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2024-2025 Women's Alpine Ski World Cup Super-G Season Review

  • Writer: Raúl Revuelta
    Raúl Revuelta
  • Mar 31
  • 3 min read

2024-2025 Women's Alpine Ski World Cup Super-G Season Review


Lara Gut-Behrami won the Super-G Crystal Globe. Federica Brignone and Sofia Goggia secured second and third places in the discipline's rankings.

2024-2025 Women's Alpine Ski World Cup Super-G Season Review

Sofia Goggia imposed her all-on aggressive style at the Birds of Prey course in Beaver Creek to win the first World Cup Super-G of the 2024-2025 winter season. Lara Gut-Behrami finished in second place, 0.48 seconds behind. Ariane Raedler rounded up the podium in third position, 0.55 seconds off the pace.



Cornelia Hütter celebrated her second victory of the season in St. Moritz. Thanks to a perfect line, she beat Lara Gut-Behrami by 0.18 seconds. Sofia Goggia finished third, 0.33 seconds behind the Austrian. She was the first Austrian to win the super-G in St. Moritz since Michaela Dorfmeister in 2006.



The first Super-G of the Alpine Ski World Cup in 2025 featured a first-time winner. The 22-year-old US skier Lauren Macuga proved she is one of the promising skiers to follow by winning the Super-G in St. Anton. After finishing in fourth place in the first Downhill of the season in Beaver Creek and seventh in the Super-G in St. Moritz, she celebrated her first victory and podium finish in her 17th Super-G and 30th World Cup race.

Stephanie Venier finished second, 0.68 seconds behind Macuga. Federica Brignone completed the podium in third, 0.92 seconds off the pace.



Federica Brignone ended the Cortina speed weekend with another victory for the Italian team. Lara Gut-Behrami finished in second place, 0.58 seconds behind the Italian. Corinne Suter rounded up the podium in third place, 1.08 seconds off the pace. Brignone won a World Cup race on home snow for the first time in almost four years since winning the Super-G in Val di Fassa in February 2021.



In the fifth Super-G race of the season, the last one before the Alpine World Ski Championships in Saalbach, Lara Gut-Behrami claimed her first win. It was her fifth Alpine Ski World Cup Super-G win in Garmisch.

Kajsa Vickhoff Lie secured second place, trailing by 0.35 seconds. Federica Brignone, who won the Downhill, came in third, 0.38 seconds behind the Swiss.



Federica Brignone claimed victory in an exciting Super-G event in Kvitfjell. The 34-year-old set the best time in a challenging Olympiabakken course to finish just 0.06 seconds ahead of Lara Gut-Behrami. Sofia Goggia rounded out the podium 0.09 seconds behind Brignone.



After claiming her first Alpine Ski World Cup Victory in the Downhill in Kvitfjell, Emma Aicher won her first Super-G in a shortened racecourse in La Thuile. The 21-year-old all-rounder German skier finished ahead of the Italian duo of Sofia Goggia and Federica Brignone. Before La Thuile Aicher's best result in the Super-G was a 5th place in Kvitfjell in 2023.

It was Germany's first women's Super-G win in the World Cup since March 2019, when Viktoria Rebensburg won in Soldeu.



Federica Brignone claimed victory in an exciting Super-G event in La Thuile. The 34-year-old set the best time in a shortened course to finish just 0.01 seconds ahead of Sofia Goggia. Romane Miradoli rounded out the podium 0.05 seconds behind Brignone.



In a remarkable performance, Lara Gut-Behrami triumphed by over one second in the final Super-G of the season in Sun Valley. Lindsey Vonn finished in second place, 1.29 seconds behind Gut-Behrami. Federica Brignone rounded out the podium in third place, 1.33 seconds behind the Swiss.

With her win in Sun Valley, Lara Gut-Behrami secured the Super-G Crystal Globe for the third time in a row. She has won the Super-G Globe five times before: 2013-2014, 2105-2016, 2020-2021, 2022-2023, and 2023-2024. Gut-Behrami is the only Super-G star with six Crystal Globes.

Lindsey Vonn achieved her first podium in 2656 days, over seven years, since she finished third in a Super-G in Are in March 15, 2018. With her second place in Sun Valley, she became the oldest podium finisher in the Alpine Ski World Cup.




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