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List of FIS Alpine Ski World Cup men's race winners
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List of FIS Alpine Ski World Cup men's race winners : ウィキペディア英語版
List of FIS Alpine Ski World Cup men's race winners



This is a list of all male winners in FIS Alpine Ski World Cup from 1967 to present. The list includes all downhill, super-G, giant slalom, slalom, combined and parallel events, but does not show team events.
==History==
In 46 World Cup seasons 1595 races (452 downhills, 185 Super G's, 380 giant slaloms, 450 slaloms, 122 combined and 6 parallel events) for men were held. These events saw 1605 winners, because ten races (three downhills, four Super G's, one giant slalom, and two slaloms) ended with a tie.
A total of 266 male alpine skiers from 19 nations have won at least one individual race. The first winner in 1967 was the Austrian Heinrich Messner who won the slalom in Berchtesgaden. The newest member in this list is Canada's Dustin Cook who won the slalom in Méribel on 19 March 2015. Alpine skiers from nineteen nations from three continent have won races; Yugoslavia and Slovenia are listed separately, but counted as one nation; also Germany and West Germany are shown but counted together. The first winner for his country is highlighted in blue.
Jean-Claude Killy was the first skier to win races in two different seasons (1967 and 1967/1968), while Ingemar Stenmark won races in 13 different seasons. He won races between 1974/1975 and 1988/1989, only failed to win in the season 1984/1985. Stenmark was also able to win races in ten consecutive seasons (1974/1975 to 1983/1984).
Patrick Russel was the first to win races in three and four seasons, Henri Duvillard was the first to win races in five seasons. Gustav Thöni was the first to win races in six, seven, and eight seasons. Ingemar Stenmark was the first to win races in nine, ten, eleven, and twelve seasons and he is the only skier to win races in 13 seasons.
Jean-Claude Killy won all his 18 races in only two seasons, while Günther Mader won his 14 races in nine seasons. Paul Accola was only able to win races in one season (1991/1992), but won seven events in four different disciplines. Rok Petrovič also won races only in one season (1985/1986) when he won five slaloms. Michael von Grünigen is the highest placed racer to win in only one discipline - 23 giant slaloms.
Eighty-eight racers have won only one race. The downhill races saw 111 different winners (the 100th different winner was Canada's Manuel Osborne-Paradis in 2009), the Super G races saw 73 different winners, the giant slaloms 92 different, the slaloms 105 different (the 100th different winner was Italy's Cristian Deville in 2012), combined events 35 different winners and parallel events saw 6 different winners.
The youngest male winner is Piero Gros (born 30 October 1954) who won the Giant Slalom in Val-d'Isère on 8 December 1972 at the age of 18 years and 39 days. The oldest winner is Didier Cuche (born 16 August 1974) who was aged 37 years and 192 days when he won the Super G in Crans-Montana on 24 February 2012.
Disciplines were introduced in World Cup: downhill, giant slalom and slalom in 1967; Combined and parallel slalom in 1975; super-G in 1982, super combined in 2006 and renamed to alpine combined in 2015.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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