Lucas Braathen gifted shocking World Cup slalom win by teammate Kristoffersen | CBC Sports

Soaring from 29th place after the first run, Lucas Braathen scored a stunning win in a World Cup slalom on Sunday in Wengen, Switzerland.

Braathen sat in the finish-area leader’s box for 45 minutes looking steadily more disbelieving until watching the last racer, his Norway teammate Henrik Kristoffersen, straddle a gate within sight of a clear victory.

The error gifted the win to Braathen who was almost one second faster than any rival in the second run on snow that was cutting up in the warm sunshine.

In the end, Braathen posted a combined time of 1:41:48, 0.22 seconds ahead of Daniel Yule of Switzerland. The 2010 Olympic champion, Guiliano Razzoli of Italy, was 0.29 back in third for his best result in six years at age 37.

WATCH | Braathen prevails after starting Sunday wearing bib No. 31:

Lucas Braathen shockingly climbs leaderboard, wins World Cup slalom event

Norway’s Lucas Braathen sat 29th after the 1st run of the FIS Alpine World Cup in Wengen, Switzerland. A strong showing in the 2nd led to him stunningly capturing the men’s slalom title. 5:32

Calgary’s Erik Read was 22nd of 24 finishers in 1:43.56.

Braathen’s win was also remarkable for starting the day among the low-ranked racers wearing bib No. 31.

Season-ending knee injury a year ago

It was the second straight Sunday that a Swiss slalom was won by an outsider, after Johannes Strolz wore No. 38 to victory at nearby Adelboden.

“Words cannot describe how grateful I am,” said the 21-year-old Braathen, whose ranking dipped after a season-ending knee injury one year ago in the Adelboden giant slalom.

Braathen had also been fast in the first run Sunday, until losing his rhythm in the bottom half to barely qualify among the top 30 racers who advance to the second leg.

“After my mistake in the first run I was eager to redeem myself in the second,” said Braathen, whose father is Norwegian and mother Brazilian.

Braathen was helped by getting early use of the second run snow surface and a gate setting designed by a Norway team coach.

A steep and tricky middle section saw several racers crash out. Italian prospect Alex Vinatzer lost one ski, Christian Hirschbuehl of Austria lost both and Luca Aerni of Switzerland was launched into the air with both skis high off the snow.

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