Years in skiing |
2018 in sports |
---|
|
Alpine skiing
2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (Alpine skiing)
- February 11 – 24: Alpine skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics[1]
- Men's Downhill winners:
Aksel Lund Svindal;
Kjetil Jansrud;
Beat Feuz
- Women's Downhill winners:
Sofia Goggia;
Ragnhild Mowinckel;
Lindsey Vonn
- Men's Super G winners:
Matthias Mayer;
Beat Feuz;
Kjetil Jansrud
- Women's Super G winners:
Ester Ledecká;
Anna Veith;
Tina Weirather
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Marcel Hirscher;
Henrik Kristoffersen;
Alexis Pinturault
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Mikaela Shiffrin;
Ragnhild Mowinckel;
Federica Brignone
- Men's Slalom winners:
André Myhrer;
Ramon Zenhäusern;
Michael Matt
- Women's Slalom winners:
Frida Hansdotter;
Wendy Holdener;
Katharina Gallhuber
- Men's Combined winners:
Marcel Hirscher;
Alexis Pinturault;
Victor Muffat-Jeandet
- Women's Combined winners:
Michelle Gisin;
Mikaela Shiffrin;
Wendy Holdener
- Mixed Team winners:
Switzerland;
Austria;
Norway
- Men's Downhill winners:
- March 10 – 18: Alpine skiing at the 2018 Winter Paralympics[2]
- Men's Visually Impaired Winners:
- Downhill:
Mac Marcoux;
Jakub Krako;
Giacomo Bertagnolli
- Super G:
Jakub Krako;
Giacomo Bertagnolli;
Miroslav Haraus
- Giant Slalom:
Giacomo Bertagnolli;
Jakub Krako;
Mac Marcoux
- Slalom:
Giacomo Bertagnolli;
Jakub Krako;
Valery Redkozubov
- Super Combined:
Miroslav Haraus;
Jon Santacana Maiztegui;
Valery Redkozubov
- Downhill:
- Men's Sitting Winners:
- Downhill:
Andrew Kurka;
Taiki Morii;
Corey Peters
- Super G:
Kurt Oatway;
Andrew Kurka;
Frédéric François
- Giant Slalom:
Jesper Pedersen;
Tyler Walker;
Igor Sikorski
- Slalom:
Dino Sokolović;
Tyler Walker;
Frédéric François
- Super Combined:
Jeroen Kampschreur;
Frédéric François;
Jesper Pedersen
- Downhill:
- Men's Standing Winners:
- Downhill:
Théo Gmür;
Arthur Bauchet;
Markus Salcher
- Super G:
Théo Gmür;
Arthur Bauchet;
Markus Salcher
- Giant Slalom:
Théo Gmür;
Alexey Bugaev;
Alexis Guimond
- Slalom:
Adam Hall;
Arthur Bauchet;
Jamie Stanton
- Super Combined:
Alexey Bugaev;
Arthur Bauchet;
Adam Hall
- Downhill:
- Women's Visually Impaired Winners:
- Downhill:
Henrieta Farkašová;
Millie Knight;
Eléonor Sana
- Super G:
Henrieta Farkašová;
Millie Knight;
Menna Fitzpatrick
- Giant Slalom:
Henrieta Farkašová;
Menna Fitzpatrick;
Melissa Perrine
- Slalom:
Menna Fitzpatrick;
Henrieta Farkašová;
Millie Knight
- Super Combined:
Henrieta Farkašová;
Menna Fitzpatrick;
Melissa Perrine
- Downhill:
- Women's Sitting Winners:
- Downhill:
Anna Schaffelhuber;
Momoka Muraoka;
Laurie Stephens
- Super G:
Anna Schaffelhuber;
Claudia Lösch;
Momoka Muraoka
- Giant Slalom:
Momoka Muraoka;
Linda van Impelen;
Claudia Lösch
- Slalom:
Anna-Lena Forster;
Momoka Muraoka;
Heike Eder
- Super Combined:
Anna-Lena Forster;
Anna Schaffelhuber;
Momoka Muraoka
- Downhill:
- Women's Standing Winners:
- Downhill:
Marie Bochet;
Andrea Rothfuss;
Mollie Jepsen
- Super G:
Marie Bochet;
Andrea Rothfuss;
Alana Ramsay
- Giant Slalom:
Marie Bochet;
Andrea Rothfuss;
Mollie Jepsen
- Slalom:
Marie Bochet;
Mollie Jepsen;
Andrea Rothfuss
- Super Combined:
Mollie Jepsen;
Andrea Rothfuss;
Alana Ramsay
- Downhill:
- Men's Visually Impaired Winners:
FIS World Championships (AS)
- August 27 – September 1, 2017: 2017 FIS Junior Grass Ski World Championships in
Sauris
- Giant Slalom winners:
Martin Bartak (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Slalom winners:
Martin Bartak (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Super Combined winners:
Martin Bartak (m) /
Adela Kettnerova (f)
- Super G winners:
Martin Bartak (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- September 5 – 10, 2017: 2017 FIS Grass Ski World Championships in
Kaprun
- Super G winners:
Jan Gardavský (m) /
Adela Kettnerova (f)
- Super Combined winners:
Lorenzo Gritti (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Slalom winners:
Michael Stocker (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Jan Gardavský (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Super G winners:
- January 29 – February 8: World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2018 in
Davos
- Downhill winners:
Marco Odermatt (m) /
Kajsa Vickhoff Lie (f)
- Super G winners:
Marco Odermatt (m) /
Kajsa Vickhoff Lie (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Marco Odermatt (m) /
Julia Scheib (f)
- Slalom winners:
Clement Noel (m) /
Meta Hrovat (f)
- Combined winners:
Marco Odermatt (m) /
Aline Danioth (f)
- Team event winners:
Switzerland (Camille Rast, Marco Odermatt, Aline Danioth, Semyel Bissig)
- Downhill winners:
2017–18 Alpine Skiing World Cup
- October 2017
- October 28 & 29: ASWC #1 in
Sölden
- Note: The Men's Giant Slalom event was cancelled due to a wind storm.[3]
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Viktoria Rebensburg
- November 2017
- November 11 & 12: ASWC #2 in
Levi
- Slalom winners:
Felix Neureuther (m) /
Petra Vlhová (f)
- Slalom winners:
- November 22 – 26: ASWC #3 in
Lake Louise Ski Resort #1
- Men's Downhill winner:
Beat Feuz
- Men's Super G winner:
Kjetil Jansrud
- Men's Downhill winner:
- November 25 & 26: ASWC #4 in
Killington Ski Resort
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Viktoria Rebensburg
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- November 28 – December 3: ASWC #5 in
Lake Louise Ski Resort #2
- Women's Downhill winners:
Cornelia Hütter (#1) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (#2)
- Women's Super G winner:
Tina Weirather
- Women's Downhill winners:
- November 29 – December 3: ASWC #6 in
Beaver Creek Resort
- Men's Super G winner:
Vincent Kriechmayr
- Men's Downhill winner:
Aksel Lund Svindal
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Super G winner:
- December 2017
- December 8 – 10: ASWC #7 in
St. Moritz
- Note: Two, of three, Super G and the Alpine Combined events was cancelled.
- Women's Super G winner:
Jasmine Flury
- December 9 & 10: ASWC #8 in
Val-d'Isère #1
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Alexis Pinturault
- Men's Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- December 13 – 16: ASWC #9 in
Val Gardena
- Men's Super G winner:
Josef Ferstl
- Men's Downhill winner:
Aksel Lund Svindal
- Men's Super G winner:
- December 14 – 17: ASWC #10 in
Val-d'Isère #2
- Note: The women's downhill event here was cancelled.
- Women's Super G winners:
Lindsey Vonn (#1) /
Anna Veith (#2)
- December 17 & 18: ASWC #11 in
Alta Badia
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Matts Olsson
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- December 19 & 20: ASWC #12 in
Courchevel
- Women's Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner:
- December 22: ASWC #13 in
Madonna di Campiglio
- Men's Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Slalom winner:
- December 26 – 29: ASWC #14 in
Bormio
- Men's Downhill winners:
Dominik Paris (#1) /
Matthias Mayer (#2)
- Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Alexis Pinturault
- Men's Downhill winners:
- December 28 & 29: ASWC #15 in
Lienz
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Federica Brignone
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- January 2018
- January 1: ASWC #16 in
Oslo
- City Event winners:
André Myhrer (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- City Event winners:
- January 3 & 4: ASWC #17 in
Zagreb
- Slalom winners: (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- Slalom winners: (m) /
- January 6 & 7: ASWC #18 in
Kranjska Gora
- Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
- January 6 & 7: ASWC #19 in
Adelboden
- Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
- January 9: ASWC #20 in
Flachau
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Slalom winner:
- January 9 – 14: ASWC #21 in
Wengen
- Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Victor Muffat-Jeandet
- Men's Downhill winners:
Dominik Paris (#1) /
Beat Feuz (#2)
- Men's Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Alpine Combined winner:
- January 11 – 14: ASWC #22 in
Bad Kleinkirchheim
- Women's Downhill winner:
Sofia Goggia
- Women's Super G winner:
Federica Brignone
- Women's Downhill winner:
- January 16 – 21: ASWC #23 in
Kitzbühel
- Men's Super G winner:
Aksel Lund Svindal
- Men's Downhill winner:
Thomas Dreßen
- Men's Slalom winner:
Henrik Kristoffersen
- Men's Super G winner:
- January 17 – 21: ASWC #24 in
Cortina d'Ampezzo
- Women's Downhill winners:
Sofia Goggia (#1) /
Lindsey Vonn (#2)
- Women's Super G winner:
Lara Gut
- Women's Downhill winners:
- January 23: ASWC #25 in
Schladming
- Men's Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Slalom winner:
- January 23: ASWC #26 in
Kronplatz
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Viktoria Rebensburg
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- January 25 – 28: ASWC #27 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen #1
- Men's Downhill winner:
Beat Feuz
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Downhill winner:
- January 26 – 28: ASWC #28 in
Lenzerheide
- Women's Alpine Combined winner:
Wendy Holdener
- Women's Super G winner:
Lindsey Vonn
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Tessa Worley
- Women's Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
- Women's Alpine Combined winner:
- January 30: ASWC #29 in
Stockholm
- City Event winners:
Ramon Zenhäusern (m) /
Nina Haver-Løseth (f)
- City Event winners:
- February 2018
- February 1 – 4: ASWC #30 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen #2
- Women's Downhill winner:
Lindsey Vonn (2 times)
- Women's Downhill winner:
- March 2018
- March 3 & 4: ASWC #31 in
Crans-Montana
- Women's Super G winners:
Tina Weirather (#1) /
Sofia Goggia (#2)
- Women's Alpine Combined winner:
Federica Brignone
- Women's Super G winners:
- March 3 & 4: ASWC #32 in
Kranjska Gora Ski Resort
- Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
- March 8 – 11: ASWC #33 in
Kvitfjell
- Men's Downhill winner:
Thomas Dreßen
- Men's Super G winner:
Kjetil Jansrud
- Men's Downhill winner:
- March 9 & 10: ASWC #34 in
Ofterschwang
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Ragnhild Mowinckel
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 12 – 18: ASWC #35 (final) in
Åre ski resort
- Note: Both the men's Slalom and women's Giant Slalom events were cancelled.
- Men's Downhill winners:
Vincent Kriechmayr and
Matthias Mayer (tie)
- Women's Downhill winner:
Lindsey Vonn
- Super G winners:
Vincent Kriechmayr (m) /
Sofia Goggia (f)
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Alpine Team Event winners:
Sweden
2017 FIS Grass Skiing World Cup
- June 10 & 11: GSWC #1 in
Rettenbach
- Giant Slalom winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Super Combined winners:
Marc Zickbauer (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- July 29 & 30: GSWC #2 in
Montecampione
- Slalom winners:
Lorenzo Gritti (m) /
Adela Kettnerova (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Michael Stocker (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
- Slalom winners:
- August 12 & 13: GSWC #3 in
Marbach
- Giant Slalom winners:
Stefan Portmann (m) /
Barbara Míková (f)
- Super G winners:
Stefan Portmann (m) /
Barbara Míková (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- August 19 & 20: GSWC #4 in
Předklášteří
- Giant Slalom winners:
Martin Bartak (m) /
Barbara Míková (f)
- Slalom winners:
Lorenzo Gritti (m) /
Barbara Míková (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- August 24 & 25: GSWC #5 in
Santa Caterina Valfurva
- Slalom #1 winners:
Lorenzo Gritti (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Slalom #2 winners:
Lorenzo Gritti (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Slalom #1 winners:
2017 FIS Australia & New Zealand Cup (AS)
- August 21 – 25: A&NZ #1 in
Thredbo
- Giant Slalom #1 winners:
Adam Barwood (m) /
Sara Hector (f)
- Giant Slalom #2 winners:
Daniel Meier (m) /
Sara Hector (f)
- Slalom #1 winners:
Linus Straßer (m) /
Estelle Alphand (f)
- Slalom #2 winners:
Linus Straßer (m) /
Sara Hector (f)
- Giant Slalom #1 winners:
- August 28 – 31: A&NZ #2 in
Coronet Peak
- Giant Slalom #1 winners:
Erik Read (m) /
Mina Fürst Holtmann (f)
- Giant Slalom #2 winners:
Erik Read (m) /
Sara Hector (f)
- Slalom #1 winners:
Manuel Feller (m) /
Estelle Alphand (f)
- Slalom #2 winners:
Marc Rochat (m) /
Chiara Mair (f)
- Giant Slalom #1 winners:
- September 5 & 6: A&NZ #3 (final) in
Mount Hutt
- Event cancelled.
2017–18 FIS European Cup (AS)
- November 29 & 30, 2017: ECAS #1 in
Funäsdalen
- Women's Slalom winners:
Katharina Liensberger (#1) /
Marina Wallner (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
- December 3 & 4, 2017: ECAS #2 in
Hafjell
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Estelle Alphand (#1) /
Meta Hrovat (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
- December 5 & 6, 2017: ECAS #3 in
Fjätervålen
- Men's Slalom winners:
Ramon Zenhäusern (#1) /
Marc Rochat (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- December 7 – 9, 2017: ECAS #3 in
Kvitfjell #1
- Women's Alpine combined winner:
Franziska Gritsch
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Vanessa Kasper
- Women's Super G winner:
Kajsa Vickhoff Lie
- Women's Alpine combined winner:
- December 8 & 9, 2017: ECAS #4 in
Trysil
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Johannes Strolz (2 times)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- December 13, 2017: ECAS #5 in
Obereggen
- Men's Slalom winner:
Matej Vidović
- Men's Slalom winner:
- December 14 & 15, 2017: ECAS #6 in
Andalo
- Note: One, of two, Giant Slalom events was cancelled.
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Meta Hrovat
- December 16, 2017: ECAS #7 in
Kronplatz
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Dominik Raschner (m) /
Aline Danioth (f)
- Slalom (Qualification Race) winners:
Matej Vidović (m) /
Franziska Gritsch (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
- December 18, 2017: ECAS #8 in
Fassa Valley
- Men's Slalom winner:
Stefano Gross
- Men's Slalom winner:
- December 20 & 21, 2017: ECAS #9 in
Reiteralm
- Men's Super G winners:
Niklas Köck (#1) /
Christoph Krenn (#2)
- Men's Super G winners:
- December 19 – 22, 2017: ECAS #10 in
Fassa Valley
- Women's Downhill winner:
Juliana Suter (2 times)
- Women's Downhill winner:
- January 5 & 6: ECAS #10 in
Wengen
- Note: One, of two, Super G events was cancelled.
- Men's Super G winner:
Emanuele Buzzi
- January 8 – 12: ECAS #11 in
Innerkrems
- Women's Alpine combined winner:
Lisa Hörnblad
- Wome's Super G winners:
Nina Ortlieb (#1) /
Franziska Gritsch (#2)
- Women's Alpine combined winner:
- January 8 – 12: ECAS #12 in
Saalbach-Hinterglemm
- Men's Alpine combined winner:
Marco Pfiffner
- Men's Downhill winners:
Daniel Hemetsberger (#1) /
Henrik Roea (#2)
- Men's Alpine combined winner:
- January 13 & 14: ECAS #13 in
Zell am See
- Women's Slalom winners:
Magdalena Fjällström (#1) /
Marina Wallner (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
- January 14 & 15: ECAS #14 in
Kirchberg
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Florian Eisath (#1) /
Alex Hofer (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- January 15 – 19: ECAS #15 in
Zauchensee
- Note: Here, the downhill events competition were cancelled.
- Women's Super G winner:
Lisa Hörnblad
- January 17 – 21: ECAS #16 in
Méribel
- Event cancelled.
- January 22 & 23: ECAS #17 in
Folgaria/Lavarone
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Stefan Brennsteiner (#1) /
Marco Odermatt (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- January 23 & 24: ECAS #18 in
Zinal
- Event cancelled.
- January 25 & 26: ECAS #19 in
Melchsee-Frutt
- Women's Slalom winners:
Anna Swenn-Larsson (2 times)
- Women's Slalom winners:
- January 25 & 26: ECAS #20 in
Chamonix
- Men's Slalom winners:
Johannes Strolz (#1) /
Simon Maurberger (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- February 16 & 17: ECAS #21 in
Jaun
- Men's Slalom winners:
Matej Vidović (#1) /
Marc Rochat (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- February 17 & 18: ECAS #22 in
Bad Wiessee
- Women's Slalom winner:
Charlotta Säfvenberg (2 times)
- Women's Slalom winner:
- February 19 – 23: ECAS #23 in
Sarntal
- Men's Downhill winners:
Stian Saugestad (#1) /
Adrian Smiseth Sejersted (#2)
- Men's Alpine combined winner:
Johannes Strolz
- Men's Downhill winners:
- February 24 – 28: ECAS #24 in
Crans-Montana
- Women's Downhill winners:
Ariane Raedler (#1 & #3) /
Priska Nufer (#2)
- Women's Super G winner:
Jasmine Flury
- Women's Downhill winners:
- February 26 & 27: ECAS #25 in
St. Moritz
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Thibaut Favrot (#1) /
Thomas Tumler (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- March 1 & 2: ECAS #26 in
Zinal
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Thea Louise Stjernesund (#1) /
Katharina Liensberger (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
- March 3 – 6: ECAS #27 in
Kvitfjell #2
- Men's Downhill winners:
Adrian Smiseth Sejersted (#1) /
Christopher Neumayer (#2)
- Men's Downhill winners:
- March 8 & 9: ECAS #28 in
La Molina
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Thea Louise Stjernesund (#1) /
Nina Ortlieb (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
- March 10 & 11: ECAS #29 in
Berchtesgaden
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Timon Haugan
- Men's Slalom winner:
Marc Rochat
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 12 – 18: ECAS #30 (final) in
Soldeu - El Tarter
- Downhill winners:
Otmar Striedinger (m) /
Ariane Raedler (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Dominik Raschner (m) /
Kristine Gjelsten Haugen (f)
- Super G winners:
Stefan Rogentin (m) /
Ariane Raedler (f)
- Slalom winners:
Christian Hirschbuehl /
Josephine Forni (f)
- Downhill winners:
2017–18 Far East Cup (AS)
- December 6 – 9, 2017: FEC #1 in
Wanlong
- Men's Slalom winners:
Ondřej Berndt (2 times)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Asa Ando (2 times)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Vladislav Novikov (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Sakurako Mukogawa (#1) /
Asa Ando (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- December 13 – 16, 2017: FEC #2 in
Songhua
- Men's Slalom winners:
Hideyuki Narita (2 times)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Neja Dvornik (#1) /
Sakurako Mukogawa (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Cédric Noger (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Sakurako Mukogawa (2 times)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- January 8 – 12: FEC #3 in
High1 Resort
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Charlie Raposo (#1) /
Cédric Noger (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Haruna Ishikawa (#1) /
Mio Arai (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Joaquim Salarich (#1) /
Juan del Campo (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Yukina Tomii (#1) /
Sakurako Mukogawa (#2)
- Alpine Combined winners:
Matej Falat (m) /
Sakurako Mukogawa (f)
- Super G winners:
Hideyuki Narita (m) /
Sakurako Mukogawa (f)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- January 14 & 15: FEC #4 in
High1 Resort
- Men's Slalom winners:
Matej Falat (#1) /
Juan del Campo (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Sakurako Mukogawa (#1) /
Haruna Ishikawa (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- February 5 – 7: FEC #5 in
Engaru
- Giant Slalom winners:
Anthon Cassman (m) /
Haruna Ishikawa (f)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Richard Leitgeb (#1) /
Hideyuki Narita (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Josephine Forni (2 times)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- March 9 – 11: FEC #6 in
Sapporo
- Note: Here the Giant Slalom events are cancelled'.
- Slalom winners:
Ryunosuke Ohkoshi (m) /
Sakurako Mukogawa (f)
2017–18 North American Cup (AS)
- November 18 & 19, 2017: NAC #1 in
Loveland Ski Area
- Women's Slalom winners:
Erin Mielzynski (#1) /
Laurence St-Germain (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
- November 18 – 21, 2017: NAC #2 in
Copper Mountain
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Phil Brown (#1) /
Trevor Philp (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Marie-Michèle Gagnon (#1) /
AJ Hurt (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Phil Brown (#1) /
Jeffrey Read (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- December 4 – 8, 2017: NAC #3 in
Lake Louise
- Downhill winners:
Markus Dürager (m) /
Roni Remme (f)
- Super G winners:
Sam Mulligan (m) /
Roni Remme (f)
- Downhill winners:
- December 9 – 16, 2017: NAC #4 in
Panorama
- Alpine combined winners:
River Radamus (m) /
Roni Remme (f)
- Men's Super G winners:
Jeffrey Read (#1) /
River Radamus (#2)
- Women's Super G winners:
Roni Remme (#1) /
AJ Hurt (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Brian McLaughlin (#1) /
River Radamus (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Adriana Jelinkova (#1) /
Alice Robinson (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Tanguy Nef (#1) /
Nolan Kasper (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Roni Remme (2 times)
- Alpine combined winners:
- February 13 – 16: NAC #5 in
Stowe Mountain Resort
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Tanguy Nef (#1) /
Charlie Raposo (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Michael Ankeny (#1) /
Luke Winters (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- February 13 – 16: NAC #6 in
Whiteface Mountain
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Mikaela Tommy (2 times)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Nina O'Brien (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
- February 26 – March 4: NAC #7 in
Copper Mountain Resort
- Men's Downhill winners:
James Crawford (#1) /
Jeffrey Read (#2)
- Women's Downhill winners:
Maureen Lebel (#1) /
Roni Remme (#2)
- Alpine combined winners:
Sam Mulligan (m) /
Valérie Grenier (f)
- Super G winners:
Broderick Thompson (m) /
Valérie Grenier (f)
- Men's Downhill winners:
2017 FIS South American Cup (AS)
- August 1 – 5: SAC #1 in
Chapelco
- This event is cancelled.
- August 7 – 11: SAC #2 in
Cerro Catedral
- Giant Slalom winners: Men's here is cancelled /
Nicol Gastaldi (f)
- Slalom winners:
Sebastiano Gastaldi (m) /
Kim Vanreusel (f)
- Giant Slalom winners: Men's here is cancelled /
- August 12 – 15: SAC #3 in
Antillanca (part of South American Alpine Skiing Championships)
- This event is cancelled.
- September 2: SAC #4 in
El Colorado #1
- Giant Slalom winners:
Rasmus Windingstad (m) /
Anna Hofer (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- September 3–8: SAC #5 in
La Parva
- Slalom winners:
Martin Arene (m) /
Núria Pau (f)
- Downhill #1 winners:
Brice Roger (m) /
Ester Ledecká (f)
- Downhill #2 winners:
Klemen Kosi (m) /
Ester Ledecká (f)
- Super G winners:
Thomas Dreßen (m) /
Ester Ledecká (f)
- Slalom winners:
- September 10 – 12: SAC #6 in
Chapelco
- Giant Slalom #1 winners:
Sebastiano Gastaldi (m) /
Noelle Barahona (f)
- Giant Slalom #2 winner:
Sebastiano Gastaldi (Men's only)
- Giant Slalom #1 winners:
- September 13 & 14: SAC #7 in
Cerro Catedral #2
- Slalom winners:
Tomas Birkner De Miguel (m) /
Núria Pau (f)
- Giant Slalom here is cancelled.
- Slalom winners:
- September 18 – 22: SAC #8 (final) in
El Colorado #2
- Alpine combined #1 winners:
Rasmus Windingstad (m) /
Núria Pau (f)
- Alpine combined #2 winners:
Marko Vukićević (m) /
Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f)
- Super G #1 winners:
Klemen Kosi (m) /
Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f)
- Super G #2 winners:
Jack Gower (m) /
Iulija Pleshkova (f)
- Downhill #1 winners:
Marko Vukićević (m) (2 runs) /
Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f)
- Downhill #2 winners:
Marko Vukićević (m) (2 runs) /
Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f)
- Alpine combined #1 winners:
Biathlon
2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (Biathlon)
- February 10 – 23: Biathlon at the 2018 Winter Olympics[4]
- Men's Individual winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø;
Jakov Fak;
Dominik Landertinger
- Women's Individual winners:
Hanna Öberg;
Anastasiya Kuzmina;
Laura Dahlmeier
- Men's Sprint winners:
Arnd Peiffer;
Michal Krčmář;
Dominik Windisch
- Women's Sprint winners:
Laura Dahlmeier;
Marte Olsbu;
Veronika Vítková
- Men's Pursuit winners:
Martin Fourcade;
Sebastian Samuelsson;
Benedikt Doll
- Women's Pursuit winners:
Laura Dahlmeier;
Anastasiya Kuzmina;
Anaïs Bescond
- Men's Mass Start winners:
Martin Fourcade;
Simon Schempp;
Emil Hegle Svendsen
- Women's Mass Start winners:
Anastasiya Kuzmina;
Darya Domracheva;
Tiril Eckhoff
- Men's 4 x 7.5 km Relay winners:
Sweden;
Norway;
Germany
- Women's 4 x 6 km Relay winners:
Belarus;
Sweden;
France
- Mixed 2 x 6 km / 2 x 7.5 km Relay winners:
France;
Norway;
Italy
- Men's Individual winners:
- March 10, 13, & 16: Biathlon at the 2018 Winter Paralympics[5]
- Men's Visually Impaired Winners:
- 7.5 km:
Vitaliy Lukyanenko;
Yury Holub;
Anatolii Kovalevskyi
- 12.5 km:
Yury Holub;
Oleksandr Kazik;
Iurii Utkin
- 15 km:
Vitaliy Lukyanenko;
Oleksandr Kazik;
Anthony Chalencon
- 7.5 km:
- Men's Sitting Winners:
- 7.5 km:
Daniel Cnossen;
Dzmitry Loban;
Collin Cameron
- 12.5 km:
Taras Rad;
Daniel Cnossen;
Andy Soule
- 15 km:
Martin Fleig;
Daniel Cnossen;
Collin Cameron
- 7.5 km:
- Men's Standing Winners:
- 7.5 km:
Benjamin Daviet;
Mark Arendz;
Ihor Reptyukh
- 12.5 km:
Benjamin Daviet;
Ihor Reptyukh;
Mark Arendz
- 15 km:
Mark Arendz;
Benjamin Daviet;
Nils Erik Ulset
- 7.5 km:
- Women's Visually Impaired Winners:
- 6 km:
Mikhalina Lysova;
Oksana Shyshkova;
Sviatlana Sakhanenka
- 10 km:
Oksana Shyshkova;
Mikhalina Lysova;
Clara Klug
- 12.5 km:
Mikhalina Lysova;
Oksana Shyshkova;
Clara Klug
- 6 km:
- Women's Sitting Winners:
- 6 km:
Kendall Gretsch;
Oksana Masters;
Lidziya Hrafeyeva
- 10 km:
Andrea Eskau;
Marta Zaynullina;
Irina Gulyayeva
- 12.5 km:
Andrea Eskau;
Oksana Masters;
Lidziya Hrafeyeva
- 6 km:
- Women's Standing Winners:
- 6 km:
Ekaterina Rumyantseva;
Anna Burmistrova;
Liudmyla Liashenko
- 10 km:
Ekaterina Rumyantseva;
Anna Burmistrova;
Liudmyla Liashenko
- 12.5 km:
Anna Burmistrova;
Ekaterina Rumyantseva;
Brittany Hudak
- 6 km:
- Men's Visually Impaired Winners:
International biathlon championships
- January 23 – 28: 2018 IBU Open European Championships in
Ridnaun-Val Ridanna
- Individual winners:
Felix Leitner (m) /
Chloe Chevalier (f)
- Sprint winners:
Andrejs Rastorgujevs (m) /
Iryna Varvynets (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Alexandr Loginov (m) /
Chloe Chevalier (f)
- Single mixed relay winners:
Norway (Thekla Brun-Lie & Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen)
- 2x6+2x7.5 km mixed relay winners:
Ukraine (Yuliya Zhuravok, Iryna Varvynets, Artem Pryma, & Dmytro Pidruchnyi)
- Individual winners:
- January 30 – February 4: 2018 IBU Junior Open European Championships in
Pokljuka
- Junior individual winners:
Said Karimulla Khalili (m) /
Tamara Steiner (f)
- Junior sprint winners:
Igor Malinovskii (m) /
Valeriia Vasnetcova (f)
- Junior pursuit winners:
Igor Malinovskii (m) /
Polina Shevnina (f)
- Junior single mixed relay winners:
Finland (Jenni Keranen & Jaakko Ranta)
- Junior 2x6+2x7.5 km mixed relay winners:
Russia (Polina Shevnina, Valeriia Vasnetcova, Vasilii Tomshin, & Igor Malinovskii)
- Junior individual winners:
- February 26 – March 4: 2018 IBU Youth/Junior World Championships in
Otepää
- Junior individual winners:
Igor Malinovskii (m) /
Kamila Zuk (f)
- Junior sprint winners:
Vasilii Tomshin (m) /
Kamila Zuk (f)
- Junior pursuit winners:
Sverre Dahlen Aspenes (m) /
Marketa Davidova (f)
- Junior Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners:
Russia (Said Karimulla Khalili, Vasilii Tomshin, Viacheslav Maleev, & Igor Malinovskii)
- Junior Women's 3x6 km relay winners:
France (Camille Bened, Myrtille Begue, & Lou Jeanmonnot-Laurent)
- Youth individual winners:
Mikhail Pervushin (m) /
Elvira Oeberg (f)
- Youth sprint winners:
Mikhail Pervushin (m) /
Elvira Oeberg (f)
- Youth pursuit winners:
Andrei Viukhin (m) /
Anastasiia Goreeva (f)
- Youth Men's 3x7.5 km relay winners:
Russia (Denis Tashtimerov, Andrei Viukhin, & Mikhail Pervushin)
- Youth Women's 3x6 km relay winners:
Sweden (Amanda Lundstroem, Ella Halvarsson, & Elvira Oeberg)
- Junior individual winners:
2017–18 Biathlon World Cup
- November 24, 2017 – December 3, 2017: BWC #1 in
Östersund
- Individual winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Nadezhda Skardino (f)
- Sprint winners:
Tarjei Bø (m) /
Denise Herrmann (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Denise Herrmann (f)
- Single mixed relay winners:
Austria (Lisa Hauser & Simon Eder)
- 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners:
Norway (Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold, Tiril Eckhoff, Johannes Thingnes Bø, & Emil Hegle Svendsen)
- Individual winners:
- December 5 – 10, 2017: BWC #2 in
Hochfilzen
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Darya Domracheva (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners:
Norway (Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Henrik L'Abée-Lund, Erlend Bjøntegaard, & Lars Helge Birkeland)
- Women's 4x6 km relay winners:
Germany (Vanessa Hinz, Franziska Hildebrand, Maren Hammerschmidt, & Laura Dahlmeier)
- Sprint winners:
- December 12 – 17, 2017: BWC #3 in
Annecy-Le Grand-Bornand
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Laura Dahlmeier (f)
- Mass Start winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Justine Braisaz (f)
- Sprint winners:
- January 2 – 7: BWC #4 in
Oberhof
- Sprint winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners:
Sweden (Martin Ponsiluoma, Jesper Nelin, Sebastian Samuelsson, & Fredrik Lindström)
- Women's 4x6 km relay winners:
France (Anaïs Bescond, Anaïs Chevalier, Célia Aymonier, & Justine Braisaz)
- Sprint winners:
- January 9 – 14: BWC #5 in
Ruhpolding
- Individual winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Dorothea Wierer (f)
- Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners:
Norway (Lars Helge Birkeland, Tarjei Bø, Emil Hegle Svendsen, & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
- Women's 4x6 km relay winners:
Germany (Franziska Preuß, Denise Herrmann, Franziska Hildebrand, & Laura Dahlmeier)
- Mass Start winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f)
- Individual winners:
- January 16 – 21: BWC #6 in
Antholz-Anterselva
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Tiril Eckhoff (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Laura Dahlmeier (f)
- Mass Start winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Darya Domracheva (f)
- Sprint winners:
- March 6 – 11: BWC #7 in
Kontiolahti
- Sprint winners:
Anton Shipulin (m) /
Darya Domracheva (f)
- Single mixed relay winners:
France (Anaïs Chevalier & Antonin Guigonnat)
- 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners:
Italy (Dorothea Wierer, Lisa Vittozzi, Dominik Windisch, & Lukas Hofer)
- Mass Start winners:
Julian Eberhard (m) /
Vanessa Hinz (f)
- Sprint winners:
- March 13 – 18: BWC #8 in
Oslo-Holmenkollen
- Sprint winners:
Henrik L'Abée-Lund (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Darya Domracheva (f)
- Men's 4x7.5 km relay winners:
Norway (Lars Helge Birkeland, Henrik L'Abée-Lund, Tarjei Bø, & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
- Women's 4x6 km relay winners:
France (Anaïs Chevalier, Célia Aymonier, Marie Dorin Habert, & Anaïs Bescond)
- Sprint winners:
- March 20 – 25: BWC #9 (final) in
Tyumen
- Sprint winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Darya Domracheva (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f)
- Mass Start winners:
Maxim Tsvetkov (m) /
Darya Domracheva (f)
- Sprint winners:
2017–18 IBU Cup
- November 22 – 26, 2017: IBU Cup #1 in
Sjusjøen
- Men's 10 km winners:
Emilien Jacquelin (#1) /
Tarjei Bø (#2)
- Women's 7.5 km winners:
Uliana Kaisheva (#1) /
Denise Herrmann (#2)
- Single mixed relay winners:
France (Julia Simon & Antonin Guigonnat)
- 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners:
Russia (Uliana Kaisheva, Irina Uslugina, Alexander Povarnitsyn, Alexey Slepov)
- Men's 10 km winners:
- December 7 – 10, 2017: IBU Cup #2 in
Lenzerheide
- Pursuit winners:
Antonin Guigonnat (m) /
Uliana Kaisheva (f)
- Sprint winners:
Antonin Guigonnat (m) /
Uliana Kaisheva (f)
- Single mixed relay winners:
Norway (Thekla Brun-Lie & Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen)
- 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners:
France (Enora Latuillière, Chloe Chevalier, Clement Dumont, & Fabien Claude)
- Pursuit winners:
- December 13 – 17, 2017: IBU Cup #3 in
Obertilliach
- Individual winners:
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (m) /
Monika Hojnisz (f)
- Sprint winners:
Dmitry Malyshko (m) /
Karolin Horchler (f)
- Single mixed relay winners:
Russia (Kristina Reztsova & Alexey Volkov)
- 2x6+2x7.5 km Mixed Relay winners:
Norway (Emilie Aagheim Kalkenberg, Karoline Offigstad Knotten, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, & Vegard Gjermundshaug)
- Individual winners:
- January 5 – 7: IBU Cup #4 in
Brezno-Osrblie
- Men's 10 km winners:
Simon Fourcade (#1) /
Vegard Gjermundshaug (#2)
- Women's 7.5 km winner:
Uliana Kaisheva (2 times)
- Men's 10 km winners:
- January 10 – 13: IBU Cup #5 in
Großer Arber
- Individual winners:
Jean-Guillaume Béatrix (m) /
Nadine Horchler (f)
- Sprint winners:
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (m) /
Hilde Fenne (f)
- Individual winners:
- February 1 – 3: IBU Cup #6 in
Martell-Val Martello
- Sprint winners:
Alexandr Loginov (m) /
Victoria Slivko (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Alexandr Loginov (m) /
Anastasia Zagoruiko (f)
- Sprint winners:
- March 9 – 11: IBU Cup #7 in
Uvat
- Individual winners:
Fabien Claude (m) /
Irina Uslugina (f)
- Sprint winners:
Alexandr Loginov (m) /
Evgeniya Pavlova (f)
- Individual winners:
- March 13 – 17: IBU Cup #8 (final) in
Khanty-Mansiysk
- Super Sprint winners:
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (m) /
Karolin Horchler (f)
- Sprint winners:
Alexey Slepov (m) /
Julia Schwaiger (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Alexandr Loginov (m) /
Irina Uslugina (f)
- Super Sprint winners:
2017–18 IBU Junior Cup
- December 8 – 10, 2017: IBUJC #1 in
Obertilliach
- Junior Sprint #1 winners:
Hugo Rivail (m) /
Myrtille Begue (f)
- Junior Sprint #2 winners:
Emilien Claude (m) /
Sophia Schneider (f)
- Junior Sprint #1 winners:
- December 14 – 16, 2017: IBUJC #2 in
Ridnaun-Val Ridanna
- Junior Individual winners:
Vasilii Tomshin (m) /
Irene Lardschneider (f)
- Junior Sprint winners:
Dzmitry Lazouski (m) /
Marina Sauter (f)
- Junior Individual winners:
- January 25 – 27: IBUJC #3 (final) in
Nové Město na Moravě
- Note: This event was supposed to be held in Duszniki-Zdrój, but it was moved due to unexplained reasons.
- Junior Sprint #1 winners:
Emilien Claude (m) /
Lou Jeanmonnot-Laurent (f)
- Junior Sprint #2 winners:
Martin Perrillat Bottonet (m) /
Sophia Schneider (f)
Cross-country skiing
2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (XC)
- February 10 – 25: Cross-country skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics[6]
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winners:
Dario Cologna;
Simen Hegstad Krüger;
Denis Spitsov
- Women's 10 km Freestyle winners:
Ragnhild Haga;
Charlotte Kalla;
Marit Bjørgen;
Krista Pärmäkoski
- Men's 30 km Skiathlon winners:
Simen Hegstad Krüger;
Martin Johnsrud Sundby;
Hans Christer Holund
- Women's 15 km Skiathlon winners:
Charlotte Kalla;
Marit Bjørgen;
Krista Pärmäkoski
- Men's 50 km Classical winners:
Iivo Niskanen;
Aleksandr Bolshunov;
Andrey Larkov
- Women's 30 km Classical winners:
Marit Bjørgen;
Krista Pärmäkoski;
Stina Nilsson
- Men's 4 x 10 km Relay winners:
Norway;
Olympic Athletes from Russia;
France
- Women's 4 x 5 km Relay winners:
Norway;
Sweden;
Olympic Athletes from Russia
- Men's Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo;
Federico Pellegrino;
Alexander Bolshunov
- Women's Sprint Classical winners:
Stina Nilsson;
Maiken Caspersen Falla;
Yulia Belorukova
- Men's Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
Norway (Martin Johnsrud Sundby & Johannes Høsflot Klæbo);
(Denis Spitsov & Aleksandr Bolshunov);
France (Maurice Manificat & Richard Jouve)
- Women's Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
United States (Kikkan Randall & Jessie Diggins);
Sweden (Charlotte Kalla & Stina Nilsson);
Norway (Marit Bjørgen & Maiken Caspersen Falla)
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winners:
- March 11 – 18: Cross-country skiing at the 2018 Winter Paralympics[7]
- Men's Visually Impaired Winners:
- Sprint:
Brian McKeever;
Zebastian Modin;
Eirik Bye
- 10 km:
Brian McKeever;
Jake Adicoff;
Yury Holub
- 20 km Freestyle:
Brian McKeever;
Yury Holub;
Thomas Clarion
- Sprint:
- Men's Sitting Winners:
- Sprint:
Andy Soule;
Dzmitry Loban;
Daniel Cnossen
- 7.5 km:
Sin Eui-hyun;
Daniel Cnossen;
Maksym Yarovyi
- 15 km:
Maksym Yarovyi;
Daniel Cnossen;
Sin Eui-hyun
- Sprint:
- Men's Standing Winners:
- Sprint:
Alexandr Kolyadin;
Yoshihiro Nitta;
Mark Arendz;
Ilkka Tuomisto
- 10 km:
Yoshihiro Nitta;
Grygorii Vovchynskyi;
Mark Arendz
- 20 km Freestyle:
Ihor Reptyukh;
Benjamin Daviet;
Håkon Olsrud
- Sprint:
- Women's Visually Impaired Winners:
- Sprint:
Sviatlana Sakhanenka;
Mikhalina Lysova;
Oksana Shyshkova
- 7.5 km:
Sviatlana Sakhanenka;
Mikhalina Lysova;
Carina Edlinger
- 15 km Freestyle:
Sviatlana Sakhanenka;
Oksana Shyshkova;
Mikhalina Lysova
- Sprint:
- Women's Sitting Winners:
- Sprint:
Oksana Masters;
Andrea Eskau;
Marta Zaynullina
- 5 km:
Oksana Masters;
Andrea Eskau;
Marta Zaynullina
- 12 km:
Kendall Gretsch;
Andrea Eskau;
Oksana Masters
- Sprint:
- Women's Standing Winners:
- Sprint:
Anna Burmistrova;
Vilde Nilsen;
Natalie Wilkie
- 7.5 km:
Natalie Wilkie;
Ekaterina Rumyantseva;
Emily Young
- 15 km Freestyle:
Ekaterina Rumyantseva;
Anna Burmistrova;
Liudmyla Liashenko
- Sprint:
- Relays
- Men's Visually Impaired Winners:
2017–18 Tour de Ski
- December 30, 2017 – January 1, 2018: TdS #1 in
Lenzerheide
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Sergey Ustiugov (m) /
Laurien van der Graaff (f)
- Classical winners:
Dario Cologna (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Dario Cologna (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 3 & 4: TdS #2 in
Oberstdorf
- Note: The sprint classical events here was cancelled, due to a thunderstorm.[8]
- Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Emil Iversen (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- January 6 & 7: TdS #3 (final) in
Fiemme Valley
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Alexey Poltoranin (m) /
Heidi Weng (f)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Dario Cologna (m) /
Heidi Weng (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
2017–18 FIS Cross-Country World Cup
- November 24 – 26, 2017: CCWC #1 in
Kuusamo (Ruka)
- Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Marit Bjørgen (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Maurice Manificat (m) /
Ragnhild Haga (f)
- Classical winners:
- December 2 & 3, 2017: CCWC #2 in
Lillehammer
- Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
- Skiathlon winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Charlotte Kalla (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- December 9 & 10, 2017: CCWC #3 in
Davos
- Freestyle winners:
Maurice Manificat (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Freestyle winners:
- December 16 & 17, 2017: CCWC #4 in
Toblach
- Classical Pursuit winners:
Alexey Poltoranin (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Simen Hegstad Krüger (m) /
Charlotte Kalla (f)
- Classical Pursuit winners:
- January 13 & 14: CCWC #5 in
Dresden
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Federico Pellegrino (m) /
Hanna Falk (f)
- Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
Italy (Dietmar Nöckler & Federico Pellegrino) (m) /
Sweden (Ida Ingemarsdotter & Maja Dahlqvist) (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 20 & 21: CCWC #6 in
Planica
- Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Classical winners:
Alexey Poltoranin (m) /
Krista Pärmäkoski (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- January 27 & 28: CCWC #7 in
Seefeld in Tirol
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Sophie Caldwell (f)
- Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Dario Cologna (m) /
Jessie Diggins (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- March 3 & 4: CCWC #8 in
Lahti
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Federico Pellegrino (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
- Classical winners:
Alexey Poltoranin (m) /
Krista Pärmäkoski (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- March 7: CCWC #9 in
Drammen
- Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- March 10 & 11: CCWC #10 in
Oslo
- Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Dario Cologna (m) /
Marit Bjørgen (f)
- Freestyle Mass Start winners:
- March 16 – 18: CCWC #11 (final) in
Falun
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Hanna Falk (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Krista Pärmäkoski (f)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Marit Bjørgen (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
2017–18 East European Cup (XC)
- November 20 – 24, 2017: Khakasia Cup in
Vershina Tea
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Stanislav Volzhentsev
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Svetlana Nikolaeva
- Men's 1.7 km Speed Freestyle winner:
Andrey Parfenov
- Women's 1.3 km Speed Freestyle winner:
Tatiana Aleshina
- Men's 1.7 km Classic winner:
Ermil Vokuev
- Women's 1.3 km Classic winner:
Polina Nekrasova
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner:
Artem Nikolaev
- Women's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Daria Storozhilova
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
- December 20 – 22, 2017: EEC #2 in
Syanki
- 1,6 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
Aliaksandr Saladkou (m) /
Darya Blashko (f)
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Veselin Tzinzov
- Women's 5 km Freestyle winner:
Maryna Antsybor
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Veselin Tzinzov
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Tetyana Antypenko
- 1,6 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
- December 23 – 27, 2017: EEC #3 in
Krasnogorsk
- Event cancelled.
- January 8 – 12: EEC #4 in
Raubichi/Minsk
- Event cancelled.
- February 9: EEC #5 in
Krasnogorsk
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Maxim Vylegzhanin
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Polina Kalsina
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
- February 11: EEC #6 in
Moscow
- 1.4 km Freestyle winners:
Gleb Retivykh (m) /
Natalya Matveyeva (f)
- 1.4 km Freestyle winners:
- February 24 – 28: EEC #7 in
Kononovskaya
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner:
Artem Maltsev
- Women's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Mariya Istomina
- Men's 1.4 km Classic winner:
Gleb Retivykh
- Women's 1.2 km Classic winner:
Natalya Matveyeva
- Men's Skiathlon winner:
Stanislav Volzhentsev
- Women's Skiathlon winner:
Polina Kalsina
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner:
2017–18 Far East Cross Country Cup (XC)
- December 26 & 27, 2017: FAC #1 in
Otoineppu
- Men's 10 km Classic winners:
Keishin Yoshida (#1) /
Naoto Baba (#2)
- Women's 5 km Classic winners:
Masako Ishida (2 times)
- Men's 10 km Classic winners:
- January 6 & 7: FAC #2 & #3 in
Sapporo
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Hiroyuki Miyazawa
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Masako Ishida
- 1.4 Sprint Classic winners:
Hiroyuki Miyazawa (m) /
Kozue Takizawa (f)
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
- January 11 & 12: FAC #4 in
Alpensia Resort
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Hiroyuki Miyazawa
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Lee Chae-won
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Hiroyuki Miyazawa
- Women's 5 km Freestyle winner:
Lee Chae-won
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
2017–18 Scandinavian Cup (XC)
- December 15 – 17, 2017: SCAN #1 in
Vuokatti
- Men's 15 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
Daniel Stock
- Women's 10 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
Tiril Udnes Weng
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Sindre Bjørnestad Skar (m) /
Tiril Udnes Weng (f)
- Men's 15 km Classic winner:
Ristomatti Hakola
- Women's 10 km Classic winner:
Johanna Matintalo
- Men's 15 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
- January 5 – 7: SCAN #2 in
Piteå
- 1 km Sprint Classic winners:
Eirik Brandsdal (m) /
Lotta Udnes Weng (f)
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner:
Eirik Sverdrup Augdal
- Women's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Charlotte Kalla
- Men's 30 km Classic Must Start winner:
Mattis Stenshagen
- Women's 20 km Classic Must Start winner:
Johanna Matintalo
- 1 km Sprint Classic winners:
- February 23 – 25: SCAN #3 in
Trondheim
- Men's 1.5 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
Sindre Bjørnestad Skar
- Women's 1.3 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
Anne Kjersti Kalvå
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Paal Golberg
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Thea Krokan Murud
- Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Magne Haga
- Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Tiril Udnes Weng
- Men's 1.5 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
2017–18 Slavic Cup (XC)
- December 16 & 17, 2017: SC #1 (Tatra Cup) in
Štrbské pleso
- Men's 1.6 km Classic winner:
Peter Mlynár
- Women's 1.4 km Classic winner:
Kateryna Serdyuk
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Peter Mlynár
- Women's 7.5 km Freestyle winner:
Tetyana Antypenko
- Men's 1.6 km Classic winner:
- December 29 & 30, 2017: SC #2 (Memoriál 24 padlých hrdinov SNP) in
Štrbské pleso
- 1.6 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
Kamil Bury (m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
- Men's 15 km Classic winner:
Yury Astapenka
- Women's 10 km Classic winner:
Justyna Kowalczyk
- 1.6 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
- March 3 & 4: SC #3 in
Wisla
- 1.5 km Classic winners:
Mateusz Haratyk (m) /
Eliza Rucka (f)
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner:
Mateusz Haratyk
- Women's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Eliza Rucka
- 1.5 km Classic winners:
2018 FIS Balkan Cup (XC)
- January 13 & 14: BC #1 in
Ravna Gora
- Note: Here Sprint Freestyle competitions is cancelled.
- 2.5 Freestyle winners:
Edi Dadić (m) /
Antoniya Grigorova-Burgova (f)
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Yordan Chuchuganov
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Anja Žavbi Kunaver
- January 19 – 21: BC #2 in
Erzurum
- Men's 10 km Classic winners:
Edi Dadić (2 times)
- Women's 5 km Classic winners:
Antoniya Grigorova-Burgova (#1) /
Nansi Okoro (#2)
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Damir Rastić
- Women's 5 km Freestyle winner:
Sandra Schuetzova
- Men's 10 km Classic winners:
- February 3 & 4: BC #3 in
Naousa
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winners:
Florin Robert Dolhăscu (#1) /
Petrică Hogiu (#2)
- Women's 5 km Freestyle winners:
Maria Danou (#1) /
Nansi Okoro (#2)
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winners:
- February 28 & March 1: BC #4 in
Zlatibor
- 1.2 Freestyle winners:
Nikolay Viyachev (m) /
Nansi Okoro (f)
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Damir Rastić
- Women's 5 km Freestyle winner:
Nansi Okoro
- 1.2 Freestyle winners:
2017–18 Cross Country Continental Cup (XC)
- December 9 & 10, 2017: OPA #1 in
Les Tuffes
- Note: The second set of 15 km and 10 km cross country events here was cancelled, due to heavy snow.
- Men's 15 km winners:
Ivan Perrillat Boiteux (#1)
- Women's 10 km winners:
Kateřina Beroušková (#1)
- December 15 – 17, 2017: OPA #2 in
St. Ulrich/Pillersee Valley
- Men's 1.4 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
Simi Hamilton
- Women's 1.2 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
Sophie Caldwell
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Alexis Jeannerod
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Elena Soboleva
- Men's 15 km Freestyle Must Start winner:
Beda Klee
- Women's 10 km Freestyle Must Start winner:
Julia Belger
- Men's 1.4 km Sprint Freestyle winner:
- January 5 – 7: OPA #3 in
Campra
- Men's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winner:
Maicol Rastelli
- Women's 1.4 km Sprint Classic winner:
Anne Winkler
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner:
Clément Arnault
- Women's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Sara Pellegrini
- Skiathlon winners:
Sergio Rigoni (m) /
Sara Pellegrini (f)
- Men's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winner:
- February 16 – 18: OPA #4 in
Zwiesel
- Men's 1.8 km Sprint Classic winner:
Giacomo Gabrielli
- Women's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winner:
Laura Gimmler
- Men's 15 km Classic winner:
Valentin Chauvin
- Women's 10 km Classic winner:
Antonia Fraebel
- Men's 20 km Freestyle Must Start winner:
Robin Duvillard
- Women's 10 km Freestyle Must Start winner:
Antonia Fraebel
- Men's 1.8 km Sprint Classic winner:
- March 3 & 4: OPA #5 in
Cogne
- Men's 15 km Classic winner:
Adrien Backscheider
- Women's 10 km Classic winner:
Rosie Frankowski
- 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Adrien Backscheider (m) /
Rosie Frankowski
- Men's 15 km Classic winner:
2017 FIS Australia & New Zealand Cup (CC)
- July 22 & 23: ANZC #1 in
Perisher Valley
- 1 km Freestyle speed:
Phillip Bellingham (m) /
Barbara Jezeršek (f)
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Philippe Nicollier
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Katerina Paul
- 1 km Freestyle speed:
- August 19 & 20: ANZC #2 in
Falls Creek (part of Australian Cross Country Skiing Championships)
- 1 km Classic winners:
Phillip Bellingham (m) /
Barbara Jezeršek (f)
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner:
Phillip Bellingham
- Women's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Barbara Jezeršek
- 1 km Classic winners:
- September 7 – 9: ANZC #3 in
Snow Farm
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Benjamin Lustgarten
- Women's 5 km Freestyle winner:
Jessie Diggins
- 1.6 km Sprint Classic winners:
Ben Saxton (m) /
Sophie Caldwell (f)
- Men's 15 km Classic Mass Start winner:
Benjamin Lustgarten
- Women's 10 km Classic Mass Start winner:
Jessie Diggins
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner:
2017–18 USA Super Tour (XC)
- December 2 & 3, 2017: UST #1 in
Rendezvous Ski Trails
- 1,3 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
Nick Michaud (m) /
Annie Hart (f)
- Men's 15 km Classic winner:
Brian Gregg
- Women's 10 km Classic winner:
Hedda Bångman
- 1,3 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 26 – 28: UST #2 in
Craftsbury
- 1,3 Sprint Classic winners:
Forrest Mahlen (m) /
Kaitlynn Miller (f)
- Men's Individual 10 km Freestyle winner:
David Norris
- Women's Individual 5 km Freestyle winner:
Becca Rorabaugh
- 1,3 Sprint Classic winners:
- February 15 – 18: UST #3 in
Al Quaal Recreation Area
- 1,6 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
Kevin Bolger (m) /
Anikken Gjerde-Alnaes (f)
- Men's 20 km Freestyle Must Start winner:
David Norris
- Women's 15 km Freestyle Must Start winner:
Chelsea Holmes
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
David Norris
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Kaitlynn Miller
- 1,6 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
2017–18 North American Cup (XC)
- December 9 & 10: NAC #1 in
Vernon
- 1,3 km Classic winners:
Bob Thompson (m) /
Kaitlynn Miller (f)
- Men's 15 km Classic winner:
Ian Torchia
- Women's 10 km Classic winner:
Caitlin Patterson
- 1,3 km Classic winners:
- December 15 – 17: NAC #2 in
Rossland
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
Brian Gregg
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Caitlin Compton Gregg
- 1,3 km Freestyle winners:
Julien Locke (m) /
Zina Kocher (f)
- Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Brian Gregg
- Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Caitlin Compton Gregg
- Men's 10 km Classic winner:
- January 5 – 10: NAC #3 in
Mont-Sainte-Anne
- Sprint Classique winners:
Julien Locke (m) /
Dahria Beatty (f)
- Skiathlon winners:
Knute Johnsgaard (m) /
Cendrine Browne (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Jesse Cockney (m) /
Dahria Beatty (f)
- Men's Individual 15 km winner:
Ricardo Izquierdo-Bernier
- Women's Individual 10 km winner:
Cendrine Browne
- Sprint Classique winners:
- January 19 – 21: NAC #4 in
Red Deer, Alberta
- 1.2 km Sprint Freestryle winners:
Jesse Cockney (m) /
Olivia Bouffard-Nesbitt (f)
- Men's 15 km Classic Must Start winner:
Andy Shields
- Women's 10 km Classic Must Start winner:
Annika Hicks
- 1.2 km Sprint Freestryle winners:
- February 2 – 4: NAC #5 in
Nakkertok
- 1,4 km Classic winners:
Benjamin Saxton (m) /
Becca Rorabaugh (f)
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner:
John Hegman
- Women's 10 km Freestyle winner:
Rosie Frankowski
- Men's 15 km Classic Pursuit winner:
David Norris
- Women's 10 km Classic Pursuit winner:
Rosie Frankowski
- 1,4 km Classic winners:
2017 FIS Roller Skiing World Cup & 2017 FIS Roller Skiing Junior World Cup
- July 7 – 9: RSWC #1 & RSJWC #1 in
Oroslavje
- Men's 16 km Freestyle Must Start:
Emanuele Becchis
- Women's 12 km Freestyle Must Start:
Lisa Bolzan
- Men's Junior 16 km Freestyle Must Start:
Francesco Becchis
- Women's Junior 12 km Freestyle Must Start:
Anna-Maria Dietze
- 7 km Cross Uphill winners:
Robin Norum (m) /
Sandra Olsson (f)
- Junior 7 km Cross Uphill winners:
Hugo Jacobsson (m) /
Kristina Axelsson (f)
- 0.2 km Speed Freestyle winners:
Dmitriy Voronin (m) /
Anna Bolzan (f)
- Junior 0.2 km Speed Freestyle winners:
Nico Rieckhoff (m) /
Anna Bolzan (f)
- Men's 16 km Freestyle Must Start:
- August 3 – 6: RSWC #2 & RSJWC #2 in
Sollefteå (part of 2017 FIS Rollerski World Championships)
- Men's 22.5 km Freestyle winner:
Anders Svanebo
- Women's 18 km Freestyle winner:
Linn Sömskar
- Men's Junior 18 km Freestyle winner:
Alexander Grigoriev
- Women's Junior 13.5 km Freestyle winner:
Anna Zherebyateva
- 0.2 km Freestyle winners:
Emanuele Becchis (m) /
Olga Letucheva (f)
- Junior 0.2 km Freestyle winners:
Adam Persson (m) /
Alba Mortagna (f)
- Men's 20 km Freestyle Must Start:
Alexander Bolshunov
- Women's 16 km Freestyle Must Start:
Linn Sömskar
- Men's Junior 16 km Freestyle Must Start:
Leo Johansson
- Women's Junior 12 km Freestyle Must Start:
Anna Zherebyateva
- Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
Norway (Even Sæteren Hippe, Ragnar Bragvin Andresen) (m) /
Sweden (Maja Dahlqvist, Linn Sömskar) (f)
- Junior Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
Italy (Mattia Armellini, Francesco Becchis) (m) /
Norway Kristin Austgulen Fosnæs, Amalie Honerud Olsen)
- Men's 22.5 km Freestyle winner:
- August 11 – 13: RSWC #3 & RSJWC #3 in
Madona
- 0.2 km Speed winners:
Emanuele Becchis (m) /
Alena Procházková (f)
- Junior 0.2 km Speed winners:
Dmitriy Karakosov (m) /
Alba Mortagna (f)
- Men's 7.5 km Classic winner:
Robin Norum
- Men's Junior 7.5 km Classic winner:
Gabriel Strid
- Women's 5 km Classic winner:
Alena Procházková
- Women's Junior 5 km Classic winner:
Yuliia Krol
- Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Robin Norum
- Men's Junior 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Raimo Vigants
- Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Alena Procházková
- Women's Junior 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Yuliia Krol
- Overall Standing winners:
Robin Norum (m) /
Alena Procházková (f)
- Overall Standing Junior winners:
Raimo Vigants (m) /
Yuliia Krol (f)
- 0.2 km Speed winners:
- September 8 – 10: RSWC #4 & RSJWC #4 in
Trento/Monte Bondone
- 0.165 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
Emanuele Becchis (m) /
Alena Procházková (f)
- Junior 0.165 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
Raimo Vigants (m) /
Alba Mortagna (f)
- Men's 8.5 km Classic winner:
Irineu Esteve Altimiras
- Women's 4.7 km Classic winner:
Helene Söderlund
- Juniors 4.7 km Classic winners:
Luca Curti (m) /
Chiara Becchis (f)
- Men's 10.8 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Paul Constantin Pepene
- Women's 6.9 km Freestyle Pursuit winner:
Helene Söderlund
- Juniors 6.9 km Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Gabriel Strid (m) /
Hanna Abrahamsson (f)
- 0.165 km Sprint Freestyle winners:
Freestyle skiing
2018 Winter Olympics (Freestyle)
- February 9 – 23: Freestyle skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics[9]
- Men's Aerials winners:
Oleksandr Abramenko;
Jia Zongyang;
Ilya Burov
- Women's Aerials winners:
Hanna Huskova;
Zhang Xin;
Kong Fanyu
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
David Wise;
Alex Ferreira;
Nico Porteous
- Women's Halfpipe winners:
Cassie Sharpe;
Marie Martinod;
Brita Sigourney
- Men's Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury;
Matt Graham;
Daichi Hara
- Women's Moguls winners:
Perrine Laffont;
Justine Dufour-Lapointe;
Yuliya Galysheva
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Øystein Bråten;
Nick Goepper;
Alex Beaulieu-Marchand
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
Sarah Höfflin;
Mathilde Gremaud;
Isabel Atkin
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Brady Leman;
Marc Bischofberger;
Sergey Ridzik
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Kelsey Serwa;
Brittany Phelan;
Fanny Smith
- Men's Aerials winners:
World and Continental events
- March 2: 2018 Asian Cup (Halfpipe) in
Pyeongchang
- Halfpipe winners:
Lee Kang-bok (m) /
Jang Yu-jin (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- FIS Junior Freestyle Ski World Championships
2017–18 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup
- August 26, 2017 – March 25, 2018: 2017–18 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Schedule[10]
- Moguls and Aerials
- December 9, 2017: MAWC #1 in
Rukatunturi (Kuusamo)
- Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Britteny Cox (f)
- Moguls winners:
- December 16 & 17, 2017: MAWC #2 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden (Chongli District. Zhangjiakou)
- Men's aerials winner:
Jia Zongyang (2 times)
- Women's aerials winners:
Hanna Huskova (#1) /
Danielle Scott (#2)
- Team aerials winners:
China (Xu Mengtao, Qi Guangpu, & Jia Zongyang)
- Men's aerials winner:
- December 21 & 22, 2017: MAWC #3 in
Thaiwoo (Chongli District, Zhangjiakou)
- Men's moguls winner:
Mikaël Kingsbury (2 times)
- Women's moguls winners:
Jaelin Kauf (#1) /
Yuliya Galysheva (#2)
- Men's moguls winner:
- January 6: MAWC #4 in
Moscow
- Aerials winners:
Anton Kushnir (m) /
Kiley McKinnon (f)
- Aerials winners:
- January 6: MAWC #5 in
Calgary
- Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Britteny Cox (f)
- Moguls winners:
- January 10 – 12: MAWC #6 in
Deer Valley
- Men's moguls winner:
Mikaël Kingsbury (2 times)
- Women's moguls winners:
Perrine Laffont (#1) /
Jaelin Kauf (#2)
- Aerials winners:
Maxim Burov (m) /
Xu Mengtao (f)
- Men's moguls winner:
- January 19 & 20: MAWC #7 in
Lake Placid, New York
- Men's aerials winners:
Jia Zongyang (#1) /
Maxim Burov (#2)
- Women's aerials winners:
Lydia Lassila (#1) /
Xu Mengtao (#2)
- Men's aerials winners:
- January 20: MAWC #8 in
Mont Tremblant Resort
- Moguls winners:
Ikuma Horishima (m) /
Justine Dufour-Lapointe (f)
- Moguls winners:
- March 3 & 4: MAWC #9 in
Tazawako
- Moguls winners:
Ikuma Horishima (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
Ikuma Horishima (m) /
Tess Johnson (f)
- Moguls winners:
- March 10: MAWC #10 in
Airolo
- Event cancelled.
- March 18: MAWC #11 (final) in
Megève
- Dual moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Jaelin Kauf (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
- Half-pipe, Big air, and Slopestyle
- August 26 – September 1, 2017: HB&SWC #1 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
- Slopestyle winners:
James Woods (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
Alex Ferreira (m) /
Cassie Sharpe (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- November 3, 2017: HB&SWC #2 in
Copenhagen
- Event cancelled.
- November 18, 2017: HB&SWC #3 in
Milan
- Big Air winners:
Elias Ambühl (m) /
Coline Ballet Baz (f)
- Big Air winners:
- November 24 – 26, 2017: HB&SWC #4 in
Stubai Alps
- Slopestyle winners:
Øystein Bråten (m) /
Jennie-Lee Burmansson (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- December 1, 2017: HB&SWC #5 in
Mönchengladbach
- Big Air winners:
Christian Nummedal (m) /
Giulia Tanno (f)
- Big Air winners:
- December 6 & 8, 2017: HB&SWC #6 in
Copper Mountain
- Half-pipe winners:
David Wise (m) /
Marie Martinod (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
- December 20 & 22, 2017: HB&SWC #7 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden (Chongli District, Zhangjiakou)
- Half-pipe winners:
Thomas Krief (m) /
ZHANG Kexin (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
- December 21 – 23, 2017: HB&SWC #8 in
Font-Romeu
- Slopestyle winners:
Oscar Wester (m) /
Tess Ledeux (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 10 – 13: HB&SWC #9 in
Snowmass
- Half-pipe winners:
David Wise (m) /
Cassie Sharpe (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Andri Ragettli (m) /
Johanne Killi (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
- January 17 – 21: HB&SWC #10 in
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
- Half-pipe winners:
Kyle Smaine (m) /
Brita Sigourney (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Teal Harle (m) /
Tiril Sjåstad Christiansen (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
- March 2 & 3: HB&SWC #11 in
Silvaplana
- Slopestyle winners:
Alexander Hall (m) /
Tess Ledeux (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 14 & 16: HB&SWC #12 in
Seiser Alm
- Slopestyle winners:
Nicholas Goepper (m) /
Caroline Claire (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 21 & 22: HB&SWC #13 in
Tignes
- Half-pipe winners:
Noah Bowman (m) /
Cassie Sharpe (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
- March 22 & 24: HB&SWC #14 (final) in
Stoneham Mountain Resort
- Note: The slopestyle event here has been cancelled.
- Big Air winners:
Christian Nummedal (m) /
Dara Howell (f)
- Ski cross
- December 7 & 9, 2017: SCWC #1 in
Val Thorens
- Note: The second set of ski cross events here was cancelled, due to heavy snow.[11]
- Ski cross winners:
Christopher Del Bosco (m) /
Sandra Näslund (f)
- December 12, 2017: SCWC #2 in
Arosa
- Ski cross winners:
Viktor Andersson (m) /
Sandra Näslund (f)
- Ski cross winners:
- December 15, 2017: SCWC #3 in
Montafon
- Ski cross winners:
Sergey Ridzik (m) /
Fanny Smith (f)
- Ski cross winners:
- December 20 – 22, 2017: SCWC #4 in
Innichen
- Men's ski cross winner:
Marc Bischofberger (2 times)
- Women's ski cross winners:
Heidi Zacher (#1) /
Sandra Näslund (#2)
- Men's ski cross winner:
- January 12 – 14: SCWC #5 in
Idre
- Men's ski cross winners:
Alex Fiva (#1) /
Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (#2)
- Women's ski cross winner:
Sandra Näslund (2 times)
- Men's ski cross winners:
- January 19 & 20: SCWC #6 in
Nakiska
- Ski cross winners:
Paul Eckert (m) /
Sandra Näslund (f)
- Ski cross winners:
- March 2 – 4: SCWC #7 (final) in
Sunny Valley Ski Resort (Miass)
- Men's ski cross winners:
Jonas Lenherr (#1) /
Kevin Drury (#2)
- Women's ski cross winners:
Fanny Smith (#1) /
Sandra Näslund (#2)
- Men's ski cross winners:
- March 17: SCWC #8 in
Megève
- Event cancelled.
2017–18 European Cup (FS)
- November 26, 2017: ECFS #1 in
St. Leonhard im Pitztal
- Ski Cross winners:
Jonas Lenherr (m) /
Georgia Simmerling (f)
- Ski Cross winners:
- December 1 & 2, 2017: ECFS #2 in
Rukatunturi (Super Continental Cup)
- Men's Aerials winners:
Oleksandr Abramenko (2 times)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Laura Peel (#1) /
Danielle Scott (#2)
- Men's Aerials winners:
- December 9 – 16, 2017: ECFS #3 in
Kaprun
- Halfpipe winners:
Lukas Müllauer (m) /
Elisabeth Gram (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Petter Ulsletten (m) /
Sandra Moestue Eie (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- December 21 – 23, 2017: ECFS #4 in
Val Thorens
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Cornel Renn (#1) /
Ryan Regez (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Zoé Cheli (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- January 17 – 20: ECFS #4 in
Megève
- Men's Moguls winners:
Oskar Elofsson (2 times)
- Women's Moguls winners:
Clara Månsson (2 times)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Oskar Elofsson (m) /
Ksenia Kuznetsova (f)
- Men's Moguls winners:
- January 19 & 20: ECFS #5 in
Idre Fjäll
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Franz Pietzko (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Alexandra Edebo (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- January 25 & 26: ECFS #6 in
Lenk im Simmental
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Ryan Regez (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Alexandra Edebo (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- January 26 – 28: ECFS #7 in
St Anton am Arlberg
- Event was cancelled.
- January 31 – February 1: ECFS #8 in
Krasnoe Ozero
- Moguls winners:
Andrey Uglovski (m) /
Anastasiia Smirnova (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Oskar Elofsson (m) /
Anastasiia Smirnova (f)
- Moguls winners:
- January 31 – February 3: ECFS #9 in
St. Francois
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (#1) /
Morgan Guipponi Barfety (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Alizée Baron (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- February 4 & 5: ECFS #10 in
Jyväskylä
- Moguls winners:
Topi Kanninen (m) /
Ksenia Kuznetsova (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Oskar Elofsson (m) /
Frida Lundblad (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 6 & 7: ECFS #11 in
Méribel
- Slopestyle winners:
Javier Lliso (m) /
Tora Johansen (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- February 10 & 11: ECFS #12 in
Åre
- Moguls winners:
Topi Kanninen (m) /
Clara Månsson (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Loke Nilsson (m) /
Ksenia Kuznetsova (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 16 – 18: ECFS #13 in
Minsk
- Men's Aerials winners:
Dzmitry Mazurkevich (#1) /
Pavel Dzik (#2) /
Kirill Samorodov (#3)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Carol Bouvard (#1 & #3) /
Emma Weiß (#2)
- Team Aerials winners:
Belarus 2 (Denis Osipau, Artsiom Bashlakou, Yana Yarmashevich)
- Men's Aerials winners:
- February 23 – 25: ECFS #14 in
Davos
- Big Air winners:
Kim Gubser (m) /
Sophia Insam (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Mario Grob (m) /
Isabelle Hanssen (f)
- Big Air winners:
- February 24 & 25: ECFS #15 in
Grasgehren
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Ryan Regez (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Alexandra Edebo (#1) /
Abby McEwen (#2)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- March 1 – 3: ECFS #16 in
Mittenwald
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Ryan Regez (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Zoe Chore (#1) /
Alexandra Edebo (#2)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- March 2 & 3: ECFS #17 in
Götschen
- Big Air winners:
Hannes Rudigier (m) /
Sophia Insam (f)
- Big Air winners:
- March 3 & 4: ECFS #18 in
Krispl
- Men's Moguls winners:
Oskar Elofsson (#1) /
Nikita Novitckii (#2)
- Women's Moguls winners:
Frida Lundblad (2 times)
- Men's Moguls winners:
2017–18 North American Cup (FS)
- December 15 & 16, 2017: NAC #1 in
Copper Mountain
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
Cassidy Jarrell (#1) /
Hunter Hess (#2)
- Women's Halfpipe winners:
Abigale Hansen (2 times)
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
- December 16 & 17, 2017: NAC #2 in
Utah Olympic Park
- Men's Aerials winners:
Justin Schoenefeld (#1) /
Zachary Surdell (#2)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Karena Elliott (#1) /
Madison Varmette (#2)
- Men's Aerials winners:
- January 21 – 23: NAC #3 in
Nakiska
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Reece Howden (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Reina Umehara (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- January 27 & 28: NAC #4 in
Val Saint-Côme
- Moguls winners:
Kerrian Chunlaud (m) /
Berkley Brown (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Dylan Walczyk (m) /
Avital Shimko (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 3 & 4: NAC #5 in
Killington Ski Resort
- Moguls winners:
Dylan Walczyk (m) /
Valerie Gilbert (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Dylan Walczyk (m) /
Avital Shimko (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 9 – 11: NAC #6 in
Calgary
- Slopestyle winners:
Philippe Langevin (m) /
Megan Oldham (f)
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
Birk Irving (2 times)
- Women's Halfpipe winners:
Abigale Hansen (#1) /
Carly Margulies (#2)
- Slopestyle winners:
- February 12 – 15: NAC #7 in
Sunday River
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Reece Howden (#1) /
Mathieu Leduc (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Tiana Gairns (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- February 17 & 18: NAC #8 in
Lake Placid
- Event was cancelled.
- February 17 – 19: NAC #9 in
Calabogie Peaks
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Brant Crossan (#1) /
Zach Belczyk (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Zoe Chore (#1) /
Abby McEwen (#2)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- February 23 & 24: NAC #10 in
Le Relais, QC
- Men's Aerials winners:
Justin Schoenefeld (2 times)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Kaila Kuhn (2 times)
- Men's Aerials winners:
- February 22 – 24: NAC #11 in
Aspen / Buttermilk
- Big Air winners:
Noah Morrison (m) /
Rell Harwood (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
William Borm (m) /
Marin Hamill (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Birk Irving (m) /
Abigale Hansen (f)
- Big Air winners:
- February 24 & 25: NAC #12 in
Calgary, AB
- Moguls winners:
Laurent Dumais (m) /
Avital Shimko (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Laurent Dumais (m) /
Elizabeth O'Connell (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 27 – March 4: NAC #13 in
Park City
- Moguls winners:
Hunter Bailey (m) /
Hannah Soar (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Jesse Andringa (m) /
Berkley Brown (f)
- Moguls winners:
- March 1 & 2: NAC #14 in
Utah Olympic Park
- Men's Aerials winners:
Jasper Holcomb (#1) /
Harrison Smith (#2)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Madison Varmette (#1) /
Kaila Kuhn (#2)
- Men's Aerials winners:
2017 South American Cup (FS)
- August 11 & 12: SAC #1 in
La Parva #1
- Slopestyle #1 winners:
Alex Hall (m) /
Melanie Kraizel (f)
- Slopestyle #2 winners:
Nathan Miceli (m) /
Dominique Ohaco (f)
- Slopestyle #1 winners:
- August 24 – 26: SAC #2 in
La Parva #2
- This event is cancelled.
- September 17 & 18: SAC #3 in
Cerro Catedral
- Big Air #1 winners:
Nahuel Medrano (m) /
Josefina Vitiello (f)
- Big Air #2 winners:
Ivan Kuray (m) /
Maria Cabanillas (f)
- Big Air #1 winners:
2017 Australia & New Zealand Cup (FS)
- July 31 – August 4: ANCFS #1 in
Mount Buller #1
- Ski Cross #1 winners:
Doug Crawford (m) /
Sami Kennedy-Sim (f)
- Ski Cross #2 winners:
Doug Crawford (m) /
Sami Kennedy-Sim (f)
- Ski Cross #1 winners:
- August 15 – 17: ANCFS #2 in
Cardrona (part of FIS Continental Cup)
- Halfpipe winners:
Nico Porteous (m) /
Sabrina Cakmakli (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Birk Ruud (m) /
Mee-hyun Lee (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- August 24 – 27: ANCFS #3 in
Mount Hotham
- Ski Cross #1 winners:
Jamie Prebble (m) /
Sami Kennedy-Sim (f)
- Ski Cross #2 winners:
Tyler Wallasch (m) /
Sami Kennedy-Sim (f)
- Ski Cross #1 winners:
- August 29 – 30: ANCFS #4 in
Perisher Ski Resort
- Moguls #1 winners:
Matthew Graham (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
- Moguls #2 winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Britteny Cox (f)
- Moguls #1 winners:
- September 2: ANCFS #5 in
Mount Buller #2
- Dual Moguls winners:
Matt Graham (m) /
Nicole Parks (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Nordic combined
2018 Winter Olympics (NC)
- February 14, 20, & 22: Nordic combined at the 2018 Winter Olympics[12]
- Men's individual large hill/10 km winners:
Johannes Rydzek;
Fabian Rießle;
Eric Frenzel
- Men's individual normal hill/10 km winners:
Eric Frenzel;
Akito Watabe;
Lukas Klapfer
- Men's team large hill/4 x 5 km winners:
Germany;
Norway;
Austria
- Men's individual large hill/10 km winners:
2018 FIS Junior World Ski Championships
- January 30 – February 3: 2018 FIS Junior World Ski Championships (NC) in
Kandersteg-Goms, Valais
- Men's individual winners:
Ondrej Pazout (#1) /
Vid Vrhovnik (#2)
- Men's team winners:
Austria (Johannes Lamparter, Florian Dagn, Dominik Terzer, & Mika Vermeulen)
- Men's individual winners:
2017–18 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup
- November 24 – 26, 2017: NCWC #1 in
Rukatunturi (Kuusamo)
- Men's individual winners:
Espen Andersen (#1) /
Akito Watabe (#2) /
Johannes Rydzek (#3)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 2 & 3, 2017: NCWC #2 in
Lillehammer
- Men's individual winner:
Espen Andersen
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Jan Schmid, Espen Andersen, Jarl Magnus Riiber, & Jørgen Graabak)
- Men's individual winner:
- December 16 & 17, 2017: NCWC #3 in
Ramsau am Dachstein
- Men's individual winners:
Eric Frenzel (#1) /
Fabian Rießle (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 6 & 7: NCWC #4 in
Otepää
- Event cancelled.
- January 12 – 14: NCWC #5 in
Fiemme Valley
- Men's individual winners:
Jørgen Graabak (#1) /
Jan Schmid (#2)
- Men's team winners:
Germany (Eric Frenzel & Vinzenz Geiger)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 20 & 21: NCWC #6 in
Chaux-Neuve
- Men's individual winner:
Jan Schmid
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Jan Schmid, Espen Andersen, Jarl Magnus Riiber, & Jørgen Graabak)
- Men's individual winner:
- January 26 – 28: NCWC #7 in
Seefeld in Tirol
- Men's individual winner:
Akito Watabe (3 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 3 & 4: NCWC #8 in
Hakuba
- Men's individual winners:
Akito Watabe (#1) /
Jan Schmid (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- March 3 & 4: NCWC #9 in
Lahti
- Men's individual winner:
Johannes Rydzek
- Men's team winners:
Austria (Wilhelm Denifl & Bernhard Gruber)
- Men's individual winner:
- March 10: NCWC #10 in
Oslo
- Men's individual winner:
Akito Watabe
- Men's individual winner:
- March 13 & 14: NCWC #11 in
Trondheim
- Men's individual winners:
Eric Frenzel (#1) /
Fabian Rießle (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- March 17 & 18: NCWC #12 in
Klingenthal
- Men's individual winner:
Fabian Rießle (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- March 24 & 25: NCWC #13 (final) in
Schonach im Schwarzwald
- Men's individual winner:
Akito Watabe (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
2017–18 Continental Cup (NK)
- December 15 – 27, 2017: CCNK #1 in
Steamboat Springs, Colorado
- Men's winners:
Mikko Kokslien (3 times)
- Men's winners:
- January 5 – 7: CCNK #2 in
Klingenthal
- Men's winners:
Antoine Gérard (#1) /
Franz-Josef Rehrl (#2) /
François Braud (#3)
- Men's winners:
- January 6 & 7: CCNK #3 in
Otepää
- This event is cancelled.
- January 12 – 14: CCNK #4 in
Rukatunturi
- Men's winners:
Bernhard Flaschberger (#1) /
Sindre Ure Søtvik (#2) /
Thomas Jöbstl (#3)
- Men's winners:
- January 20 & 21: CCNK #5 in
Rena
- Men's winners:
Thomas Jöbstl (#1) /
Dominik Terzer (#2)
- Women's winners:
Stefaniya Nadymova (#1) /
Ayane Miyazaki (#2)
- Men's winners:
- February 3 & 4: CCNK #6 in
Planica
- Men's winners:
Bryan Fletcher (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- February 9 – 11: CCNK #7 in
Eisenerz
- Men's winners:
Mika Vermeulen (#1) /
Mikko Kokslien (#2)
- Men's winners:
- March 9 – 11: CCNK #8 in
Nizhny Tagil
- Men's winners:
Lukas Runggaldier (#1) /
Laurent Muhlethaler (#2)
- Women's winners:
Stefaniya Nadymova (2 times)
- Men's Mass Start winner:
Bernhard Flaschberger
- Men's winners:
2017 Grand Prix (NK)
- August 19 & 20, 2017: GPNK #1 in
Oberwiesenthal
- Men's winner:
Mario Seidl
- Team winners:
Czech Republic I (Tomáš Portyk, Miroslav Dvořák)
- Men's winner:
- August 23, 2017: GPNK #2 in
Tschagguns
- Men's winner:
Fabian Rießle
- Men's winner:
- August 25 & 26, 2017: GPNK #3 in
Oberstdorf
- Men's winners:
Eric Frenzel (#1) /
Mario Seidl (#2)
- Men's winners:
- September 30 & October 1, 2017: GPNK #4 in
Planica
- Men's winners:
Magnus Moan (2 times)
- Men's winners:
2017–18 OPA Alpen Cup (NK)
- Summer
- August 7, 2017: ACNK #1 in
Klingenthal
- Women's winner:
Lena Prinoth
- Women's winner:
- August 11, 2017: ACNK #2 in
Bischofsgrün
- Women's winner:
Jenny Nowak
- Women's winner:
- September 9 & 10, 2017: ANCK #3 in
Kandersteg
- Men's winners:
Florian Dagn (#1) /
Lilian Vaxelaire (#2)
- Men's winners:
- September 23, 2017: ANCK #4 in
Predazzo
- Women's winner:
Lena Prinoth
- Women's winner:
- September 23 & 24, 2017: ANCK #5 in
Winterberg
- Men's winners:
Justin Moczarski (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- Winter
- December 16 & 17, 2017: ANCK #6 in
Seefeld in Tirol
- Men's winners:
Ondřej Pažout (#1) /
Edgar Vallet (#2)
- Women's winners:
Jenny Nowak (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- January 13 & 14: ANCK #7 in
Schonach
- Men's winners:
Mika Vermeulen (2 times)
- Women's winners:
Jenny Nowak (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- February 17 & 18: ANCK #8 in
Baiersbronn
- Men's winners:
Johannes Lamparter (#1) /
Florian Dagn (#2)
- Women's winners:
Annika Sieff (#1) /
Jenny Nowak (#2)
- Men's winners:
- February 24 & 25: ANCK #9 in
Planica
- March 10 & 11: ANCK #10 in
Chaux-Neuve
- Men's winners:
Johannes Lamparter (2 times)
- Women's winners:
Annika Sieff (2 times)
- Men's winners:
Ski jumping
2018 Winter Olympics (SJ)
- February 10 – 19: Ski jumping at the 2018 Winter Olympics[13]
- Men's Individual Normal Hill winners:
Andreas Wellinger;
Johann André Forfang;
Robert Johansson
- Men's Individual Large Hill winners:
Kamil Stoch;
Andreas Wellinger;
Robert Johansson
- Men's Team Large Hill winners:
Norway;
Germany;
Poland
- Women's Individual Normal Hill winners:
Maren Lundby;
Katharina Althaus;
Sara Takanashi
- Men's Individual Normal Hill winners:
World ski jumping championships
- January 19 – 21: FIS Ski Flying World Championships 2018 in
Oberstdorf
- Men's individual winner:
Daniel-André Tande
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Robert Johansson, Andreas Stjernen, Johann André Forfang, & Daniel-André Tande)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 1 – 4: 2018 FIS Junior World Ski Championships (SJ) in
Kandersteg-Goms, Valais
- Individual winners:
Marius Lindvik (m) /
Nika Kriznar (f)
- Men's team winners:
Germany (Philipp Raimund, Justin Lisso, Cedrik Weigel, & Constantin Schmid)
- Women's team winners:
Slovenia (Jerneja Brecl, Nika Kriznar, Katra Komar, & Ema Klinec)
- Mixed team winners:
Norway (Silje Opseth, Fredrik Villumstad, Anna Odine Strøm, & Marius Lindvik)
- Individual winners:
2017–18 Four Hills Tournament
- December 29 & 30, 2017: FHT #1 in
Oberstdorf
- Winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Winner:
- December 31, 2017 & January 1, 2018: FHT #2 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
- Winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Winner:
- January 3 & 4: FHT #3 in
Innsbruck
- Winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Winner:
- January 5 & 6: FHT #4 (final) in
Bischofshofen
- Winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Winner:
Raw Air 2018
- March 9 – 11: RA #1 in
Oslo (SJWC #18)
- Individual winners:
Daniel-André Tande (m) /
Maren Lundby (f)
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Daniel-André Tande, Andreas Stjernen, Johann André Forfang, & Robert Johansson)
- Individual winners:
- March 12 & 13: RA #2 in
Lillehammer (SJWC #19)
- Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Men's individual winner:
- March 14 & 15: RA #3 in
Trondheim (SJWC #20)
- Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Men's individual winner:
- March 16 – 18: RA #4 (final) in
Vikersund (SJWC #21)
- Men's individual winner:
Robert Johansson
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Daniel-André Tande, Johann André Forfang, Andreas Stjernen, & Robert Johansson)
- Men's individual winner:
2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
- November 17 – 19, 2017: SJWC #1 in
Wisła
- Men's individual winner:
Junshirō Kobayashi
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Johann André Forfang, Anders Fannemel, Daniel-André Tande, & Robert Johansson)
- Men's individual winner:
- November 24 – 26, 2017: SJWC #2 in
Ruka (Kuusamo)
- Men's individual winner:
Jernej Damjan
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Robert Johansson, Anders Fannemel, Daniel-André Tande, & Johann André Forfang)
- Men's individual winner:
- November 30 – December 3, 2017: SJWC #3 in
Lillehammer
- Women's individual winners:
Maren Lundby (#1) /
Katharina Althaus (#2; 2 times)
- Women's individual winners:
- December 1 – 3, 2017: SJWC #4 in
Nizhny Tagil
- Men's individual winners:
Richard Freitag (#1) /
Andreas Wellinger (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 9 & 10, 2017: SJWC #5 in
Titisee-Neustadt
- Men's individual winner:
Richard Freitag
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Robert Johansson, Daniel-André Tande, Anders Fannemel, & Johann André Forfang)
- Men's individual winner:
- December 15 – 17, 2017: SJWC #6 in
Engelberg
- Men's individual winners:
Anders Fannemel (#1) /
Richard Freitag (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 15 – 17, 2017: SJWC #7 in
Hinterzarten
- Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby
- Women's team winners:
Japan (Yuki Ito, Kaori Iwabuchi, Yūka Setō, & Sara Takanashi)
- Women's individual winner:
- January 5 – 7: SJWC #8 in
Râșnov
- Event cancelled (moved to March 2 – 4).
- January 12 – 14: SJWC #9 in
Sapporo
- Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- January 12 – 14: SJWC #10 in
Tauplitz-Bad Mitterndorf
- Note: The second men's individual event was cancelled.
- Men's individual winner:
Andreas Stjernen
- January 18 – 21: SJWC #11 in
Zaō, Miyagi
- Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby (2 times)
- Women's team winners:
Japan (Kaori Iwabuchi, Yūka Setō, Yuki Ito, & Sara Takanashi)
- Women's individual winner:
- January 26 – 28: SJWC #12 in
Ljubno ob Savinji
- Women's individual winners:
Maren Lundby (#1) /
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
- January 26 – 28: SJWC #13 in
Zakopane
- Men's individual winner:
Anže Semenič
- Men's team winners:
Poland (Maciej Kot, Stefan Hula Jr., Dawid Kubacki, & Kamil Stoch)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 2 – 4: SJWC #14 in
Hinzenbach
- Event cancelled.
- February 2 – 4: SJWC #15 in
Willingen
- Men's individual winners:
Daniel-André Tande (#1) /
Johann André Forfang (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- March 2 – 4: SJWC #16 in
Lahti
- Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Men's team winners:
Germany (Karl Geiger, Markus Eisenbichler, Richard Freitag, & Andreas Wellinger)
- Men's individual winner:
- March 2 – 4: SJWC #17 in
Râșnov
- Women's individual winners:
Katharina Althaus (#1) /
Maren Lundby (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
- March 22 – 25: SJWC #22 in
Planica
- Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch (2 times)
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Daniel-André Tande, Andreas Stjernen, Robert Johansson, & Johann André Forfang)
- Men's individual winner:
- March 23 – 25: SJWC #23 (final) in
Oberstdorf
- Women's individual winner:
Sara Takanashi (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup
- Summer
- July 7 & 8, 2017: #1 in
Kranj
- Men's winners:
Klemens Murańka (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- August 18, 2017: #2 in
Szczyrk
- Men's winner:
Aleksander Zniszczoł
- Men's winner:
- August 18 & 19, 2017: #3 in
Oberwiesenthal
- Women's winners:
Ramona Straub (#1) /
Kamila Karpiel (#2)
- Women's winners:
- August 18 & 19: #4
Frenštát pod Radhoštěm
- Women's winners:
Yuki Ito (#1) /
Sara Takanashi (#2)
- Women's winners:
- August 19, 2017: #5 in
Wisła
- Men's winner:
Miran Zupančič
- Men's winner:
- August 20, 2017: #6 in
Frenštát pod Radhoštěm (Men's only)
- Men's winner:
Maximilian Steiner
- Men's winner:
- September 9 & 10, 2017: #7 in
Stams
- Men's winners:
Stefan Kraft (#1) /
Daniel Huber (#2)
- Men's winners:
- September 16 & 17, 2017: #8 in
Trondheim
- Men's winners:
Pius Paschke (#1) /
Timi Zajc (#2)
- Women's winners:
Juliane Seyfarth (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- September 23 & 24, 2017: #9 in
Râșnov
- Men's winners:
Pius Paschke (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- September 30 & October 1, 2017: #10 in
Klingenthal
- Men's winners:
Joachim Hauer (#1) /
Tilen Bartol (#2)
- Men's winners:
- Winter
- December 9 & 10, 2017: CC#11 in
Whistler
- Men's winners:
Tomasz Pilch (#1) /
Andreas Wank (#2)
- Men's winners:
- December 15 & 16, 2017: CC #12 in
Notodden
- Women's winners:
Lidiia Iakovleva (#1) /
Aleksandra Barantceva (#2)
- Women's winners:
- December 16 & 17, 2017: CC #13 in
Rukatunturi
- Men's winners:
Tomasz Pilch (#1) /
Jurij Tepeš (#2)
- Men's winners:
- December 27 & 28, 2017: CC #14 in
Engelberg
- Men's winners:
Jonathan Learoyd (#1) /
Ulrich Wohlgenannt (#2)
- Men's winners:
- January 6 & 7: CC #15 in
Titisee-Neustadt
- Men's winners:
Marius Lindvik (#1) /
David Siegel (#2)
- Men's winners:
- January 10 & 11: CC #16 in
Bischofshofen
- Men's winners:
Tom Hilde (#1) /
David Siegel (#2)
- Men's winners:
- January 20: CC #17 in
Erzurum
- Men's winners:
David Siegel (#1) /
Anže Lanišek (#2)
- Men's winners:
- January 20 & 21: CC #18 in
Planica #1
- Women's winners:
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (2 times)
- Women's winners:
- January 26 & 29: CC #19 in
Sapporo
- Men's winners:
Robert Kranjec (2 times) /
Daniel Huber (#2)
- Men's winners:
- February 3 & 4: CC #19 in
Planica #2
- Men's winners:
Anže Lanišek (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- February 10 & 11: CC #20 in
Iron Mountain, Michigan
- Men's winners:
Marius Lindvik (#1) /
Halvor Egner Granerud (#2)
- Men's winners:
2017 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix
- July 13 – 15: #1 in
Wisła
- Men's winner:
Dawid Kubacki
- Teams winners:
Poland (Piotr Żyła, Kamil Stoch, Dawid Kubacki, Maciej Kot)
- Men's winner:
- July 28 & 29: #2 in
Hinterzarten
- Men's winner:
Dawid Kubacki
- Men's winner:
- August 10 – 12: #3 in
Courchevel
- Winners:
Dawid Kubacki (m) /
Katharina Althaus (f)
- Winners:
- August 25 – 27: #4 in
Hakuba
- Men's winners:
Junshirō Kobayashi (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- September 8 – 10: #5 in
Chaykovsky
- Men's winners:
Anže Lanišek (2 times)
- Women's winners:
Sara Takanashi (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- September 30 – October 1: #6 in
Hinzenbach
- Men's winners:
Dawid Kubacki
- Men's winners:
- October 2 & 3: #7 in
Klingenthal
- Men's winners:
Dawid Kubacki
- Men's winners:
2017–18 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup
- Summer
- August 6 & 7, 2017: OPA #1 in
Klingenthal
- Women's winners:
Julia Mühlbacher (#1) /
Alexandra Seifert (#2)
- Women's winners:
- August 9 & 10, 2017: OPA #2 in
Pöhla
- Women's winners:
Lisa Eder (2 times)
- Women's winners:
- August 11 & 12, 2017: OPA #3 in
Bischofsgrün (Women's only)
- Women's winners:
Katra Komar (#1) /
Lisa Eder (#2)
- Women's winners:
- September 9 & 10, 2017: OPA #4 in
Kandersteg
- Men's winners:
Aljaž Osterc (#1) /
Sandro Hauswirth (#2)
- Men's winners:
- September 23 & 24, 2017: OPA #5 in
Predazzo
- Men's winners:
Justin Lisso (2 times)
- Women's winners:
Océane Paillard (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- Winter
- December 15 – 17, 2017: OPA #6 in
Seefeld in Tirol
- Note: Second women's event here is cancelled.
- Men's winners:
Clemens Leitner (#1) /
Sandro Hauswirth (#2)
- Women's winners:
Jenny Nowak (#1)
- January 13 & 14: OPA #7 in
Hinterzarten
- Men's winners:
Jan Hoerl (2 times)
- Women's winners:
Jerneja Brecl (2 times)
- Men's winners:
2017–18 FIS Cup
- Summer
- July 1 & 2, 2017: FC #1 in
Villach
- Men's winners:
Timi Zajc (#1) /
Lukas Wagner (#2)
- Women's winners:
Nika Križnar (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- August 12 & 13, 2017: FC #2 in
Kuopio
- Men's winners:
Timi Zajc (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- September 16 & 17, 2017: FC #3 in
Kandersteg
- Men's winners:
Timi Zajc (#1) /
Masamitsu Itō (#2)
- Women's winners:
Léa Lemare (#1) /
Nika Križnar (#2)
- Men's winners:
- September 21 & 22, 2017: FC #4 in
Râșnov
- Men's winners:
Markus Rupitsch (#1) /
Dominik Mayländer (#2)
- Women's winners:
Daniela Haralambie (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- Winter
- December 7 & 8, 2017: FC #5 in
Whistler
- Men's winners:
Elias Tollinger (#1) /
Nejc Dežman (#2)
- Women's winners:
Abigail Strate (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- December 15 & 16, 2017: FC #6 in
Notodden
- Men's winners:
Sondre Ringen (#1) /
Ulrich Wohlgenannt (#2)
- Men's winners:
- January 13 & 14: FC #7 in
Zakopane
- Men's winners:
Maximilian Steiner (#1) /
Stefan Huber (#2)
- Men's winners:
- January 20 & 21: FC #8 in
Planica
- Men's winners:
Markus Schiffner (#1) /
Dominik Mayländer (#2)
- Men's winners:
- February 10 & 11: FC #9 in
Breitenberg/Rastbüchl
- Men's winners:
Tomasz Pilch (2 times)
- Women's winners:
Agnes Reisch (2 times)
- Men's winners:
Snowboarding
2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics (SB)
- February 10 – 24: Snowboarding at the 2018 Winter Olympics[14]
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Nevin Galmarini;
Lee Sang-ho;
Žan Košir
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Ester Ledecká;
Selina Jörg;
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
Shaun White;
Ayumu Hirano;
Scott James
- Women's Halfpipe winners:
Chloe Kim;
Liu Jiayu;
Arielle Gold
- Men's Big Air winners:
Sébastien Toutant;
Kyle Mack;
Billy Morgan
- Women's Big Air winners:
Anna Gasser;
Jamie Anderson;
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Redmond Gerard;
Maxence Parrot;
Mark McMorris
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
Jamie Anderson;
Laurie Blouin;
Enni Rukajärvi
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Pierre Vaultier;
Jarryd Hughes;
Regino Hernández
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Michela Moioli;
Julia Pereira de Sousa Mabileau;
Eva Samková
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- March 12 & 16: Snowboarding at the 2018 Winter Paralympics[15]
- Men's Banked Slalom winners:
- SB-UL:
Mike Minor;
Patrick Mayrhofer;
Simon Patmore
- SB-LL1:
Noah Elliott;
Mike Schultz;
Bruno Bošnjak
- SB-LL2:
Gurimu Narita;
Evan Strong;
Matti Suur-Hamari
- SB-UL:
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- SB-UL:
Simon Patmore;
Manuel Pozzerle;
Mike Minor
- SB-LL1:
Mike Schultz;
Chris Vos;
Noah Elliott
- SB-LL2:
Matti Suur-Hamari;
Keith Gabel;
Gurimu Narita
- SB-UL:
- Women's Banked Slalom winners:
- SB-LL1:
Brenna Huckaby;
Cécile Hernandez;
Amy Purdy
- SB-LL2:
Bibian Mentel;
Brittani Coury;
Lisa Bunschoten
- SB-LL1:
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
- SB-LL1:
Brenna Huckaby;
Amy Purdy;
Cécile Hernandez
- SB-LL2:
Bibian Mentel;
Lisa Bunschoten;
Astrid Fina
- SB-LL1:
- Men's Banked Slalom winners:
International events
- March 2: Asian Cup (Snowboard) in
Pyeongchang
- Halfpipe winners:
Lee Kwang-ki (m) /
Sunoo Kwon (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Alpine snowboarding
- December 14, 2017: ASWC #1 in
Carezza
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Andrey Sobolev (m) /
Ester Ledecká (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- December 15 & 16, 2017: ASWC #2 in
Cortina d'Ampezzo
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Alexander Payer (m) /
Ester Ledecká (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Roland Fischnaller (m) /
Sabine Schöffmann (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 5: ASWC #3 in
Lackenhof
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Nevin Galmarini (m) /
Ester Ledecká (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 12: ASWC #4 in
Bad Gastein
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
- January 20 & 21: ASWC #5 in
Rogla Ski Resort
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Andreas Prommegger (#1) /
Benjamin Karl (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Ester Ledecká (#1) /
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 26 & 28: ASWC #6 in
Bansko
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Jasey-Jay Anderson (#1) /
Nevin Galmarini (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Ester Ledecká (#1) /
Julia Dujmovits (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- March 3: ASWC #7 in
Kayseri
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Stefan Baumeister (m) /
Milena Bykova (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- March 10: ASWC #8 in
Scuol
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Tim Mastnak (m) /
Ester Ledecká (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- March 17: ASWC #9 (final) in
Winterberg
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Roland Fischnaller (m) /
Selina Jörg (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Snowboard cross
- September 8 – 10, 2017: SBXWC #1 in
Cerro Catedral
- Men's Snowboard cross winner:
Alex Pullin (2 times)
- Women's Snowboard cross winners:
Chloé Trespeuch (#1) /
Lindsey Jacobellis (#2)
- Men's Snowboard cross winner:
- December 12 & 13, 2017: SBXWC #2 in
Val Thorens
- Snowboard cross winners:
Paul Berg (m) /
Lindsey Jacobellis (f)
- Snowboard cross winners:
- December 15 – 17, 2017: SBXWC #3 in
Montafon
- Men's Snowboard cross winner:
Jarryd Hughes
- Women's Snowboard cross winner:
Michela Moioli
- Team winners:
Spain (Regino Hernández & Lucas Eguibar) (m) /
France (Chloé Trespeuch & Nelly Moenne Loccoz) (f)
- Men's Snowboard cross winner:
- December 21 & 22, 2017: SBXWC #4 in
Breuil-Cervinia
- Snowboard cross winners:
Omar Visintin (m) /
Michela Moioli (f)
- Snowboard cross winners:
- January 20 & 21: SBXWC #5 in
Erzurum
- Snowboard cross winners:
Omar Visintin (m) /
Eva Samková (f)
- Team winners:
Italy (Emanuel Perathoner & Omar Visintin) (m) /
France (Nelly Moenne Loccoz & Chloé Trespeuch) (f)
- Snowboard cross winners:
- January 27: SBXWC #6 in
Bansko
- Snowboard cross winners:
Pierre Vaultier (m) /
Charlotte Bankes (f)
- Snowboard cross winners:
- February 2 – 4: SBXWC #7 in
Feldberg
- Men's Snowboard cross winners:
Julian Lueftner (#1) /
Pierre Vaultier (#2)
- Women's Snowboard cross winner:
Michela Moioli (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard cross winners:
- March 2 & 3: SBXWC #8 in
La Molina
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Alessandro Hämmerle (m) /
Eva Samková (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
- March 10 & 11: SBXWC #9 in
Moscow
- March 16 – 18: SBXWC #10 (final) in
Veysonnaz
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Nate Holland (m) /
Michela Moioli (f)
- Team winners:
Germany (Paul Berg & Konstantin Schad) (m) /
France (Nelly Moenne Loccoz & Chloé Trespeuch) (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Freestyle snowboarding
- September 3 – 9, 2017: FSWC #1 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
- Slopestyle winners:
Marcus Kleveland (m) /
Jamie Anderson (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
Yuto Totsuka (m) /
Chloe Kim (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- November 4, 2017: FSWC #2 in
Copenhagen
- Event cancelled.
- November 11, 2017: FSWC #3 in
Milan
- Big Air winners:
Chris Corning (m) /
Anna Gasser (f)
- Big Air winners:
- November 24 & 25, 2017: FSWC #4 in
Beijing
- Big Air winners:
Mark McMorris (m) /
Anna Gasser (f)
- Big Air winners:
- December 2, 2017: FSWC #5 in
Mönchengladbach
- Big Air winners:
Marcus Kleveland (m) /
Carla Somaini (f)
- Big Air winners:
- December 7 – 10, 2017: FSWC #6 in
Copper Mountain
- Big Air winners:
Mons Røisland (m) /
Reira Iwabuchi (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
Ayumu Hirano (m) /
Chloe Kim (f)
- Big Air winners:
- December 19 & 21, 2017: FSWC #7 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden
- Half-pipe winners:
Ayumu Hirano (m) /
Liu Jiayu (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
- January 10 – 13: FSWC #8 in
Snowmass
- Slopestyle winners:
Redmond Gerard (m) /
Christy Prior (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
Shaun White (m) /
Queralt Castellet (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 17 – 20: FSWC #9 in
Laax
- Note: The slopestyle events here were cancelled.
- Half-pipe winners:
Iouri Podladtchikov (m) /
Liu Jiayu (f)
- March 15 – 17: FSWC #10 in
Seiser Alm
- Slopestyle winners:
Chris Corning (m) /
Sofya Fyodorova (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 23 & 24: FSWC #11 (final) in
Stoneham Mountain Resort
- Big Air winners:
Maxence Parrot (m) /
Julia Marino (f)
- Big Air winners:
2017–18 European Cup (SB)
- November 22 – 23, 2017: SBEC #1 in
Landgraaf
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Erik Bastiaansen (two times)
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
Evy Poppe (#1) /
Annika Morgan (#2)
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
- November 25 & 26, 2017: SBEC #2 in
Kaunertal
- Event cancelled.
- November 29 & 30, 2017: SBEC #3 in
Sankt Leonhard im Pitztal
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Julian Lüftner (#1) /
Nick Baumgartner (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Rosina Mancari (#1) /
Faye Gulini (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- December 9 & 10, 2017: SBEC #4 in
Hochfügen
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Patrick Bussler (#1) /
Michał Nowaczyk (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Selina Jörg (#1) /
Sabine Schöffmann (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 13 & 14: SBEC #5 in
Jasna
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Gian Andrea Sutter (#1) /
Noah Vicktor (#2)
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
Annika Morgan (2 times)
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
- January 13 & 14: SBEC #6 in
Isola 2000
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Ken Vuagnoux (#1) /
Jakob Dusek (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Holly Roberts (#1) /
Muriel Jost (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- January 19 & 21: SBEC #7 in
Font Romeu
- Big Air winners:
Leon Vockensperger (m) /
Lea Jugovac (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Leon Vockensperger (m) /
Lea Jugovac (f)
- Big Air winners:
- January 20 & 21: SBEC #8 in
Lachtal
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Daniele Bagozza (2 times)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Jemima Juritz (#1) /
Alexandra Vlasenko (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 23 & 24: SBEC #9 in
Vars
- Slopestyle winners:
Gian Andrea Sutter (m) /
Ariane Burri (f)
- Big Air winners:
Leon Vockensperger (m) /
Katarzyna Rusin (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 27 & 28: SBEC #10 in
Crans-Montana
- Halfpipe winners:
Elias Allenspach (m) /
Kaja Verdnik (f)
- Big Air winners:
Enzo Valax (m) /
Lia-Mara Bösch (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- January 27 & 28: SBEC #11 in
Grasgehren
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Florian Gregor (#1) /
Jakob Dusek (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Alexia Queyrel (#1) /
Sofia Belingheri (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- January 3 & 4: SBEC #12 in
Puy-Saint-Vincent
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jakob Dusek (#1) /
Luca Hämmerle (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Muriel Jost (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 10 & 11: SBEC #13 in
Pamporovo
- This event was cancelled.
- February 10 & 11: SBEC #14 in
Lenzerheide
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Maurizio Bormolini (#1) /
Daniele Bagozza (#2)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Larissa Gasser (#1) /
Jemima Juritz (#2)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
- February 18: SBEC #15 in
Sarajevo
- Big Air winners:
Enzo Valax (m) /
Thalie Larochaix (f)
- Big Air winners:
- February 23 & 24: SBEC #16 in
Davos
- Halfpipe winners:
Viktor Ivanov (m) /
Verena Rohrer (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- February 25 & 26: SBEC #17 in
Kopaonik
- Men's Big Air winners:
Enzo Valax (#1)
- Women's Big Air winners:
Lea Jugovac (#1)
- Note: Second events of Big Air here is cancelled.
- Men's Big Air winners:
- March 1 – 3: SBEC #18 in
Götschen
- Big Air winners:
Leon Vockensperger (m) /
Loranne Smans (f)
- Big Air winners:
- March 10: SBEC #19 in
Pec pod Sněžkou
- Slopestyle winners:
Nicola Liviero (m) /
Katarzyna Rusin (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 9 – 11: SBEC #20 in
Lenk
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Matthew Thomas (2 times)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Hanna Ihedioha (#1) /
Alexia Queyrel (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- March 10 & 11: SBEC #21 in
Tauplitz
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Johann Stefaner (2 times)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Maria Valova (#1) /
Jemima Juritz (#2)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
2017–18 North American Cup (SB)
- December 9 & 10, 2017: NAC #1 in
Steamboat Ski Resort
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Steven MacCutcheon (m) /
Millie Bongiorno
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Christian De Oliveira (m) /
Jennifer Hawkrigg (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- December 11 – 16, 2017:: NAC #2 in
Copper Mountain
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
Raibu Katayama (#1) /
Yūto Totsuka (#2)
- Women's Halfpipe winners:
Torah Bright (#1) /
Kurumi Imai (#2)
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
- December 15 – 17, 2017:: NAC #3 in
Buck Hill
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
William Taylor (#1) /
Richard-Riley Kilmer-Choi (#2) /
Dylan Udolf (#3)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Jennifer Hawkrigg (2 times) /
Karina Bladon (#3)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
- January 3 – 5: NAC #4 in
Le Relais
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Michael Nazwaski (#1) /
Arnaud Gaudet (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Millie Bongiorno (#1) /
Jennifer Hawkrigg (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 23 & 24: NAC #5 in
Sun Peaks Resort
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Liam Gill (#1) /
Liam Brearley (#2)
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
Jasmine Baird (#1) /
Sommer Gendron (#2)
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
- January 26 – 28: NAC #6 in
Big White Ski Resort
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Danny Bourgeois (2 times)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Emilie-Kate Robinson-Leith (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- January 31 – February 2: NAC #7 in
Holiday Valley
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Arnaud Gaudet (#1) /
Jules Lefebvre (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Megan Farrell (2 times)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- February 4 – 9: NAC #8 in
Blue Mountain Resort
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Darren Gardner (m) /
Megan Farrell (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Sebastien Beaulieu (m) /
Megan Farrell (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- February 7 – 9: NAC #9 in
Craigleith
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Senna Leith (2 times)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Elise Turner (#1) /
Stacy Gaskill (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 8 – 10: NAC #10 in
Mount St-Louis Moonstone
- Slopestyle winners:
Nicolas Laframboise (m) /
Jasmine Baird (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Jack Collins (m) /
Taylor Obregon (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- February 12 – 15: NAC #11 in
Sunday River
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Danny Bourgeois (2 times)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Emily Boyce (#1) /
Anna Miller (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 20 – 22: NAC #12 in
Toronto
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Robert Burns (2 times)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Megan Farrell (2 times)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
- February 21 – 23: NAC #13 in
Mont Original
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Liam Moffatt (#1) /
Danny Bourgeois (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Danielle Steinhoff (#1) /
Emily Boyce (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 27 & 28: NAC #14 in
Park City
- Halfpipe winners:
Chase Blackwell (m) /
Anna Valentine (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Lyon Farrell (m) /
Courtney Rummel (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- March 5 – 8: NAC #15 in
Sugarloaf
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Henry Collins (#1) /
Danny Bourgeois (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Stacy Gaskill (#1) /
Anna Miller (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- March 5 – 11: NAC #16 in
Canada Olympic Park, AB
- Halfpipe winners:
Shawn Fair (m) /
Calynn Irwin (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
William Buffey (m) /
Jasmine Baird (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
2017 South American Cup (SB)
- August 11 & 12: SAC #1 in
La Parva #1
- Slopestyle #1 winners:
Federico Chiaradio (m) /
Antonia Yáñez (f)
- Slopestyle #2 winners:
Matias Schmitt (m) /
Antonia Yáñez (f)
- Slopestyle #1 winners:
- August 25 & 26: SAC #2 in
La Parva #2
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
Kevin Hill (m) /
Meryeta Odine (f)
- Snowboardcross #2 here is cancelled
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
- September 4 & 5: SAC #3 in
Corralco (part of XXIII Brazilian Snowboard Championships)
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
Markus Schairer (m) /
Isabel Clark Ribeiro (f)
- Snowboardcross #2 here is cancelled
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
- September 12 & 13: SAC #4 in
Cerro Catedral
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
Danny Bourgeois (m) /
Simona Meiler (f)
- Snowboardcross #2 winners:
Danny Bourgeois (m) /
Anna Miller (f)
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
- September 17 & 18: SAC #5 in
Cerro Catedral
- Big Air #1 winners:
Martín Jaureguialzo (m) /
Macarena Valle (f)
- Big Air #2 winners:
Martín Jaureguialzo (m) /
Sandra Isabel Hillen Rodriguez (f)
- Big Air #1 winners:
2017 Australia & New Zealand Cup (SB)
- July 26 – 28: SBANC #1 in
Mount Hotham #1
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
Cameron Bolton (m) /
Georgia Baff (f)
- Snowboardcross #2 winners:
Alex Pullin (m) /
Georgia Baff (f)
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
- August 15 – 17: SBANC #2 in
Cardrona (part of FIS Continental Cup)
- Halfpipe winners:
Naito Ando (m) /
Emily Arthur (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Matthew Cox (m) /
Reira Iwabuchi (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- August 24 – 27: SBANC #3 in
Mount Hotham #2
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
Alex Pullin (m) /
Emily Boyce (f)
- Snowboardcross #2 winners:
Alex Pullin (m) /
Emily Boyce (f)
- Snowboardcross #1 winners:
Telemark skiing
FIS Telemark Junior World Ski Championships
- March 19 – 25: 2018 FIS Junior World Ski Championships (TS) in
Mürren-Schilthorn
- Sprint winners:
Romain Beney (m) /
Kaja Bjoernstad Konow (f)
- Classic winners:
Noe Claye (m) /
Chloe Blyth (f)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Louis Uber (m) /
Goril Strom Eriksen (f)
- Mixed Team Parallel Sprint winners:
Norway
- Sprint winners:
2017–18 FIS Telemark World Cup
- December 1 – 3, 2017: TSWC #1 in
Hintertux
- Men's Sprint winners:
Bastien Dayer (#1) /
Nicolas Michel (#2)
- Women's Sprint winners:
Beatrice Zimmermann (#1) /
Johanna Holzmann (#2)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Bastien Dayer (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
- Men's Sprint winners:
- January 12 & 13: TSWC #2 in
Pralognan-la-Vanoise
- Sprint winners:
Nicolas Michel (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
- Classic winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
- Sprint winners:
- January 20 – 22: TSWC #3 in
Suicide Six
- Men's Sprint winners:
Jure Ales (#1) /
Nicolas Michel (#2)
- Women's Sprint winners:
Jasmin Taylor (#1) /
Simone Oehrli (#2)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Nicolas Michel (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
- Men's Sprint winners:
- January 24 – 26: TSWC #4 in
Sugarbush Resort
- Classic #1 winners:
Jure Ales (m) /
Jasmin Taylor (f)
- Classic #2 winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
- Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
- Classic #1 winners:
- February 3 & 4: TSWC #5 in
Bad Hindelang-Oberjoch
- Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Beatrice Zimmermann (f)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Nicolas Michel (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
- Sprint winners:
- February 7 & 8: TSWC #6 in
Krvavec Ski Resort
- Note: The sprint events here were cancelled.
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Jasmin Taylor (f)
- March 14 – 17: TSWC #7 in
Rjukan
- Sprint #1 winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Martina Wyss (f)
- Sprint #2 winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
- Men's Parallel Sprint winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (#1) /
Jure Ales (#2)
- Women's Parallel Sprint winner:
Johanna Holzmann (2 times)
- Sprint #1 winners:
- March 19 – 25: TSWC #8 (final) in
Mürren-Schilthorn (part of FIS Telemark Junior World Championships)
- Sprint winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
- Classic winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Beatrice Zimmermann (f)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Jasmin Taylor (f)
- Mixed Team Parallel Sprint winners:
France
- Sprint winners:
References
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games Alpine Skiing Page". Archived from the original on February 10, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Paralympic Winter Games Alpine Skiing Page". Archived from the original on December 8, 2017. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ Soelden men's giant slalom cancelled due to storm
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games Biathlon Page". Archived from the original on February 10, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Paralympic Winter Games Biathlon Page". Archived from the original on March 14, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games Cross-Country Skiing Page". Archived from the original on December 27, 2017. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Paralympic Winter Games Cross-Country Skiing Page". Archived from the original on December 9, 2017. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ Tour de Ski sprint stage in Obertsdorf cancelled due to thunderstorm
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games Freestyle Skiing Page". Archived from the original on February 10, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ FIS' 2017–18 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Page
- ↑ Second Ski Cross World Cup competition cancelled due to heavy snow
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games Nordic Combined Page". Archived from the original on January 10, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games Ski Jumping Page". Archived from the original on February 10, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games Snowboarding Page". Archived from the original on February 10, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
- ↑ "PyeongChang 2018 Paralympic Winter Games Snowboarding Page". Archived from the original on February 28, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.