 & 14: RA #3 in
Trondheim
(SJWC #22)
Individual winners:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
(m) /
Maren Lundby (f)
March 15 – 17: RA #4 (final) in
Vikersund
(SJWC #23)
Men's individual winner:
Domen Prevc
Men's team winners:
Slovenia
(
Anže Semenič
,
Peter Prevc
, Domen Prevc, &
Timi Zajc
)
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
November 16 – 18, 2018: SJWC #1 in
Wisła
Men's individual winner:
Evgeni Klimov
Men's team winners:
Poland
(
Piotr Żyła
,
Jakub Wolny
,
Dawid Kubacki
, &
Kamil Stoch
)
November 23 – 25, 2018: SJWC #2 in
Ruka
Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
(2 times)
November 29 – December 2, 2018: SJWC #3 in
Lillehammer
Women's individual winners:
Juliane Seyfarth
(#1) /
Lidiia Iakovleva (#2) /
Katharina Althaus
(#3)
November 30 – December 2, 2018: SJWC #4 in
Nizhny Tagil
#1
Men's individual winners:
Johann André Forfang
(#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
December 7 – 9, 2018: SJWC #5 in
Titisee-Neustadt
Event cancelled.
December 14 – 16, 2018: SJWC #6 in
Engelberg
Men's individual winners:
Karl Geiger
(#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
December 14 – 16: SJWC #7 in
Prémanon
Women's individual winner:
Katharina Althaus (2 times)
January 11 – 13: SJWC #8 in
Sapporo
#1
Women's individual winners:
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz
(#1) /
Maren Lundby
(#2)
January 11 – 13: SJWC #9 in
Fiemme Valley
Men's individual winners:
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#1) /
Dawid Kubacki (#2)
January 17 – 20: SJWC #10 in
Zaō, Miyagi
Women's individual winners:
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (#1) /
Maren Lundby (#2)
Women's team winners:
Germany
(Juliane Seyfarth,
Ramona Straub
,
Carina Vogt
, & Katharina Althaus)
January 18 – 20: SJWC #11 in
Zakopane
Men's individual winner:
Stefan Kraft
Men's team winners:
Germany
(Karl Geiger,
Markus Eisenbichler
, David Siegel, &
Stephan Leyhe
)
January 25 – 27: SJWC #12 in
Râșnov
Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby (2 times)
January 25 – 27: SJWC #13 in
Sapporo #2
Men's individual winner:
Stefan Kraft (2 times)
February 1 – 3: SJWC #14 in
Oberstdorf #1
Men's individual winners:
Timi Zajc
(#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2) /
Kamil Stoch (#3)
February 1 – 3: SJWC #15 in
Hinzenbach
Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby (2 times)
February 7 – 10: SJWC #16 in
Ljubno ob Savinji
Note: The second women's event here was cancelled.
Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby
Women's team winners:
Germany
(Carina Vogt,
Anna Rupprecht
, Juliane Seyfarth, & Katharina Althaus)
February 8 – 10: SJWC #17 in
Lahti
Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
Men's team winners:
Austria
(Philipp Aschenwald,
Gregor Schlierenzauer
,
Michael Hayböck
, & Stefan Kraft)
February 15 – 17: SJWC #18 in
Willingen
Men's individual winners:
Karl Geiger (#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
Men's team winners:
Poland
(Piotr Żyła, Jakub Wolny, Dawid Kubacki, & Kamil Stoch)
February 15 – 17: SJWC #19 in
Oberstdorf #2
Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby (2 times)
March 15 – 17: SJWC #24 in
Nizhny Tagil #2
Women's individual winner:
Juliane Seyfarth (2 times)
March 21 – 24: SJWC #25 in
Planica
Men's individual winners:
Markus Eisenbichler (#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
Men's team winners:
Poland
(Jakub Wolny, Kamil Stoch, Dawid Kubacki, & Piotr Żyła)
March 22 – 24: SJWC #26 (final) in
Chaykovsky, Perm Krai
Women's individual winners:
Juliane Seyfarth (#1) /
Maren Lundby (#2)
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
July 7 & 8: SJCC #1 in
Kranj
Men's individual winner:
Killian Peier
(2 times)
August 16 – 19: SJCC #2 in
Frenštát pod Radhoštěm
Men's individual winner:
Lukáš Hlava
August 17: SJCC #3 in
Szczyrk
Men's individual winner:
Philipp Aschenwald
August 18: SJCC #4 in
Wisła
Men's individual winner:
Philipp Aschenwald
September 8 & 9: SJCC #5 in
Stams
Men's individual winners:
Philipp Aschenwald (#1) /
Killian Peier (#2)
September 15 & 16: SJCC #6 in
Oslo
Men's individual winner:
Philipp Aschenwald (2 times)
Women's individual winner:
Katharina Althaus
(2 times)
September 22 & 23: SJCC #7 in
Zakopane
#1
Men's individual winners:
Stefan Huber (#1) /
Philipp Aschenwald (#2)
September 29 & 30: SJCC #8 in
Klingenthal
#1
Men's individual winners:
Dimitry Vassiliev
(#1) /
Aleksander Zniszczoł
(#2)
December 8 & 9: SJCC #9 in
Lillehammer
Men's individual winner:
Marius Lindvik (2 times)
December 14 & 15: SJCC #10 in
Notodden
Women's individual winners:
Selina Freitag (#1) /
Claudia Purker (#2)
December 15 & 16: SJCC #11 in
Ruka
Men's individual winner:
Robin Pedersen (2 times)
December 27 & 28: SJCC #12 in
Engelberg
Men's individual winners:
Markus Schiffner
(#1) /
Philipp Aschenwald (#2)
January 5 & 6: SJCC #13 in
Klingenthal #2
Men's individual winners:
Moritz Baer
(#1) /
Tilen Bartol
(#2)
January 12 & 13: SJCC #14 in
Bischofshofen
Men's individual winners:
Clemens Aigner
(#1) /
Žiga Jelar
(#2)
January 18 – 20: SJCC #15 in
Sapporo Okurayama
Men's individual winner:
Clemens Aigner (3 times)
January 19 & 20: SJCC #16 in
Planica
#1
Women's individual winner:
Jerneja Brecl (2 times)
January 26 & 27: SJCC #17 in
Planica #2
Men's individual winners:
Bor Pavlovčič
(#1) /
Martin Hamann (#2)
February 1 & 2: SJCC #18 in
Erzurum
Event cancelled.
February 8 – 10: SJCC #19 in
Iron Mountain
Men's individual winners:
Pius Paschke (#1) /
Marius Lindvik (#2) /
Thomas Aasen Markeng (#3)
February 15 & 16: SJCC #20 in
Oberstdorf
Men's individual winner:
Clemens Aigner (2 times)
February 23 & 24: SJCC #21 in
Brotterode
Men's individual winners:
Clemens Aigner (#1) /
Marius Lindvik (#2)
Women's individual winners:
Pauline Heßler
(#1) /
Katra Komar (#2)
March 2 & 3, 2019: SJCC #22 in
Rena
Men's individual winner:
Marius Lindvik (2 times)
March 16 & 17: SJCC #23 in
Zakopane #2
Men's individual winners:
Stefan Huber (#1) /
Aleksander Zniszczoł (#2)
March 23 & 24: SJCC #24 (final) in
Chaykovsky
Men's individual winner:
Aleksander Zniszczoł (2 times)
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
August 5 & 6: SJAC #1 in
Klingenthal
Women's individual winners:
Lisa Hirner (#1) /
Josephin Laue (#2)
August 8 & 9: SJAC #2 in
Pöhla
Women's individual winners:
Lisa Hirner (#1) /
Alina Ihle (#2)
August 10 & 11: SJAC #3 in
Bischofsgrün
Women's individual winners:
Lisa Hirner (#1) /
Oceane Paillard (#2)
September 8 & 9: SJSC #4 in
Einsiedeln
Men's individual winner:
David Haagen (2 times)
October 5 – 7: SJSC #5 in
Fiemme Valley
-
Predazzo
Men's individual winners:
David Haagen (#1) /
Jan Bombek (#2)
Women's individual winners:
Lara Malsiner
(#1) /
Agnes Reisch
(#2)
December 21 – 23: SJSC #6 in
Villach
Men's individual winners:
Stefan Rainer (#1) /
Luca Roth (#2)
Women's individual winners:
Lisa Eder (#1) /
Lisa Hirner (#2)
January 11 & 12: SJSC #7 in
Schonach im Schwarzwald
Women's individual winner:
Josephine Pagnier (2 times)
January 12 & 13: SJSC #8 in
Oberwiesenthal
Event cancelled.
February 8 – 10: SJSC #9 in
Kandersteg
Men's individual winners:
Rok Masle (#1) /
Marco Woergoetter (#2)
Men's team winners:
Women's individual winners:
Ana Jereb (#1) /
Lisa Hirner (#2)
Women's team winners:
February 15 & 16: SJSC #10 in
Kranj
Men's individual winner:
Aljaž Osterc (2 times)
February 23 & 24: SJSC #11 in
Oberhof
Men's individual winners:
Dominik Peter (#1) /
Claudio Moerth (#2)
March 9 & 10: SJSC #12 (final) in
Chaux-Neuve
Note:
The second women's individual event here was cancelled.
Men's individual winners:
Dominik Peter (#1) /
David Haagen (#2)
Women's individual winner:
Pia Mazi
2018 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
July 20 – 22: SJGP #1 in
Wisła
Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
Men's team winners:
Poland
(
Maciej Kot
,
Dawid Kubacki
, Kamil Stoch, &
Piotr Żyła
)
July 27 & 28: SJGP #2 in
Hinterzarten
Individual winners:
Kamil Stoch (m) /
Sara Takanashi
(f)
August 3 & 4: SJGP #3 in
Einsiedeln
Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
August 9 – 11: SJGP #4 in
Courchevel
Individual winners:
Evgeni Klimov
(m) /
Sara Takanashi (f)
August 16 – 19: SJGP #5 in
Frenštát pod Radhoštěm
Women's individual winner:
Sara Takanashi (2 times)
August 23 – 25: SJGP #6 in
Hakuba
Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
(2 times)
September 7 – 9: SJGP #7 in
Chaykovsky, Perm Krai
Note:
The men's individual event was cancelled.
Women's individual winner:
Ema Klinec
Mixed Team winners:
Japan
(Nozomi Maruyama, Yukiya Sato, Sara Takanashi, &
Junshirō Kobayashi
)
September 21 – 23: SJGP #8 in
Râșnov
Men's individual winner:
Karl Geiger
(2 times)
September 27 & 28: SJGP #9 in
Liberec
Event cancelled.
September 29 & 30: SJGP #10 in
Hinzenbach
Men's individual winner:
Daniel Huber
October 2 & 3: SJGP #11 (final) in
Klingenthal
Note:
The men's individual event was cancelled.
Women's individual winner:
Anna Rupprecht
2018 FIS Ski Jumping Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
July 7 & 8: SJC #1 in
Villach
#1
Men's winners:
Justin Nietzel (#1) /
Luca Egloff (#2)
Women's winner:
Chiara Hoelzl (2 times)
July 14 & 15: SJC #2 in
Szczyrk
Men's winners:
Maximilian Steiner (#1) /
Justin Nietzel (#2)
Women's winner:
Daniela Haralambie
(2 times)
August 18 & 19: SJC #3 in
Sochi
Event cancelled.
September 15 & 16: SJC #4 in
Râșnov
Men's winner:
Ren Nikaido (2 times)
Women's winner:
Daniela Haralambie (2 times)
December 14 & 15: SJC #5 in
Notodden
Men's winners:
Stefan Rainer (#1) /
Fabian Seidl (#2)
December 19 & 20: SJC #6 in
Utah Olympic Park
Men's winner:
Luca Egloff (2 times)
Women's winners:
Natalie Eilers (#1) /
Taylor Henrich
(#2)
January 12 & 13: SJC #7 in
Zakopane
Men's winners:
Claudio Moerth (#1) /
David Haagen (#2)
January 19 & 20: SJC #8 in
Planica
Men's winner:
Cene Prevc
(2 times)
January 30 & 31: SJC #9 in
Erzurum
Event cancelled.
February 9 & 10: SJC #10 in
Rastbuechl
Men's winner:
Andreas Wank
(2 times)
Women's winner:
Agnes Reisch
(2 times)
February 23 & 24: SJC #11 (final) in
Villach #2
Men's winner:
Andreas Wank (2 times)
Women's winners:
Giada Tomaselli (#1) /
Veronica Gianmoena (#2)
Other ski jumping events
[
edit
]
July 26, 2018: 2018 FIS Europa-Park FIS Youth Cup in
Hinterzarten
Winners:
Rok Masle (m) /
Ana Jereb (f)
September 14, 2018: 2018 FIS Carpath Cup in
Râșnov
Winners:
Andrew Urlaub (m) /
Annika Sieff (f)
March 7 – 10: 2019 Miyasama Ski Games in both
Okurayama Ski Jump Stadium
&
Miyanomori Ski Jump Stadium
(
Sapporo
)
Miyanomori Winners:
Keiichi Sato (m) /
Misaki Shigeno (f)
Okurayama Winners:
Yumu Harada (m) /
Misaki Shigeno (f)
Snowboarding
[
edit
]
Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships
[
edit
]
August 24 – September 6, 2018: Part of the FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2018 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
[
20
]
Note:
The team snowboard cross events here were cancelled.
Big Air winners:
Takeru Otsuka (m) /
Kokomo Murase (f)
Snowboard Cross winners:
Jake Vedder (m) /
Kristina Paul
(f)
Slopestyle winners:
Takeru Otsuka (m) /
Kokomo Murase (f)
Halfpipe winners:
Toby Miller (m) /
Mitsuki Ono (f)
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov
(m) /
Milena Bykova
(f)
Parallel Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Daniela Ulbing
(f)
January 26 – April 14: FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2019 in
Leysin
,
Rogla Ski Resort
,
Reiteralm
, &
Klaeppen
[
21
]
Leysin
(January 26 & 27)
Halfpipe winners:
Ruka Hirano (m) /
Mitsuki Ono (f)
Rogla
(March 29 – April 5)
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Anastasia Kurochkina (f)
Parallel Slalom winners:
Mykhailo Kharuk (m) /
Maria Valova (f)
Team Parallel winners:
Russia
(Anastasia Kurochkina & Dmitry Loginov)
Reiteralm
(April 1 – 3)
Snowboard Cross winners:
Loan Bozzolo
(m) /
Jana Fischer
(f)
Team Snowboard Cross winners:
France
(Chloe Passerat & Loan Bozzolo)
Klaeppen
(April 4 – 14)
Slopestyle winners:
William Buffey (m) /
Sommer Gendron (f)
Big Air winners:
Ryoma Kimata (m) /
Sommer Gendron (f)
February 1 – 10: Part of the
FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019
in
Park City
,
Deer Valley
, &
Solitude Mountain Resort
[
11
]
[
22
]
Note:
The big air events here were cancelled.
Halfpipe winners:
Scotty James
(m) /
Chloe Kim
(f)
Slopestyle winners:
Chris Corning
(m) /
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott
(f)
Snowboard Cross winners:
Mick Dierdorff
(m) /
Eva Samková
(f)
Team Snowboard Cross winners:
United States
(Mick Dierdorff &
Lindsey Jacobellis
)
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Selina Jörg
(f)
Parallel Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Julie Zogg
(f)
Alpine snowboarding
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 13, 2018: ASWC #1 in
Carezza
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Tim Mastnak
(m) /
Nadya Ochner
(f)
December 14 & 15, 2018: ASWC #2 in
Cortina d'Ampezzo
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Roland Fischnaller
(m) /
Ester Ledecká
(f)
January 8 & 9: ASWC #3 in
Bad Gastein
Parallel Slalom winners:
Stefan Baumeister
(m) /
Claudia Riegler
(f)
Team Parallel Slalom winners:
Austria
(
Benjamin Karl
&
Daniela Ulbing
)
January 19: ASWC #4 in
Rogla Ski Resort
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Edwin Coratti
(m) /
Selina Jörg
(f)
January 26 & 27: ASWC #5 in
Moscow
Parallel Slalom winners:
Andrey Sobolev
(m) /
Julie Zogg
(f)
Team Parallel Slalom winners:
Austria
(Daniela Ulbing & Benjamin Karl)
February 16 & 17: ASWC #6 in
PyeongChang
Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Žan Košir
(#1) /
Andreas Prommegger
(#2)
Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Ester Ledecká (#1) /
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister
(#2)
February 23 & 24: ASWC #7 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Tim Mastnak (m) /
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (f)
Parallel Slalom winners:
Daniele Bagozza (m) /
Gong Naiying
(f)
March 9: ASWC #8 in
Scuol
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Andrey Sobolev (m) /
Milena Bykova
(f)
March 23 & 24: ASWC #9 (final) in
Winterberg
Parallel Slalom winners:
Lukas Mathies
(m) /
Patrizia Kummer
(f)
Team Parallel Slalom winners:
Austria
(Daniela Ulbing & Benjamin Karl)
Snowboard cross
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 12 – 16, 2018: SBXWC #1 in
Montafon
Event cancelled.
December 20 – 22, 2018: SBXWC #2 in
Breuil-Cervinia
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Martin Nörl
(#1) /
Emanuel Perathoner
(#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Lindsey Jacobellis
(#1) /
Eva Samková
(#2)
February 8 – 10: SBXWC #3 in
Feldberg
Note:
The team snowboard cross event here was cancelled.
Snowboard Cross winners:
Cameron Bolton
(m) /
Lindsey Jacobellis (f)
March 1 & 2: SBXWC #4 in
Baqueira-Beret
Snowboard Cross winners:
Alessandro Hämmerle
(m) /
Eva Samková (f)
March 16: SBXWC #5 (final) in
Veysonnaz
Snowboard Cross winners:
Lucas Eguibar
(m) /
Eva Samková (f)
Freestyle snowboarding
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
September 6 & 8, 2018: FSWC #1 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
Big Air winners:
Chris Corning
(m) /
Reira Iwabuchi
(f)
November 3, 2018: FSWC #2 in
Modena
Skipass
Big Air winners:
Takeru Otsuka (m) /
Reira Iwabuchi (f)
November 23 & 24, 2018: FSWC #3 in
Beijing
Big Air winners:
Sven Thorgren
(m) /
Anna Gasser
(f)
December 6 & 8, 2018: FSWC #4 in
Copper Mountain
Halfpipe winners:
Scotty James
(m) /
Chloe Kim
(f)
December 19 – 21, 2018: FSWC #5 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden
Halfpipe winners:
Jan Scherrer
(m) /
Cai Xuetong
(f)
Slopestyle winners:
Takeru Otsuka (m) /
Miyabi Onitsuka
(f)
January 11 & 12: FSWC #6 in
Kreischberg
Slopestyle winners:
Mons Røisland
(m) /
Miyabi Onitsuka (f)
January 15 – 19: FSWC #7 in
Laax
Slopestyle winners:
Chris Corning (m) /
Silje Norendal
(f)
Halfpipe winners:
Scotty James (m) /
Chloe Kim (f)
January 24 & 26: FSWC #8 in
Seiser Alm
Slopestyle winners:
Markus Olimstad (m) /
Isabel Derungs
(f)
February 13 & 15: FSWC #9 in
Calgary
Halfpipe winners:
Yūto Totsuka
(m) /
Queralt Castellet
(f)
March 5 – 9: FSWC #10 in
Mammoth Mountain
Note:
The women's slopestyle event here was cancelled.
Men's Slopestyle winner:
Red Gerard
Halfpipe winners:
Yūto Totsuka (m) /
Cai Xuetong (f)
March 14 – 17: FSWC #11 (final) in
Quebec City
Note:
The slopestyle events here was cancelled.
Big Air winners:
Seppe Smits
(m) /
Julia Marino
(f)
March 22: FSWC #12 (final) in
Oslo
Event cancelled.
2018–19 FIS Snowboard Europa Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
November 2018
November 21 & 22, 2018: SBEC #1 in
Landgraaf
Slopestyle winners:
Erik Bastiaansen (m) /
Melissa Peperkamp (f)
November 24 & 25, 2018: SBEC #2 in
Kaunertal
Event cancelled.
November 28 & 29, 2018: SBEC #3 in
Pitztal
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Konstantin Schad
(#1) /
Lucas Eguibar
(#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Charlotte Bankes
(#1) /
Eva Samková
(#2)
December 2018
December 22 & 23, 2018: SBEC #4 in
Hochfügen
Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Maurizio Bormolini (#1) /
Arvid Auner (#2)
Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister
(#1) /
Jemima Juritz (#2)
January 2019
January 8 & 9: SBEC #5 in
Jasná
Event cancelled.
January 10 & 11: SBEC #6 in
Bad Gastein
Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Lee Sang-ho
(#1) /
Dmitriy Karlagachev (#2)
Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Patrizia Kummer
(#1) /
Maria Valova (#2)
January 12 & 13: SBEC #7 in
Puy-Saint-Vincent
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Lorenzo Sommariva
(#1) /
Florian Gregor (#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Charlotte Bankes (2 times)
January 16 & 17: SBEC #8 in
Kreischberg
Big Air winners:
Boris Mouton (m) /
Melissa Peperkamp (f)
Slopestyle winners:
Moritz Boll (m) /
Melissa Peperkamp (f)
January 19 & 20: SBEC #9 in
Grasgehren
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jakob Dusek (#1) /
Kalle Koblet
(#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Lara Casanova
(2 times)
January 22 & 23: SBEC #10 in
Font-Romeu
Note:
The slopestyle events here were cancelled.
Big Air winners:
Moritz Boll (m) /
Lucie Silvestre (f)
January 25 & 26: SBEC #11 in
Vars
Slopestyle winners:
Moritz Boll (m) /
Lucie Silvestre (f)
Big Air winners:
Leon Guetl (m) /
Noemie Equy (f)
January 26 & 27: SBEC #12 in
Lachtal
Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Igor Sluev (#1) /
Ilia Vitugov (#2)
Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Jessica Keiser (#1) /
Sofia Nadyrshina (#2)
January 29 & 30: SBEC #13 in
Val Thorens
Note:
The second snowboard cross events for men and women were cancelled.
Snowboard Cross winners:
Florian Gregor (m) /
Katharina Neussner (f)
January 31 & February 1: SBEC #14 in
Monte Bondone
Event cancelled.
February 2019
February 2 & 3: SBEC #15 in
Sarajevo
Men's Big Air winners:
Matija Milenković (#1) /
Tino Stojak (#2)
Women's Big Air winner:
Martyna Maciejewska (2 times)
February 6 & 7: SBEC #16 in
Dolní Morava
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
David Pickl (#1) /
Sebastian Jud (#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Chloe Passerat (#1) /
Katharina Neussner (#2)
February 7 & 8: SBEC #17 in
Kopaonik
Men's Big Air winners:
Tino Stojak (#1) /
Noah Vicktor (#2)
Women's Big Air winners:
Jelena Ignjatov (#1) /
Tinkara Tanja Valcl (#2)
February 9 & 10: SBEC #18 in
Lenzerheide
Men's Parallel Slalom winner:
Fabian Obmann (2 times)
Women's Parallel Slalom winner:
Anastasia Kurochkina (2 times)
February 9 & 10: SBEC #19 in
Crans-Montana
Halfpipe winners:
Lorenzo Gennero (m) /
Berenice Wicki
(f)
February 15 & 16: SBEC #20 in
Kotelnica Bialczanska
Big Air winners:
Tino Stojak (m) /
Martyna Maciejewska (f)
February 22 & 23: SBEC #21 in
Davos
#1
Big Air winners:
Nick Puenter (m) /
Lia-Mara Boesch (f)
February 26 & 27: SBEC #22 in
Götschen
Men's Big Air winners:
Gabriel Adams (#1) /
Tino Stojak (#2)
Women's Big Air winners:
Nadja Flemming (#1) /
Emma Lantos (#2)
March 2019
March 2 & 3: SBEC #23 in
Davos #2
Men's Parallel Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner:
Masaki Shiba
Women's Parallel Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner:
Patrizia Kummer
March 8 – 10: SBEC #24 in
Gudauri
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jakob Dusek (#1) /
Merlin Surget
(#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Hanna Ihedioha
(2 times)
March 10 – 16: SBEC #25 in
Sunny Valley (
Miass
)
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jakob Dusek (#1) /
Loan Bozzolo
(#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jana Fischer
(#1) /
Sophie Hediger (#2)
March 15 – 17: SBEC #26 in
Kühtai Saddle
Big Air winners:
Jules de Sloover (m) /
Evy Poppe (f)
Halfpipe winners:
Christoph Lechner (m) /
Leilani Ettel (f)
March 16: SBEC #27 in
Pec pod Sněžkou
Slopestyle winners:
Leon Guetl (m) /
Šárka Pančochová
(f)
March 16 & 17: SBEC #28 in
Rogla Ski Resort
Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Tim Mastnak
(2 times)
Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Elizaveta Salikhova (#1) /
Anastasia Kurochkina (#2)
March 18 & 19: SBEC #29 in
Jasná
Men's Slopestyle winners:
Noah Vicktor (#1) /
Leon Guetl (#2)
Women's Slopestyle winner:
Lucie Silvestre (2 times)
March 21 – 24: SBEC #30 in
Laax
Slopestyle winners:
Noah Vicktor (m) /
Bianca Gisler (f)
Halfpipe winners:
Andre Hoeflich (m) /
Verena Rohrer
(f)
March 22 – 24: SBEC #31 in
Lenk
Men's Snowboard Cross winner:
Loan Bozzolo (2 times)
Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Chloé Trespeuch
(2 times)
March 26 – 28: SBEC #32 in
Sochi
Slopestyle winners:
Mark Teimurov (m) /
Ekaterina Kosova (f)
Big Air winners:
Mikhail Matveev (m) /
Ekaterina Kosova (f)
March 28 & 29: SBEC #33 in
Livigno
Men's Slopestyle winner:
Jonas Bösiger
(2 times)
Women's Slopestyle winner:
Loranne Smans (2 times)
April 2019
April 6 & 7: SBEC #34 in
Racines
Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Arvid Auner (#1) /
Stefan Baumeister
(#2)
Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Tsubaki Miki (#1) /
Jemima Juritz (#2)
April 10 – 14: SBEC #35 (final) in
Silvaplana
Note:
The men's slopestyle event here was cancelled.
Women's Slopestyle winner:
Isabel Derungs
Big Air winners:
Jonas Bösiger (m) /
Carla Somaini
(f)
2018–19 FIS Snowboard Nor-Am Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
December 8 & 9, 2018: SNAC #1 in
Steamboat Ski Resort
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Robert Burns (m) /
Tsubaki Miki (f)
Parallel Slalom winners:
Robert Burns (m) /
Maggie Carrigan (f)
December 11 & 12, 2018: SNAC #2 in
Copper Mountain
Men's Halfpipe winner:
Yūto Totsuka
(2 times)
Women's Halfpipe winners:
Kurumi Imai
(#1) /
Hikaru Ōe
(#2)
December 14 – 16, 2018: SNAC #3 in
Buck Hill
Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Cody Winters (#1; 2 times) /
Robert Burns (#2)
Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Tsubaki Miki (#1) /
Kaylie Buck (#2; 2 times)
January 2 – 4: SNAC #4 in
Le Relais
Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Jasey-Jay Anderson
(#1) /
Ryan Rosencranz (#2)
Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Kaylie Buck (#1) /
Lynn Ott
(#2)
January 7 – 9: SNAC #5 in
Panorama Mountain Village
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Glenn de Blois (#1) /
Hagen Kearney
(#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Tess Critchlow
(#1) /
Carle Brenneman
(#2)
January 14 & 15: SNAC #6 in
Waterville Valley Resort
Men's Slopestyle winners:
Jake Canter (#1) /
Luke Winkelmann (#2)
Women's Slopestyle winners:
Addison Gardner (#1) /
Courtney Rummel (#2)
January 22 – 24: SNAC #7 in
Sun Peaks Resort
Slopestyle winners:
Luke Winkelmann (m) /
Addison Gardner (f)
Big Air winners:
Storm Rowe (m) /
Jade Thurgood (f)
February 6 – 8: SNAC #8 in
Craigleith Ski Club
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Cole Johnson (#1) /
Mike Lacroix (#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Christina Taylor (#1) /
Emma Downing (#2)
February 6 – 8: SNAC #9 in
Mount St. Louis Moonstone
Note:
The big air events here were cancelled.
Slopestyle winners:
Storm Rowe (m) /
Addison Gardner (f)
February 9 & 10: SNAC #10 in
Alpine Ski Club
Men's Parallel Slalom winner:
Arnaud Gaudet (2 times)
Women's Parallel Slalom winner:
Kaylie Buck (2 times)
February 11 – 13: SNAC #11 in
Mont Original
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Éliot Grondin
(#1) /
Liam Moffatt (#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Livia Molodyh (2 times)
February 18 – 23: SNAC #12 in
Ski Cooper
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Senna Leith (#1) /
WOO Jin (#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Anna Miller (#1) /
Stacy Gaskill (#2)
February 28 & March 1: SNAC #13 in
Holiday Valley
#1
Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Arnaud Gaudet (2 times)
Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Megan Farrell (2 times)
March 3 – 8: SNAC #14 in
Blue Mountain
Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Sebastien Beaulieu (m) /
Katrina Gerencser (f)
Parallel Slalom winners:
Jules Lefebvre (m) /
Megan Farrell (f)
March 12 – 17: SNAC #15 in
Holiday Valley #2
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Liam Moffatt (#1) /
Mike Lacroix (#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Audrey McManiman (2 times)
March 13 & 14: SNAC #16 in
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
Slopestyle winners:
Liam Brearley (m) /
Addison Gardner (f)
Halfpipe winners:
Shawn Fair (m) /
Brooke Dhondt (f)
March 18 – 24: SNAC #17 in
Canada Olympic Park
(
Calgary
)
Halfpipe winners:
Shawn Fair (m) /
Brooke Dhondt (f)
Men's Slopestyle & Big Air winner:
Nicolas Laframboise
Women's Slopestyle & Big Air winner:
Jasmine Baird
March 26 – 28: SNAC #18 (final) in
Big White Ski Resort
Snowboard Cross winners:
Danny Bourgeois (m) /
Tess Critchlow (f)
2018 FIS Snowboard South American Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
August 3 – 5: SACSB #1 in
La Parva
#1
Men's Slopestyle winners:
Martin Jaureguialzo (#1) /
Inaqui Irarrazaval (#2)
Women's Slopestyle winner:
Antonia Yanez (2 times)
August 10 – 12: SACSB #2 in
La Parva #2
Note:
Both women's snowboard cross events here were cancelled.
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Simon White (#1) /
Steven Williams
(#2)
September 14 & 15: SACSB #3 in
Cerro Catedral
Men's Big Air winners:
Matías Schmitt
(#1) /
Federico Chiaradio de la Iglesia (#2)
Women's Big Air winner:
Antonia Yanez (2 times)
September 18 – 23: SACSB #4 & #5 (final) in
Cerro Castor
Big Air winners:
Federico Chiaradio de la Iglesia (m) /
Maria Azul Chavez Martinez (f)
Slopestyle winners:
Matías Schmitt (m) /
Morena Poggi Silveira (f)
Snowboard Cross winners:
Regino Hernández
(m) /
Maria Agustina Pardo (f)
2018 FIS Snowboard Australia & New Zealand Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
July 30 – August 1: SBANC #1 in
Mount Hotham
#1
Snowboard Cross winners:
Alex Pullin
(m) /
Emily Boyce (f)
August 14 – 16: SBANC #2 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
Slopestyle winners:
Ryo Aizawa (m) /
Rina Yoshika (f)
Half-pipe winners:
Lee Kwang-ki
(m) /
LEE Min-ju (f)
September 3 – 5: SBANC #3 (final) in
Mount Hotham #2
Note:
The third set of snowboard cross events here was cancelled.
Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Paul Berg
(#1) /
Alex Pullin (#2)
Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Emily Boyce (2 times)
Telemark skiing
[
edit
]
Telemark Skiing World Championships
[
edit
]
February 14 – 18: 2019 Junior Telemark Skiing World Championships in
Krvavec Ski Resort
[
23
]
Note:
The Junior World Championship and the World Cup are separate events, even though they are located in an identical location and dates.
Classic winners:
Noe Claye (m) /
Chloe Blyth (f)
Team Parallel Sprint winners:
France
Parallel Sprint winners:
Christoph Frank (m) /
Goril Strom Eriksen (f)
Sprint winners:
Theo Sillon (m) /
Julie Bourbon (f)
March 20 – 23: 2019 Telemark Skiing World Championships in
Rjukan
[
24
]
Classic winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
Sprint winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
Parallel Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
Team Parallel Sprint winners:
Switzerland
2019 Telemark Skiing World Cup
[
edit
]
Note:
For the FIS page about these events, click
here.
January 20 & 21: TSWC #1 in
La Thuile
Classic winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
Sprint winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
January 25 & 26: TSWC #2 in
Pralognan-la-Vanoise
Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Jasmin Taylor (f)
Classic winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
January 29 – February 1: TSWC #3 in
Pra-Loup
Classic winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
Sprint winners:
Bastien Dayer (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
Parallel Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
February 9 & 10: TSWC #4 in
Bad Hindelang
-
Oberjoch
Sprint winners:
Bastien Dayer (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
Parallel Sprint winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
February 14 – 18: TSWC #5 (final) in
Krvavec Ski Resort
Classic winners:
Bastien Dayer (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
Parallel Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
Sprint winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
References
[
edit
]
^
"FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 Website"
. Archived from
the original
on 2014-12-13
. Retrieved
2019-01-23
.
^
FIS' Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 Results Page
^
FIS' World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2019 Website
^
FIS' World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2019 Results Page
^
"FIS' Men's GS in Sölden dogged by bad luck"
. Archived from
the original
on 2018-10-28
. Retrieved
2019-01-23
.
^
ITG's Cancelled men's Alpine Skiing World Cup opener rescheduled for December in Saalbach-Hinterglemm
^
FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Cross-Country) Results Page
^
FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Cross-Country) Results Page
^
FIS' 2018 Freestyle Junior World Ski Championships Results Page
^
FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2019 (Freestyle) Results Page
^
a
b
"FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 Website"
. Archived from
the original
on 2018-11-23
. Retrieved
2019-01-23
.
^
FIS' Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 (Freestyle) Results Page
^
FIS' 2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Page
^
FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Nordic Combined) Results Page
^
FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Nordic Combined) Results Page
^
"2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships Website"
. Archived from
the original
on 2019-01-03
. Retrieved
2019-01-24
.
^
FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 Website
^
FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Ski Jumping) Results Page
^
FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Ski Jumping) Results Page
^
FIS' 2018 Snowboard Junior World Championships Results Page
^
FIS' 2019 Snowboard Junior World Championships Results Page
^
FIS' Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 (Snowboard) Results Page
^
FIS' 2019 Junior Telemark Skiing World Championships Page
^
FIS' 2019 Telemark Skiing World Championships Page
External links
[
edit
]
International Ski Federation official website
Retrieved from "
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2018–19_in_skiing&oldid=1305236223
"
Categories
:
Skiing by year
2018 in winter sports
2019 in winter sports
2018 sport-related lists
2019 sport-related lists
Hidden categories:
Articles with short description
Short description is different from Wikidata
Search
Search
Toggle the table of contents
2018–19 in skiing
Add languages
Add topic
[8]
ページ先頭
©2009-2026
Movatter.jp