Lara Gut injures knee at alpine worlds
Swiss finish 1-2 in combined, Canada's Gagnon 6th
On a bitter-sweet day for the home team at the world championships, Wendy Holdener led a 1-2 finish for Switzerland in the combined event and Lara Gut was airlifted from the course following a crash.
Canadian Marie-Michele Gagnon finished sixth, one spot below American star Lindsey Vonn.
"For me it's a good solid result to have a top-six [finish] but I guess I was expecting a little more," Gagnon said. "After the race I got quite emotional for some reason. I guess it was maybe a little bit of mental fatigue because I really was focused all week on this downhill business, which is not easy for me.
"But I think I wanted a little more. I wanted to be on that podium. I knew it was possible."
Canada's Valerie Grenier was 11th and Candace Crawford 21st, Mikaela Tommy failed to finish the closing slalom leg of the race, which also includes a downhill portion.
Holdener, a slalom specialist, was 0.05 ahead of teammate Michelle Gisin, who took silver. Michaela Kirschgasser of Austria trailed Holdener by 0.38, and repeated her combined bronze from the 2015 worlds.
The finish gave skiing-crazed Switzerland its first women's world title since 2001.
Gut-Vonn showdown nixed
Gut had been favoured to end that streak but one hour before the slalom leg, the Swiss star crashed in practice. Gut ruptured the ACL in her left knee but did not have emergency surgery at the hospital in St. Moritz, the Swiss team said in a statement.
Gut, who won bronze in the super-G on Tuesday, had been third after the morning downhill. She will now miss the anticipated showdown with Vonn in the marquee downhill on Sunday.
The slalom run, raced through falling snow, flipped the standings from the downhill, which began three hours earlier.
First-run leader Sofia Goggia of Italy and second-place Ilka Stuhec of Slovenia failed to complete the slalom. Stuhec quickly went out after just a few gates.
Slalom racers were favoured by a decision to shorten the downhill course because of poor weather forecast for higher sections of the slope.
"I think then the slalom race should be shortened as well because it's too big of a disadvantage," Vonn said. "The first four girls are all slalom skiers."
Holdener, who is third in the World Cup slalom standings behind Mikaela Shiffrin, was 0.94 off the lead in downhill.
The fact that Vonn was only 0.09 faster in the downhill was a surprise, and the American's morning run came back to cost her. Vonn gestured to the finish-area crowd after both runs by holding out her arms as if she could do little more.
Vonn has never won a major championship medal in combined in six starts at the worlds and three Olympics. However, she completed the event on Friday for the first time since the 2005 worlds.
"No regrets," said Vonn, the best-placed speed specialist in a race favouring slalom experts. "My downhill run was really solid. I'm really proud of my performance."
Gisin was watched by her older sister Dominique, who took gold in the 2014 Olympic downhill in a tie with Tina Maze of Slovenia.
Shiffrin leads the overall World Cup standings, ahead of defending champion Gut. The 21-year-old American is now heavily favoured to collect her first giant crystal trophy next month at the final races in Aspen, Colorado.
With files from CBC Sports