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Writer's pictureRaúl Revuelta

St. Moritz to host two Women's World Cup Super-G races this weekend

St. Moritz
St. Moritz. Picture: Engadin St. Moritz Tourismus AG, Fabian Gattlen

After the races in Beaver Creek, the fastest women in the World Cup will gather in St. Moritz, Switzerland, next weekend for the second stop on the speed calendar. Two Super-G races are scheduled to take place in the Upper Engadine Valley on the World Championship course “Engiadina” on Corviglia. St. Moritz, a classic and a fixed date in the women's Alpine Ski World Cup calendar, will mark the return of Lindsey Vonn to the Alpine Ski World Cup.


St. Moritz (SUI)


December 21st Super-G / Women 10:30 CET

December 22nd Super-G / Women 11:00 CET



  • Start altitude: 2,745m (DH), 2,580m (SG)

  • Finish altitude: 2,030m

  • Elevation difference: 715m (DH), 550m (SG)

  • Length: 2,633m (DH), 1,950m (SG)


St. Moritz has a permanent place in the international ski racing calendar. St. Moritz has hosted five alpine ski world championships: 1934, 1948, 1974, 2003, and 2017, and two Olympic Games in 1928 and 1948 – the only ones ever held in Switzerland. St. Moritz is one of the very few exclusive locations, such as Lake Placid and Innsbruck, to have hosted the Winter Olympic Games twice. The 1928 Games were, in fact, the first-ever official Winter Olympic Games – the "test run" in Chamonix (1924) was only honored with this title much later on.

Skiing in St. Moritz, Switzerland
Skifahren in Pontresina, 1946. Picture: St. Moritz Tourismus AG

St. Moritz is more than just a holiday resort. It was also the birthplace of the Alpine winter holidays in 1864. Nevertheless, St. Moritz first became famous thanks to its mineral springs, which were discovered 3,000 years ago and established the town as a summer spa resort early on.


St. Moritz, which lies on the south side of the Alps, in the Upper Engadine Valley, at an elevation of 1,856 m, boasts plenty of sunny days. It was exactly this sun that was legally protected as the emblem of St. Moritz in 1930. St. Moritz was often ahead of the times - for example, the first electric light went on at Christmas time in 1878, the first golf tournament in the Alps took place here, in 1889 and one of the first ski lifts in Switzerland began running in 1935.


St Moritz is Switzerland's most famous exclusive winter resort: glitzy, expensive, and fashionable. Few ski destinations can claim even one five-star hotel, but this sunny Swiss lakeside resort boasts five, including the all-suites Carlton, located in Tsar Nicolai II’s former vacation house. St. Moritz Dorf in the hillside over the lake includes Via Serlas’s jet-set shopping "luxury mile", with boutiques like Emilio Pucci, Gucci, Chanel, or jewelry stores like Bucherer, Cartier or Chopard. St. Moritz Bad, at the lake’s foot, hides local gems among its shops, restaurants, and hotels.


The valley offers nine ski areas accessed with a single ski pass. Several of them are connected by lifts; the rest are connected by bus. The Engadine Ski Paradise: St. Moritz-Corviglia, Corvatsch, Diavolezza are synonymous with breathtaking and unforgettable skiing experiences. 60 modern transportation facilities open up on 350 km of snow-covered runs at altitudes from 1,800 to 3,300 meters above sea level of slopes in nine different skiing areas with 37 mountain restaurants.



St. Moritz 2023 Alpine Ski World Cup Super-G Podium. Sofia Goggia, Cornelia Huetter, Lara Gut-Behrami
St. Moritz 2023 Alpine Ski World Cup Super-G Podium. Picture: GEPA Pictures / HEAD Ski

In 2023, Sofia Goggia outclassed the competition in the first Super-G race of the season. Goggia was characteristically aggressive and risky, and the style paid off massively. She bested Austrian Cornelia Huetter by +0.95 seconds. Laura Gut-Behrami completed the podium (+1.02).



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