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Guay of Canada wins men’s World Cup super G in Norway

Nesha Starcevic
The Associated Press
Aspen, CO Colorado
Erik Guay of Canada in action during men's World Cup Super G race in Kvitfjell, Norway, Sunday March 7, 2010. Guay finished the race in first place. (AP Photo / Cornelius Poppe, Scanpix) ** NORWAY OUT **
AP | Scanpix

KVITFJELL, Norway – Erik Guay of Canada ended three years of near misses and captured his second career World Cup victory Sunday, narrowly winning a super G that Bode Miller skipped.

Guay edged early leader Hannes Reichelt of Austria on the 1994 Olympic course to win his first race since a 2007 downhill in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany.

“It’s been a long time since I’ve been on top of the podium,” Guay said. I took a lot of risks and it paid off. … I’ve had a lot of close calls, fourths and fifths and I am going to push hard in the last races next week and see what happens.”



Guay’s home Olympics in Vancouver also produced two fifth-place finishes despite bigger expectations.

This time, the close call went Guay’s way and he edged Reichelt by .02 seconds.




Olympic champion Aksel Lund Svindal of Norway and Tobias Gruenenfelder of Switzerland tied for third place. Svindal was second in Saturday’s downhill.

Miller, who took silver in the super G at Vancouver, skipped the two races in Norway. U.S. teammate Andrew Weibrecht, who took super G bronze at the Olympics, dislocated his shoulder in a crash in Saturday’s downhill and will miss the remainder of the season.

Didier Cuche of Switzerland, who won Saturday’s downhill, was disqualified. His Swiss teammate and Olympic downhill champion, Didier Defago, lost a ski halfway down the course and crashed.

Reichelt was first out of the starting gate and his time topped the board until Guay came down as No. 18.

Guay clocked 1 minute, 31.95 seconds over the 1.6-mile Olympiabakken course to snatch victory ahead of Reichelt. Svindal and Gruenenfelder clocked 1:32.26.

Mario Scheiber of Austria was fifth, only 0.01 seconds behind Svindal and Gruenenfelder.

Reichelt posted his best result in two years, a measure of redemption after failing to make Austria’s Olympic squad.

The World Cup season ends next week in Garmisch with final races in four events.

Michael Walchhofer of Austria placed sixth and kept his lead in super G World Cup standings with one race left. He has 300 points, with Svindal second at 254 and Guay third at 231. A win is worth 100 points.

“Svindal is so strong right now, he can win every race and I am not going to play any tactical games in Garmisch but go for it,” Walchhofer said.

In the overall standings, leader Benjamin Raich ceded more ground to Carlo Janka of Switzerland. Raich finished 19th and now has a total of 1,019 points, while Janka was seventh and is now only 46 behind.

“I’ll have to take risks if I want to get ahead,” Janka said.

Cuche is third with 846 points and Svindal is fourth at 801.