The 49th World Cup season began on 25 October 2014, in Sölden, Austria, and concluded on 22 March 2015 at the World Cup finals in Meribel, France.[1] The defending overall champions from the 2014 season - Marcel Hirscher and Anna Fenninger, both of Austria, defended their titles successfully. The season was interrupted by the World Championships in February, in the United States at Vail/Beaver Creek, Colorado.[2] Combined events were not awarded as a discipline trophy.
2014–15 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup champions | |||
---|---|---|---|
Discipline | Men | Women | |
Overall | Marcel Hirscher | Anna Fenninger | |
Downhill | Kjetil Jansrud | Lindsey Vonn | |
Super-G | Kjetil Jansrud | Lindsey Vonn | |
Giant slalom | Marcel Hirscher | Anna Fenninger | |
Slalom | Marcel Hirscher | Mikaela Shiffrin | |
Nations Cup | Austria | Austria | |
Nations Cup Overall | Austria | ||
Competition | |||
Locations |
19 venues |
16 venues | |
Individual |
37 events |
32 events | |
Mixed |
1 event |
1 event | |
Cancelled |
1 event |
2 events | |
Rescheduled |
2 events |
8 events | |
Calendar
Men
Ladies
Nation team event
Race | Season | Date | Place | Type | Winner | Second | Third | Details |
10 | 1 | 20 March 2015 | Méribel | PG 007 | Switzerland | Sweden | Austria | [80] |
Men's standings
- Overall
|
Bold – Best time in 1st run |
- Downhill
Pos. | after all 10 races | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Kjetil Jansrud | 605 |
2 | Hannes Reichelt | 511 |
3 | Guillermo Fayed | 389 |
4 | Dominik Paris | 386 |
Matthias Mayer | 386 |
- Super-G
Rank | after all 7 races | Points | 4 | 6 | 11 | 21 | 27 | 31 | 35 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Kjetil Jansrud | 556 | 100 | 80 | 100 | 36 | 60 | 100 | 80 |
2 | Dominik Paris | 353 | |||||||
3 | Matthias Mayer | 274 | |||||||
4 | Hannes Reichelt | 243 | |||||||
5 | Dustin Cook | 239 |
- Giant slalom
Rank | after all 8 races | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Marcel Hirscher | 690 |
2 | Alexis Pinturault | 487 |
3 | Ted Ligety | 462 |
4 | Fritz Dopfer | 346 |
5 | Thomas Fanara | 330 |
- Slalom
Rank | after all 10 races | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Marcel Hirscher | 614 |
2 | Felix Neureuther | 591 |
3 | Aleksandr Khoroshilov | 485 |
4 | Henrik Kristoffersen | 463 |
5 | Fritz Dopfer | 451 |
- Alpine combined
Rank | after all 2 races | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Carlo Janka (no trophy)[nb 11] | 140 |
2 | Alexis Pinturault | 126 |
3 | Victor Muffat-Jeandet | 125 |
4 | Ivica Kostelić | 110 |
5 | Ondřej Bank | 92 |
Ladies' standings
- Overall
|
Bold – Best time in 1st run |
|
|
|
|
|
Nations Cup
|
|
|
|
Prize money
|
|
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Footnotes
- Giant slalom from Val-d'Isère was rescheduled to Åre on 12 December 2014
- Slalom from Val-d'Isère was rescheduled to Åre on 14 December 2014
- Giant slalom from Courchevel was rescheduled to Åre on 12 December 2014
- Slalom from Courchevel was rescheduled to Åre on 13 December 2014
- Downhill from Bad Kleinkirchheim was rescheduled to Cortina d'Ampezzo on 16 January 2015
- Downhill from Cortina d'Ampezzo was rescheduled from 17 to 18 January 2015
- Super giant slalom from Cortina d'Ampezzo was rescheduled from 18 to 19 January 2015
- Super giant slalom from Bad Kleinkirchheim was rescheduled to Bansko from 27 February to 2 March 2015
- Crystal globes were not awarded in the Combined discipline in 2015.
References
External links
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