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Scott Campbell
03-15-2007, 12:17 PM
For those who think they only compete once every 4 years:

Svindal wins final super-G; Miller takes title
Associated Press

LENZERHEIDE, Switzerland -- Bode Miller captured the super-G season title with his performance Thursday, finishing tied for fourth behind winner Aksel Lund Svindal at the World Cup finals.

Bode Miller
AP Photo/Armando Trovati
Bode Miller won two of five super-G events this season.

Miller's finish give him 304 super-G points for the season, well ahead of newly crowned downhill champion Didier Cuche of Switzerland.

"I'm proud. I'm more proud he didn't let it slip away because he's been so dominant all year," U.S. men's coach John McBride said. "Things have fallen off at the end of the year for one reason or another, but he proved for the majority of the season he's a dominant super-G skier."

Svindal, chasing Benjamin Raich of Austria for the overall title, clocked a winning time of 1:17.94 on the 1.24-mile Silvano Beltrametti course. Svindal also won the season's final downhill on Wednesday.

Raich, an all-around skier who prefers the technical races, finished a strong second in 1:18.07 to maintain a three-point overall lead over Svindal with two races remaining.

Raich, who for the second day in a row benefited from his early start number and the course's tight gating, leads the overall with 1,155 points.

Miller won two of the five super-G events this season, in Val Gardena, Italy, and Hinterstoder, Italy.

He also had downhill victories this year at Beaver Creek, Colo., and Wengen, Switzerland, but his difficulties in completing slaloms left him too far behind to challenge for the overall title.

Starting last, Miller came through only a 10th of a second behind Svindal at the middle interval and seemed to be picking up speed. But he slipped back in the final stretch to finish even with Marco Buechel at 1:18.33, 0.39 seconds back.

Miller won the super-G title in 2005, when he also became the first American man in 22 years to claim the World Cup overall title. He was mathematically eliminated Wednesday from the race for the overall crown.

Erik Guay of Canada was third in 1:18.29.

Svindal has 1,152 points and Cuche remains in contention in third with 1,048, but will have difficulty gaining ground in this weekend's final giant slalom and slalom races.

Miller ended the season 94 points ahead of Cuche for the smaller, super-G globe. John Kucera of Canada, 15th on Thursday, finished third 110 points behind.

Fritz Strobl, the 2002 Olympic downhill champion, ended his career by skiing down the slope in a Mozart costume complete with wig. The Austrian finished last, nearly a minute off the pace, after slowing to receive congratulations from staff and coaches on the course.

Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press

http://assets.espn.go.com/photo/2007/0315/oly_a_miller_195.jpg

Joemailman
03-16-2007, 09:05 PM
Alpine Skiing, especially Downhill and Super-G, is probably the most exciting sporting event to watch on television. I wish it would get more press coverage in non-Olympic years. 2010 Olympics will be in Vancouver, B.C., so we'll see a lot of events live. I wonder if Miller is going to make another Olympic run, or if he'll be surpassed by younger talent by then.

Freak Out
03-16-2007, 10:57 PM
I have skied downhill for most of my 46 years and raced at a few levels and what Miller has done over the last few years is amazing...Americans just don't know it.
I was very disappointed with his performance at the Olympics but was not surprised by it.....that is just who he was at the time.
I would be surprised if he was competing in BC.....something tells me he'll be doing something else then.

esoxx
03-16-2007, 11:25 PM
Is he still required to stay at the team hotel? I know he was pissed about that. I personally didn't see the harm in letting him stay in his RV at the competition site.

Scott Campbell
03-17-2007, 03:55 PM
I have skied downhill for most of my 46 years and raced at a few levels and what Miller has done over the last few years is amazing...Americans just don't know it.

I was at the Olympics in 02 and watched Bode win his silver medal in the Combined. That was the downhill run where he fell back and hit his ass on the slope but popped back up and held it together. He then made up ground in the two slalom runs. It's amazing how his body thickness has changed him over the years from a technical specialist in the Slalom and GS into a more powerful Super G and Downhill contender.

Anybody who can get to Vancouver for the event should.