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'I'm the oldest, right?': Brignone wins in Tremblant to set age record

Dec 02, 2023·Alpine Skiing
TREMBLANT, CANADA - DECEMBER 2: Federica Brignone of Team Italy takes 1st place during the Audi FIS Alpine Ski World Cup Women's Giant Slalom on December 2, 2023 in Tremblant, Canada. (Photo by Christophe Pallot/Agence Zoom)

After letting nerves get the better of her as the last skier on the mountain in the season-opening race in Sölden five weeks ago, Federica Brignone (ITA) wasn't about to make the same mistake again.

Instead, the 33-year-old Italian veteran used all her experience to become the oldest winner of a women's World Cup giant slalom race by triumphing in the Canadian resort of Tremblant on Saturday.

Brignone mastered foggy conditions in the first run to take the half-way lead and this time she held her nerve in the second run to hold off Petra Vlhova (SVK, +0.21s) and Mikaela Shiffrin (USA, +0.29s).

"I'm really excited, it was really, really an amazing race," said Brignone, who admitted her inability to go on with the job in Sölden, where she finished second to Lara Gut-Behrami (SUI), was on her mind between runs in Tremblant.

"In Sölden actually it was totally a surprise to be so far ahead in the first run and I completed blocked myself," Brignone said.

"Before the second run I couldn't even move and warm up, I wanted to puke, I felt really bad and my legs were not moving.

"Today I felt better. I wanted just to concentrate on my skiing and I did it and that's so great."

Brignone in form during Saturday's first run
Brignone in form during Saturday's first run

In finishing off the victory, Brignone won her 22nd World Cup race to equal teammate Sofia Goggia (ITA) for the all-time lead among Italian women and make up for a disappointing sixth position in the Killington giant slalom last Saturday.

"I came here after the Killington weekend and there I didn't have great sensations and I just wanted to come here and just ski the way I want and the way I know," Brignone said.

By doing just that, Brignone broke a 24-year-old record as the most senior women's World Cup giant slalom winner, surpassing Anita Wachter (AUT), who was 32 when she triumphed in Lienz in 1999.

"I'm the oldest, right?" Brignone laughed.

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Her younger rivals Vlhova and Shiffrin, both 28, skied the two fastest second runs of the field to move up two places each and reach the podium at the expense of Sara Hector (SWE, fourth) and Gut-Behrami (fifth).

Vlhova finished runner-up for her second podium in three giant slalom races this season, while Shiffrin's third place was her 142nd podium in just 255 World Cup starts over her extraordinary career.

Both stars admitted to testing out the rolling terrain of the hill on the first run during Tremblant's first women's World Cup race in 40 years, before picking up the pace in the second run.

"The first run I was so-so because I didn't know the slope and all the rolls so it was a little bit difficult to understand everything," Vlhova said. "But then I realised that I like this kind of condition, like spring snow, and that I know I can be really fast."

Shiffrin was all smiles after her second run
Shiffrin was all smiles after her second run

Shiffrin, who moved up from fifth to third with a brilliant second run, concurred.

"I started off feeling very unsure about how the hill would feel, how the terrain would move," Shiffrin said. "I got a little bit more security in my feeling after the first run and in the second run I really tried to push."

As for tomorrow's second giant slalom race on what will now be a slightly more familiar course, the 90-time World Cup winner has a simple plan: "let it fly," Shiffrin said.

Click here for the full results from Saturday's race.