Matthias Mayer ends career, dog on track

EActually, it was Julian Schütter’s turn at the ski race in Bormio, Italy. But when the Austrian wanted to start his run in the Super-G, someone else had pushed ahead – on four legs and without skis. A dog wagged across the “Pista Stelvio”. After Cyprien Sarrazin’s fall, some safety fences buckled on Thursday. The animal took the chance.

Athletes and spectators enjoyed the strange interruption, especially since the dog made a run that was well worth seeing. “He even has the ideal line there,” exclaimed enthusiastic commentators on Austrian television. The animal took bumps in the road, but then went fatally wrong in the direction and ran up the track before running out of breath. Then it was the professional’s turn. Schütter started – on two feet and with skis

Unimpressed by Matthias Mayer’s declaration of resignation and the dog on the course, Swiss alpine high-flyer Marco Odermatt achieved his fifth World Cup title this winter in Bormio. The 25-year-old ski racer won the Super-G on Thursday with a lead of 0.64 seconds over Austria’s Vincent Kriechmayr and further extended his lead in the overall World Cup. Third was Loic Meillard from Switzerland (+1.22).

Matthias Mayer just stops

Around a month before the World Cup in France, the Germans missed out on the top ten. Josef Ferstl, who was injured after his fall the day before, took 16th place as the best DSV athlete. Andreas Sander (20th) and Romed Baumann (31st) fell short of their expectations. Dominik Schwaiger retired again after a driving error.

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