Jump to content

2018–19 in skiing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from 2019 in skiing)

FIS World Championships (AS)

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • October 2018
    • October 27 & 28: ASWC #1 in Österreich Sölden
      • Note: The men's giant slalom event was cancelled, due to huge amounts of snow.[5]
      • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Frankreich Tessa Worley
  • November 2018
  • December 2018
  • January 2019
    • January 1: ASWC #17 in Norwegen Oslo
    • January 5 & 6: ASWC #18 in Kroatien Zagreb
      • Slalom winners: Österreich Marcel Hirscher (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
    • January 8: ASWC #19 in Österreich Flachau
      • Women's Slalom winner: Slowakei Petra Vlhová
    • January 10 – 13: ASWC #20 in Österreich St Anton am Arlberg
      • Event cancelled.
    • January 12 & 13: ASWC #21 in Schweiz Adelboden
      • Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner: Österreich Marcel Hirscher
    • January 15: ASWC #22 in Italien Kronplatz
      • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin
    • January 15 – 20: ASWC #23 in Schweiz Wengen
    • January 17 – 20: ASWC #24 in Italien Cortina d'Ampezzo
      • Women's Downhill winner: Österreich Ramona Siebenhofer (2 times)
      • Women's Super G winner: Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin
    • January 22 – 27: ASWC #25 in Österreich Kitzbühel
      • Men's Downhill winner: Italien Dominik Paris
      • Men's Slalom winner: Frankreich Clément Noël
      • Men's Super G winner: Deutschland Josef Ferstl
    • January 24 – 27: ASWC #26 in Deutschland Garmisch-Partenkirchen #1
      • Women's Super G winner: Österreich Nicole Schmidhofer
      • Women's Downhill winner: Österreich Stephanie Venier
    • January 29: ASWC #27 in Österreich Schladming
      • Men's Slalom winner: Österreich Marcel Hirscher
    • January 31 – February 3: ASWC #28 in Deutschland Garmisch-Partenkirchen #2
      • Event cancelled.
  • February 2019
    • February 1 & 2: ASWC #29 in Slowenien Maribor
      • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Slowakei Petra Vlhová
      • Women's Slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin
    • February 19: ASWC #30 in Schweden Stockholm
    • February 21 – 24: ASWC #31 in Schweiz Crans-Montana
      • Women's Downhill winner: Italien Sofia Goggia
      • Women's Alpine Combined winner: Italien Federica Brignone
    • February 22 – 24: ASWC #32 in Bulgarien Bansko
    • February 27 – March 3: ASWC #33 in Russland Rosa Khutor Alpine Resort
      • Event cancelled.
    • February 28 – March 3: ASWC #34 in Norwegen Kvitfjell
      • Note: The second men's downhill event here was cancelled.
      • Men's Downhill & Super G winner: Italien Dominik Paris
  • March 2019
    • March 8 & 9: ASWC #35 in Tschechische Republik Špindlerův Mlýn
      • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Slowakei Petra Vlhová
      • Women's Slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin
    • March 9 & 10: ASWC #36 in Slowenien Kranjska Gora Ski Resort
      • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Norwegen Henrik Kristoffersen
      • Men's Slalom winner: Schweiz Ramon Zenhäusern
    • March 11 – 17: ASWC #37 (final) in Andorra Soldeu
      • Downhill winners: Italien Dominik Paris (m) / Österreich Mirjam Puchner (f)
      • Super G winners: Italien Dominik Paris (m) / Deutschland Viktoria Rebensburg (f)
      • Team Alpine Event winners:  Schweiz (Aline Danioth, Wendy Holdener, Daniel Yule, & Ramon Zenhäusern)
      • Giant Slalom winners: Frankreich Alexis Pinturault (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
      • Slalom winners: Frankreich Clément Noël (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Mikaela Shiffrin (f)

2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing European Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • November 2018
  • December 2018
    • December 3 & 4: ECAS #3 in Norwegen Trysil
    • December 4 & 5: ECAS #4 in Schweden Funäsdalen #2
    • December 6 & 7: ECAS #5 in Norwegen Kvitfjell
    • December 11 & 12: ECAS #6 in Schweiz St. Moritz
      • Note: The men's alpine combined event here was cancelled.
      • Men's Super G winners: Schweiz Marco Odermatt (#1) / Schweiz Stefan Rogentin (#2)
    • December 13 & 14: ECAS #7 in Italien Andalo-Paganella #1
    • December 17 & 18: ECAS #8 in Italien Andalo-Paganella #2
    • December 17 – 21: ECAS #9 in Österreich Zauchensee
      • Women's Downhill winner: Italien Nadia Delago (2 times)
      • Women's Super G winner: Österreich Elisabeth Reisinger
      • Men's Super G winners: Schweiz Gino Caviezel (#1) / Österreich Stefan Babinsky (#2)
    • December 19: ECAS #10 in Italien Obereggen
    • December 21 & 22: ECAS #11 in Österreich Saalbach-Hinterglemm
      • Event cancelled.
  • January 2019
    • January 6 & 7: ECAS #12 in Frankreich Val-Cenis
      • Men's Slalom winner: Italien Simon Maurberger (2 times)
    • January 9 – 12: ECAS #13 in Schweiz Wengen
      • Note: The second men's downhill event here was cancelled.
      • Men's Downhill winner: Italien Mattia Casse
    • January 11 & 12: ECAS #14 in Österreich Göstling-Hochkar
      • Event cancelled.
    • January 14 & 15: ECAS #15 in Österreich Reiteralm
      • Event cancelled.
    • January 15 – 18: ECAS #16 in Italien Fassa Valley
      • Women's Downhill winners: Österreich Elisabeth Reisinger (#1) / Italien Nadia Delago (#2)
    • January 17: ECAS #17 in Italien Kronplatz
      • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Norwegen Lucas Braathen
    • January 19 – 21: ECAS #18 in Österreich Kitzbühel
      • Men's Downhill winner: Österreich Daniel Danklmaier
    • January 21 & 22: ECAS #19 in Schweiz Zinal
      • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Österreich Franziska Gritsch (#1) / Schweden Ylva Staalnacke (#2)
    • January 23 & 24: ECAS #20 in Frankreich Courchevel
    • January 24 & 25: ECAS #21 in Schweiz Melchsee-Frutt
      • Women's Slalom winners: Slowenien Meta Hrovat (#1) / Deutschland Marlene Schmotz (#2)
    • January 27 – 30: ECAS #22 in Frankreich Chamonix
      • Men's Downhill winner: Frankreich Victor Schuller (2 times)
    • January 28 & 29: ECAS #23 in Schweiz Les Diablerets
      • Women's Alpine Combined winner: Schweiz Nicole Good
      • Women's Super G winner: Österreich Elisabeth Reisinger (2 times)
    • January 31 & February 1: ECAS #24 in Frankreich Tignes
      • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Schweiz Lindy Etzensperger
      • Parallel Slalom winners: Österreich Pirmin Hacker (m) / Frankreich Marie Lamure (f)
  • February 2019
    • February 4 & 5: ECAS #25 in Schweiz Gstaad-Saanenland
    • February 4 & 5: ECAS #26 in Österreich Obdach
    • February 9 & 10: ECAS #27 in Deutschland Berchtesgaden
    • February 11 – 15: ECAS #28 in Italien Sarntal
      • Men's Downhill winners: Vereinigte Staaten Thomas Biesemeyer (#1) / Österreich Christopher Neumayer (#2)
      • Men's Alpine Combined winner: Deutschland Christof Brandner
      • Men's Super G winner: Italien Davide Cazzaniga
    • February 14 – 17: ECAS #29 in Schweiz Crans-Montana
      • Women's Downhill winner: Österreich Elisabeth Reisinger (2 times)
    • February 28 – March 2: ECAS #30 in Deutschland Oberjoch
      • Note: Both men's slalom events here were cancelled.
      • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Italien Andrea Ballerin
  • March 2019
    • March 2 & 3: ECAS #31 in Slowakei Jasná
    • March 5 – 7: ECAS #32 in Österreich Hinterstoder
    • March 11 & 12: ECAS #33 in Slowenien Kranjska Gora
      • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Italien Hannes Zingerle
      • Men's Slalom winner: Norwegen Jonathan Nordbotten
    • March 11 – 17: ECAS #34 in Italien Sella Nevea
      • Men's Super G winner: Frankreich Roy Piccard (2 times)
      • Women's Super G winner: Italien Roberta Melesi
      • Downhill winners: Schweiz Urs Kryenbühl (m) / Schweiz Priska Nufer (f)
      • Men's Alpine Combined winner: Italien Simon Maurberger
    • March 16 & 17: ECAS #35 (final) in Italien Folgaria
      • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Österreich Julia Scheib
      • Women's Slalom winner: Vereinigtes Königreich Charlie Guest

2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing Nor-Am Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 3 – 7, 2018: SNAC #1 in Alberta Lake Louise Ski Resort
    • Note: The alpine combined events here were cancelled.
    • Men's Downhill winner: Kanada James Crawford (2 times)
    • Women's Downhill winner: Vereinigte Staaten A.J. Hurt (2 times)
    • Super G winners: Vereinigte Staaten Samuel Dupratt (m) / Vereinigte Staaten A.J. Hurt (f)
  • December 10 – 16, 2018: SNAC #2 in British Columbia Panorama Mountain Village
    • Alpine Combined winners: Kanada Jeffery Read (m) / Vereinigte Staaten A.J. Hurt (f)
    • Men's Super G winners: Vereinigte Staaten Samuel Dupratt (#1) / Kanada Sam Mulligan (#2)
    • Women's Super G winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten A.J. Hurt (#2)
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Kanada Simon Fournier (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Krause (#2)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Patricia Mangan (#2)
    • Men's Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Mark Engel (#1) / Kanada Simon Fournier (#2)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Foreste Peterson (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Katie Hensien (#2)
  • January 2 & 3: SNAC #3 in Ontario Georgian Peaks Club
    • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (2 times)
  • January 3 – 5: SNAC #4 in Quebec Camp Fortune
    • Men's Slalom winners: Kanada Simon Fournier (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Benjamin Ritchie (#2)
  • January 4: SNAC #5 in Ontario Alpine Ski Club
    • Women's Parallel Slalom winner: Norwegen Tuva Norbye
  • January 4 – 6: SNAC #6 in Ontario Osler Bluff
    • Women's Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Katie Hensien (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (#2)
  • January 5 – 7: SNAC #7 in Quebec Mont Ste. Marie
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Norwegen Aage Solheim (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Nicholas Krause (#2)
    • Men's Parallel Slalom winner: Österreich Tobias Kogler
  • February 5 – 8: SNAC #8 in Idaho Sun Valley
    • Men's Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Luke Winters (#1) / Österreich Tobias Kogler (#2)
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Norwegen Max Roeisland (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten River Radamus (#2)
  • February 5 – 8: SNAC #9 in Wyoming Snow King Mountain
    • Women's Slalom winner: Kanada Amelia Smart (2 times)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Keely Cashman (#1) / Niederlande Adriana Jelinkova (#2)
  • March 12 – 15: SNAC #10 in Vermont Stowe Mountain Resort
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Kanada Mikaela Tommy (#1) / Niederlande Adriana Jelinkova (#2)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Kanada Amelia Smart (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (#2)
  • March 12 – 15: SNAC #11 in Vermont Burke Mountain Ski Area
    • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Schweiz Tanguy Nef (2 times)
    • Men's Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Kyle Negomir (#1) / Deutschland Fritz Dopfer (#2)
  • March 16 – 21: SNAC #12 (final) in Maine Sugarloaf
    • Men's Downhill winners: Vereinigte Staaten Thomas Biesemeyer (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Ryan Cochran-Siegle (#2)
    • Women's Downhill winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Alice Merryweather (#2)
    • Alpine Combined winners: Vereinigte Staaten Luke Winters (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (f)
    • Men's Super G winners: Vereinigte Staaten Ryan Cochran-Siegle (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten River Radamus (#2)
    • Women's Super G winners: Vereinigte Staaten Keely Cashman (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Nina O'Brien (#2)

2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing Far East Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 4 – 7, 2018: FEC #1 in China Wanlong Ski Resorts
  • December 10 – 13, 2018: FEC #2 in China Taiwoo Ski Resorts
    • Men's Slalom winners: Bulgarien Kamen Zlatkov (#1) / Südkorea Jung Dong-hyun (#2)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Schweden Liv Ceder (#1) / Neuseeland Piera Hudson (#2)
    • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Südkorea Jung Dong-hyun (2 times)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Neuseeland Piera Hudson (2 times)
  • February 7 – 9: FEC #3 in Südkorea Yongpyong Resort
    • Note: The Super G events here were cancelled.
    • Slalom winners: Südkorea Jung Dong-hyun (m) / Südkorea Gim So-hui (f)
    • Giant Slalom winners: Südkorea Jung Dong-hyun (m) / Südkorea Kang Young-seo (f)
  • February 12 – 15: FEC #4 in Südkorea Bears Town Resort
    • Men's Slalom winners: Japan Hideyuki Narita (#1) / Japan Yohei Koyama (#2)
    • Women's Slalom winner: Japan Makiko Arai (2 times)
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Schweiz Noel von Gruenigen (#1) / Japan Seigo Kato (#2)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Japan Konatsu Hasumi (#1) / Südkorea Kang Young-seo (#2)
  • February 24 – 27: FEC #5 in Japan Hanawa
    • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Schweiz Reto Schmidiger (2 times)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Japan Asa Ando (2 times)
    • Slalom winners: Schweiz Reto Schmidiger (m) / Japan Chisaki Maeda (f)
  • March 2 – 5: FEC #6 in Japan Engaru
    • Giant Slalom winners: Schweiz Reto Schmidiger (m) / Japan Mio Arai (f)
    • Men's Slalom winner: Schweiz Reto Schmidiger (2 times)
    • Women's Slalom winner: Schweden Michelle Kerven (2 times)
  • March 19 – 25: FEC #7 (final) in Russland Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
    • Men's Super G winners: Russland Ivan Kuznetsov (#1) / Tschechische Republik Jan Zabystřan (#2)
    • Women's Super G winner: Russland Iulija Pleshkova (2 times)
    • Alpine Combined winners: Russland Ivan Kuznetsov (m) / Serbien Nevena Ignjatović (f)
    • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Russland Pavel Trikhichev (2 times)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Slowenien Ana Bucik (2 times)
    • Men's Slalom winners: Russland Pavel Trikhichev (#1) / Tschechische Republik Jan Zabystřan (#2)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Slowenien Maruša Ferk (#1) / Slowenien Ana Bucik (#2)

2018 FIS Alpine Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • August 20 – 24: A&NZ #1 in Australien Hotham Alpine Resort
    • Men's Giant Slalom winner: Slowakei Adam Žampa (2 times)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winner: Deutschland Lena Dürr (2 times)
    • Men's Slalom winners: Niederlande Steffan Winkelhorst (#1) / Slowakei Adam Žampa (#2)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Schweiz Charlotte Chable (#1) / Slowenien Neja Dvornik (#2)
  • August 27 – 30: A&NZ #2 in Neuseeland Coronet Peak
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Slowakei Adam Žampa (#1) / Belgien Sam Maes (#2)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Neuseeland Alice Robinson (#1) / Österreich Katharina Truppe (#2)
    • Men's Slalom winners: Schweiz Marc Rochat (#1) / Slowakei Adam Žampa (#2)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Schweiz Charlotte Chable (#1) / Vereinigtes Königreich Charlie Guest (#2)
  • September 3 – 6: A&NZ #3 (final) in Neuseeland Mount Hutt
    • Men's Super G winner: Niederlande Maarten Meiners (2 times)
    • Women's Super G winner: Neuseeland Alice Robinson (2 times)

2018 FIS Alpine Skiing South American Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • August 14 – 17: SAC #1 in Argentinien Cerro Catedral
    • Note: The second set of Giant Slalom and Slalom events were cancelled.
    • Slalom winners: Argentinien Tomas Birkner De Miguel (m) / Argentinien Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (f)
    • Giant Slalom winners: Frankreich Vito Cottineau (m) / Argentinien Carolina Blaquier (f)
  • August 25 – 28: SAC #2 in Argentinien Las Leñas
    • Note: The Super G events were cancelled.
    • Slalom winners: Argentinien Enrique Evia y Roca (m) / Argentinien Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (f)
    • Men's Giant Slalom winners: Chile Diego Holscher (#1) / Argentinien Cristian Javier Simari Birkner (#2)
    • Women's Giant Slalom winners: Argentinien Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (#1) / Schweiz Andrea Ellenberger (#2)
  • September 1: SAC #3 in Chile El Colorado #1
  • September 2 – 7: SAC #4 in Chile La Parva
  • September 10 – 13: SAC #5 in Chile El Colorado #2
    • Note: All other alpine skiing events, except for the Super G ones, were cancelled.
    • Men's Super G winners: Deutschland Manuel Schmid (#1) / Slowenien Klemen Kosi (#2)
    • Women's Super G winners: Slowenien Ilka Štuhec (#1) / Andorra Cande Moreno Becerra (#2)
  • September 17 – 20: SAC #6 (final) in Argentinien Cerro Castor

2018 FIS Grass Skiing World Cup & Junior World Championship

[edit]
  • Note 1: For the FIS page about the World Cup events, click here.
  • Note 2: For the FIS page about the Junior World Championships event, click here.
  • June 16 & 17, 2018: GSWC #1 in Österreich Rettenbach
    • Giant Slalom winners: Italien Edoardo Frau (m) / Österreich Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
    • Super Combined winners: Schweiz Mirko Hüppi (m) / Österreich Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
    • Super G winners: Italien Edoardo Frau (m) / Österreich Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
  • June 30 & July 1, 2018: GSWC #2 in Tschechische Republik Předklášteří
    • Giant Slalom winners: Österreich Hannes Angerer (m) / Österreich Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
    • Slalom winners: Schweiz Mirko Hüppi (m) / Österreich Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
  • July 28 & 29, 2018: GSWC #3 in Italien Montecampione
    • Giant Slalom winners: Italien Edoardo Frau (m) / Japan Chisaki Maeda (f)
    • Slalom winners: Italien Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (m) / Österreich Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
  • July 30 – August 4, 2018: 2018 FIS Grass Ski Junior World Championships in Italien Montecampione
    • Giant Slalom winners: Tschechische Republik Martin Barták (m) / Japan Chisaki Maeda (f)
    • Slalom winners: Tschechische Republik Martin Barták (m) / Japan Chisaki Maeda (f)
    • Super Combined winners: Tschechische Republik Martin Barták (m) / Japan Chisaki Maeda (f)
    • Super G winners: Tschechische Republik Martin Barták (m) / Japan Chisaki Maeda (f)
  • August 18 & 19: GSWC #4 in Italien San Sicario
    • Super Combined winners: Italien Edoardo Frau (m) / Österreich Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
    • Super G winners: Italien Edoardo Frau (m) / Österreich Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
    • Giant Slalom winners: Italien Edoardo Frau (m) / Österreich Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
  • August 31 – September 2: GSWC #5 in Italien Santa Caterina di Valfurva
    • Note: The men's & women's parallel slalom events here were cancelled.
    • Men's Slalom winner: Italien Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (2 times)
    • Women's Slalom winners: Österreich Lisa Wusits (#1) / Österreich Kristin Hetfleisch (#2)
  • September 13 – 16: GSWC #6 (final) in Italien Sauris
    • Giant Slalom winners: Schweiz Stefan Portmann (m) / Österreich Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
    • Slalom winners: Italien Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (m) / Österreich Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
    • Super Combined winners: Italien Edoardo Frau (m) / Österreich Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
    • Super G winners: Schweiz Stefan Portmann (m) / Österreich Jacqueline Gerlach (f)

International biathlon championships

[edit]

2018–19 IBU Cup

[edit]
  • November 26 – December 2, 2018: IBU Cup #1 in Schweden Idre
  • December 10 – 16, 2018: IBU Cup #2 in Italien Ridnaun-Val Ridanna
    • Pursuit winners: Norwegen Johannes Dale (m) / Russland Anastasiia Morozova (f)
    • Sprint winners: Norwegen Johannes Dale (m) / Russland Anastasiia Morozova (f)
    • Single Mixed Relay winners:  Russland (Anastasiia Morozova & Sergey Korastylev)
    • Mixed Relay winners:  Russland (Irina Kazakevich, Svetlana Mironova, Yury Shopin, & Anton Babikov)
  • December 17 – 22, 2018: IBU Cup #3 in Österreich Obertilliach
    • Individual winners: Frankreich Simon Fourcade (m) / Frankreich Caroline Colombo (f)
    • Sprint winners: Norwegen Sivert Guttorm Bakken (m) / Kanada Nadia Moser (f)
    • Super Sprint winners: Norwegen Sindre Pettersen (m) / Schweden Felicia Lindqvist (f)
  • January 7 – 13: IBU Cup #4 in Polen Duszniki-Zdrój
    • Men's Sprint winners: Russland Alexander Povarnitsyn (#1) / Deutschland Philipp Horn (#2)
    • Women's Sprint winner: Russland Natalia Gerbulova (2 times)
  • January 14 – 20: IBU Cup #5 in Deutschland Großer Arber
    • Short Individual winners: Russland Alexander Povarnitsyn (m) / Ukraine Yuliya Zhuravok (f)
    • Sprint winners: Frankreich Aristide Begue (m) / Russland Victoria Slivko (f)
    • Pursuit winners: Russland Anton Babikov (m) / Russland Victoria Slivko (f)
  • January 21 – 27: IBU Cup #6 in Schweiz Lenzerheide
    • Sprint winners: Frankreich Fabien Claude (m) / Russland Victoria Slivko (f)
    • Pursuit winners: Frankreich Fabien Claude (m) / Russland Uliana Kaisheva (f)
    • Single Mixed Relay winners:  Russland (Sergey Korastylev & Uliana Kaisheva)
    • Mixed Relay winners:  Russland (Anton Babikov, Alexey Slepov, Valeriia Vasnetcova, & Victoria Slivko)
  • February 25 – March 2: IBU Cup #7 in Estland Otepää
    • Super Sprint winners: Norwegen Endre Stroemsheim (m) / Deutschland Anna Weidel (f)
    • Sprint winners: Deutschland David Zobel (m) / Frankreich Chloe Chevalier (f)
  • March 11 – 17: IBU Cup #8 (final) in Italien Martell-Val Martello
    • Men's Sprint winners: Norwegen Johannes Dale (#1) / Deutschland Lucas Fratzscher (#2)
    • Women's Sprint winners: Ukraine Olga Abramova (#1) / Frankreich Caroline Colombo (#2)
    • Mass Start winners: Frankreich Aristide Begue (m) / Frankreich Caroline Colombo (f)

2018–19 IBU Junior Cup

[edit]
  • December 10 – 16, 2018: IBUJC #1 in Schweiz Lenzerheide
    • Junior Individual winners: Italien Patrick Braunhofer (m) / Frankreich Camille Bened (f)
    • Junior Sprint winners: Russland Viacheslav Maleev (m) / Frankreich Paula Botet (f)
  • December 17 – 22, 2018: IBUJC #2 in Frankreich Les Rousses
    • Junior Pursuit winners: Russland Said Karimulla Khalili (m) / Deutschland Juliane Frühwirt (f)
    • Junior Sprint winners: Schweiz Sebastian Stalder (m) / Russland Anastasiia Kaisheva (f)
    • Junior Single Mixed Relay winners:  Slowenien (Alex Cisar & Nika Vindisar)
    • Junior Mixed Relay winners:  Frankreich (Sebastien Mahon, Pierre Monney, Gilonne Guigonnat, & Paula Botet)
  • February 25 – March 3: IBUJC #3 (final) in Norwegen Sjusjøen
    • Note: This event was supposed to be held in Torsby, but it was moved to the new location here.
    • Junior Men's Sprint winners: Slowenien Alex Cisar (#1) / Deutschland Tim Grotian (#2)
    • Junior Women's Sprint winners: Schweden Amanda Lundstroem (#1) / Russland Anastasiia Goreeva (#2)

International cross-country skiing events

[edit]

2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Alpen Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 8 & 9, 2018: CCSAC #1 in Frankreich Prémanon
    • Event cancelled.
  • December 21 – 23, 2018: CCSAC #2 in Italien Valdidentro-Isolaccia
  • January 4 – 6: CCSAC #3 in Tschechische Republik Nové Město na Moravě
    • Sprint Classical winners: Frankreich Valentin Chauvin (m) / Deutschland Antonia Fraebel (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Frankreich Robin Duvillard (m) / Deutschland Antonia Fraebel (f)
    • Classical Mass Start winners: Frankreich Valentin Chauvin (m) / Deutschland Antonia Fraebel (f)
  • February 8 – 10: CCSAC #4 in Slowenien Planica
    • Men's Sprint Freestyle winners: Frankreich Jules Chappaz (#1) / Italien Claudio Muller (#2)
    • Women's Sprint Freestyle winners: Deutschland Anna-Maria Dietze (#1) / Italien Ilaria Debertolis (#2)
    • Men's Classical winners: Frankreich Jules Chappaz (#1) / Kasachstan Alexey Poltoranin (#2)
    • Women's Classical winners: Deutschland Lisa Lohmann (#1) / Italien Lucia Scardoni (#2)
    • Men's Freestyle Mass Start winners: Frankreich Jules Chappaz (#1) / Österreich Max Hauke (#2)
    • Women's Freestyle Mass Start winners: Tschechische Republik Barbora Havlíčková (#1) / Italien Ilaria Debertolis (#2)
  • March 2 & 3: CCSAC #5 in Schweiz Le Brassus
    • Freestyle winners: Frankreich Hugo Lapalus (m) / Frankreich Laura Chamiot Maitral (f)
    • Classical Pursuit winners: Frankreich Valentin Chauvin (m) / Deutschland Julia Belger (f)
  • March 15 – 17: CCSAC #6 (final) in Deutschland Oberwiesenthal
    • Men's Sprint Freestyle winners: Italien Davide Graz (#1) / Schweiz Janik Riebli (#2)
    • Women's Sprint Freestyle winners: Deutschland Lisa Lohmann (#1) / Tschechische Republik Katerina Janatova (#2)
    • Men's Classical Mass Start winners: Italien Luca del Fabbro (#1) / Frankreich Valentin Chauvin (#2)
    • Women's Classical Mass Start winners: Tschechische Republik Barbora Havlíčková (#1) / Deutschland Antonia Fraebel (#2)
    • Freestyle Pursuit winners: Frankreich Clement Arnault (m) / Tschechische Republik Kateřina Razýmová (f)
    • Men's Freestyle Relay winners:  Frankreich (Theo Schely, Victor Lovera, & Jules Chappaz)
    • Women's Freestyle Relay winners:  Tschechische Republik (Pavlina Votockova, Zuzana Holikova, & Barbora Havlíčková)

2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Eastern Europe Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • November 22 – 26, 2018: EEC #1 in Russland Vershina Tea
    • Sprint Classical winners: Russland Ilia Poroshkin (m) / Russland Olga Tsareva (f)
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Russland Alexander Terentev (m) / Russland Olga Tsareva (f)
    • Classical winners: Russland Sergey Ardashev (m) / Russland Diana Golovan (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Russland Alexander Bessmertnykh (m) / Russland Anna Nechaevskaya (f)
  • December 22 – 26, 2018: EEC #2 in Russland Krasnogorsk #1
    • Sprint Classical winners: Russland Ermil Vokuev (m) / Russland Natalia Matveeva (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Russland Ivan Yakimushkin (m) / Russland Tatiana Aleshina (f)
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Russland Ivan Yakimushkin (m) / Russland Natalia Matveeva (f)
    • Classical winners: Russland Alexander Bessmertnykh (m) / Russland Alisa Zhambalova (f)
  • January 10 – 13: EEC #3 in Weißrussland Raubichi
    • Sprint Classical winners: Russland Ilia Semikov (m) / Weißrussland Anastasia Kirillova (f)
    • Classical winners: Russland Ermil Vokuev (m) / Russland Alisa Zhambalova (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Russland Ilia Poroshkin (m) / Russland Alisa Zhambalova (f)
  • February 8 – 10: EEC #4 in Russland Krasnogorsk #2
    • Classical winners: Russland Andrey Parfenov (m) / Russland Alisa Zhambalova (f)
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Russland Andrey Parfenov (m) / Russland Anastasia Vlasova (f)
  • February 23 – 27: EEC #5 (final) in Russland Syktyvkar
    • Classical winners: Russland Ilia Semikov (m) / Russland Yevgeniya Shapovalova (f)
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Russland Andrey Parfenov (m) / Russland Aida Bayazitova (f)
    • Skiathlon winners: Russland Alexey Vitsenko (m) / Russland Svetlana Plotnikova (f)

2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing US Super Tour

[edit]

2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Nor-Am Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 8 & 9, 2018: SNAC #1 in British Columbia Vernon
  • December 13 – 16, 2018: SNAC #2 in Alberta Canmore Nordic Centre
    • Sprint Classical winners: Kanada Bob Thompson (m) / Kanada Dahria Beatty (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Kanada Russell Kennedy (m) / Kanada Dahria Beatty (f)
    • Classical Mass Start winners: Kanada Bob Thompson (m) / Kanada Dahria Beatty (f)
  • January 18 – 20: SNAC #3 in Quebec Sherbrooke
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Kanada Russell Kennedy (m) / (f)
    • Classical winners: Kanada Scott James Hill (m) / Kanada Katherine Stewart-Jones (f)
    • Freestyle Mass Start winners: Kanada Russell Kennedy (m) / Kanada Katherine Stewart-Jones (f)
  • February 1 – 3: SNAC #4 (final) in Ontario Duntroon
    • Sprint Classical winners: Kanada Julien Locke (m) / Kanada Zoe Williams (f)
    • Classical winners: Kanada Alexis Dumas (m) / Kanada Zoe Williams (f)
    • Freestyle Pursuit winners: Kanada Jack Carlyle (m) / Kanada Laura Leclair (f)

2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Slavic Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 15 & 16, 2018: SSC #1 in Slowakei Štrbské Pleso #1
  • December 29 & 30, 2018: SSC #2 in Slowakei Štrbské Pleso #2
    • Freestyle winners: Slowakei Jan Koristek (m) / Polen Izabela Marcisz (f)
    • Classical winners: Slowakei Jan Koristek (m) / Polen Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
  • February 2 & 3: SSC #3 in Polen Zakopane
    • Classical winners: Slowakei Jan Koristek (m) / Polen Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Slowakei Jan Koristek (m) / Polen Izabela Marcisz (f)
  • March 9 & 10: SSC #4 in Polen Wisła Kubalonka
  • March 23 & 24: SSC #5 (final) in Slowakei Kremnica-Skalksa
    • Classical winners: Polen Dominik Bury (m) / Polen Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
    • Freestyle Mass Start winners: Polen Dominik Bury (m) / Polen Izabela Marcisz (f)

2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Far East Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 16 & 17, 2018: FEC #1 in Südkorea Alpensia Cross-Country and Biathlon Centre #1
    • Classical winners: Japan Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) / Japan Yukari Tanaka (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Japan Hikari Fujinoki (m) / Südkorea Lee Chae-won (f)
  • December 25 – 27, 2018: FEC #2 in Japan Otoineppu
    • Classical winners: Japan Naoto Baba (m) / Japan Chika Kobayashi (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Japan Naoto Baba (m) / Japan Miki Kodama (f)
  • January 6 – 8: FEC #3, FEC #4, & FEC #5 in Japan Sapporo
    • Classical winners: Japan Takanori Ebina (m) / Japan Kozue Takizawa (f)
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Japan Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) / Japan Yuka Watanabe (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Japan Naoto Baba (m) / Japan Miki Kodama (f)
  • January 16 & 17: FEC #6 in Südkorea Alpensia Cross-Country and Biathlon Centre #2
    • Classical winners: Japan Hikari Fujinoki (m) / Japan Yukari Tanaka (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Japan Hikari Fujinoki (m) / Südkorea Lee Chae-won (f)
  • March 2 & 3: FEC #7 (final) in Japan Shiramine
    • Sprint Classical winners: Japan Hikari Fujinoki (m) / Japan Yukari Tanaka (f)
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Japan Tomoki Sato (m) / Japan Yukari Tanaka (f)

2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Scandinavian Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 14 – 16, 2018: CCSC #1 in Schweden Östersund
    • Note: The classical events here were cancelled.
    • Sprint Classical winners: Norwegen Paal Troean Aune (m) / Norwegen Anna Svendsen (f)
    • Freestyle winners: Schweden Daniel Rickardsson (m) / Norwegen Astrid Oeyre Slind (f)
  • January 4 – 6: CCSC #2 in Finnland Vuokatti
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Norwegen Erik Valnes (m) / Schweden Johanna Hagström (f)
    • Classical winners: Finnland Livo Niskanen (m) / Schweden Frida Karlsson (f)
    • Freestyle Mass Start winners: Norwegen Mattis Stenshagen (m) / Schweden Frida Karlsson (f)
  • March 1 – 3: CCSC #3 (final) in Lettland Madona
    • Sprint Freestyle winners: Norwegen Gjoeran Tefre (m) / Schweden Moa Lundgren (f)
    • Classical winners: Norwegen Daniel Stock (m) / Schweden Johanna Hagström (f)
    • Freestyle Pursuit winners: Norwegen Martin Loewstroem Nyenget (m) / Schweden Moa Lundgren (f)

2019 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Balkan Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • January 12 & 13: BC #1 in Kroatien Ravna Gora
    • Event cancelled.
  • February 2 & 3: BC #2 in Griechenland Pigadia
    • Men's Freestyle winner: Bulgarien Martin Penchev (2 times)
    • Women's Freestyle winner: Kroatien Vedrana Malec (2 times)
  • February 9 & 10: BC #3 in Serbien Sjenica
    • Men's Freestyle winner: Bosnien und Herzegowina Strahinja Eric (2 times)
    • Women's Freestyle winner: Bosnien und Herzegowina Sanja Kusmuk (2 times)
  • February 13 & 14: BC #4 in North Macedonia Mavrovo
    • Note: The second men's and women's freestyle events here was cancelled.
    • Freestyle winners: Kroatien Edi Dadić (m) / Kroatien Vedrana Malec (f)
  • March 2 & 3: BC #5 in Kroatien Ravna Gora
    • Men's Classical & Freestyle winner: Österreich Tobias Habenicht
    • Women's Classical & Freestyle winner: Kroatien Nika Jagecic
  • March 9 & 10: BC #6 in Bosnien und Herzegowina Dvorista
    • Men's Freestyle winner: Kroatien Edi Dadić (2 times)
    • Women's Freestyle winner: Kroatien Vedrana Malec (2 times)
  • March 17 & 18: BC #7 in Bulgarien Borovets
    • Event cancelled.
  • March 23 & 24: BC #8 (final) in Türkei Bolu-Gerede

2018 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup

[edit]

World championships (Freestyle)

[edit]
  • September 5, 2018 – March 30, 2019: 2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Schedule[13]

Moguls and Aerials

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 6 – 8, 2018: SCWC #1 in Frankreich Val Thorens
    • Event cancelled.
  • December 13 – 15, 2018: SCWC #2 in Österreich Montafon
    • Event cancelled.
  • December 16 & 17, 2018: SCWC #3 in Schweiz Arosa
  • December 20 – 22, 2018: SCWC #4 in Italien Innichen
  • January 18 – 20: SCWC #5 in Schweden Idre
  • January 25 & 26: SCWC #6 in Kanada Blue Mountain
  • February 15 – 17: SCWC #7 in Deutschland Feldberg
    • Men's Ski Cross winners: Schweiz Ryan Regez (#1) / Frankreich Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (#2)
    • Women's Ski Cross winner: Schweden Sandra Näslund (2 times)
  • February 22 – 24: SCWC #8 in Russland Sunny Valley Ski Resort (Miass)
    • Men's Ski Cross winner: Frankreich Bastien Midol (2 times)
    • Women's Ski Cross winner: Schweiz Fanny Smith (2 times)
  • March 17: SCWC #9 (final) in Schweiz Veysonnaz

2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing Europa Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • November 2018
  • January 2019
    • January 11: FSEC #3 in Schweiz Villars-sur-Ollon
    • January 16 & 17: FSEC #4 in Österreich Kreischberg
      • Slopestyle winners: Österreich Hannes Rudigier (m) / Spanien Maialen Oiartzabal (f; default)
      • Big Air winners: Finnland Kuura Koivisto (m) / Spanien Maialen Oiartzabal (f; default)
    • January 17 – 19: FSEC #5 in Frankreich Val Thorens
      • Men's Ski Cross winners: Frankreich Youri Duplessis Kergomard (#1) / Schweiz Gil Martin (#2)
      • Women's Ski Cross winner: Frankreich Amelie Schneider (2 times)
    • January 20 – 23: FSEC #6 in Frankreich Vars
      • Slopestyle winners: Schweiz Nils Rhyner (m) / Frankreich Lou Barin (f)
    • January 24 – 26: FSEC #7 in Schweiz Lenk im Simmental
      • Men's Ski Cross winner: Schweiz Niki Lehikoinen (2 times)
      • Women's Ski Cross winner: Österreich Katrin Ofner (2 times)
    • January 26 & 27: FSEC #8 in Russland Moscow
      • Men's Aerials winners: Weißrussland Ilya Harelik (#1) / Russland Ruslan Katmanov (#2)
      • Women's Aerials winner: Weißrussland Sniazhana Drabiankova (2 times)
    • January 26 & 27: FSEC #9 in Österreich St Anton am Arlberg
      • Slopestyle winners: Finnland Simo Peltola (m) / Tschechische Republik Ruzena Cermakova (f; default)
      • Big Air winners: Tschechische Republik Matej Svancer (m) / Tschechische Republik Ruzena Cermakova (f; default)
    • January 26 & 27: FSEC #8 in Russland Krasnoe Ozero
      • Event cancelled.
    • January 31 – February 2: FSEC #11 in Frankreich Saint François Longchamp
      • Note: The second ski cross events for men and women here were cancelled.
      • Ski Cross winners: Frankreich Youri Duplessis Kergomard (m) / Frankreich Amelie Schneider (f)
  • February 2019
    • February 1 & 2: FSEC #12 in Finnland Taivalvaara
      • Moguls winners: Russland Viacheslav Tcvetkov (m) / Russland Anna Gerasimova (f)
      • Dual moguls winners: Russland Maxim Kudryavtsev (m) / Russland Anna Gerasimova (f)
    • February 5 & 6: FSEC #13 in Finnland Jyväskylä
      • Moguls winners: Finnland Miska Mustonen (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Lulu Shaffer (f)
      • Dual moguls winners: Finnland Johannes Suikkari (m) / Russland Anna Gerasimova (f)
    • February 5 – 7: FSEC #14 in Frankreich La Clusaz
      • Slopestyle winners: Finnland Kuura Koivisto (m) / Frankreich Lou Barin (f)
    • February 9 & 10: FSEC #15 in Deutschland Grasgehren
    • February 9 & 10: FSEC #16 in Schweden Bygdsiljum
      • Moguls winners: Finnland Johannes Suikkari (m) / Frankreich Fantine Degroote (f)
      • Dual moguls winners: Schweden Albin Holmgren (m) / Schweden My Bjerkman (f)
    • February 15 – 17: FSEC #17 in Weißrussland Minsk
      • Men's Aerials winners: Weißrussland Ihar Drabiankou (#1) / Weißrussland Makar Mitrafanau (#2)
      • Women's Aerials winner: Weißrussland Sniazhana Drabiankova (2 times)
      • Team Aerials winners:
    • February 16: FSEC #18 in Polen Kotelnica Bialczanska
      • Big Air winners: Österreich Hannes Rudigier (m) / Norwegen Elvira Marie Ros (f)
    • February 22 & 23: FSEC #19 in Schweiz Davos
    • February 23: FSEC #20 in Tschechische Republik Deštné v Orlických horách
      • Slopestyle winners: Ukraine Orest Kovalenko (m) / Norwegen Tora Johansen (f)
  • March 2019
    • March 1: FSEC #21 in Tschechische Republik Dolní Morava
      • Ski Cross winners: Schweiz Ryan Regez (m) / Russland Ekaterina Maltseva (f)
    • March 2 & 3: FSEC #22 in Österreich Krispl
      • Event cancelled.
    • March 12 & 13: FSEC #23 in Frankreich Tignes
      • Moguls winners: Frankreich Nicolas Degaches (m) / Schweden Josefina Wersen (f)
      • Dual Moguls winners: Frankreich Nicolas Degaches (m) / Schweden My Bjerkman (f)
    • March 15 – 18: FSEC #24 in Georgia (country) Gudauri
      • Men's Ski Cross winners: Russland Igor Omelin (#1) / Frankreich Youri Duplessis Kergomard (#2)
      • Women's Ski Cross winners: Russland Ekaterina Maltseva (#1) / Kanada Mikayla Martin (#2)
    • March 16 & 17: FSEC #25 in Slowakei Jasná
      • Slopestyle winners: Tschechische Republik Vojtěch Bresky (m) / Ukraine Kateryna Kotsar (f)
    • March 17 – 19: FSEC #26 in Schweiz Airolo #1
      • Moguls winners: Vereinigtes Königreich Thomas Gerken Schofield (m) / Schweden My Bjerkman (f)
      • Men's Dual Moguls winners: Vereinigtes Königreich Thomas Gerken Schofield (#1) / Finnland Miska Mustonen (#2)
      • Women's Dual Moguls winners: Schweden Thea Wallberg (#1) / Vereinigtes Königreich Makayla Gerken Schofield (#2)
    • March 21 – 24: FSEC #27 in Österreich Reiteralm
      • Men's Ski Cross winners: Deutschland Cornel Renn (#1) / Deutschland Tobias Müller (#2)
      • Women's Ski Cross winner: Kanada India Sherret (2 times)
    • March 22 & 23: FSEC #28 in Deutschland Goetschen
      • Big Air winners: Finnland Simo Peltola (m) / Norwegen Tora Johansen (f)
    • March 22 – 24: FSEC #29 in Schweiz Airolo #2
      • Men's Aerials winner: Schweiz Noé Roth (2 times)
      • Women's Aerials winners: Weißrussland Sniazhana Drabiankova (#1) / Weißrussland Volha Chromova (#2)
      • Team Aerials winners:
    • March 25 & 26: FSEC #30 in Italien Livigno
      • Men's Slopestyle winners: Schweiz Kim Gubser (#1) / Tschechische Republik Matej Svancer (#2)
      • Women's Slopestyle winners: Vereinigtes Königreich Kirsty Muir (#1) / Italien Elisa Maria Nakab (#2)
    • March 31 & April 1: FSEC #31 (final) in Italien Chiesa in Valmalenco
      • Men's Aerials winner: Schweiz Noé Roth (2 times)
      • Women's Aerials winners: Weißrussland Sniazhana Drabiankova (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Karyl Loeb (#2)

2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing Nor-Am Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 2018
    • December 14 & 15, 2018: FSNA #1 in Colorado Copper Mountain
      • Men's Halfpipe winners: Vereinigte Staaten Cassidy Jarrell (#1) / Kanada Sam McKeown (#2)
      • Women's Halfpipe winner: Vereinigtes Königreich Zoe Atkin (2 times)
  • January 2019
    • January 5 & 6: FSNA #2 in Utah Utah Olympic Park
      • Men's Aerials winners: Vereinigte Staaten Jonathon Lillis (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Christopher Lillis (#2)
      • Women's Aerials winners: Ukraine Olga Polyuk (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Madison Varmette (#2)
    • January 17 & 18: FSNA #3 in New Hampshire Waterville Valley Resort
      • Men's Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Deven Fagan (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Hunter Henderson (#2)
      • Women's Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Marin Hamill (#1) / Kanada Skye Clarke (#2)
    • January 17 – 20: FSNA #4 in Ontario Calabogie Peaks #1
      • Men's Ski Cross winners: Kanada Gavin Rowell (#1) / Kanada Jared Schmidt (#2)
      • Women's Ski Cross winner: Kanada Zoe Chore (2 times)
    • January 27 – 29: FSNA #5 in New York (state) Lake Placid
      • Note: The second aerials events for men and women were cancelled.
      • Aerials winners: Schweiz Noé Roth (m) / Australien Brittany George (f)
  • February 2019
    • February 1 & 2: FSNA #6 in Ontario Calabogie Peaks #2
      • Men's Ski Cross winner: Kanada Jared Schmidt (2 times)
      • Women's Ski Cross winner: Kanada Zoe Chore (2 times)
    • February 1 & 2: FSNA #7 in Quebec Le Relais #1
      • Men's Aerials winners: Kanada Miha Fontaine (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Quinn Dehlinger (#2)
      • Women's Aerials winner: Vereinigte Staaten Megan Smallhouse (2 times)
    • February 2 & 3: FSNA #8 in Vermont Stratton Mountain Resort
      • Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten George McQuinn (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Kasey Hogg (f)
      • Dual moguls winners: Japan Sō Matsuda (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Kenzie Radway (f)
    • February 8 – 10: FSNA #9 in Alberta Calgary
      • Halfpipe winners: Vereinigte Staaten Hunter Hess (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Svea Irving (f)
      • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Étienne Geoffroy Gagnon (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Marin Hamill (f)
    • February 9 & 10: FSNA #10 in Quebec Val Saint-Côme
      • Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten Alex Lewis (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Ali Kariotis (f)
      • Dual moguls winners: Kanada Gabriel Dufresne (m) / Kanada Florence Delsame (f)
    • February 14 – 16: FSNA #11 in Colorado Aspen/Snowmass
      • Note: The women's big air event here was cancelled.
      • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Rylan Evans (m) / Kanada Megan Oldham (f)
      • Men's Big Air winner: Vereinigte Staaten Ryan Stevenson
      • Halfpipe winners: Vereinigte Staaten Samson Schuiling (m) / Vereinigtes Königreich Zoe Atkin (f)
    • February 18 – 23: FSNA #12 in Colorado Ski Cooper
      • Men's Ski Cross winners: Kanada Gavin Rowell (#1) / Kanada Carson Cook (#2)
      • Women's Ski Cross winners: Kanada Zoe Chore (#1) / Kanada Hannah Schmidt (#2)
    • February 21 – 24: FSNA #13 in Colorado Steamboat Ski Resort
      • Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten Jack Kariotis (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Kai Owens (f)
      • Dual moguls winners: Kanada Elliot Vaillancourt (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Kenzie Radway (f)
  • March & April 2019
    • March 2 & 3: FSNA #14 in British Columbia Apex Mountain Resort
      • Moguls winners: Vereinigte Staaten Nick Page (m) / Japan Shunka Fukushima (f)
      • Dual moguls winners: Japan Sō Matsuda (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Kai Owens (f)
    • March 12 – 17: FSNA #15 in New York (state) Holiday Valley
      • Men's Ski Cross winner: Kanada Phillip Tremblay (2 times)
      • Women's Ski Cross winners: (#1) / (#2)
    • March 16 & 17: FSNA #16 in California Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
      • Halfpipe winners: Vereinigte Staaten Dylan Ladd (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Svea Irving (f)
      • Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Hunter Henderson (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Marin Hamill (f)
    • March 26: FSNA #17 in Quebec Stoneham Mountain Resort
      • Halfpipe winners: Vereinigte Staaten Jaxin Hoerter (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Svea Irving (f)
    • March 29 & 30: FSNA #18 in Quebec Le Relais #2
      • Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Hunter Henderson (m) / Kanada Amy Fraser (f)
    • April 13 & 14: FSNA #19 (final) in Alberta Banff Sunshine

2018 FIS Freestyle Skiing South American Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • August 3 – 5: SAC #1 in Chile La Parva #1
    • Note: The second Women's slopestyle event was cancelled.
    • Men's Slopestyle winner: Argentinien Mateo Bonacalza (2 times)
    • Women's Slopestyle winner: Chile Dominique Ohaco
  • August 10 – 12: SAC #2 in Chile La Parva #2
    • Men's Ski Cross winner: Chile Joaquin Valdes (2 times)
    • Women's Ski Cross winner: Chile Saga Goni (2 times)
  • September 14 & 15: SAC #3 in Argentinien Cerro Catedral
    • Men's Big Air winner: Vereinigte Staaten Luke Price (2 times)
    • Women's Big Air winners: Argentinien Abril Melisa Bertzky (#1) / Argentinien Josefina Vitiello (#2)
  • September 18 – 20: SAC #4 (final) in Argentinien Cerro Castor
    • Big Air winners: Vereinigte Staaten Luke Price (m) / Argentinien Josefina Vitiello (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Argentinien Ivan Kuray (m) / Argentinien Josefina Vitiello (f)

2018 FIS Freestyle Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup

[edit]

International Nordic combined events

[edit]

2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined Continental Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 14 & 15, 2018: CCNC #1 in Vereinigte Staaten Steamboat Ski Resort
  • December 19 & 20, 2018: CCNC #2 in Vereinigte Staaten Utah Olympic Park
    • Men's individual winners: Italien Lukas Runggaldier (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Taylor Fletcher (#2)
    • Women's individual winners: Vereinigte Staaten Tara Geraghty-Moats (#1) / Norwegen Gyda Westvold Hansen (#2)
  • January 4 – 6: CCNC #3 in Deutschland Klingenthal
    • Note: The men's team event here was cancelled.
    • Men's individual winner: Norwegen Jens Lurås Oftebro (2 times)
  • January 5 & 6: CCNC #4 in Estland Otepää
    • Women's individual winner: Vereinigte Staaten Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
  • January 11 – 13: CCNC #5 in Finnland Ruka
    • Men's individual winner: Norwegen Leif Torbjoern Naesvold
    • Men's team winners:  Norwegen (Simen Tiller, Sindre Ure Soetvik, Harald Johnas Riiber, & Leif Torbjoern Naesvold)
    • Men's Mass Start winner: Norwegen Leif Torbjoern Naesvold
  • January 26 & 27: CCNC #6 in Slowenien Planica
    • Men's individual winners: Norwegen Leif Torbjoern Naesvold (#1) / Österreich Paul Gerstgraser (#2)
  • February 8 – 10: CCNC #7 in Österreich Eisenerz
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich Paul Gerstgraser (2 times)
    • Men's team winners:  Österreich (Philipp Orter, Christian Deuschl, Florian Dagn, & Paul Gerstgraser)
  • February 16 & 17: CCNC #8 in Norwegen Rena
    • Men's individual winner: Österreich Paul Gerstgraser (2 times)
    • Women's individual winner: Vereinigte Staaten Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
  • March 8 – 10: CCNC #9 (final) in Russland Nizhny Tagil
    • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Luis Lehnert (#1) / Österreich Thomas Joebstl (#2)
    • Women's individual winner: Vereinigte Staaten Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
    • Mass Start winners: Österreich Thomas Joebstl (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Tara Geraghty-Moats (f)

2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined Alpen Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • August 6, 2018: ACNC #1 in Deutschland Klingenthal
    • Women's individual winner: Italien Daniela Dejori
  • August 10, 2018: ACNC #2 in Deutschland Bischofsgrün
    • Women's individual winner: Österreich Lisa Hirner
  • September 8 – 10, 2018: ACNC #3 in Deutschland Winterberg
    • Men's individual winners: Slowenien Rok Jelen (#1) / Österreich Manuel Einkemmer (#2)
  • October 5 – 7, 2018: ACNC #4 in Italien Fiemme Valley-Predazzo
    • Men's individual winners: Deutschland David Mach (#1) / Österreich Johannes Lamparter (#2)
    • Women's individual winners: Deutschland Jenny Nowak (#1) / Österreich Lisa Hirner (#2)
  • December 21 – 23, 2018: ACNC #5 in Österreich Villach
    • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Luis Lehnert (#1) / Österreich Thomas Rettenegger (#2)
    • Women's individual winner: Österreich Lisa Hirner (2 times)
  • January 12 & 13: ACNC #6 in Deutschland Schonach im Schwarzwald
    • Men's individual winners: Frankreich Edgar Vallet (#1) / Österreich Max Teeling (#2)
    • Women's individual winners: Slowenien Ema Volavsek (#1) / Italien Annika Sieff (#2)
  • February 8 – 10: ACNC #7 in Schweiz Kandersteg
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich Severin Reiter (#1) / Österreich Nicolas Pfandl (#2)
    • Men's team winners:
    • Women's individual winners: Deutschland Cindy Haasch (#1) / Österreich Lisa Hirner (#2)
    • Women's team winners:
  • February 16 & 17: ACNC #8 in Slowenien Kranj
    • Men's individual winners: Slowenien Vid Vrhovnik (#1) / Deutschland Christian Frank (#2)
  • March 9 & 10: ACNC #9 (final) in Frankreich Chaux-Neuve
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich Max Teeling (#1) / Slowenien Rok Jelen (#2)
    • Women's individual winners: Italien Daniela Dejori (#1) / Italien Annika Sieff (#2)

2018 FIS Nordic Combined Grand Prix

[edit]

International ski jumping events

[edit]
  • December 29 & 30, 2018: FHT #1 in Deutschland Oberstdorf
  • December 31, 2018 & January 1, 2019: FHT #2 in Deutschland Garmisch-Partenkirchen
    • Men's individual winner: Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi
  • January 3 & 4: FHT #3 in Österreich Innsbruck
    • Men's individual winner: Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi
  • January 5 & 6: FHT #4 (final) in Österreich Bischofshofen
    • Men's individual winner: Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • November 16 – 18, 2018: SJWC #1 in Polen Wisła
  • November 23 – 25, 2018: SJWC #2 in Finnland Ruka
  • November 29 – December 2, 2018: SJWC #3 in Norwegen Lillehammer
  • November 30 – December 2, 2018: SJWC #4 in Russland Nizhny Tagil #1
  • December 7 – 9, 2018: SJWC #5 in Deutschland Titisee-Neustadt
    • Event cancelled.
  • December 14 – 16, 2018: SJWC #6 in Schweiz Engelberg
    • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Karl Geiger (#1) / Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
  • December 14 – 16: SJWC #7 in Frankreich Prémanon
    • Women's individual winner: Deutschland Katharina Althaus (2 times)
  • January 11 – 13: SJWC #8 in Japan Sapporo #1
  • January 11 – 13: SJWC #9 in Italien Fiemme Valley
    • Men's individual winners: Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi (#1) / Polen Dawid Kubacki (#2)
  • January 17 – 20: SJWC #10 in Japan Zaō, Miyagi
    • Women's individual winners: Österreich Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (#1) / Norwegen Maren Lundby (#2)
    • Women's team winners:  Deutschland (Juliane Seyfarth, Ramona Straub, Carina Vogt, & Katharina Althaus)
  • January 18 – 20: SJWC #11 in Polen Zakopane
  • January 25 – 27: SJWC #12 in Rumänien Râșnov
    • Women's individual winner: Norwegen Maren Lundby (2 times)
  • January 25 – 27: SJWC #13 in Japan Sapporo #2
    • Men's individual winner: Österreich Stefan Kraft (2 times)
  • February 1 – 3: SJWC #14 in Deutschland Oberstdorf #1
    • Men's individual winners: Slowenien Timi Zajc (#1) / Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2) / Polen Kamil Stoch (#3)
  • February 1 – 3: SJWC #15 in Österreich Hinzenbach
    • Women's individual winner: Norwegen Maren Lundby (2 times)
  • February 7 – 10: SJWC #16 in Slowenien Ljubno ob Savinji
    • Note: The second women's event here was cancelled.
    • Women's individual winner: Norwegen Maren Lundby
    • Women's team winners:  Deutschland (Carina Vogt, Anna Rupprecht, Juliane Seyfarth, & Katharina Althaus)
  • February 8 – 10: SJWC #17 in Finnland Lahti
  • February 15 – 17: SJWC #18 in Deutschland Willingen
    • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Karl Geiger (#1) / Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
    • Men's team winners:  Polen (Piotr Żyła, Jakub Wolny, Dawid Kubacki, & Kamil Stoch)
  • February 15 – 17: SJWC #19 in Deutschland Oberstdorf #2
    • Women's individual winner: Norwegen Maren Lundby (2 times)
  • March 15 – 17: SJWC #24 in Russland Nizhny Tagil #2
    • Women's individual winner: Deutschland Juliane Seyfarth (2 times)
  • March 21 – 24: SJWC #25 in Slowenien Planica
    • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Markus Eisenbichler (#1) / Japan Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
    • Men's team winners:  Polen (Jakub Wolny, Kamil Stoch, Dawid Kubacki, & Piotr Żyła)
  • March 22 – 24: SJWC #26 (final) in Russland Chaykovsky, Perm Krai
    • Women's individual winners: Deutschland Juliane Seyfarth (#1) / Norwegen Maren Lundby (#2)

2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • July 7 & 8: SJCC #1 in Slowenien Kranj
  • August 16 – 19: SJCC #2 in Tschechische Republik Frenštát pod Radhoštěm
  • August 17: SJCC #3 in Polen Szczyrk
    • Men's individual winner: Österreich Philipp Aschenwald
  • August 18: SJCC #4 in Polen Wisła
    • Men's individual winner: Österreich Philipp Aschenwald
  • September 8 & 9: SJCC #5 in Österreich Stams
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich Philipp Aschenwald (#1) / Schweiz Killian Peier (#2)
  • September 15 & 16: SJCC #6 in Norwegen Oslo
    • Men's individual winner: Österreich Philipp Aschenwald (2 times)
    • Women's individual winner: Deutschland Katharina Althaus (2 times)
  • September 22 & 23: SJCC #7 in Polen Zakopane #1
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich Stefan Huber (#1) / Österreich Philipp Aschenwald (#2)
  • September 29 & 30: SJCC #8 in Deutschland Klingenthal #1
  • December 8 & 9: SJCC #9 in Norwegen Lillehammer
    • Men's individual winner: Norwegen Marius Lindvik (2 times)
  • December 14 & 15: SJCC #10 in Norwegen Notodden
    • Women's individual winners: Deutschland Selina Freitag (#1) / Österreich Claudia Purker (#2)
  • December 15 & 16: SJCC #11 in Finnland Ruka
    • Men's individual winner: Norwegen Robin Pedersen (2 times)
  • December 27 & 28: SJCC #12 in Schweiz Engelberg
  • January 5 & 6: SJCC #13 in Deutschland Klingenthal #2
  • January 12 & 13: SJCC #14 in Österreich Bischofshofen
  • January 18 – 20: SJCC #15 in Japan Sapporo Okurayama
    • Men's individual winner: Österreich Clemens Aigner (3 times)
  • January 19 & 20: SJCC #16 in Slowenien Planica #1
    • Women's individual winner: Slowenien Jerneja Brecl (2 times)
  • January 26 & 27: SJCC #17 in Slowenien Planica #2
  • February 1 & 2: SJCC #18 in Türkei Erzurum
    • Event cancelled.
  • February 8 – 10: SJCC #19 in Vereinigte Staaten Iron Mountain
    • Men's individual winners: Deutschland Pius Paschke (#1) / Norwegen Marius Lindvik (#2) / Norwegen Thomas Aasen Markeng (#3)
  • February 15 & 16: SJCC #20 in Deutschland Oberstdorf
    • Men's individual winner: Österreich Clemens Aigner (2 times)
  • February 23 & 24: SJCC #21 in Deutschland Brotterode
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich Clemens Aigner (#1) / Norwegen Marius Lindvik (#2)
    • Women's individual winners: Deutschland Pauline Heßler (#1) / Slowenien Katra Komar (#2)
  • March 2 & 3, 2019: SJCC #22 in Norwegen Rena
    • Men's individual winner: Norwegen Marius Lindvik (2 times)
  • March 16 & 17: SJCC #23 in Polen Zakopane #2
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich Stefan Huber (#1) / Polen Aleksander Zniszczoł (#2)
  • March 23 & 24: SJCC #24 (final) in Russland Chaykovsky
    • Men's individual winner: Polen Aleksander Zniszczoł (2 times)

2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • August 5 & 6: SJAC #1 in Deutschland Klingenthal
    • Women's individual winners: Österreich Lisa Hirner (#1) / Deutschland Josephin Laue (#2)
  • August 8 & 9: SJAC #2 in Deutschland Pöhla
    • Women's individual winners: Österreich Lisa Hirner (#1) / Deutschland Alina Ihle (#2)
  • August 10 & 11: SJAC #3 in Deutschland Bischofsgrün
    • Women's individual winners: Österreich Lisa Hirner (#1) / Frankreich Oceane Paillard (#2)
  • September 8 & 9: SJSC #4 in Schweiz Einsiedeln
    • Men's individual winner: Österreich David Haagen (2 times)
  • October 5 – 7: SJSC #5 in Italien Fiemme Valley-Predazzo
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich David Haagen (#1) / Slowenien Jan Bombek (#2)
    • Women's individual winners: Italien Lara Malsiner (#1) / Deutschland Agnes Reisch (#2)
  • December 21 – 23: SJSC #6 in Österreich Villach
    • Men's individual winners: Österreich Stefan Rainer (#1) / Deutschland Luca Roth (#2)
    • Women's individual winners: Österreich Lisa Eder (#1) / Österreich Lisa Hirner (#2)
  • January 11 & 12: SJSC #7 in Deutschland Schonach im Schwarzwald
    • Women's individual winner: Frankreich Josephine Pagnier (2 times)
  • January 12 & 13: SJSC #8 in Deutschland Oberwiesenthal
    • Event cancelled.
  • February 8 – 10: SJSC #9 in Schweiz Kandersteg
    • Men's individual winners: Slowenien Rok Masle (#1) / Österreich Marco Woergoetter (#2)
    • Men's team winners:
    • Women's individual winners: Slowenien Ana Jereb (#1) / Österreich Lisa Hirner (#2)
    • Women's team winners:
  • February 15 & 16: SJSC #10 in Slowenien Kranj
    • Men's individual winner: Slowenien Aljaž Osterc (2 times)
  • February 23 & 24: SJSC #11 in Deutschland Oberhof
    • Men's individual winners: Schweiz Dominik Peter (#1) / Österreich Claudio Moerth (#2)
  • March 9 & 10: SJSC #12 (final) in Frankreich Chaux-Neuve
    • Note: The second women's individual event here was cancelled.
    • Men's individual winners: Schweiz Dominik Peter (#1) / Österreich David Haagen (#2)
    • Women's individual winner: Slowenien Pia Mazi

2018 FIS Ski Jumping Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • July 7 & 8: SJC #1 in Österreich Villach #1
    • Men's winners: Deutschland Justin Nietzel (#1) / Schweiz Luca Egloff (#2)
    • Women's winner: Österreich Chiara Hoelzl (2 times)
  • July 14 & 15: SJC #2 in Polen Szczyrk
    • Men's winners: Österreich Maximilian Steiner (#1) / Deutschland Justin Nietzel (#2)
    • Women's winner: Rumänien Daniela Haralambie (2 times)
  • August 18 & 19: SJC #3 in Russland Sochi
    • Event cancelled.
  • September 15 & 16: SJC #4 in Rumänien Râșnov
    • Men's winner: Japan Ren Nikaido (2 times)
    • Women's winner: Rumänien Daniela Haralambie (2 times)
  • December 14 & 15: SJC #5 in Norwegen Notodden
    • Men's winners: Österreich Stefan Rainer (#1) / Deutschland Fabian Seidl (#2)
  • December 19 & 20: SJC #6 in Vereinigte Staaten Utah Olympic Park
    • Men's winner: Schweiz Luca Egloff (2 times)
    • Women's winners: Kanada Natalie Eilers (#1) / Kanada Taylor Henrich (#2)
  • January 12 & 13: SJC #7 in Polen Zakopane
    • Men's winners: Österreich Claudio Moerth (#1) / Österreich David Haagen (#2)
  • January 19 & 20: SJC #8 in Slowenien Planica
  • January 30 & 31: SJC #9 in Türkei Erzurum
    • Event cancelled.
  • February 9 & 10: SJC #10 in Deutschland Rastbuechl
  • February 23 & 24: SJC #11 (final) in Österreich Villach #2
    • Men's winner: Deutschland Andreas Wank (2 times)
    • Women's winners: Italien Giada Tomaselli (#1) / Italien Veronica Gianmoena (#2)

Other ski jumping events

[edit]
  • July 26, 2018: 2018 FIS Europa-Park FIS Youth Cup in Deutschland Hinterzarten
    • Winners: Slowenien Rok Masle (m) / Slowenien Ana Jereb (f)
  • September 14, 2018: 2018 FIS Carpath Cup in Rumänien Râșnov
    • Winners: Vereinigte Staaten Andrew Urlaub (m) / Italien Annika Sieff (f)
  • March 7 – 10: 2019 Miyasama Ski Games in both Japan Okurayama Ski Jump Stadium & Miyanomori Ski Jump Stadium (Sapporo)
    • Miyanomori Winners: Japan Keiichi Sato (m) / Japan Misaki Shigeno (f)
    • Okurayama Winners: Japan Yumu Harada (m) / Japan Misaki Shigeno (f)

Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships

[edit]

Alpine snowboarding

[edit]

Snowboard cross

[edit]

Freestyle snowboarding

[edit]

2018–19 FIS Snowboard Europa Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • November 2018
  • November 21 & 22, 2018: SBEC #1 in Niederlande Landgraaf
    • Slopestyle winners: Niederlande Erik Bastiaansen (m) / Niederlande Melissa Peperkamp (f)
  • November 24 & 25, 2018: SBEC #2 in Österreich Kaunertal
    • Event cancelled.
  • November 28 & 29, 2018: SBEC #3 in Österreich Pitztal
  • December 2018
  • December 22 & 23, 2018: SBEC #4 in Deutschland Hochfügen
    • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Italien Maurizio Bormolini (#1) / Österreich Arvid Auner (#2)
    • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Deutschland Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (#1) / Österreich Jemima Juritz (#2)
  • January 2019
  • January 8 & 9: SBEC #5 in Slowakei Jasná
    • Event cancelled.
  • January 10 & 11: SBEC #6 in Österreich Bad Gastein
    • Men's Parallel Slalom winners: Südkorea Lee Sang-ho (#1) / Russland Dmitriy Karlagachev (#2)
    • Women's Parallel Slalom winners: Schweiz Patrizia Kummer (#1) / Russland Maria Valova (#2)
  • January 12 & 13: SBEC #7 in Frankreich Puy-Saint-Vincent
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Italien Lorenzo Sommariva (#1) / Deutschland Florian Gregor (#2)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winner: Vereinigtes Königreich Charlotte Bankes (2 times)
  • January 16 & 17: SBEC #8 in Österreich Kreischberg
    • Big Air winners: Schweiz Boris Mouton (m) / Niederlande Melissa Peperkamp (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Schweiz Moritz Boll (m) / Niederlande Melissa Peperkamp (f)
  • January 19 & 20: SBEC #9 in Deutschland Grasgehren
  • January 22 & 23: SBEC #10 in Frankreich Font-Romeu
    • Note: The slopestyle events here were cancelled.
    • Big Air winners: Schweiz Moritz Boll (m) / Frankreich Lucie Silvestre (f)
  • January 25 & 26: SBEC #11 in Frankreich Vars
    • Slopestyle winners: Schweiz Moritz Boll (m) / Frankreich Lucie Silvestre (f)
    • Big Air winners: Deutschland Leon Guetl (m) / Frankreich Noemie Equy (f)
  • January 26 & 27: SBEC #12 in Österreich Lachtal
    • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Russland Igor Sluev (#1) / Russland Ilia Vitugov (#2)
    • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Schweiz Jessica Keiser (#1) / Russland Sofia Nadyrshina (#2)
  • January 29 & 30: SBEC #13 in Frankreich Val Thorens
    • Note: The second snowboard cross events for men and women were cancelled.
    • Snowboard Cross winners: Deutschland Florian Gregor (m) / Österreich Katharina Neussner (f)
  • January 31 & February 1: SBEC #14 in Italien Monte Bondone
    • Event cancelled.
  • February 2019
  • February 2 & 3: SBEC #15 in Bosnien und Herzegowina Sarajevo
    • Men's Big Air winners: Serbien Matija Milenković (#1) / Kroatien Tino Stojak (#2)
    • Women's Big Air winner: Polen Martyna Maciejewska (2 times)
  • February 6 & 7: SBEC #16 in Tschechische Republik Dolní Morava
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Österreich David Pickl (#1) / Österreich Sebastian Jud (#2)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Frankreich Chloe Passerat (#1) / Österreich Katharina Neussner (#2)
  • February 7 & 8: SBEC #17 in Serbien Kopaonik
    • Men's Big Air winners: Kroatien Tino Stojak (#1) / Deutschland Noah Vicktor (#2)
    • Women's Big Air winners: Serbien Jelena Ignjatov (#1) / Slowenien Tinkara Tanja Valcl (#2)
  • February 9 & 10: SBEC #18 in Schweiz Lenzerheide
    • Men's Parallel Slalom winner: Österreich Fabian Obmann (2 times)
    • Women's Parallel Slalom winner: Russland Anastasia Kurochkina (2 times)
  • February 9 & 10: SBEC #19 in Schweiz Crans-Montana
  • February 15 & 16: SBEC #20 in Polen Kotelnica Bialczanska
    • Big Air winners: Kroatien Tino Stojak (m) / Polen Martyna Maciejewska (f)
  • February 22 & 23: SBEC #21 in Schweiz Davos #1
    • Big Air winners: Schweiz Nick Puenter (m) / Schweiz Lia-Mara Boesch (f)
  • February 26 & 27: SBEC #22 in Deutschland Götschen
    • Men's Big Air winners: Vereinigtes Königreich Gabriel Adams (#1) / Kroatien Tino Stojak (#2)
    • Women's Big Air winners: Deutschland Nadja Flemming (#1) / Österreich Emma Lantos (#2)
  • March 2019
  • March 2 & 3: SBEC #23 in Schweiz Davos #2
    • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner: Japan Masaki Shiba
    • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner: Schweiz Patrizia Kummer
  • March 8 – 10: SBEC #24 in Georgia (country) Gudauri
  • March 10 – 16: SBEC #25 in Russland Sunny Valley (Miass)
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Österreich Jakob Dusek (#1) / Frankreich Loan Bozzolo (#2)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Deutschland Jana Fischer (#1) / Schweiz Sophie Hediger (#2)
  • March 15 – 17: SBEC #26 in Österreich Kühtai Saddle
    • Big Air winners: Belgien Jules de Sloover (m) / Belgien Evy Poppe (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: Deutschland Christoph Lechner (m) / Deutschland Leilani Ettel (f)
  • March 16: SBEC #27 in Tschechische Republik Pec pod Sněžkou
  • March 16 & 17: SBEC #28 in Slowenien Rogla Ski Resort
    • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner: Slowenien Tim Mastnak (2 times)
    • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Russland Elizaveta Salikhova (#1) / Russland Anastasia Kurochkina (#2)
  • March 18 & 19: SBEC #29 in Slowakei Jasná
    • Men's Slopestyle winners: Deutschland Noah Vicktor (#1) / Deutschland Leon Guetl (#2)
    • Women's Slopestyle winner: Frankreich Lucie Silvestre (2 times)
  • March 21 – 24: SBEC #30 in Schweiz Laax
    • Slopestyle winners: Deutschland Noah Vicktor (m) / Schweiz Bianca Gisler (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: Deutschland Andre Hoeflich (m) / Schweiz Verena Rohrer (f)
  • March 22 – 24: SBEC #31 in Schweiz Lenk
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winner: Frankreich Loan Bozzolo (2 times)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winner: Frankreich Chloé Trespeuch (2 times)
  • March 26 – 28: SBEC #32 in Russland Sochi
    • Slopestyle winners: Russland Mark Teimurov (m) / Russland Ekaterina Kosova (f)
    • Big Air winners: Russland Mikhail Matveev (m) / Russland Ekaterina Kosova (f)
  • March 28 & 29: SBEC #33 in Italien Livigno
    • Men's Slopestyle winner: Schweiz Jonas Bösiger (2 times)
    • Women's Slopestyle winner: Belgien Loranne Smans (2 times)
  • April 2019
  • April 6 & 7: SBEC #34 in Italien Racines
    • Men's Parallel Slalom winners: Österreich Arvid Auner (#1) / Deutschland Stefan Baumeister (#2)
    • Women's Parallel Slalom winners: Japan Tsubaki Miki (#1) / Österreich Jemima Juritz (#2)
  • April 10 – 14: SBEC #35 (final) in Schweiz Silvaplana
    • Note: The men's slopestyle event here was cancelled.
    • Women's Slopestyle winner: Schweiz Isabel Derungs
    • Big Air winners: Schweiz Jonas Bösiger (m) / Schweiz Carla Somaini (f)

2018–19 FIS Snowboard Nor-Am Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • December 8 & 9, 2018: SNAC #1 in Colorado Steamboat Ski Resort
    • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Robert Burns (m) / Japan Tsubaki Miki (f)
    • Parallel Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Robert Burns (m) / Republic of Ireland Maggie Carrigan (f)
  • December 11 & 12, 2018: SNAC #2 in Colorado Copper Mountain
  • December 14 – 16, 2018: SNAC #3 in Minnesota Buck Hill
    • Men's Parallel Slalom winners: Vereinigte Staaten Cody Winters (#1; 2 times) / Vereinigte Staaten Robert Burns (#2)
    • Women's Parallel Slalom winners: Japan Tsubaki Miki (#1) / Kanada Kaylie Buck (#2; 2 times)
  • January 2 – 4: SNAC #4 in Quebec Le Relais
    • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Kanada Jasey-Jay Anderson (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Ryan Rosencranz (#2)
    • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Kanada Kaylie Buck (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Lynn Ott (#2)
  • January 7 – 9: SNAC #5 in British Columbia Panorama Mountain Village
  • January 14 & 15: SNAC #6 in New Hampshire Waterville Valley Resort
    • Men's Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Jake Canter (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Luke Winkelmann (#2)
    • Women's Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Addison Gardner (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Courtney Rummel (#2)
  • January 22 – 24: SNAC #7 in British Columbia Sun Peaks Resort
    • Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Luke Winkelmann (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Addison Gardner (f)
    • Big Air winners: Vereinigte Staaten Storm Rowe (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Jade Thurgood (f)
  • February 6 – 8: SNAC #8 in Ontario Craigleith Ski Club
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Vereinigte Staaten Cole Johnson (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Mike Lacroix (#2)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Australien Christina Taylor (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Emma Downing (#2)
  • February 6 – 8: SNAC #9 in Ontario Mount St. Louis Moonstone
    • Note: The big air events here were cancelled.
    • Slopestyle winners: Vereinigte Staaten Storm Rowe (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Addison Gardner (f)
  • February 9 & 10: SNAC #10 in Ontario Alpine Ski Club
    • Men's Parallel Slalom winner: Kanada Arnaud Gaudet (2 times)
    • Women's Parallel Slalom winner: Kanada Kaylie Buck (2 times)
  • February 11 – 13: SNAC #11 in Quebec Mont Original
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Kanada Éliot Grondin (#1) / Kanada Liam Moffatt (#2)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winner: Vereinigte Staaten Livia Molodyh (2 times)
  • February 18 – 23: SNAC #12 in Colorado Ski Cooper
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Vereinigte Staaten Senna Leith (#1) / Südkorea WOO Jin (#2)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winners: Vereinigte Staaten Anna Miller (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Stacy Gaskill (#2)
  • February 28 & March 1: SNAC #13 in New York (state) Holiday Valley #1
    • Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner: Kanada Arnaud Gaudet (2 times)
    • Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winner: Kanada Megan Farrell (2 times)
  • March 3 – 8: SNAC #14 in Ontario Blue Mountain
    • Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Kanada Sebastien Beaulieu (m) / Kanada Katrina Gerencser (f)
    • Parallel Slalom winners: Kanada Jules Lefebvre (m) / Kanada Megan Farrell (f)
  • March 12 – 17: SNAC #15 in New York (state) Holiday Valley #2
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Kanada Liam Moffatt (#1) / Vereinigte Staaten Mike Lacroix (#2)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winner: Kanada Audrey McManiman (2 times)
  • March 13 & 14: SNAC #16 in California Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
    • Slopestyle winners: Kanada Liam Brearley (m) / Vereinigte Staaten Addison Gardner (f)
    • Halfpipe winners: Kanada Shawn Fair (m) / Kanada Brooke Dhondt (f)
  • March 18 – 24: SNAC #17 in Alberta Canada Olympic Park (Calgary)
    • Halfpipe winners: Kanada Shawn Fair (m) / Kanada Brooke Dhondt (f)
    • Men's Slopestyle & Big Air winner: Kanada Nicolas Laframboise
    • Women's Slopestyle & Big Air winner: Kanada Jasmine Baird
  • March 26 – 28: SNAC #18 (final) in British Columbia Big White Ski Resort
    • Snowboard Cross winners: Kanada Danny Bourgeois (m) / Kanada Tess Critchlow (f)

2018 FIS Snowboard South American Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • August 3 – 5: SACSB #1 in Chile La Parva #1
    • Men's Slopestyle winners: Argentinien Martin Jaureguialzo (#1) / Chile Inaqui Irarrazaval (#2)
    • Women's Slopestyle winner: Chile Antonia Yanez (2 times)
  • August 10 – 12: SACSB #2 in Chile La Parva #2
    • Note: Both women's snowboard cross events here were cancelled.
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Argentinien Simon White (#1) / Argentinien Steven Williams (#2)
  • September 14 & 15: SACSB #3 in Argentinien Cerro Catedral
    • Men's Big Air winners: Argentinien Matías Schmitt (#1) / Argentinien Federico Chiaradio de la Iglesia (#2)
    • Women's Big Air winner: Chile Antonia Yanez (2 times)
  • September 18 – 23: SACSB #4 & #5 (final) in Argentinien Cerro Castor
    • Big Air winners: Argentinien Federico Chiaradio de la Iglesia (m) / Argentinien Maria Azul Chavez Martinez (f)
    • Slopestyle winners: Argentinien Matías Schmitt (m) / Argentinien Morena Poggi Silveira (f)
    • Snowboard Cross winners: Spanien Regino Hernández (m) / Argentinien Maria Agustina Pardo (f)

2018 FIS Snowboard Australia & New Zealand Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • July 30 – August 1: SBANC #1 in Australien Mount Hotham #1
    • Snowboard Cross winners: Australien Alex Pullin (m) / Australien Emily Boyce (f)
  • August 14 – 16: SBANC #2 in Neuseeland Cardrona Alpine Resort
    • Slopestyle winners: Japan Ryo Aizawa (m) / Japan Rina Yoshika (f)
    • Half-pipe winners: Südkorea Lee Kwang-ki (m) / Südkorea LEE Min-ju (f)
  • September 3 – 5: SBANC #3 (final) in Australien Mount Hotham #2
    • Note: The third set of snowboard cross events here was cancelled.
    • Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Deutschland Paul Berg (#1) / Australien Alex Pullin (#2)
    • Women's Snowboard Cross winner: Australien Emily Boyce (2 times)

Telemark Skiing World Championships

[edit]
  • February 14 – 18: 2019 Junior Telemark Skiing World Championships in Slowenien Krvavec Ski Resort[23]
    • Note: The Junior World Championship and the World Cup are separate events, even though they are located in an identical location and dates.
    • Classic winners: Frankreich Noe Claye (m) / Frankreich Chloe Blyth (f)
    • Team Parallel Sprint winners:  Frankreich
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Deutschland Christoph Frank (m) / Norwegen Goril Strom Eriksen (f)
    • Sprint winners: Frankreich Theo Sillon (m) / Frankreich Julie Bourbon (f)
  • March 20 – 23: 2019 Telemark Skiing World Championships in Norwegen Rjukan[24]
    • Classic winners: Norwegen Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Sprint winners: Schweiz Stefan Matter (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Frankreich Philippe Lau (m) / Deutschland Johanna Holzmann (f)
    • Team Parallel Sprint winners:  Schweiz

2019 Telemark Skiing World Cup

[edit]
  • Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
  • January 20 & 21: TSWC #1 in Italien La Thuile
    • Classic winners: Norwegen Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Sprint winners: Norwegen Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) / Frankreich Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
  • January 25 & 26: TSWC #2 in Frankreich Pralognan-la-Vanoise
    • Sprint winners: Frankreich Philippe Lau (m) / Vereinigtes Königreich Jasmin Taylor (f)
    • Classic winners: Schweiz Stefan Matter (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
  • January 29 – February 1: TSWC #3 in Frankreich Pra-Loup
    • Classic winners: Schweiz Stefan Matter (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Sprint winners: Schweiz Bastien Dayer (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Frankreich Philippe Lau (m) / Frankreich Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
  • February 9 & 10: TSWC #4 in Deutschland Bad Hindelang-Oberjoch
    • Sprint winners: Schweiz Bastien Dayer (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Norwegen Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
  • February 14 – 18: TSWC #5 (final) in Slowenien Krvavec Ski Resort
    • Classic winners: Schweiz Bastien Dayer (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
    • Parallel Sprint winners: Frankreich Philippe Lau (m) / Deutschland Johanna Holzmann (f)
    • Sprint winners: Schweiz Stefan Matter (m) / Schweiz Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 Website". Archived from the original on 2014-12-13. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  2. ^ FIS' Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 Results Page
  3. ^ FIS' World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2019 Website
  4. ^ FIS' World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2019 Results Page
  5. ^ "FIS' Men's GS in Sölden dogged by bad luck". Archived from the original on 2018-10-28. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  6. ^ ITG's Cancelled men's Alpine Skiing World Cup opener rescheduled for December in Saalbach-Hinterglemm
  7. ^ FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Cross-Country) Results Page
  8. ^ FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Cross-Country) Results Page
  9. ^ FIS' 2018 Freestyle Junior World Ski Championships Results Page
  10. ^ FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2019 (Freestyle) Results Page
  11. ^ a b "FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 Website". Archived from the original on 2018-11-23. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
  12. ^ FIS' Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 (Freestyle) Results Page
  13. ^ FIS' 2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Page
  14. ^ FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Nordic Combined) Results Page
  15. ^ FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Nordic Combined) Results Page
  16. ^ "2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships Website". Archived from the original on 2019-01-03. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
  17. ^ FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 Website
  18. ^ FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Ski Jumping) Results Page
  19. ^ FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Ski Jumping) Results Page
  20. ^ FIS' 2018 Snowboard Junior World Championships Results Page
  21. ^ FIS' 2019 Snowboard Junior World Championships Results Page
  22. ^ FIS' Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 (Snowboard) Results Page
  23. ^ FIS' 2019 Junior Telemark Skiing World Championships Page
  24. ^ FIS' 2019 Telemark Skiing World Championships Page
[edit]