Jump to content

2016–17 in skiing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from 2017 in skiing)

From July 1, 2016 to April 23, 2017, the following skiing events took place at various locations around the world.

Alpine skiing

[edit]

World championships (alpine)

[edit]

2017 Alpine Skiing World Cup

[edit]
  • October 22, 2016 – March 19, 2017: FIS 2016–17 Alpine Skiing World Cup[4]
October
November
  • November 12 & 13: ASWC #2 in Finnland Levi
  • November 23–27: ASWC #3 in Kanada Lake Louise #1
    • All events cancelled, due to unfavorable weather conditions.[5]
  • November 26 & 27: ASWC #4 in Vereinigte Staaten Killington
    • Women's giant slalom winner: Frankreich Tessa Worley
    • Women's slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin
  • November 29 – December 4: ASWC #5 in Frankreich Val-d'Isère #1[6]
  • November 29 – December 4: ASWC #6 in Kanada Lake Louise #2
    • Women's downhill winner: Slowenien Ilka Štuhec (2 times)
    • Women's super-G winner: Schweiz Lara Gut
December
  • December 10 & 11: ASWC #7 in Frankreich Val-d'Isère #2
  • December 10 & 11: ASWC #8 in Italien Sestriere
    • Women's giant slalom winner: Frankreich Tessa Worley
    • Women's slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin
  • December 14–17: ASWC #9 in Italien Val Gardena
    • Men's super-G winner: Norwegen Kjetil Jansrud
    • Men's downhill winner: Österreich Max Franz
  • December 14–18: ASWC #10 in Frankreich Val-d'Isère #3
    • Women's alpine combined winner: Slowenien Ilka Štuhec
    • Women's downhill winner: Slowenien Ilka Štuhec
    • Women's super-G winner: Schweiz Lara Gut
  • December 18 & 19: ASWC #11 in Italien Alta Badia
    • Men's giant slalom winner: Österreich Marcel Hirscher
    • Men's Parallel giant slalom winner: Frankreich Cyprien Sarrazin
  • December 20: ASWC #12 in Frankreich Courchevel
    • Event cancelled, due to strong winds.[8]
  • December 22: ASWC #13 in Italien Madonna di Campiglio
    • Men's slalom winner: Norwegen Henrik Kristoffersen
  • December 26–29: ASWC #14 in Italien Santa Caterina
    • The Men's Downhill event here was cancelled.
    • Men's super-G winner: Norwegen Kjetil Jansrud
    • Men's alpine combined winner: Frankreich Alexis Pinturault
  • December 27–29: ASWC #15 in Österreich Semmering
    • Note: One Giant slalom event was rescheduled from the Courchevel venue to this one.[9]
    • Women's giant slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin (2 times)
    • Women's slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin
January
February
  • February 23–26: ASWC #28 in Norwegen Kvitfjell
  • February 24–26: ASWC #29 in Schweiz Crans-Montana
    • Women's alpine combined winners: Italien Federica Brignone (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin (#2)
    • Women's super-G winner: Slowenien Ilka Štuhec
March
  • November 29 & 30: ASEC #1 in Finnland Levi
  • December 3 & 4: ASEC #2 in Schweden Gällivare
    • Men's giant slalom winners: Frankreich Cyprien Sarrazin (m) / Second event is cancelled
  • December 4–6: ASEC #3 in Norwegen Trysil
  • December 8–10: ASEC #4 in Norwegen Kvitfjell
    • Women's giant slalom winner: Frankreich Clara Direz
    • Women's super-G winner: Österreich Dajana Dengscherz
    • Women's Alpine combined winner: Norwegen Kristina Riis-Johannessen
  • December 8–11: ASEC #5 in Norwegen Hafjell
    • Unfortunately the races in Hafjell are cancelled.[10]
  • December 14: ASEC #6 in Italien Obereggen
  • December 15: ASEC #7 in Italien Val di Fassa
  • December 15 & 16: ASEC #8 in Italien Andalo
    • Women's giant slalom winner: Schweiz Simone Wild
    • Women's slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Resi Stiegler
  • December 17: ASEC #8 in Italien Kronplatz
    • Parallel slalom winners: Schweiz Reto Schmidiger (m) / Österreich Katharina Gallhuber (f)
    • Slalom winners (1 run): Kroatien Matej Vidović (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Resi Stiegler (f)
  • December 20 & 21: ASEC #9 in Österreich Schladming
  • January 6 & 7, 2017: ASEC #10 in Schweiz Wengen
  • January 9–13: ASEC #11 in Österreich Saalbach-Hinterglemm
    • Women's downhill winners: Österreich Christina Ager (#1) / (#2)
    • Women's Super G here is cancelled
  • January 9 & 10: ASEC #12 in Schweiz Davos #1
    • Men's giant slalom winners: Norwegen Marcus Monsen (#1) / Finnland Samu Torsti (#2)
  • January 11 & 12: ASEC #13 in Österreich Zell am See
  • January 14–16: ASEC #14 in Österreich Kitzbühel
    • Men's downhill winner: Schweiz Gilles Roulin
  • January 16 & 17: ASEC #15 in Schweiz Zinal
  • January 19 & 20: ASEC #16 in Schweiz Melchsee-Frutt
    • Women's slalom winners: Deutschland Marina Wallner (#1) / Deutschland Jessica Hilzinger (#2)
  • January 19 & 20: ASEC #17 in Frankreich Val-d'Isère
  • January 23–27: ASEC #18 in Schweiz Davos #2
  • January 23–27: ASEC #19 in Frankreich Méribel
    • Men's downhill winners: Österreich Johannes Kröll (#1) / Schweiz Gilles Roulin (#2)
    • Men's Super-G winner: Schweiz Gilles Roulin
    • Men's alpine combined winner: Norwegen Marcus Monsen
  • January 31 – February 3: ASEC #20 in Frankreich Châtel
    • Women's Super-G winners: Österreich Nadine Fest (#1) / Norwegen Kristina Riis-Johannessen (#2)
    • Women's giant slalom winners: Norwegen Kristin Anna Lysdahl (#1) / Slowenien Tina Robnik (#2)
    • Women's alpine combined winner: Österreich Nadine Fest
  • January 31 – February 3: ASEC #21 in Österreich Hinterstoder
    • Men's downhill winners: Schweiz Gilles Roulin (2 times)
    • Men's Super-G winner: Schweiz Gilles Roulin
    • Men's Alpine Combined: Schweiz Gilles Roulin
  • February 8 & 9: ASEC #22 in Slowakei Jasná
  • February 9 & 10: ASEC #23 in Deutschland Bad Wiessee
    • Women's slalom winners: Schweiz Mélanie Meillard (2 times)
  • February 11 & 12: ASEC #24 in Polen Zakopane
  • February 13 & 14: ASEC #25 in Österreich Göstling-Hochkar
  • February 17–20: ASEC #26 in Schweiz Crans-Montana
    • Women's downhill winners: Italien Laura Pirovano (#1) / Österreich Sabrina Maier (#2)
    • Women's Alpine combined winner: Österreich Rosina Schneeberger
  • February 17 & 18: ASEC #27 in Deutschland Oberjoch
  • February 20–25: ASEC #28 in Italien Sarntal
    • Super G winners: Österreich Christian Walder (m) / Österreich Nina Ortlieb (f)
    • Men's Alpine combined winner: Schweiz Sandro Simonet
    • Men's downhill winners: Österreich Joachim Puchner (#1) / Österreich Johannes Kröll (#2)
    • Women's downhill winner: Schweden Lisa Hörnblad
  • March 17–19: ASEC #29 in Italien San Candido (final)

2016–17 North America Cup

[edit]
  • November 29 & 30, 2016: ASNAC #1 in Vereinigte Staaten Snow King Mountain/Jackson, Wyoming
  • December 5–9, 2016: ASNAC #2 in Kanada Lake Louise
    • Downhill #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Krause (m) / Kanada Stefanie Fleckenstein (f)
    • Downhill #2 winners: Kanada Tyler Werry (m) / Neuseeland Georgia Willinger (f)
  • December 11–18, 2016: ASNAC #3 in Kanada Panorama Mountain Village
    • Super G #1 winners: Andorra Joan Verdu Sanchez (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Maureen Lebel (f)
    • Super G #2 winners: Andorra Joan Verdu Sanchez (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Alice Merryweather (f)
    • Alpine combined winners: Vereinigte Staaten Kieffer Christianson (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Patricia Mangan (f)
    • Giant slalom #1 winners: Kanada Phil Brown (m) / Kanada Erin Mielzynski (f)
    • Giant slalom #2 winners: Kanada Phil Brown (m) / Kanada Amelia Smart (f)
    • Slalom #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Hig Roberts (m) / Kanada Erin Mielzynski (f)
    • Slalom #2 winners: Deutschland David Ketterer (m) / Kanada Erin Mielzynski (f)
  • January 2–5: ASNAC #4 in Vereinigte Staaten Burke Mountain Ski Area
    • Giant slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Paula Moltzan (#1) / Kanada Ali Nullmeyer (#2)
    • Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Paula Moltzan (#1) / Kanada Ali Nullmeyer (#2)
  • January 2–5: ASNAC #5 in Vereinigte Staaten Stowe Mountain Resort
    • Giant slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Krause (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Hig Roberts (#2)
    • Slalom winners: Deutschland David Ketterer (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Jett Seymour (#2)
  • February 1–4: ASNAC #6 in Vereinigte Staaten Vail Ski Resort
    • Men's slalom winners: Deutschland David Ketterer (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Mark Engel (#2)
    • Women's slalom winners: Kanada Ali Nullmeyer (2 times)
  • February 1–11: ASNAC #7 in Vereinigte Staaten Copper Mountain
    • Men's giant slalom winners: Kanada Erik Read (#1) / Kanada Trevor Philp (#2)
    • Women's giant slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Megan McJames (#1) / Kanada Ali Nullmeyer (#2)
    • Men's downhill winners: Kanada Broderick Thompson (#1) / Kanada Tyler Werry (#2)
    • Women's downhill winners: Vereinigte Staaten Alice McKennis (2 times)
    • Super G #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Krause (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Patricia Mangan (f)
    • Super G #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Krause (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Patricia Mangan (f)
    • Alpine combined winners: Kanada Tyler Werry (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (f)
  • March 17–20: ASNAC #8 in Kanada Mont Ste. Marie
  • March 17 & 18: ASNAC #9 in Kanada Val Saint-Côme Ski Resort
  • March 19 & 20: ASNAC #10 in Kanada Garceau
    • Women's giant slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (#1) / Kanada Mikaela Tommy (#2)
  • March 22 & 23: ASNAC #11 (final) in Vereinigte Staaten Sugarloaf
    • Alpine combined winners: Kanada Sam Mulligan (m) / Kanada Mikaela Tommy (f)
    • Super G #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Erik Arvidsson (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Stacey Cook (f)
    • Super G #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Kipling Weisel (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Megan McJames (f)

2016–17 Far East Cup

[edit]

2016 FIS Alpine South American Cup

[edit]
  • August 4–5: SAC #1 in Argentinien Chapelco Ski Resort
    • This event was cancelled due warm temperatures.
  • August 8–11: SAC #2 in Argentinien Cerro Catedral
  • August 13–15: SAC #3 in Chile Antillanca ski resort
  • August 24–26: SAC #4 in Chile Valle Nevado
  • August 27: SAC #5 in Chile El Colorado #1
  • August 28: SAC #6 in Chile La Parva #1
  • August 31 – September 2: SAC #7 in Argentinien Las Leñas
    • Cancelled
  • September 5–9: SAC #8 in Chile La Parva #2
  • September 12–16: SAC #9 in Chile El Colorado #2
    • Alpine combined #1 winners: Slowenien Martin Cater (m) / Tschechische Republik Ester Ledecká (f)
    • Alpine combined #2 winners: Deutschland Thomas Dreßen (m) / Tschechische Republik Ester Ledecká (f)
    • Super G #1 winners: Deutschland Josef Ferstl (m) / Tschechische Republik Ester Ledecká (f)
    • Super G #2 winners: Deutschland Josef Ferstl (m) / Tschechische Republik Ester Ledecká (f)
    • Downhill #1 winners: Deutschland Josef Ferstl (m) / Tschechische Republik Ester Ledecká (f)
    • Downhill #1 winners: Italien Mattia Casse (m) / Tschechische Republik Ester Ledecká (f)
  • September 26–29: SAC #10 (final) in Argentinien Cerro Castor
    • Giant slalom winners: Frankreich Cyprien Sarrazin (m) / Frankreich Adeline Baud (f)
    • Slalom winners: Argentinien Sebastiano Gastaldi (m) / Frankreich Adeline Baud (f)

2016 FIS Alpine Australia/New Zealand Cup

[edit]

Biathlon

[edit]
  • November 25, 2016 – March 19, 2017: 2016–17 IBU Calendar of Events[11]

International biathlon championships

[edit]

2016–17 Biathlon World Cup

[edit]

2016–17 IBU Cup

[edit]
  • November 23–27, 2016: IBU Cup #1 in Norwegen Beitostølen
  • December 6–11, 2016: IBU Cup #2 in Italien Ridnaun-Val Ridanna
    • Sprint winners: Norwegen Fredrik Gjesbakk (m) / Ukraine Anastasiya Merkushyna (f)
    • Pursuit winners: Frankreich Aristide Begue (m) / Russland Uliana Kaisheva (f)
    • Single Mixed Relay winners:  Ukraine (Anastasiya Merkushyna, Artem Tyshchenko)
    • Mixed 2x6 + 2x7.5 km Relay winners:  Russland (Victoria Slivko, Uliana Kaisheva, Semen Suchilov, Alexey Slepov)
  • December 14–17, 2016: IBU Cup #3 in Österreich Obertilliach
  • January 3–8: IBU Cup #4 in Italien Martell-Val Martello
    • Pursuit winners: Russland Alexandr Loginov (m) / Russland Daria Virolaynen (f)
    • Sprint winners #1: Norwegen Andreas Dahlø Waernes (m) / Österreich Fabienne Hartweger (f)
    • Sprint winners #2: Russland Alexandr Loginov (m) / Frankreich Julia Simon (f)
  • January 11–14: IBU Cup #5 in Deutschland Arber
    • Note: Both relay events here are cancelled.
    • Individual winners: Russland Alexandr Loginov (m) / Russland Irina Starykh (f)
  • February 1–4: IBU Cup #6 in Slowakei Brezno-Osrblie
    • Pursuit winners: Norwegen Kristoffer Skjelvik (m) / Russland Daria Virolaynen (f)
    • Sprint winners: Russland Alexey Volkov (m) / Deutschland Denise Herrmann (f)
  • February 28 – March 5: IBU Cup #7 in Finnland Kontiolahti
    • Individual winners: Tschechische Republik Ondřej Moravec (m) / Russland Ekaterina Shumilova (f)
    • Pursuit winners: Russland Alexandr Loginov (m) / Deutschland Anna Weidel (f)
    • Sprint winners: Russland Alexander Povarnitsyn (m) / Russland Daria Virolaynen (f)
  • March 7–12: IBU Cup #8 (final) in Estland Otepää
    • Men's 10 km Sprint winner: Russland Alexandr Loginov (2 times)
    • Women's 7.5 km Sprint winners: Russland Anastasia Zagoruiko (#1) / Frankreich Enora Latuillière (#2)
    • Single Mixed Relay #1 winners:  Norwegen (Thekla Brun-Lie & Martin Femsteinevik)
    • Mixed Relay #1 winners:  Deutschland (Karolin Horchler, Marion Deigentesch, Matthias Dorfer, David Zobel)
    • Single Mixed Relay #2 winners:  Russland (Anna Nikulina & Yury Shopin)
    • Mixed Relay #2 winners:  Norwegen (Sigrid Bilstad Neraasen, Rikke Andersen, Sindre Pettersen, & Henrik L'Abée-Lund)

2016–17 IBU Junior Cup

[edit]
  • December 9–11, 2016: IBU JC #1 in Schweiz Lenzerheide
    • Junior individual winners: Ukraine Anton Dudchenko (m) / Frankreich Julia Simon (f)
    • Junior sprint winners: Ukraine Vitaliy Trush (m) / Frankreich Caroline Colombo (f)
  • December 14–17, 2016: IBU JC #2 in Österreich Hochfilzen
    • Junior sprint winners: Deutschland Erik Weick (m) / Russland Valeriia Vasnetcova (f)
    • Junior pursuit winners: Ukraine Vitaliy Trush (m) / Deutschland Anna Weidel (f)
    • Junior relay winners:  Russland (Aleksandr Nasekin, Igor Malinovskii, & Nikita Porshnev) (m) /  Frankreich (Camille Bened, Myrtille Begue, & Lena Arnaud) (f)
  • January 26–29: IBU JC #3 (final) in Slowenien Pokljuka
    • Junior men's sprint winners: Russland Kirill Streltsov (#1) / Russland Nikita Porshnev (#2)
    • Junior women's sprint winners: Russland Ekaterina Moshkova (#1) / Russland Valeriia Vasnetcova (#2)
    • Junior single mixed relay winners:  Russland (Liudmila Ulybina & Semen Bey)
    • Junior mixed relay winners:  Russland (Ekaterina Sannikova, Valeriia Vasnetcova, Nikita Porshnev, & Igor Malinovskii)

World Championships (XC)

[edit]

2016–17 Tour de Ski

[edit]

2016–17 FIS Cross-Country World Cup

[edit]

2016–17 FIS OPA Continental Cup

[edit]
  • December 10 & 11: OPA #1 in Italien Valdidentro
    • Men's 15 km Classic winners: Frankreich Alexis Jeannerod (#1) / Andorra Irineu Esteve Altimiras (#2)
    • Women's 10 km Classic winners: Polen Justyna Kowalczyk (#1) / Italien Caterina Ganz (#2)
  • December 16–18: OPA #2 in Schweiz Goms
    • Men's 1.4 km Sprint Classic winner: Russland Anton Gafarov
    • Women's 1.2 km Sprint Classic winner: Russland Natalya Matveyeva
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Italien Giandomenico Salvadori
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Italien Caterina Ganz
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Italien Maicol Rastelli
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Deutschland Sofie Krehl
  • January 6–8: OPA #3 in Slowenien Planica
    • Men's 1.2 km Sprint Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Simi Hamilton
    • Women's 1.2 km Sprint Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Sophie Caldwell
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Frankreich Jean Tiberghien
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Italien Sara Pellegrini
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Italien Dietmar Nöckler
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Italien Francesca Baudin
  • February 17–19: OPA #4 in Deutschland Zwiesel
    • 1.6 Sprint Classic winners: Italien Sergio Rigoni (m) / Italien Caterina Ganz (f)
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Frankreich Paul Goalabre
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Deutschland Monique Siegel
    • Men's 15 km Classic Pursuit winner: Italien Giandomenico Salvadori
    • Women's 10 km Classic Pursuit winner: Italien Caterina Ganz
  • March 4 & 5: OPA #5 in Österreich St. Ulrich
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Frankreich Adrien Backscheider
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Österreich Lisa Unterweger
    • Men's 30 km Classic winner: Deutschland Thomas Wick
    • Women's 15 km Classic winner: Deutschland Theresa Eichhorn
  • March 17–19: OPA #6 in Österreich Seefeld in Tirol (final)
    • Men's 3.3 km Freestyle winner: Frankreich Jean Tiberghien
    • Women's 2.5 km Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Caitlin Compton Gregg
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Italien Maicol Rastelli
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Deutschland Theresa Eichhorn
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Italien Maicol Rastelli
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Deutschland Theresa Eichhorn

2016 Australia/New Zealand Cup

[edit]

2016–17 North American Cup

[edit]
  • December 10 & 11, 2016: NAC #1 in Kanada Sovereign Lake Nordic Centre/Vernon, British Columbia
    • Men's Sprint Classical winner: Vereinigte Staaten Reese Hanneman
    • Women's Sprint Classical winner: Vereinigte Staaten Julia Kern
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Scott Patterson
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Chelsea Holmes
  • December 16–18, 2016: NAC #2 in Kanada Rossland, British Columbia
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Kanada Evan Palmer-Charrette
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Chelsea Holmes
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Andrew Newell (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Erika Flowers (f)
    • Men's 15 km Classical Pursuit winner: Kanada Evan Palmer-Charrette
    • Women's 10 km Classical Pursuit winner: Vereinigte Staaten Chelsea Holmes
  • January 20 & 21: NAC #3 in Kanada Whistler Olympic Park
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Kanada Jesse Cockney (m) / Kanada Dahria Beatty (f)
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Kanada Andy Shields
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Kanada Emily Nishikawa
  • February 3–5: NAC #4 (final) in Kanada Nakkertok Nordic Ski Centre/Gatineau
    • Sprint Classical winners: Kanada Dominique Moncion-Groulx (m) / Kanada Maya MacIsaac-Jones (f)
    • Men's 15 km Classical winner: Kanada Andy Shields
    • Women's 10 km Classical winner: Vereinigte Staaten Annie Hart
    • Men's 20 km Freestyle winner: Kanada Russell Kennedy
    • Women's 15 km Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Annie Hart

2016–17 Balkan Cup

[edit]
  • January 7 & 8: BC #1 in Türkei Gerede
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Kroatien Edi Dadić
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Kroatien Vedrana Malec
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Kroatien Edi Dadić
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Kroatien Vedrana Malec
  • January 17 & 18: BC #2 in Serbien Zlatibor
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Bulgarien Veselin Tzinzov
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Kroatien Vedrana Malec
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Bulgarien Veselin Tzinzov
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Kroatien Vedrana Malec
  • January 21 & 22: BC #3 in Griechenland Metsovo
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Bulgarien Veselin Tzinzov (2 times)
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Bosnien und Herzegowina Dejana Košarac (#1) / Griechenland Maria Tsakiri
  • January 28 & 29: BC #4 in Bosnien und Herzegowina Pale
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Bulgarien Veselin Tzinzov
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Bosnien und Herzegowina Sanja Kusmuk
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Bulgarien Veselin Tzinzov
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Bosnien und Herzegowina Sanja Kusmuk
  • February 4 & 5: BC #5 in Kroatien Ravna Gora
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Bulgarien Veselin Tzinzov
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Österreich Lisa Unterweger
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Serbien Damir Rastić
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Österreich Lisa Unterweger
  • February 14 & 15: BC #6 in North Macedonia Mavrovo
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winners: Kroatien Edi Dadić (#1) / Bulgarien Veselin Tzinzov (#2)
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winners: Bosnien und Herzegowina Dejana Košarac (#1) / Bosnien und Herzegowina Sanja Kusmuk (#2)
  • March 24 & 25: BC #7 (final) in Bulgarien Bansko
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Bulgarien Veselin Tzinzov
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Bulgarien Nansi Okoro
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Serbien Damir Rastić
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Bulgarien Stefani Popova

2016–17 Scandinavian Cup

[edit]
  • December 9–11: SCAN #1 in Norwegen Lillehammer
    • Men's 1.5 km Sprint Classic winner: Norwegen Sindre Odberg Palm
    • Women's 1.3 km Sprint Classic winner: Schweden Anna Dyvik
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Norwegen Daniel Stock
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: Schweden Charlotte Kalla
    • Men's 30 km Classic winner: Norwegen Niklas Dyrhaug
    • Women's 15 km Classic winner: Schweden Charlotte Kalla
  • January 6–8: SCAN #2 in Finnland Lahti
  • March 3–5: SCAN #3 (final) in Lettland Madona
    • 1 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Norwegen Håvard Solås Taugbøl (m) / Schweden Anna Dyvik (f)
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Norwegen Daniel Stock
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Schweden Maria Nordstroem
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Norwegen Mathias Rundgreen
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Schweden Linn Sömskar

2016–17 Slavic Cup

[edit]
  • December 16–18: SC #1 in Slowakei Štrbské pleso
    • Men's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winners: Weißrussland Aliaksandr Voranau (#1) / Tschechische Republik Jan Barton (#2)
    • Women's 1.4 km Sprint Classic winners: Slowakei Alena Procházková (2 times)
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: Weißrussland Mikhail Kuklin
    • Women's 7.5 km Freestyle winner: Slowakei Alena Procházková
  • February 18 & 19: SC #2 in Polen Zakopane
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Slowakei Andrej Segeč
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Polen Urszula Łętocha
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Polen Andrzej Pradziad
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Polen Urszula Łętocha
  • February 24–26: SC #3 in Tschechische Republik Jablonec nad Nisou
    • Men's 3 km Freestyle winner: Tschechische Republik Dušan Kožíšek
    • Women's 2 km Freestyle winner: Tschechische Republik Zuzana Staňková
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Tschechische Republik Luděk Šeller
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Polen Urszula Łętocha
    • Men's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Tschechische Republik Adam Fellner
    • Women's 5 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: Tschechische Republik Anna Sixtová
  • March 11 & 12: SC #4 (final) in Tschechische Republik Harrachov

2016–17 Eastern Europe Cup

[edit]
  • November 20–24, 2016: EEC #1 in Russland Vershina Tea
    • Men's 1.7 km Free winner: Russland Ivan Yakimushkin
    • Women's 1.3 km Free winner: Russland Polina Nekrasova
    • Men's 10 km Free winner: Russland Aleksey Chervotkin
    • Women's 5 km Free winner: Russland Anna Nechaevskaya
    • Men's 1.7 km Classic winner: Russland Aleksey Chervotkin
    • Women's 1.3 km Classic winner: Russland Polina Nekrasova
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Russland Alexey Vitsenko
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Russland Mariya Guschina
  • December 20–22, 2016: EEC #2 in Ukraine Sianky
  • December 24–28, 2016: EEC #3 in Russland Krasnogorsk
    • 1.4 km Sprint Classic #1 winners: Russland Alexander Panzhinskiy (m) / Russland Natalya Matveyeva (f)
    • 1.4 km Sprint Classic #2 winners: Russland Alexander Bolshunov (m) / Russland Natalya Matveyeva (f)
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Russland Andrey Melnichenko
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Russland Anna Nechaevskaya
    • Men's 30 km Classic winner: Russland Alexander Bolshunov
    • Women's 15 km Classic winner: Russland Olga Rocheva
  • January 11–15: EEC #4 in Weißrussland Minsk
    • 1.5 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Russland Andrey Parfenov (m) / Weißrussland Yulia Tikhonova (f)
    • Men's 15 km Classic winners: Russland Nikita Stupak (#1) / Russland Vladislav Skobelev (#2)
    • Women's 10 km Classic winners: Polen Justyna Kowalczyk (#1) / Russland Anna Nechaevskaya (#2)
  • February 10: EEC #5 in Russland Krasnogorsk
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Russland Alexey Vitsenko
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Russland Zhanna Muraveva
  • February 12: EEC #6 in Russland Moscow
    • 1.4 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Russland Nikolay Morilov (m) / Russland Maria Davydenkova (f)
  • February 25 – March 1: EEC #7 (final) in Russland Syktyvkar
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Russland Ermil Vokuev
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Russland Anna Nechaevskaya
    • 1.4 km Sprint Freestyle winners: Russland Andrey Krasnov (m) / Russland Natalia Nepryaeva (f)
    • Skiathlon winners: Russland Denis Spitsov (m) / Russland Anna Nechaevskaya (f)

2016–17 Far East Cup

[edit]
  • December 16 & 17: FEC #1 in Südkorea Alpensia Resort
    • Sprint Classic winners: Japan Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) / Japan Nanase Fujita (f)
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Japan Hikari Fujinoki
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Südkorea Lee Chae-won
  • December 26 & 27: FEC #2 in Japan Otoineppu, Hokkaido
  • January 6: FEC #3 in Japan Sapporo
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Japan Keishin Yoshida
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Japan Yuki Kobayashi
  • January 7: FEC #4 in Japan Sapporo
    • 1.4 km Sprint Classic winners: Japan Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) / Japan Masako Ishida
  • January 8: FEC #5 in Japan Sapporo
    • Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Japan Keishin Yoshida
    • Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Japan Masako Ishida
  • January 15 & 16: FEC #6 (final) in Südkorea Alpensia Resort

2016–17 USSA Super Tour

[edit]
  • December 3 & 4: UST #1 in Vereinigte Staaten Rendezvous Ski Trails/West Yellowstone, Montana
    • Note: This event replaced Bozeman, Montana.
    • 1.5 km Freestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Matthew Gelso (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Jennie Bender (f)
    • Men's 15 km Classic winner: Vereinigte Staaten Matthew Gelso
    • Women's 10 km Classic winner: Vereinigte Staaten Elizabeth Guiney
  • January 21 & 22: UST #2 in Vereinigte Staaten Soda Springs
    • Sprint Classic winners: Vereinigte Staaten Benjamin Lustgarten (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Jennie Bender (f)
  • February 17–19: UST #3 in Vereinigte Staaten Al Quaal Recreation Area
    • 1.6 km Freestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Tyler Kornfield (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Julia Kern (f)
    • Men's 10 km Classic winner: Vereinigte Staaten David Norris
    • Women's 5 km Classic winner: Vereinigte Staaten Kaitlynn Miller
  • March 27 – April 2: UST #4 in Vereinigte Staaten Birch Hill Recreation Area/Fairbanks (final)
    • Skiathlon winners: Vereinigte Staaten Scott Patterson (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Jessie Diggins (f)
    • Men's 1.5 km Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Logan Hanneman
    • Women's 1.4 km Freestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Jessie Diggins
    • Men's 50 km Must Start winner: Vereinigte Staaten Scott Patterson
    • Women's 30 km Must Start winner: Vereinigte Staaten Jessie Diggins

Freestyle skiing

[edit]

World Championships (Freestyle)

[edit]

FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup

[edit]

Moguls and Aerials

[edit]
  • December 10, 2016 – March 4, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Moguls and Aerials World Cup Schedule[24][25][26]
    • December 10, 2016: MAWC #1 in Finnland Ruka
    • December 17 & 18, 2016: MAWC #2 in China Beijing (Beida Lake)
    • January 13 & 14: MAWC #3 in Vereinigte Staaten Lake Placid, New York
    • January 21: MAWC #4 in Kanada Val Saint-Côme
    • January 28: MAWC #5 in Kanada Calgary
    • February 2–4: MAWC #6 in Vereinigte Staaten Deer Valley
      • Moguls winners: Kanada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Morgan Schild (f)
      • Aerials winners: China Qi Guangpu (m) / Australien Lydia Lassila (f)
      • Dual Moguls winners: Kanada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Australien Britteny Cox (f)
    • February 10 & 11: MAWC #7 in Südkorea Bokwang
      • Aerials winners: Weißrussland Anton Kushnir (m) / China Xu Mengtao (f)
      • Moguls winners: Kanada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Australien Britteny Cox (f)
    • February 18 & 19: MAWC #8 in Japan Tazawako
      • Moguls winners: Kanada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Australien Britteny Cox (f)
      • Dual Moguls winners: Kanada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Jaelin Kauf (f)
    • February 25: MAWC #9 in Weißrussland Minsk
      • Aerials winners: China WANG Xindi (m) / Australien Lydia Lassila (f)
    • February 25 & 26: MAWC #10 in China Thaiwoo (Hebei)
      • Moguls winners: Kanada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Frankreich Perrine Laffont (f)
      • Dual Moguls winners: Kanada Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Australien Britteny Cox (f)
    • March 4: MAWC #11 (final) in Russland Moscow
      • Aerials winners: China ZHOU Hang (m) / Australien Lydia Lassila (f)

Half-pipe, Big air, and Slopestyle

[edit]
  • September 2, 2016 – March 25, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Half-pipe, Big air, and Slopestyle World Cup Schedule[27][28][29]

Ski cross

[edit]
  • December 8, 2016 – March 5, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Ski Cross World Cup Schedule[30]
    • December 8–10, 2016: SCWC #1 in Frankreich Val Thorens
    • December 12 & 13, 2016: SCWC #2 in Schweiz Arosa
      • Ski cross winners: Schweiz Romain Detraz (m) / Kanada Marielle Thompson (f)
    • December 16 & 17, 2016: SCWC #3 in Österreich Montafon
      • Ski cross winners: Frankreich Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (m) / Kanada Marielle Thompson (f)
    • December 20–22, 2016: SCWC #4 in Italien Innichen
    • January 14 & 15: SCWC #5 in Italien Watles
    • February 3–5: SCWC #6 in Deutschland Feldberg
      • Note: The second women's ski cross event here was cancelled.
      • Men's Ski cross winner: Frankreich Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (2 times)
      • Women's Ski cross winner: Deutschland Heidi Zacher
    • February 9–12: SCWC #7 in Schweden Idre
      • Ski cross #1 winners: Schweiz Alex Fiva (m) / Schweden Sandra Näslund (f)
      • Ski cross #2 winners: Kanada Brady Leman (m) / Kanada Marielle Thompson (f)
    • February 24 & 25: SCWC #8 in Russland Sunny Valley (Miass)
    • March 5: SCWC #9 (final) in Kanada Blue Mountain
      • Ski cross winners: Kanada Brady Leman (m) / Kanada Marielle Thompson (f)

2016–17 Europa Cup

[edit]
  • November 26: FSEC #1 in Österreich Stubai
  • November 26 & 27: FSEC #2 in Österreich Pitztal
  • December 1 & 2: FSEC #3 in Finnland Ruka
    • Aerials #1 winners: Russland Maxim Burov (m) / Australien Danielle Scott (f)
    • Aerials #2 winners: Russland Maxim Burov (m) / Australien Danielle Scott (f)
  • January 11 & 12: FSEC #4 in Frankreich Val Thorens
    • Men's Ski Cross winners: Schweiz Bryan Zooler (#1) / Frankreich François Place (#2)
    • Women's Ski Cross winners: Frankreich Amelie Schneider (#1) / Schweden Lisa Andersson (#2)
  • January 20–22: FSEC #5 in Österreich St Anton am Arlberg
    • Big Air winners: Österreich Lukas Müllauer (m) / Österreich Laura Wallner (f)
    • Slopestyle #1 winners: Finnland Joona Sipola (m) / Österreich Laura Wallner (f)
    • Slopestyle #2 winners: Andorra Carles Aguareles Loan (m) / Schweden Jennie-Lee Burmansson (f)
  • January 26 & 27: FSEC #6 in Schweiz Lenk im Simmental
    • Men's Ski Cross winners: Neuseeland Jamie Prebble (#1) / Schweiz Ryan Regez (#2)
    • Women's Ski Cross winners: Schweden Lisa Andersson (2 times)
  • January 28 & 29: FSEC #7 in Frankreich Albiez-Montrond
    • Moguls winners: Russland Evgeniy Gedrovich (m) / Norwegen Kristine Gullachsen (f)
    • Dual Moguls winners: Frankreich Gaël Gaiddon (m) / Schweden Thea Wallberg (f)
  • February 1–3: FSEC #8 in Italien Bardonecchia
    • Ski Cross #1 winners: Frankreich François Place (m) / Frankreich Amelie Schneider (f)
    • Ski Cross #1 winners: Frankreich François Place (m) / Schweden Lisa Andersson (f)
  • February 9–12: FSEC #9 in Weißrussland Minsk
    • Aerials #1 winners: Weißrussland Artsiom Bashlakou (m) / Schweiz Carol Bouvard (f)
    • Aerials #2 winners: Weißrussland Artsiom Bashlakou (m) / Schweiz Carol Bouvard (f)
    • Team Aerials winners:  Weißrussland (Hanna Yauseyenka, Dzmitry Mazurkevich, Artsiom Bashlakou)
  • February 11 & 12: FSEC #10 in Österreich Gaißau
    • Moguls #1 winners: Schweden Oskar Elofsson (m) / Kasachstan Ayaulum Amrenova (f)
    • Moguls #2 winners: Schweden Loke Nilsson (m) / Kasachstan Ayaulum Amrenova (f)
  • February 11 & 12: FSEC #11 in Deutschland Grasgehren
    • Cancelled
  • February 15–18: FSEC #12 in Schweiz Prato Leventina
    • Moguls winners: Russland Andrey Uglovski (m) / Kasachstan Ayaulum Amrenova (f)
    • Dual Moguls #1 winners: Russland Evgeniy Gedrovich (m) / Vereinigtes Königreich Léonie Gerken Schofield (f)
    • Dual Moguls #2 winners: Schweden Albin Holmgren (m) / Vereinigtes Königreich Makayla Gerken-Schofield (f)
  • February 18: FSEC #13 in Deutschland Bischofswiesen
    • Big Air winners: Deutschland Vincent Veile (m) / Deutschland Kea Deike Kuehnel (f)
  • February 18 & 19: FSEC #14 in Deutschland Ebingen
    • Ski Cross #1 winners: Österreich Robert Winkler (m) / Schweden Alexandra Edebo (f)
    • Ski Cross #2 winners: Frankreich François Place (m) / Schweden Alexandra Edebo (f)
  • March 8 & 9: FSEC #15 in Frankreich Saint-François-Longchamp
  • March 10 & 11: FSEC #16 in Slowenien Vogel
    • Slopestyle #1 winners: Dänemark Rasmus Dalberg Jørgensen (m) / Österreich Elisabeth Gram (f)
    • Slopestyle #2 winners: Italien Yuri Silvestri (m) / Italien Sophia Insam (f)
  • March 11 & 12: FSEC #17 in Schweden Kungsberget
    • Moguls winners: Schweden Loke Nilsson (m) / Schweden Frida Lundblad (f)
    • Dual Moguls winners: Schweden Albin Holmgren (m) / Schweden Frida Lundblad (f)
  • March 17 & 18: FSEC #18 in Bulgarien Pamporovo
    • Note: The women's slopestyle events were cancelled.
    • Men's Slopestyle winner: Vereinigte Staaten Brandon Davis (2 times)
  • March 18 & 19: FSEC #19 in Schweden Mora
    • Ski Cross #1 winners: Österreich Robert Winkler (m) / Schweden Lisa Andersson
    • Ski Cross #2 winners: Frankreich Morgan Guipponi-Barfety (m) / Schweden Lisa Andersson
  • March 19 & 20: FSEC #20 in Finnland Jyväskylä
    • Dual Moguls #1 winners: Finnland Jussi Penttala (m) / Schweden Frida Lundblad (f)
    • Dual Moguls #2 winners: Finnland Jimi Salonen (m) / Schweden Thea Wallberg (f)
  • March 24–27: FSEC #21 in Schweiz Airolo
    • Aerials #1 winners: Schweiz Dimitri Isler (m) / Kasachstan Zhanbota Aldabergenova (f)
    • Aerials #2 winners: Schweiz Noe Roth (m) / Kasachstan Zhanbota Aldabergenova (f)
    • Aerials #3 winners: Schweiz Nicolas Gygax (m) / Kasachstan Zhanbota Aldabergenova (f)
  • March 25 & 26: FSEC #22 in Tschechische Republik Pec pod Sněžkou
  • March 30 & 31: FSEC #23 in Italien Chiesa in Valmalenco
    • Aerials #1 winners: Russland Maxim Burov (m) / Russland Liubov Nikitina (f)
    • Aerials #2 winners: Weißrussland Dzmitry Mazurkevich (m) / Russland Liubov Nikitina (f)
  • March 30 & 31: FSEC #24 (final) in Italien Livigno
    • Slopestyle winners: Schweiz Colin Wili (m; 2 times) / Frankreich Elisa Nakab (f; 2 times)

2016–17 Nor-Am Cup

[edit]
  • December 14–18: NAC #1 in Vereinigte Staaten Utah Olympic Park
    • Aerials #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Zachary Surdell (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Winter Vinecki (f)
    • Aerials #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nik Seemann (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Winter Vinecki (f)
  • January 6–8: NAC #2 in Kanada Sunridge Ski Area
    • Ski Cross #1 winners: Kanada Trent McCarthy (m) / Kanada India Sherret (f)
    • Ski Cross #2 winners: Kanada Trent McCarthy (m) / Kanada Zoe Chore (f)
  • January 13 & 14: NAC #3 in Kanada Tabor Mountain Ski Resort
    • Men's Ski Cross winners: Kanada Kevin MacDonald (2 times)
    • Women's Ski Cross winners: Kanada India Sherret (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Leah Emaus (#2)
  • January 20: NAC#4/Super Continental Cup in Vereinigte Staaten Solitude Mountain Resort
  • February 11 & 12: NAC #5 in Vereinigte Staaten Killington Ski Resort
    • Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten Emerson Smith (m) / Kanada Valérie Gilbert (f)
    • Dual Moguls winners: Kanada Gabriel Dufresne (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Lane Stoltzner (f)
  • February 13–17: NAC #6 in Vereinigte Staaten Sunday River Resort
    • Ski Cross #1 winners: Kanada Kevin MacDonald (m) / Kanada Tiana Gairns (f)
    • Ski Cross #2 winners: Kanada Reece Howden (m) / Kanada Tiana Gairns (f)
  • February 14 & 15: NAC #7 in Kanada Val Saint-Côme Ski Resort #1
    • Aerials #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Thomas Coe (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Erica Stemler (f)
    • Aerials #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Thomas Coe (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Tyra Izor (f)
  • February 16–18: NAC #8 in Vereinigte Staaten Aspen/Buttermilk
    • Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Ethan Swadburg (m) / Kanada Elena Gaskell (f)
    • Big Air winners: Vereinigte Staaten Mac Forehand (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Grace Henderson (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: Vereinigte Staaten Birk Irving (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Abigale Hansen (f)
  • February 18 & 19: NAC #9 in Kanada Val Saint-Côme Ski Resort #2
    • Moguls winners: Kanada Elliot Vaillancourt (m) / Kanada Berkley Brown (f)
    • Dual Moguls winners: Kanada Simon Lemieux (m) / Kanada Valérie Gilbert (f)
  • February 19 & 20: NAC #10 in Vereinigte Staaten Lake Placid, New York
    • Aerials #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Patrick O'Flynn (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Megan Nick (f)
    • Aerials #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Novak (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Kira Tanghe (f)
  • February 20–25: NAC #11 in Vereinigte Staaten Ski Cooper
    • Ski Cross #1 winners: Kanada Kevin MacDonald (m) / Kanada India Sherret (f)
    • Ski Cross #2 winners: Kanada Reece Howden (m) / Kanada India Sherret (f)
  • February 22–26: NAC #12 in Vereinigte Staaten Northstar California Resort
    • Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten Emerson Smith (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Lane Stoltzner (f)
    • Dual Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten Troy Tully (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Avital Shimko (f)
  • February 24–26: NAC #13 in Kanada Canada Olympic Park
    • Halfpipe winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nick Goepper (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Carly Margulies (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Philippe Langevin (m) / Kanada Sofia Tchernetsky (f)
  • February 27 – March 3: NAC #14 in Vereinigte Staaten Utah Olympic Park
    • Aerials #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Novak (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Madison Varmette (f)
    • Aerials #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Novak (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Madison Varmette (f)
  • March 3 & 4: NAC #15 in Kanada Mount St. Louis Moonstone
    • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Christian Stormgaard (m) / Kanada Sofia Tchernetsky (f)
  • March 4 & 5: NAC #16: in Kanada Apex Mountain Resort
    • Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten Casey Andringa (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Avital Shimko (f)
    • Dual Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten Joel Hedrick (m) / Kanada Berkley Brown (f)
  • March 7 & 8: NAC #17 in Vereinigte Staaten Seven Springs Mountain Resort
    • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Philippe Langevin (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Caroline Claire (f)
  • March 7–9: NAC #18 (final) in Kanada Blue Mountain
    • Ski Cross #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Brant Crossan (m) / Kanada Marielle Thompson (f)
    • Ski Cross #2 winners: Kanada Mathieu Leduc (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Tania Prymak (f)

2016 FIS Freestyle Australia/New Zealand Cup

[edit]

2016 FIS Freestyle South American Cup

[edit]
  • August 4–6: SAC #1 in Chile La Parva
    • Ski Cross winners #1: Kanada Ned Ireland (m) / Chile Magdalena Casas-Cordero (f)
    • Ski Cross winners #2: Kanada Ned Ireland (m) / Chile Magdalena Casas-Cordero (f)
  • August 17–20: SAC #2 in Argentinien Cerro Catedral #1
  • August 26 & 27: SAC #3 in Chile El Colorado
  • September 12–14: SAC #4 (final) in Argentinien Cerro Catedral #2
    • Slopestyle winners #1: Argentinien Mateo Cremer (m)
    • Slopestyle winners #2: Costa Rica Andre Hamm (m) / Russland Elena Kostenko (f)

Nordic combined

[edit]

World Championships (NC)

[edit]
  • August 27, 2016 – March 19, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup Schedule[31]
    • August 27 & 28, 2016: NCWC #1 in Deutschland Oberwiesenthal
    • August 31, 2016: NCWC #2 in Österreich Villach
      • Men's individual winner: Österreich Mario Seidl
    • September 2 & 3, 2016: NCWC #3 in Deutschland Oberstdorf
      • Winners #1: Norwegen Jarl Magnus Riiber (m) / Deutschland Jenny Nowak (f)
      • Winners #2: Deutschland Jan Andersen (m) / Österreich Timna Moser (f)
      • Winners #3: Norwegen Jarl Magnus Riiber (m) / Deutschland Jenny Nowak (f)
      • Winners #4: Deutschland Jan Andersen (m) / Österreich Lisa Eder (f)
      • Men's individual winners: Finnland Atte Kettunen (#1) / Ukraine Dmytro Mazurchuk (#2)
    • November 26 & 27, 2016: NCWC #4 in Finnland Ruka
    • December 2–4, 2016: NCWC #5 in Norwegen Lillehammer
      • Men's individual winner: Deutschland Eric Frenzel (2 times)
      • Men's team winners:  Deutschland (Björn Kircheisen, Eric Frenzel, Fabian Rießle, Johannes Rydzek)
    • December 17 & 18, 2016: NCWC #6 in Österreich Ramsau
      • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Johannes Rydzek (#1) / Deutschland Eric Frenzel (#2)
    • January 7 & 8: NCWC #7 in Finnland Lahti
      • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Eric Frenzel (#1) / Deutschland Fabian Rießle (#2)
    • January 13–15: NCWC #8 in Italien Fiemme Valley
    • January 21 & 22: NCWC #9 in Frankreich Chaux-Neuve
      • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Johannes Rydzek (#1) / Deutschland Fabian Rießle (#2)
    • January 27–29: NCWC #10 in Österreich Seefeld
      • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Johannes Rydzek (2 wins) / Deutschland Eric Frenzel (1 win)
    • February 4 & 5: NCWC #11 in Südkorea Pyeongchang
      • Men's individual winner: Deutschland Johannes Rydzek (2 times)
    • February 10 & 11: NCWC #12 in Japan Sapporo
      • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Björn Kircheisen (#1) / Japan Akito Watabe (#2)
    • March 11: NCWC #13 in Norwegen Oslo
      • Men's individual winner: Japan Akito Watabe
    • March 15: NCWC #14 in Norwegen Trondheim
      • Men's individual winner: Deutschland Eric Frenzel
    • March 18 & 19: NCWC #15 (final) in Deutschland Schonach
      • Men's individual winner: Deutschland Eric Frenzel (2 times)

2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined Grand Prix

[edit]

2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined Continental Cup

[edit]
  • December 15 & 18: COC #1 in Deutschland Klingenthal
    • Winner #1: Deutschland Maximilian Pfordte
    • Winner #2: Deutschland Tobias Simon
    • Winner #3: Japan Go Yamamoto
  • January 7 & 8: COC #2 in Norwegen Hoeydalsmo
    • Winner #1: Norwegen Truls Soenstehagen Johansen
    • Winner #2: Frankreich Hugo Buffard
  • January 14 & 15: COC #3 in Finnland Rukatunturi
    • Winner #1: Österreich Lukas Greiderer
    • Winner #2: Norwegen Sindre Ure Søtvik
  • January 21 & 22: COC #4 in Estland Otepää
  • February 11 & 12: COC #5 in Österreich Eisenerz
  • February 18 & 19: COC #6 in Slowenien Planica
  • March 10–12: COC #7 (final) in Russland Nizhny Tagil
    • Winner #1: Österreich Harald Lemmerer
    • Winner #2: Deutschland Tobias Simon
    • Winner #3: Deutschland Tobias Simon

2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined Alpen Cup

[edit]
  • August 8, 2016: NCAP #1 in Deutschland Klingenthal
    • Winner: Österreich Lisa Eder
  • August 12, 2016: NCAP #2 in Deutschland Bischofsgrün
    • Winner: Österreich Lisa Eder
  • September 17 & 18, 2016: NCAP #3 in Deutschland Winterberg
    • Winner #1: Deutschland Justin Moczarski
    • Winner #2: Deutschland Justin Moczarski
  • October 1 & 2, 2016: NCAP #4 in Deutschland Hinterzarten
    • Winner #1: Deutschland Simon Hüttel
    • Winner #2: Österreich Christian Deuschl
  • December 17 & 18: NCAP #5 in Österreich Seefeld in Tirol
    • Winner #1: Österreich Mika Vermeulen
    • Winner #2: Slowenien Vid Vrhovnik
  • December 17 & 18: NCAP #6 in Deutschland Rastbuechl
    • Winner: Italien Lisa Moreschini
  • January 13–15: NCAP #7 in Deutschland Schonach im Schwarzwald
    • Winner #1: Österreich Mika Vermeulen
    • Winner #2: Deutschland Martin Hahn
  • February 25–26: NCAP #8 in Slowenien Kranj
    • Winner #1: Österreich Mika Vermeulen
    • Winner #2: Deutschland Jonas Welde
  • March 3–5: NCAP #9 in Deutschland Hinterzarten
    • Winners #1: Österreich Stefan Rettenegger (m) / Deutschland Jenny Nowak (f)
    • Winners #2: Deutschland Luis Lehnert (m) / Deutschland Alexandra Seifert (f)
    • Teams winners:
  • March 11 & 12: NCAP #10 (final) in Frankreich Chaux-Neuve
    • Winners #1: Deutschland Luis Lehnert (m) / Frankreich Joséphine Pagnier (f)
    • Winners #2: Italien Aaron Kostner (m) / Women's is cancelled

Nordic skiing

[edit]

Ski jumping

[edit]

World Championships (SJ)

[edit]

2016–17 Four Hills Tournament

[edit]

2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup

[edit]
  • September 9–11, 2016: SJWC #1 in Russland Chaykovsky, Perm Krai
  • September 16–18, 2016: SJWC #2 in Kasachstan Almaty
    • All events cancelled here.
  • September 30 – October 2, 2016: SJWC #3 in Österreich Hinzenbach #1
  • November 24–26, 2016: SJWC #4 in Finnland Ruka
  • December 1–3, 2016: SJWC #5 in Norwegen Lillehammer #1
    • Women's Winner: Japan Sara Takanashi (2 times)
  • December 2–4, 2016: SJWC #6 in Deutschland Klingenthal
  • December 9–11, 2016: SJWC #7 in Norwegen Lillehammer #2
    • Note: The men's events was supposed to be hosted in Nizhny Tagil, but was cancelled.[33]
    • Men's Winners: Slowenien Domen Prevc (#1) / Polen Kamil Stoch (#2)
  • December 9–11, 2016: SJWC #8 in Russland Nizhny Tagil
  • December 16–18, 2016: SJWC #9 in Schweiz Engelberg
  • January 6–8: SJWC #10 in Deutschland Oberstdorf #2
    • Women's Winner: Japan Sara Takanashi (2 times)
  • January 13–15: SJWC #11 in Polen Wisła
    • Men's Winner: Polen Kamil Stoch (2 times)
  • January 13–15: SJWC #12 in Japan Sapporo #1
    • Women's Winners: Japan Yuki Ito (#1) / Norwegen Maren Lundby (#2)
  • January 19–21: SJWC #13 in Japan Zaō, Miyagi
    • Women's Winner: Japan Yuki Ito (2 times)
  • January 20–22: SJWC #14 in Polen Zakopane
  • January 27–29: SJWC #15 in Deutschland Willingen
    • Men's Winner: Deutschland Andreas Wellinger
    • Team Winners:  Polen (Piotr Żyła, Dawid Kubacki, Maciej Kot, Kamil Stoch)
  • January 27–29: SJWC #16 in Rumänien Râșnov
    • Women's Winners: Norwegen Maren Lundby (#1) / Japan Sara Takanashi (#2)
  • February 3–5: SJWC #17 in Deutschland Oberstdorf #3
  • February 3–5: SJWC #18 in Österreich Hinzenbach #2
    • Women's Winner: Japan Sara Takanashi (2 times)
  • February 10–12: SJWC #19 in Japan Sapporo #2
    • Men's Winners: Polen Maciej Kot (#1) / Polen Kamil Stoch (#2)
  • February 11–12: SJWC #20 in Slowenien Ljubno
  • February 14–16: SJWC #21 in Südkorea Pyeongchang
    • Men's Winners: Österreich Stefan Kraft (#1) / Polen Maciej Kot (#2)
    • Women's Winners: Japan Yuki Ito (#1) / Japan Sara Takanashi (#2)
  • March 10–19: Raw Air 2017 (debut event)
  • March 23–26: SJWC #26 (final) in Slowenien Planica
    • Men's Winner: Österreich Stefan Kraft (2 times)
    • Team Winners:  Norwegen (Robert Johansson, Johann André Forfang, Anders Fannemel, & Andreas Stjernen)

2016 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix

[edit]

2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup

[edit]
Summer
Winter

2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup

[edit]
  • August 7 & 8, 2016: OPA #1 in Deutschland Klingenthal
    • Winner #1: Ungarn Virág Vörös (2 times)
  • August 10 & 11, 2016: OPA #2 in Deutschland Pöhla
    • Winner #1: Ungarn Virág Vörös
    • Winner #2: Österreich Lisa Eder
  • August 12 & 13, 2016: OPA #3 in Deutschland Bischofsgrün
    • Winner #1: Österreich Lisa Eder
    • Winner #2: Ungarn Virág Vörös
  • September 10 & 11, 2016: OPA #4 in Schweiz Einsiedeln
    • Winners #1: Deutschland Felix Hoffmann (m) / Slowenien Kaja Urbanija Čož (f)
    • Winners #2: Slowenien Aljaž Osterc (m) / Slowenien Jerneja Brecl (f)
  • September 30 & October 1, 2016: OPA #5 in Deutschland Hinterzarten
  • December 16 & 17, 2016: OPA #6 in Deutschland Rastbuechl
    • Winner #1: Slowenien Katra Komar
    • Winner #2: Slowenien Jerneja Brecl
  • December 17 & 18, 2016: OPA #6 in Österreich Seefeld in Tirol
    • Winners: Slowenien Aljaž Osterc (2 times)
  • January 13 & 14: OPA #7 in Deutschland Schonach im Schwarzwald
    • Winners #1: Slowenien Rok Tarman (m) / Frankreich Joséphine Pagnier (f)
    • Winners #2: Slowenien Žiga Jelar (m) / Slowenien Jerneja Brecl (f)
  • January 21 & 22, 2017: OPA #7 in Slowenien Žiri
    • Winners: Slowenien Katra Komar (2 times)
  • February 25 & 26, 2017: OPA #8 in Slowenien Kranj
  • March 4 & 5: OPA #9 in Deutschland Hinterzarten
    • Winners #1: Österreich David Haagen (m) / Frankreich Joséphine Pagnier (f)
    • Winners #2: Slowenien Timi Zajc (m) / Österreich Marita Kramer (f)
    • Teams winners:
  • March 11 & 12: OPA #10 (final) in Frankreich Chaux-Neuve

2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping Cup

[edit]

Snowboarding

[edit]

World Championships (SB)

[edit]

Alpine snowboarding

[edit]

Snowboard cross

[edit]

Freestyle snowboarding

[edit]

2016–17 Europa Cup

[edit]
  • November 3 & 4, 2016: EC #1 in Niederlande Landgraaf
    • Parallel slalom #1 winners: Italien Maurizio Bormolini (m) / Niederlande Michelle Dekker (f)
    • Parallel slalom #2 winners: Italien Maurizio Bormolini (m) / Deutschland Carolin Langenhorst (f)
  • November 9 & 10, 2016: EC #2 in Niederlande Landgraaf
    • Slopestyle #1 winners: Niederlande Erik Bastiaansen (m) / Niederlande Babs Barnhoorn (f)
    • Slopestyle #2 winners: Niederlande Max de Vries (m) / Niederlande Babs Barnhoorn (f)
  • November 26 & 27, 2016: EC #3 in Österreich Kaunertal
    • Big Air winners: Italien Davide Boggio (m) / Russland Elena Kostenko (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Lyon Farrell (m) / Tschechische Republik Katerina Vojackova (f)
  • November 30 & December 1, 2016: EC #4 in Österreich Pitztal
  • December 10 & 11, 2016: EC #5 in Deutschland Hochfügen
    • Parallel giant slalom #1 winners: Frankreich Sylvain Dufour (m) / Russland Elizaveta Salikhova (f)
    • Parallel giant slalom #2 winners: Frankreich Sylvain Dufour (m) / Russland Ekaterina Khatomchenkova (f)
  • December 15 & 16, 2016: EC #6 in Frankreich Val Thorens
    • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Australien Adam Lambert (m) / Frankreich Gaia Tarasco (f)
    • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Australien Adam Lambert (m) / Italien Sofia Belingheri (f)
  • January 7 & 8: EC #7 in Österreich Gerlitzen
    • Parallel giant slalom #1 winners: Slowenien Jure Hafner (m) / Polen Weronika Biela (f)
    • Parallel giant slalom #2 winners: Südkorea Bo-Gun Choi (m) / Schweiz Nicole Baumgartner
  • January 20 & 21: EC #8 in Italien Pila
    • Cancelled
  • January 20 & 21: EC #9 in Italien Livigno
  • January 24 & 25: EC #10 in Frankreich Vars
    • Slopestyle #1 winners: Norwegen Bendik Gjerdalen (m) / Finnland Carola Niemelä (f)
    • Slopestyle #2 winners: Japan Takeru Otsuka (m) / Finnland Emmi Parkkisenniemi (f)
  • January 28 & 29: EC #11 in Deutschland Grasgehren
    • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Australien Adam Lambert (m) / Frankreich Julia Pereira (f)
    • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Niederlande Glenn de Blois (m) / Frankreich Gaia Tarasco (f)
  • January 28 & 29: EC #12 in Frankreich Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via
    • Big Air #1 winners: Frankreich Enzo Valax (m) / Russland Elena Kostenko (f)
    • Big Air #2 winners: Frankreich Enzo Valax (m) / Russland Elena Kostenko (f)
  • January 31 & February 1: EC #13 in Slowenien Maribor
    • Cancelled
  • February 3 & 4: EC #13 in Frankreich Puy-Saint-Vincent
    • Men's Snowboardcross winners: Schweiz Nick Watter (#1) / #2 is cancelled
    • Women's Snowboardcross winners: Italien Francesca Gallina (#1) / #2 is cancelled
  • February 11 & 12: EC #14 in Bosnien und Herzegowina Sarajevo
    • Big Air winners: Italien Nicola Liviero (m) / Weißrussland Maryia Masla (f)
  • February 17: EC #15 in Deutschland Bischofswiesen/Goetschen
    • Big Air winners: Belgien Stef Vandeweyer (m) / Schweden Louise Nordström (f)
  • February 23–26: EC #16 in Italien Colere
    • Men's Snowboardcross winners: Deutschland Paul Berg (#1) / Frankreich Ken Vuagnoux (#2)
    • Women's Snowboardcross winners: Italien Sofia Belingheri (#1) / Italien Francesca Gallina (#2)
  • February 24 & 25: EC #17 in Schweiz Davos
    • Halfpipe winners: Südkorea CHO Hyeon-Min (m) / Schweiz Carla Somaini (f)
    • Big Air winners: Schweiz Moritz Boll (m) / Chile Antonia Yañez (f)
  • February 25 & 26: EC #18 in Schweiz Lenzerheide
    • Men's Parallel slalom winners: Schweiz Dario Caviezel (#1) / Österreich Sebastian Kislinger (#2)
    • Women's Parallel slalom winners: Österreich Sabine Schöffmann (2 times)
  • February 25 & 26: EC #19 in Türkei Erzurum
    • Cancelled
  • March 4 & 5: EC #20 in Serbien Kopaonik
    • Big Air #1 winners: Italien Nicola Liviero (m) / Kroatien Lea Jugovac (f)
    • Big Air #2 winners: Russland Nikita Tiuterev (m) / Russland Elena Kostenko (f)
  • March 13 & 14: EC #21 in Bulgarien Pamporovo
    • Women's Slopestyle winners:
  • March 16 & 17: EC #22 in Slowenien Rogla
    • Cancelled
  • March 16–19: EC #23 in Schweiz Laax
    • Slopestyle winners: Österreich Simon Gschaider (m) / Finnland Elli Pikkujämsä (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: Schweiz Patrick Burgener (m) / Schweiz Verena Rohrer (f)
  • March 17 & 18: EC #24 in Österreich Radstadt
    • Parallel slalom #1 winners: Österreich Johann Stefaner (m) / Russland Milena Bykova (f)
    • Parallel slalom #2 winners: Österreich Johann Stefaner (m) / Italien Elisa Profanter (f)
  • March 17 & 18: EC #25 in Schweiz Lenk
  • March 24–26: EC #26 in Österreich Kühtai
    • Note: The women's Big Air event was cancelled.
    • Big Air winner: Österreich Moritz Amsuess
    • Halfpipe winners: Vereinigte Staaten Toby Miller (m) / Deutschland Leilani Ettel (f)
  • March 25 & 26: EC #27 in Italien Ratschings
    • Parallel slalom #1 winners: Österreich Lukas Mathies (m) / Schweiz Ladina Jenny (f)
    • Parallel slalom #2 winners: Deutschland Stefan Baumeister (m) / Österreich Jemima Juritz (f)
  • March 28 & 29: EC #28 in Slowenien Rogla
    • Parallel giant slalom winners: Österreich Sebastian Kislinger (m) / Russland Milena Bykova (f)
    • Parallel slalom winners: Österreich Benjamin Karl (m) / Österreich Sabine Schöffmann (f)
  • April 1 & 2: EC #29 in Slowakei Jasná
    • Event cancelled.
  • April 1 & 2: EC #30 in Schweiz Scuol
  • April 8 & 9: EC #31 in Tschechische Republik Pec pod Sněžkou
    • Event cancelled.
  • April 18–22: EC #32 (final) in Schweiz Silvaplana
    • Note: The half-pipe events here was cancelled.
    • Big Air winners: Schweiz Jonas Boesiger (m) / Finnland Emmi Parkkisenniemi (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Schweiz Dario Burch (m) / Schweiz Elena Koenz (f)

2016–17 Nor-Am Cup

[edit]
  • November 29 & 30, 2016: NAC #1 in Vereinigte Staaten Snow King Mountain Resort
    • Cancelled
  • December 16–18, 2016: NAC #2 in Vereinigte Staaten Buck Hill
    • Parallel slalom #1 winners: Kanada Richard Evanoff (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Maggie Carrigan (f)
    • Parallel slalom #2 winners: Kanada Arnaud Gaudet (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Maggie Carrigan (f)
    • Parallel slalom #3 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Robert Burns (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Maggie Carrigan (f)
  • January 4–7: NAC #3 in Kanada Le Relais
    • Men's Parallel slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Mike Trapp (#1) / Kanada Sébastien Beaulieu (#2)
    • Women's Parallel slalom winners: Kanada Megan Farrell (2 times)
  • January 14 & 15: NAC #4 in Vereinigte Staaten Steamboat Springs
    • Parallel giant slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Mike Trapp (m) / Kanada Megan Farrell (f)
    • Men's Parallel slalom winner: Kanada Richard Evanoff (m) / Kanada Megan Farrell (f)
  • February 1–3: NAC #5 in Kanada Mont-Tremblant, Quebec
    • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Senna Leith (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Katie Wilson (f)
    • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Senna Leith (m) / Kanada Audrey McManiman (f)
  • February 8–10: NAC #6 in Kanada Craigleith Ski Club
    • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Senna Leith (m) / Kanada Audrey McManiman (f)
    • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Senna Leith (m) / Kanada Audrey McManiman (f)
  • February 9 & 10: NAC #7 in Vereinigte Staaten Holiday Valley
    • Men's Parallel giant slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Justin Reiter (2 times)
    • Women's Parallel giant slalom winners: Kanada Rebecca Letourneau-Duynstee (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Maggie Carrigan (#2)
  • February 10–12: NAC #8 in Kanada Canada Olympic Park
    • Halfpipe winners: Kanada Trevor Niblett (m) / Kanada Calynn Irwin (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Joshua Reeves (m) / Kanada Marguerite Sweeney (f)
  • February 13–16: NAC #9 in Kanada Toronto Ski Club/Toronto
    • Men's Parallel giant slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Robert Burns (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Michael Trapp (#2)
    • Women's Parallel giant slalom winners: Kanada Marianne Laurin-Lalonde (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Maggie Carrigan (#2)
  • February 13–17: NAC #10 in Vereinigte Staaten Sunday River
    • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Michael Perle (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Colleen Healey (f)
    • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Cole Johnson (m) / Kanada Katie Anderson (f)
  • February 15 & 16: NAC #11 in Kanada Sun Peaks Resort
    • Men's Slopestyle winners: Kanada Carter Jarvis (m) / Kanada Baily Mcdonald (f)
    • Women's Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Kix Kamp (m) / Kanada Marguerite Sweeney (f)
  • February 20–25: NAC #12 in Vereinigte Staaten Ski Cooper
    • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Robert Minghini (m) / Kanada Katie Anderson (f)
    • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Kanada Danny Bourgeois (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Anna Miller (f)
  • March 5–12: #13 in Kanada Mount St. Louis Moonstone
    • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Carter Jarvis (m) / Kanada Baily Mcdonald (f)
  • March 8–10: #14 in Kanada Big White Ski Resort
    • Snowboardcross #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Robert Minghini (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Colleen Healey (f)
    • Snowboardcross #2 winners: Australien Adam Dickson (m) / Kanada Katie Anderson (f)
  • March 31 – April 4: #15 in Vereinigte Staaten Copper Mountain
    • Snowboardcross winners: Vereinigte Staaten Jake Vedder (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Colleen Healey (f)
    • Parallel giant slalom winners: Kanada Darren Gardner (m) / Österreich Ina Meschik (f)
    • Parallel slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Aaron Muss (m) / Österreich Ina Meschik (f)
  • April 4–9: #16 (final) in Kanada Mont-Tremblant
    • Snowboardcross winners: Kanada Christopher Robanske (m) / Kanada Audrey McManiman (f)
    • Parallel slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Robert Burns (m) / Südkorea SHIN Da-hae (f)

2016 FIS Snowboard Australia/New Zealand Cup

[edit]
  • August 4–7: SBANC #1 in Australien Mount Hotham #1
  • August 15–18: SBANC #2 in Australien Thredbo
    • Cancelled due to insufficient snow at the snow control.
  • August 30 – September 2: SBANC #3 in Australien Mount Hotham #2
  • September 13–16: SBANC #4 (final) in Neuseeland Cardrona
    • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Sebastien Toutant (m) / Neuseeland Zoi Sadowski-Synnott (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: Japan Ando Naito (m) / Japan Kurumi Imai (f)

2016 FIS Snowboard South American Cup

[edit]
  • August 17–21: SBSAC #1 in Argentinien Cerro Catedral #1
    • Snowboardcross winners 1: Argentinien Steven Williams (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Colleen Healey (f)
    • Snowboardcross winners 2: Argentinien Simon White (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Colleen Healey (f)
  • August 26 & 27: SBSAC #2 in Chile El Colorado
    • Big Air #1 winners: Argentinien Federico Chiaradio (m) / Chile Antonia Yáñez (f)
    • Big Air #2 winners: Argentinien Iñaki Odriozola (m) / Russland Elena Kostenko (f)
  • September 9–11: SBSAC #3 in Argentinien Cerro Catedral #2
    • Slopestyle #1 winners: Vereinigte Staaten Grant Giller (m) / Russland Elena Kostenko (f)
    • Slopestyle #2 winners: Argentinien Martín Jaureguialzo (m) / Russland Elena Kostenko (f)
  • September 22–26: SBSAC #4 (final) in Chile Corralco

Telemark skiing

[edit]

Telemark skiing world events

[edit]
  • March 1–4: 2017 FIS Telemark Junior World Championships in Norwegen Rjukan
    • Classic winners: Frankreich Guillaume Issautier (m) / Deutschland Kathrin Reischmann (f)
    • Sprint winners: Norwegen Kristian Lauvik Gjelstad (m) / Frankreich Chloe Blyth (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Frankreich Matti Lopez (m) / Deutschland Kathrin Reischmann (f)
    • Team Parallel Sprint winners:  Frankreich

2016–17 FIS Telemark World Cup

[edit]
  • November 24–27, 2016: TSWC #1 in Österreich Tux
    • Sprint #1 winners: Frankreich Philippe Lau (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Sprint #2 winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Deutschland Jonas Schmid (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
  • January 19 & 20: TSWC #2 in Italien La Thuile
    • Sprint winners: Frankreich Philippe Lau (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Classic winners: Schweiz Bastien Dayer (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
  • January 21 & 22: TSWC #3 in Frankreich Méribel
    • Sprint winners: Frankreich Philippe Lau (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
  • January 28–30: TSWC #4 in Slowenien Krvavec Ski Resort
    • Sprint winners: Schweiz Nicolas Michel (m) Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Schweiz Stefan Matter (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Mixed Team Parallel Sprint winners:  Schweiz
  • February 4 & 5: TSWC #5 in Deutschland Bad Hindelang/Oberjoch
    • Parallel Sprint #1 winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint #2 winners: Deutschland Jonas Schmid (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
  • February 24–26: TSWC #6 in Norwegen Hurdal
    • Classic winners: Norwegen Trym Nygaard Løken (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Norwegen Trym Nygaard Løken (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Sprint winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
  • March 1–3: TSWC #7 in Norwegen Rjukan (part of FIS Telemark Junior World Championships)
    • Classic winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Sprint winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
  • March 9–11: TSWC #8 in Schweiz Thyon
    • Classic winners: Schweiz Bastien Dayer (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Norwegen Trym Nygaard Løken (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Sprint winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
  • March 15–19: TSWC #9 (final) in Frankreich La Plagne/Montchavin-les-Coches (part of 2017 FIS World Telemark Skiing Championships)
    • Team Parallel Sprint winners:  Schweiz
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Frankreich Philippe Lau (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Classic winners: Schweiz Stefan Matter (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)
    • Sprint winners: Deutschland Tobias Mueller (m) / Schweiz Amélie Reymond (f)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ IPC's 2017 World Para Alpine Skiing Championships Page
  2. ^ "FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2017 Website". Archived from the original on February 13, 2016. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  3. ^ FIS' 2017 World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships Results Page
  4. ^ FIS 2016–17 Alpine Skiing World Cup Page
  5. ^ "Alberta ski resorts urged to diversify after World Cup event cancelled due to lack of snow". CBC News. November 17, 2016. Archived from the original on January 2, 2023.
  6. ^ FIS World Cup races in Beaver Creek rescheduled for Val d'Isère
  7. ^ FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup in Beaver Creek cancelled due to lack of snow and warm weather
  8. ^ FIS Alpine World Cup in Courchevel cancelled due to strong winds
  9. ^ Semmering to host cancelled FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup giant slalom from Courchevel
  10. ^ "FIS Alpine Europa Cup Hafjell". Archived from the original on January 28, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  11. ^ 2016–17 IBU Calendar of Events Page
  12. ^ "IBU's 2017 Open European Championships Page". Archived from the original on March 16, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  13. ^ "Biathlon World Championships 2017 Website". Archived from the original on February 10, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  14. ^ Biathlon and speed skating events taken away from Russia over doping scandal
  15. ^ Kontiolahti in Finland replaces Tyumen in Russia as host of IBU World Cup event
  16. ^ IBU Press Release: Extraordinary IBU Executive Board Meeting (December 22, 2016.)
  17. ^ a b c d 2017 FIS Nordic Junior World Ski Championships Website
  18. ^ a b c d "FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017 Website". Archived from the original on February 16, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  19. ^ FIS 2016–17 Cross-Country Skiing World Cup Page
  20. ^ Québec City to replace Tyumen as host of FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals
  21. ^ a b Sierra Nevada 2017 Freestyle and Snowboard World Championships Website
  22. ^ a b FIS Junior Freestyle Ski World Championships 2017 Page
  23. ^ "FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Page". Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  24. ^ FIS 2016–17 Moguls Calendar
  25. ^ FIS 2016–17 Dual Moguls Calendar
  26. ^ FIS 2016–17 Aerials Calendar
  27. ^ FIS 2016–17 Half-pipe Calendar
  28. ^ FIS 2016–17 Big Air Calendar
  29. ^ FIS 2016–17 Slopestyle Calendar
  30. ^ FIS 2016–17 Ski Cross Calendar
  31. ^ FIS' 2016–17 Nordic Combined World Cup Schedule Page
  32. ^ IPC's 2017 World Para Nordic Skiing Championships Page
  33. ^ FIS move ski jumping World Cups from Nizhny Tagil to Lillehammer
  34. ^ IPC's 2017 World Para Snowboard Championships Page
  35. ^ 2017 World Para Snowboard Championships Medal Standings
  36. ^ FIS' Snowboarding Junior World Championships 2017 Page
  37. ^ a b FIS Snowboard World Cup events in Kazan cancelled for "financial reasons"
[edit]