Listen to this article
Estimated 2 minutes
The audio version of this article is generated by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations can occur. We are working with our partners to continually review and improve the results.

Follow Winter Olympic SportsPersonalize Your Feed
Skiers from host Italy still trying to secure starting spots led the second downhill training session at the Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics on Thursday and Austria’s Daniel Hemetsberger crashed.
Mattia Casse posted the fastest time but missed a gate midway down. Teammates Florian Schieder and Giovanni Franzoni were second and third, respectively.
Franzoni, the breakout star of the Italian team who recently won the downhill in Kitzbuhel, Austria, already has a starting spot, along with Dominik Paris, who holds the Bormio record with seven World Cup victories. Casse, Schieder and Christof Innerhofer — who was seventh — are vying for the last two spots.
Cam Alexander, of North Vancouver, B.C., was the top Canadian finisher in 10th. Toronto’s Jack Crawford was 22nd, Brodie Seger, also of North Vancouver, was 24th. Jeff Read, of Canmore, Alta., was 29th, while North Vancouver’s Riley Seger was 32nd.
Favourites like Marco Odermatt and Ryan Cochran-Siegle, the American who led the opening session Wednesday, tested only portions of the Stelvio course and otherwise stood up out of their tuck positions.
Hemetsberger lost control midway down, got spun around and crashed through a gate — causing his helmet to pop off. He then hit the safety nets at high speed. He quickly got back up but was holding his face and nose area.
A third and final training session is scheduled for Friday before the downhill race on Saturday awards the first alpine skiing medal of the Games.