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| Event type

Super G, Men

Date11 February 2026 — 11:30
StatusOlympic
LocationStelvio Ski Centre, Bormio, Sondrio
Participants42 from 21 countries
Course SetterLorenzo GalliITA
DetailsGates : 46
Length : 2414 m
Start Altitude : 1959 m
Vertical Drop : 714 m

Held as the third men’s Alpine skiing event at MiCo26 the Super G took place on the traditional slope in Bormio, which usually hosted World Cup races in December. The ongoing Super G World Cup had seen five different winners and 10 different skiers placing in the top three. The winners were Vincent Kriechmayr (Beaver Creek), Jan Zabystřan (Val Gardena), Marco Schwarz (Livigno), and Giovanni Franzoni (Wengen), while Marco Odermatt (SUI) was the only skier to win two events, Copper Mountain and the final race before the Games in Kitzbühel. Odermatt and Switzerland’s Franjo von Allmen were the only racers to make three podiums in the 2025/26 season. This also gave Odermatt the lead in the ongoing Super G World Cup followed by three Austrians – Kriechmayr, Stefan Babinsky, and Raphael Haaser. The winner of the 2025 Super G race in Bormio was Fredrik Møller, securing his maiden World Cup win, while in 2022 and 2023 the winner was Odermatt. Odermatt also won the last three Super G Crystal Globes (2023-25) and was the reigning World Champion from 2025.

The early pace was set by France’s Nils Allègre (bib #1) and American Ryan Cochran-Siegle (bib #3), as the race day saw warm and sunny weather with difficult snow conditions, making it difficult for the higher bib numbers. Only von Allmen (bib #7), who started first of the favourites, was able to better the time set by Cochran-Siegle. Three starters later and under even more difficult circumstances Odermatt (bib #10) managed the third best time, giving him bronze this time after finishing fourth in the downhill and winning silver in the team combined.

Von Allmen became the first ever Olympic champion in men’s Super G for Switzerland and became the first ever skier to win the speed double (downhill and Super G) at the same Games. He also became the third male Alpine skier to win three gold medals at the same Games, after Toni Sailer (1956) and Jean-Claude Killy (1968), also achieved by Croatian Janica Kostelić in 2002.

Only 42 competitors started the race which made it the smallest field ever, less than the 45 starters from Nagano 1998. Von Allmen won the race with an average speed of 101.86 km/hr and was 3.67 metres ahead of Cochran-Siegle. Von Allmen and Cochran-Siegle also gave manufacturer Head a one-two finish with Stöckli adding another medal with bronze.

PosNumberCompetitorNOCTime
17Franjo von AllmenSUI1:25.32Gold
23Ryan Cochran-SiegleUSA1:25.45Silver
310Marco OdermattSUI1:25.60Bronze
41Nils AllègreFRA1:25.63
58Raphael HaaserAUT1:25.89
69Giovanni FranzoniITA1:25.95
715Vincent KriechmayrAUT1:26.10
812Fredrik MøllerNOR1:26.12
914Stefan RogentinSUI1:26.14
106Alexis MonneySUI1:26.22
114Christof InnerhoferITA1:26.50
1219Adrian Smiseth SejerstedNOR1:26.51
1318Miha HrobatSLO1:26.53
1416Marco SchwarzAUT1:26.68
1525Alban Elezi CannaferinaFRA1:26.77
162Jack CrawfordCAN1:26.85
=1728Simon JocherGER1:26.87
=1720Cameron AlexanderCAN1:26.87
=175Jan ZabystřanCZE1:26.87
2022Martin ČaterSLO1:26.99
2111Stefan BabinskyAUT1:27.04
2227Brodie SegerCAN1:27.08
2321Sam MorseUSA1:27.12
2417Mattia CasseITA1:27.41
2524Elian LehtoFIN1:27.85
2629Kyle NegomirUSA1:28.62
2732Simen SellægNOR1:28.63
2831Tiziano GravierARG1:29.06
2934Anton GrammelGER1:29.39
3040Arnaud AlessandriaMON1:30.13
3136Andrej DrukarovLTU1:30.34
3241Emeric GuerillotPOR1:31.43
3335Barnabás SzőllősISR1:31.64
3437Denni XhepaALB1:31.72
3538Elvis OpmanisLAT1:32.05
3639Dmytro ShepiukUKR1:33.16
3742Cormac ComerfordIRL1:34.58
DNF13Dominik ParisITA
DNF23River RadamusUSA
DNF26Nils AlphandFRA
DNF30Riley SegerCAN
DNF33Marco PfiffnerLIE