Swiss skier Von Allmen wins men's downhill gold, disappointment for Canada's Crawford at worlds
Switzerland sweeps the speed events in Saalbach-Hinterglemm, Austria
![A male alpine skier smiles on the podium while lifting his skis and poles into the air.](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7454647.1739108447!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_1180/2197935887.jpg?im=Resize%3D780)
"Oh, oh, oh. So good. So good."
The words of "Sweet Caroline" reverberated through the narrow Alpine valley hosting the skiing world championships as the crowd of 22,500 belted out the famous lyrics in celebration of Austrian veteran and home favourite Vincent Kriechmayr.
Oh no was the response from Swiss upstart Franjo von Allmen two skiers later.
The 23-year-old Von Allmen pushed Kriechmayr down a spot and grabbed gold in the marquee men's downhill on Sunday in Saalbach-Hinterglemm to announce himself as the sport's next big thing.
Take it from Marco Odermatt, the already established star of the Swiss team who took gold in super-G two days earlier and placed fifth this time.
"He can win every race," Odermatt said.
WATCH l Von Allmen captures downhill gold at world championships:
Von Allmen trailed Kriechmayr at the penultimate checkpoint on the Schneekristall (snow crystal) course before accelerating through the last gates and soaring 48 metres — more than half the length of a football field — off the final jump.
Von Allmen finished 0.24 seconds ahead of silver medallist Kriechymayr and 0.31 ahead of bronze medallist Alexis Monney, another rising Swiss racer.
"It's crazy," Von Allmen said as the Swiss fans in the crowd took over with their chants of "Hopp Suisse" (Go Switzerland). "One day it's Odermatt, the other day two other athletes from the Swiss team. It's really fun we can push each other like this. It's pretty, pretty cool."
Live streaming coverage through the alpine ski world championships event will be available on CBCSports.ca and CBC Gem.
Toronto native Jack Crawford, who recently won the World Cup downhill in Kitzbuhel, was disappointed after finishing 23rd with a time of 1:42.54 — 1.86 seconds off the lead.
"I definitely am capable of a lot better. Through the week I just struggled to adapt to warmer temperatures and the different, changing snow," Crawford told CBC Sports' Devin Heroux. "We'll debrief later and figure out what the problem was and hopefully going into next week I can get back up to speed."
WATCH l Crawford finishes 23rd in downhill:
North Vancouver, B.C.'s Brodie Seger (1:42.90) and Canmore, Alta.'s Jeffrey Read (1:43.04) were 27th and 29th, respectively.
Read was coming off a career-high 10th-place finish in Friday's super-G, the best Canadian result so far at these worlds.
"Challenging day," Read said. "It's warm out; conditions maybe slowed down a little, maybe sped up for some but I tried to push through the adversity.
"For me it just came down to some mistakes up top. I definitely had the skiing on the bottom, being there with the top guys."
During the podium ceremony, Von Allmen was named the "Weltmeister" (world champion) by Austrian downhilling great Franz Klammer, the 1976 Olympic champion.
The host country surely would have preferred to have Klammer awarding an Austrian skier. But Switzerland has dominated the downhills on the World Cup circuit all season, with four wins and five second places in five events.
"[Odermatt] is always telling us which line he's going to take. We're exchanging a lot in our team and maybe that's also why it's working so well," Monney said.
While Von Allmen has yet to win a World Cup downhill, he did finish runner-up three times this season. He also won a super-G on home snow in Wengen last month.
"We knew he's good but maybe not this good," said Stefan Rogentin, another Swiss racer.
WATCH l 'Not a lot of good today': Crawford reflects on his downhill run:
There was a time, though, when nobody knew what might become of Von Allmen. That's because his skiing career nearly ended at age 17 when his father died and he lacked the financial means to continue racing.
But Von Allmen set up a crowd-funding project that gathered 16,000 Swiss francs ($17,600 US), qualified for the national C team the following year and then won three silver medals, including one in downhill, at the 2022 junior worlds in Canada.
A trained carpenter, Von Allmen still works on construction sites in the off-season in his home valley of Simmental.
"It's important to bring something different in my head," he said.
WATCH l Full replay of men's downhill:
Several teammates described Von Allmen as "crazy" for his full-on approach to skiing.
"The second training in Kitzbuhel, he goes always 100 per cent," Rogentin said. "Sometimes that's a little bit crazy. He [doesn't] brake."
And while they enjoy being with him on the hill, none of his teammates want to share a room with Von Allmen. That's because he snores too loud, Rogentin confirmed.
For worlds, Von Allmen is sharing a suite with Monney. But there probably won't be too much sleeping going on anytime soon in their two rooms.
"It's going to be a big party tonight," Von Allmen said.
WATCH l Jeff Read speaks with CBC Sports' Devin Heroux after downhill:
The race did not go as planned for Ryan Cochran-Siegle, the American who had led two of the three training sessions.
Cochran-Siegle finished 13th after an error-strewn run and some heavy landings on the jumps.
"I didn't ski fast enough," said Cochran-Siegle, the Olympic super-G silver medallist. "I just didn't execute."
After Breezy Johnson won the women's downhill on Saturday, the American men were aiming for an unprecedented sweep.
In a year, men's skiing for the Milan-Cortina Olympics will be held on the Stelvio course in Bormio, where Cochran-Siegle has won a World Cup super-G and claimed three other top-five finishes.
But the Swiss are the early favourites for the Olympics. After all, Monney and Von Allmen finished 1-2 in the Bormio downhill this season.
"They are the team to beat right now," Cochran-Siegle said, "and we're just all trying to play catch-up."
WATCH l Seger on world championships: 'Not the week our team was looking for':
With files from CBC Sports