Send Christ's Love to a Family in Need with GFA World's Critter Campaign

Austrian skier Scheib takes World Cup GS for her 3rd win of the season. Shiffrin places 6th

Austria's Julia Scheib celebrates winning an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)
Austria's Julia Scheib celebrates winning an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)
Austria's Julia Scheib, center, winner of an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, poses with second-placed Switzerland's Camille Rast, left, and third-placed Sweden's Sara Hector, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)
Austria's Julia Scheib, center, winner of an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, poses with second-placed Switzerland's Camille Rast, left, and third-placed Sweden's Sara Hector, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Giovanni Auletta)
United States' Mikaela Shiffrin ahead of an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Pier Marco Tacca)
United States' Mikaela Shiffrin ahead of an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Pier Marco Tacca)
United States' Mikaela Shiffrin competes during an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Pier Marco Tacca)
United States' Mikaela Shiffrin competes during an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Pier Marco Tacca)
Sweden's Sara Hector competes during an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Pier Marco Tacca)
Sweden's Sara Hector competes during an alpine ski, women's World Cup giant slalom, in Semmering, Austria, Saturday, Dec. 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Pier Marco Tacca)
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

SEMMERING, Austria (AP) — Skiing in front of her home crowd. Winning the race. And going top of the discipline standings.

Julia Scheib could have hardly wished for a better scenario to wrap up her calendar year 2025, just weeks before the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

The Austrian won a World Cup giant slalom on home snow near capital Vienna on Saturday, beating Switzerland's Camille Rast by 0.14 and Olympic champion Sara Hector of Sweden by 0.40 seconds.

Mikaela Shiffrin, the women's record holder with 22 GS victories, finished sixth.

“It’s crazy, I never thought it would be the win. It was so tough, it was so bumpy, and I was so relieved when I came into the finish,” said Scheib, who was two-hundredths behind Hector after the opening run.

In the final run, Scheib trailed then-leader Rast until the final split but had a perfect finish section.

“It’s amazing. I heard the crowd before I (skied) into the last section, I heard the crowd, and I thought I had to let the skis go,” Scheib said.

Alice Robinson, Scheib's main rival in GS, skied out in the first run and the New Zealand racer failed to score points, enabling the Austrian to overtake her and enter the Olympic year with an 88-point lead in the discipline standings, having won three of the five GS races this season.

A two-time winner this season, Robinson clocked the fastest intermediate time in the opening run before she lost her balance and slid off the course in a left turn.

“I got unlucky and off balance and I pressured in a bad spot and just went face flat,” Robinson said. “I am really disappointed not to be walking away with any points.”

Shiffrin, who won the race in Semmering near capital Vienna four times between 2012 and 2022, finished in sixth position, 1.45 behind Scheib.

The American star, the 2018 Olympic champion, has not been on a giant slalom podium in her past 10 races — the longest streak in her career since the first 15 GS races of her career without top-three result in 2010-11.

Dominating slalom this season with four wins from as many races, Shiffrin is still trying to regain her form in GS, more than a year after suffering a deep puncture wound in her side and severe trauma to her oblique muscles in a bad crash at a race in Killington, Vermont.

Shiffrin’s teammates Nina O’Brien and Paula Moltzan both had nasty-looking crashes. O’Brien slid off the course in the first run and Moltzan fell and hit her head on the snow in the second run, but both apparently avoided injuries.

Before the season, the Austria women's team had not won a World Cup giant slalom for more than nine years. Scheib ended the draught last October at the season-opening race, also in Austria, and added another victory in the most recent GS in Tremblant, Quebec, three weeks ago.

And while her three wins make her a strong medal contender for the Feb. 15 Olympic giant slalom race, Scheib already had bigger plans.

“I want to continue like this, but I want also to focus a little bit on super-G,” she said.

Reigning Olympic GS champion Hector was chasing her first victory in nearly a year. The Swede has seven career World Cup wins, all in giant slalom, but the Swedish skier has not triumphed since winning a race in Slovenia in the first weekend of January.

“Julia skied really well, I stepped on the brakes a little bit, you cannot do that,” Hector told Austrian TV.

A slalom on the same hill is scheduled for Sunday.

___

AP skiing: https://apnews.com/hub/alpine-skiing

 

Salem News Channel Today

Sponsored Links

On Air & Up Next

  • Healthcare Now with Larry Jones and Mark Chaet
     
    The “truth about U.S. healthcare” is the most important issue today. Healthcare   >>
     
  • Retirement Income Show
    12:00PM - 1:00PM
     
    Having the wrong retirement program can affect your dreams. Michael Eastham can   >>
     
  • The Mary Gardner Show
    1:00PM - 2:00PM
     
    You’re not starting over. You’re rising higher. THE MARY GARDNER SHOW where   >>
     
  • The Chris Stigall Show
    2:00PM - 3:00PM
     
    Equal parts hilarity and desk-pounding monologues with healthy doses of skepticism and sarcasm.
     
  • Smarter Retirement Radio
     
    Money can be fleeting, but memories last a lifetime. Join John Ripley on   >>
     

See the Full Program Guide