2016 Alpine Skiing World Cup – Women's overall

{{short description|Alpine ski discipline year standings}}

{{Skiing season

| title = women's overall World Cup

| notes = {{ubl|File:2017 Audi FIS Ski Weltcup Garmisch-Partenkirchen Damen - Lara Gut - by 2eight - 8SC0746.jpg of Switzerland, season champion]]}}

{{ubl|2016 women's World Cup

|Overall • downhillsuper-g

|giant slalomslalomcombined}}

| link = Alpine Skiing World Cup – Women's overall

| year = 2016

}}

The women's overall competition in the 2016 FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup involved 40 events in 5 disciplines: downhill (DH), Super-G (SG), giant slalom (GS), slalom (SL) (which included one city event), and Alpine combined (AC) (which included one super-combined). A city event is a slalom conducted on a two-lane artificial ramp erected in a major city (for example, Stockholm this season, as well as Moscow, Munich, and Oslo); a super-combined (run at Val d'Isère in December 2015) consists of a downhill followed by a one-run slalom, as opposed to an Alpine combined (the other combined race currently contested), which consists of a Super-G followed by a one-run slalom.

At the start of the season, the three still-active prior overall women's champions -- two-time defending champion Anna Fenninger of Austria (2014–15), Tina Maze of Slovenia (2013), and Lindsey Vonn of the USA (2008–10, 2012) -- were all inactive. Fenninger had to miss the entire season due to a serious knee injury in October.{{cite news |author=Associated Press |title=Fenniger Out for Season after Crash in Austria|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/22/sports/skiing/fenninger-out-for-season-after-crash-in-austria.html?_r=0|work=The New York Times|date=22 October 2015 |access-date=10 February 2023}} Maze, an all-discipline skier who had been runner-up behind Fenninger in 2015, took a full-year hiatus before deciding whether to continue or permanently retire.{{cite news|title=Tina Maze temporarily suspends her career|url=http://www.rtvslo.si/news-in-english/tina-maze-temporarily-suspends-her-career/364500|work=RTV|date=7 May 2015|access-date=10 February 2023}} And Vonn was still recovering from, first, her season-ending injury in early 2015, and then a dog bite, and she didn't return until December 2015.{{cite news|title=Lindsey Vonn: Back on the slopes after suffering dogfight injury|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2015/11/11/sport/lindsey-vonn-dogfight-hospital|work=CNN.com|date=11 December 2015|access-date=10 February 2023}} Then, in early December, just a handful of events into the season, Mikaela Shiffrin of the USA, overall fourth last season and slalom discipline champion for the last three seasons, suffered an injury during practice at Åre,{{cite news|title=Skiing-Olympic champ Shiffrin heads home with knee injury|url=https://sports.yahoo.com/news/skiing-olympic-champ-shiffrin-heads-home-knee-injury-021202571--ski.html|author=Staff|work=Reuters|date=12 December 2015 |access-date=10 February 2023}} which caused her to miss the two months at the heart of the season; she did not return until mid-February (and promptly dominated the competition, although it was too late to contend for the season crown).{{cite web|title=Mikaela Shiffrin announces mid-February return to the World Cup|url=http://www.skiracing.com/stories/mikaela-shiffrin-announces-mid-february-return-to-the-world-cup|author=Staff|publisher=Ski-Racing Magazine|date=8 February 2016 |access-date=10 February 2023}}

With all of the injuries, Vonn, who herself missed more time due to injuries in late December, nevertheless had opened a narrow lead in the overall standings. When the World Cup went to Andorra in late February, Vonn had already won the Downhill discipline for the season and was leading in the Overall, Super-G and Combined disciplines for the season. However, on February 27, during the Super-G in Soldeu, Vonn crashed again near the end of her run while leading. She still raced the next day in the Combined event, although failing to podium, but on Monday a complete medical evaluation in Barcelona revealed multiple significant (not hairline, as she had thought) fractures in her knee from the Super-G crash, which ended her season at once.{{cite news |title=Lindsey Vonn ends season early after revised injury diagnosis |url=http://www.skiracing.com/stories/lindsey-vonn-ends-season-early |first=Gabbi |last=Hall |publisher=Ski-Racing Magazine |date=2 March 2016 |access-date=10 February 2023}}

After Vonn's injury, 24-year-old Lara Gut of Switzerland, Vonn's closest pursuer, grabbed the overall lead and ended up as the season champion by almost 300 points.{{cite news |url=https://www.cnn.com/2016/03/14/sport/lara-gut-alpine-skiing-world-cup/index.html |first=Matt |last=Majendie |title=Lara Gut: Family affair pushes Swiss skier to new heights |date=15 March 2016 |access-date=10 February 2023}}

Appropriately, the World Cup season finals were held in St. Moritz, Switzerland for the first time since the World Cup season finals began in 1993, although five of the previous eleven finals were held in Switzerland (all at Lenzerheide).

Standings

class="wikitable" width=60% style="font-size:95%; text-align:center;"

|#

|Skier

|DH
{{nowrap|9 races}}

|SG
{{nowrap|8 races}}

|GS
{{nowrap|9 races}}

|SL
{{nowrap|11 races}}

|AC
{{nowrap|3 races}}

!Tot.

25px

|align=left bgcolor=ffcf40| {{flagicon|SUI}}  Lara Gut

|394||bgcolor=ffcf40|481||bgcolor=cc9966|472||15||bgcolor=c0c0c0|160

!1,522

2

|align=left bgcolor=c0c0c0|{{flagicon|USA}} Lindsey Vonn

|bgcolor=ffcf40|580||bgcolor=cc9966|420||120||15||100

!1,235

3

|align=left bgcolor=cc9966|{{nowrap|{{flagicon|GER}} Viktoria Rebensburg}}

|264||293||bgcolor=cc9966|590||0||0

!1,147

4

|align=left|{{flagicon|LIE}} Tina Weirather

|244||bgcolor=c0c0c0|436||321||15||0

!1,016

5

|align=left|{{flagicon|SWE}} Frida Hansdotter

|0||0||204||bgcolor=ffcf40|711||0

!915

6

|align=left| {{flagicon|SUI}}  Wendy Holdener

|0||7||51||bgcolor=cc9966|561||bgcolor=ffcf40|198

!817

7

|align=left|{{flagicon|AUT}} Cornelia Hütter

|387||400||0||0||24

!811

8

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA}} Federica Brignone

|9||276||425||27||50

!787

9

|align=left|{{flagicon|NOR}}{{nnbsp}} Nina Løseth

|0||0||292||373||0

!665

10

|align=left|{{flagicon|USA}} Mikaela Shiffrin

|0||18||98||500||32

!648

|align=left| {{flagicon|SUI}}  Fabienne Suter

|bgcolor=c0c0c0|463||185||0||0||0

!648

12

|align=left|{{flagicon|AUT}} Eva-Maria Brem

|0||0||bgcolor=ffcf40|592||55||0

!647

13

|align=left|{{flagicon|SVK}} Veronika Velez-Zuzulová

|0||0||0||bgcolor=c0c0c0|626||0

!626

14

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA}} Nadia Fanchini

|300||171||147||0||0

!618

15

|align=left|{{flagicon|AUT}} Michaela Kirchgasser

|0||4||179||280||bgcolor=cc9966|153

!616

16

|align=left|{{flagicon|CAN}} Marie-Michèle Gagnon

|0||8||174||271||145

!598

17

|align=left|{{flagicon|SWE}} Kajsa Kling

|218||215||63||0||44

!540

18

|align=left|{{flagicon|USA}} Laurenne Ross

|224||250||0||0||52

!526

19

|align=left|{{flagicon|SWE}} Maria Pietilä-Holmner

|0||0||204||292||0

!496

20

|align=left|{{flagicon|CZE}} Šárka Strachová

|0||0||0||493||0

!493

21

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA}} Johanna Schnarf

|160||216||0||0||90

!466

22

|align=left|{{flagicon|CAN}} Larisa Yurkiw

|bgcolor=cc9966|407||58||0||0||0

!465

23

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA}} Elena Curtoni

|188||153||82||0||32

!455

24

|align=left|{{flagicon|SVK}} Petra Vlhová

|0||0||18||389||0

!407

25

|align=left|{{flagicon|ITA}} Francesca Marsaglia

|102||145||88||0||65

!400

  • {{legend|#ffcf40|Leader}}
  • {{legend|#c0c0c0|2nd place}}
  • {{legend|#cc9966|3rd place}}
  • {{small|Updated at 19 March 2016, after all events}}{{cite web|url=https://www.fis-ski.com/DB/alpine-skiing/cup-standings.html?sectorcode=AL&seasoncode=2016&cupcode=WC&disciplinecode=ALL&gendercode=W&nationcode=|title=Official FIS 2016 women's season standings |publisher=fis-ski.com|accessdate=31 January 2023}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}