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Aleksander Aamodt Kilde airlifted from course after hard crash

WENGEN, Switzerland -- Downhill star Aleksander Aamodt Kilde crashed hard into the fences within sight of the finish in the long Lauberhorn race in the World Cup on Saturday and seemed to have injured his right leg before being airlifted to a hospital.

For the second straight day at Wengen, a former men's overall World Cup champion was carried away by helicopter from Switzerland's most storied ski venue.

On Friday, French star Alexis Pinturault went into a tumbling crash on landing a jump in a super-G race. The 2021 World Cup champion, who became a father for the first time last weekend, ruptured the ACL in his left knee.

Kilde was the 2020 champion before Pinturault and is the longtime partner of American ski star Mikaela Shiffrin.

He underwent lengthy treatment as he lay flat next to the finish line and race workers strapped his right leg above the knee. A helicopter landed in the finish area to carry Kilde to a hospital.

Racers injured at Wengen -- an elevated ski resort reached by a cog railway that starts lower down the mountain -- are typically flown to a hospital in Interlaken.

Kilde, 31, was racing in a speed event for the third straight day at Wengen -- an unusual demand on the men's World Cup calendar because a downhill was canceled last month at Beaver Creek, Colorado.

The Norwegian had been fighting an illness before placing third in a shorter downhill Thursday and third again in a super-G on Friday.

"Again, it's a bad feeling like with Alexis yesterday," French racer Cyprien Sarrazin, who was second Thursday and won the super-G on Friday, told Swiss broadcaster RTS.

"It's three days of racing here, and we finish with the longest [race]. Three days is really hard physically," said Sarrazin, who finished second to Marco Odermatt on Saturday.

Kilde was unbalanced on his skis approaching the final twisting S-shaped section about 2 minutes, 10 seconds into a tiring run, then made another error entering the left-hand turn down into the finish.

He was launched off his skis and twisted in midair before crashing backward into courseside safety fences.

Kilde has been a top downhill racer for several years, with two wins in the marquee discipline at Wengen. He is a two-time champion in the season-long World Cup downhill standings.

Odermatt's winning time of just over 2 minutes, 25 seconds was about a full half-minute more than any other downhill this season. Sarrazin was 0.59 seconds back, and third-place Dominik Paris trailed by 1.92, a massive gap in men's downhill.

Odermatt put his hands to his head when he saw Kilde's crash about 80 yards from where he stood in the courseside leader's box.

"I think it's too much with three races," Odermatt told RTS, after his good friend Kilde was among seven of the top 30 starters Saturday who did not finish. "A lot of crashes, yes, perhaps it's too much."

The fourth race at Wengen is a slalom Sunday that the speed racers will skip.

Odermatt's 31st career World Cup race win was his second in downhill after a victory Thursday. The 26-year-old extended his points lead in both the seasonlong downhill standings and the overall contest.