Money dispute threatens Swiss ski race’s World Cup status

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WENGEN, Switzerland - The signature Alpine skiing race in Switzerland risks being dropped from the World Cup schedule in a money dispute with the national ski federation.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 20/05/2020 (1952 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

WENGEN, Switzerland – The signature Alpine skiing race in Switzerland risks being dropped from the World Cup schedule in a money dispute with the national ski federation.

Organizers of the Lauberhorn men’s downhill in Wengen traded statements with Swiss-Ski on Wednesday and confirmed their ongoing legal case at the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

The public spat followed Swiss-Ski declining to propose the three-race Lauberhorn meeting in January 2022 on that season’s World Cup calendar managed by the International Ski Federation (FIS).

FILE - In this Saturday, Jan. 18, 2020 file photo, Italy's Dominik Paris in action during the men's downhill race run at the Alpine Skiing FIS Ski World Cup in Wengen, Switzerland. The signature Alpine skiing race in Switzerland risks being dropped from the World Cup schedule in a money dispute with the national ski federation. Organizers traded statements with Swiss-Ski on Wednesday May 20, 2020, and confirmed their ongoing legal case at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Anthony Anex/Keystone via AP, File)
FILE - In this Saturday, Jan. 18, 2020 file photo, Italy's Dominik Paris in action during the men's downhill race run at the Alpine Skiing FIS Ski World Cup in Wengen, Switzerland. The signature Alpine skiing race in Switzerland risks being dropped from the World Cup schedule in a money dispute with the national ski federation. Organizers traded statements with Swiss-Ski on Wednesday May 20, 2020, and confirmed their ongoing legal case at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (Anthony Anex/Keystone via AP, File)

The Swiss ski body said it “cannot meet the financial demands” made by the organizing committee in Wengen.

Because of the case at CAS, the federation said it limited its risk on the 2021-22 schedule by proposing a placeholder “Switzerland” designation instead of Wengen.

Wengen has been a fixture on the men’s World Cup since the debut 1967 season, and next January’s races will be the 91st annual Lauberhorn meeting.

The Saturday downhill typically attracts 30,000 spectators to the mountain and one of Swiss television’s biggest audience ratings each year. Swiss racers have won six of the last 11 editions.

Wengen officials said the dispute centres on its share of television rights from Swiss-Ski.

They criticized an “unsportsmanlike” approach of the national federation in withdrawing the calendar proposal without consultation.

The dispute has been aired publicly as Swiss-Ski leader Urs Lehmann, a former downhill world champion, is campaigning to be president of world governing body FIS.

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