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Marco Odermatt gets fourth title, misses shot at points record

Skiing, Olympic Sports

Swiss standout Marco Odermatt earned his fourth World Cup crystal globe of the season Sunday in anticlimactic circumstances as the final race was canceled due to bad weather.

The start of the men's downhill was pushed back several times because of snow and wind while organizers continued to work on the course in Saalbach, Austria. But it was officially canceled more than an hour after it was scheduled to start.

"Unfortunately due to the present weather situation with wind and snowfall affecting the track conditions, to insure the safety of the athletes, todays Men's DH had been cancelled," the ski federation said on social media.

The cancellation handed Odermatt his first World Cup downhill title. He entered Sunday with a 42-point lead over French skier Cyprien Sarrazin, the only man who could catch him in the standings.

"For sure it's very strange to win a globe after such a tight battle with Cyprien," said Odermatt, adding that it was a "fair decision" to cancel the event over safety concerns. "But we would have liked to battle it out. It was a strange season with some cancellations, but we had a very good January and February, high-quality races, very cool medals. If you are leader going into the final week, you deserve the globe."

The cancellation denied the 26-year-old Odermatt the chance to set a men's record points total. Victory in the downhill would have given Odermatt 100 points and lifted him five points beyond his record 2,042 tally set last season.

Odermatt locked up his third straight overall championship and the giant slalom title weeks ago and lifted the super-G crystal globe Friday. He is the fourth male skier to win four classifications in one season and the first since Hermann Maier did it in 2001.

"I spoke to Hermann two years ago in summer, when I won my first globe. He told me it is cool when you can't hold all the globes. So I think this will be a good feeling," Odermatt said.

It was still a remarkable season for Sarrazin, who won four races. His only previous race win was in 2017, and the 29-year-old had never placed higher than 15th in any classification.

"For safety it was a good decision, so there is no problem," Sarrazin said about the race cancellation. "I wanted to have a fair race and a safe race, and that's how it is. We will enjoy tonight because it was an amazing season.

"I'm really happy. I'm proud of me. I never stopped believing. It was an amazing journey. For the young guys, if they watch me, they can see you never stop believing. ... I can't wait to continue the journey."

Aleksander Aamodt Kilde had won the downhill crystal globe the previous two years, but his season ended prematurely when he was among a slew of World Cup, Olympic and world champions to crash hard in a packed January program.

Sunday's weather was a contrast to the women's downhill, which took place Saturday under blue skies and with a temperature of 59 degrees Fahrenheit.

Odermatt's compatriot Lara Gut-Behrami was also chasing a quadruple, but Cornelia Huetter pipped her to the downhill title for her first crystal globe.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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