Germany's Viktoria Rebensburg victorious in Lake Louise super-G
Crosses finish in 1 minute 20 seconds, 0.35 seconds ahead of Italy's Nicol Delago
Viktoria Rebensburg meshed her giant slalom skills with speed she's always had in Lake Louise, Alta., to claim Sunday's season-opening super-G.
The German skied the cleanest lines on a course set that confounded several of her competitors. Nine of 44 starters did not finish.
Rebensburg's time of one minute 20 seconds was 0.35 quicker than runner-up Nicol Delago of Italy, who started 31st on Sunday, and 0.42 faster than Switzerland's Corinne Suter in third.
Rebensburg won Olympic gold in giant slalom at the 2010 Olympic Games in Vancouver and Whistler, B.C., and is a three-time World Cup champ in the discipline.
WATCH | Viktoria Rebensburg rule women's super-G:
"I think for sure my GS skills, or technical skills, they were helping me," she said Sunday.
The 30-year-old Bavarian was second in a downhill in Lake Louise in 2017 and third in super-G last year.
"I was always waiting for the win here in Lake Louise," Rebensburg said. "The super-G here looks tougher than it is, so I tried to push as hard as I can from top to bottom. Obviously it was working out pretty well."
Cold conditions
Super-G, or super giant slalom, is shorter than downhill with more gates for skiers to navigate.
The women don't get the benefit of training runs as they do in downhill to learn the course. They're limited to an hour's pre-race inspection of a super-G course.
The women pushed out of the start hut Sunday under sunny skies and a temperature of minus-16, but some sections of the course were shadowed by trees.
Reigning World Cup and world super-G champion Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S. placed 10th. Olympic champion Ester Ledecka of the Czech Republic finished 30th.
Marie-Michele Gagnon of Lac-Etchemin, Que., was the top Canadian in 19th.
Ledecka, Schmidhofer take downhills
"I have a little fire right now," Gagnon said. "I just messed up that one gate. I guess it got a lot of girls today unfortunately."
Ledecka and Austria's Nicole Schmidhofer won the season-opening downhills Friday and Saturday respectively at the Alberta resort.
The top 30 women Sunday split a prize purse of $160,000 and collected World Cup points which contribute to their world ranking.
Owner of career World Cup podiums in slalom and alpine combined, Gagnon intends to make gains in downhill.
Season-ending knee and shoulder injuries two years ago in Lake Louise interrupted her progress.
'I belong here'
The 30-year-old was 28th and 26th in the Lake Louise downhills.
"I feel I belong more to the speed side now," Gagnon said. "Last year, it was kind of like 'what am I doing? I'm a slalom skier. I should have stuck there.'
"I look around at these superstars all around me and I'm like 'OK, I belong here' which is cool."
Toronto's Candace Crawford placed 35th.
The women head to St. Moritz, Switzerland, to race super-G on Saturday and slaloms on Sunday.