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・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1954
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1958
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1962
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1966
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1970
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1974
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1978
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1982
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1985
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1987
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1989
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1991
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1993
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1996
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1997
FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1999
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2001
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2003
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2005
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Men's downhill
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Men's giant slalom
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Men's giant slalom qualification
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Men's slalom
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Men's slalom qualification
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Men's super combined
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Men's super-G
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Nations team event
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Women's downhill
・ FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2007 – Women's giant slalom


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FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1999 : ウィキペディア英語版
FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1999

The FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1999 were held February 2–14 in Vail and Beaver Creek, Colorado, U.S.A..〔de.wikipedia.org Alpine Skiweltmeisterschaft 1999
Lasse Kjus of Norway placed in the top two in all five events, winning two gold medals and taking three silvers. Hermann Maier of Austria won gold medals in the two speed events, the downhill and super-G (a dead-heat tie with Kjus). Austria dominated the women's two speed events with a sweep of all six medals. The men's downhill, super-G, and combined events were held at Beaver Creek, and the seven other events were at Vail.
This was the third non-Olympic World Championships held in the United States, all in Colorado. (The 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley, California, and the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York, are also officially considered World Championships). Vail hosted a decade earlier in 1989 and Aspen in 1950, the first held outside of Europe. As a host country, the U.S. has won just two medals in the three World Championships, a gold and a bronze by Tamara McKinney in 1989.
The Birds of Prey downhill course at Beaver Creek was developed for these championships, its first World Cup races were in December 1997. Designed by Olympic gold medalist Bernhard Russi, it has been a regular stop on the men's World Cup schedule and will be used again for the World Championships in 2015.
==Men's competitions==


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