2018–19 in skiing
Years in skiing |
2019 in sports |
---|
|
Alpine skiing
FIS World Championships (AS)
- February 5 – 17: FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 in
Åre[1][2]
- Alpine Combined winners:
Alexis Pinturault (m) /
Wendy Holdener (f)
- Downhill winners:
Kjetil Jansrud (m) /
Ilka Štuhec (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Henrik Kristoffersen (m) /
Petra Vlhová (f)
- Slalom winners:
Marcel Hirscher (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- Super G winners:
Dominik Paris (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- Alpine Team Event winners:
Switzerland (Aline Danioth, Wendy Holdener, Daniel Yule, & Ramon Zenhäusern)
- Alpine Combined winners:
- February 18 – 27: World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2019 in
Fassa Valley[3][4]
- Junior Giant Slalom winners:
River Radamus (m) /
Alice Robinson (f)
- Junior Slalom winners:
Alex Vinatzer (m) /
Meta Hrovat (f)
- Junior Downhill winners:
Lars Roesti (m) /
Juliana Suter (f)
- Junior Super G winners:
River Radamus (m) /
Hannah Saethereng (f)
- Junior Alpine Combined winners:
Tobias Hedstroem (m) /
Nicole Good (f)
- Junior Mixed Alpine Team Event winners:
France (Marie Lamure, Jeremie Lagier, Doriane Escane, & Augustin Bianchini)
- Junior Giant Slalom winners:
2018–19 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- October 2018
- October 27 & 28: ASWC #1 in
Sölden
- Note: The men's giant slalom event was cancelled, due to huge amounts of snow.[5]
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Tessa Worley
- October 27 & 28: ASWC #1 in
- November 2018
- November 17 & 18: ASWC #2 in
Levi
- Slalom winners:
Marcel Hirscher (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- Slalom winners:
- November 21 – 25: ASWC #3 in
Lake Louise Ski Resort #1
- Men's Downhill winner:
Max Franz
- Men's Super G winner:
Kjetil Jansrud
- Men's Downhill winner:
- November 24 & 25: ASWC #4 in
Killington Ski Resort
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Federica Brignone
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- November 27 – December 2: ASWC #5 in
Lake Louise Ski Resort #2
- Women's Downhill winner:
Nicole Schmidhofer (2 times)
- Women's Super G winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Downhill winner:
- November 27 – December 2: ASWC #6 in
Beaver Creek Resort
- Men's Super G winner:
Max Franz
- Men's Downhill winner:
Beat Feuz
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Stefan Luitz
- Men's Super G winner:
- November 17 & 18: ASWC #2 in
- December 2018
- December 8 & 9: ASWC #8 in
Val-d'Isère #1
- Note: The men's slalom event was cancelled.
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- December 8 & 9: ASWC #7 in
St. Moritz
- Women's Super G & Parallel Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Super G & Parallel Slalom winner:
- December 12 – 15: ASWC #9 in
Val Gardena #1
- Men's Super G winner:
Aksel Lund Svindal
- Men's Downhill winner:
Aleksander Aamodt Kilde
- Men's Super G winner:
- December 16 & 17: ASWC #10 in
Alta Badia
- Men's Giant Slalom & Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Giant Slalom & Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
- December 17 – 20: ASWC #11 in
Val Gardena #2
- Note: The women's alpine combined event was cancelled.
- Women's Downhill & Super G winner:
Ilka Štuhec
- December 19 & 20: ASWC #12 in
Saalbach-Hinterglemm[6]
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Žan Kranjec
- Men's Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- December 21 & 22: ASWC #13 in
Courchevel
- Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
- December 22: ASWC #14 in
Madonna di Campiglio
- Men's Slalom winner:
Daniel Yule
- Men's Slalom winner:
- December 26 – 29: ASWC #15 in
Bormio
- Men's Downhill & Super G winner:
Dominik Paris
- Men's Downhill & Super G winner:
- December 28 & 29: ASWC #16 in
Semmering
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- December 8 & 9: ASWC #8 in
- January 2019
- January 1: ASWC #17 in
Oslo
- City Event winners:
Marco Schwarz (m) /
Petra Vlhová (f)
- City Event winners:
- January 5 & 6: ASWC #18 in
Zagreb
- Slalom winners:
Marcel Hirscher (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- Slalom winners:
- January 8: ASWC #19 in
Flachau
- Women's Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
- Women's Slalom winner:
- January 10 – 13: ASWC #20 in
St Anton am Arlberg
- Event cancelled.
- January 12 & 13: ASWC #21 in
Adelboden
- Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
- January 15: ASWC #22 in
Kronplatz
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- January 15 – 20: ASWC #23 in
Wengen
- Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Marco Schwarz
- Men's Downhill winner:
Vincent Kriechmayr
- Men's Slalom winner:
Clément Noël
- Men's Alpine Combined winner:
- January 17 – 20: ASWC #24 in
Cortina d'Ampezzo
- Women's Downhill winner:
Ramona Siebenhofer (2 times)
- Women's Super G winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Downhill winner:
- January 22 – 27: ASWC #25 in
Kitzbühel
- Men's Downhill winner:
Dominik Paris
- Men's Slalom winner:
Clément Noël
- Men's Super G winner:
Josef Ferstl
- Men's Downhill winner:
- January 24 – 27: ASWC #26 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen #1
- Women's Super G winner:
Nicole Schmidhofer
- Women's Downhill winner:
Stephanie Venier
- Women's Super G winner:
- January 29: ASWC #27 in
Schladming
- Men's Slalom winner:
Marcel Hirscher
- Men's Slalom winner:
- January 31 – February 3: ASWC #28 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen #2
- Event cancelled.
- January 1: ASWC #17 in
- February 2019
- February 1 & 2: ASWC #29 in
Maribor
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- February 19: ASWC #30 in
Stockholm
- City Event winners:
Ramon Zenhäusern (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- City Event winners:
- February 21 – 24: ASWC #31 in
Crans-Montana
- Women's Downhill winner:
Sofia Goggia
- Women's Alpine Combined winner:
Federica Brignone
- Women's Downhill winner:
- February 22 – 24: ASWC #32 in
Bansko
- Note: The men's super G event here was cancelled.
- Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Alexis Pinturault
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Henrik Kristoffersen
- February 27 – March 3: ASWC #33 in
Rosa Khutor Alpine Resort
- Event cancelled.
- February 28 – March 3: ASWC #34 in
Kvitfjell
- Note: The second men's downhill event here was cancelled.
- Men's Downhill & Super G winner:
Dominik Paris
- February 1 & 2: ASWC #29 in
- March 2019
- March 8 & 9: ASWC #35 in
Špindlerův Mlýn
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mikaela Shiffrin
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 9 & 10: ASWC #36 in
Kranjska Gora Ski Resort
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Henrik Kristoffersen
- Men's Slalom winner:
Ramon Zenhäusern
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 11 – 17: ASWC #37 (final) in
Soldeu
- Downhill winners:
Dominik Paris (m) /
Mirjam Puchner (f)
- Super G winners:
Dominik Paris (m) /
Viktoria Rebensburg (f)
- Team Alpine Event winners:
Switzerland (Aline Danioth, Wendy Holdener, Daniel Yule, & Ramon Zenhäusern)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Alexis Pinturault (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- Slalom winners:
Clément Noël (m) /
Mikaela Shiffrin (f)
- Downhill winners:
- March 8 & 9: ASWC #35 in
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing European Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- November 2018
- November 29 & 30: ECAS #1 in
Levi
- Men's Slalom winners:
Sandro Simonet (#1) /
Alex Vinatzer (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- November 30 & December 1: ECAS #2 in
Funäsdalen #1
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Kristine Gjelsten Haugen (#1) /
Julia Scheib (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
- November 29 & 30: ECAS #1 in
- December 2018
- December 3 & 4: ECAS #3 in
Trysil
- Women's Slalom winners:
Ylva Staalnacke (#1) /
Nastasia Noens (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
- December 4 & 5: ECAS #4 in
Funäsdalen #2
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Simon Maurberger (#1) /
Fabian Wilkens Solheim (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- December 6 & 7: ECAS #5 in
Kvitfjell
- Women's Super G winner:
Christina Ager
- Women's Alpine Combined winner:
Anne-Sophie Barthet
- Women's Super G winner:
- December 11 & 12: ECAS #6 in
St. Moritz
- Note: The men's alpine combined event here was cancelled.
- Men's Super G winners:
Marco Odermatt (#1) /
Stefan Rogentin (#2)
- December 13 & 14: ECAS #7 in
Andalo-Paganella #1
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Maryna Gąsienica-Daniel (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- December 17 & 18: ECAS #8 in
Andalo-Paganella #2
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Cedric Noger (#1) /
Lucas Braathen (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- December 17 – 21: ECAS #9 in
Zauchensee
- Women's Downhill winner:
Nadia Delago (2 times)
- Women's Super G winner:
Elisabeth Reisinger
- Men's Super G winners:
Gino Caviezel (#1) /
Stefan Babinsky (#2)
- Women's Downhill winner:
- December 19: ECAS #10 in
Obereggen
- Men's Slalom winner:
Istok Rodeš
- Men's Slalom winner:
- December 21 & 22: ECAS #11 in
Saalbach-Hinterglemm
- Event cancelled.
- December 3 & 4: ECAS #3 in
- January 2019
- January 6 & 7: ECAS #12 in
Val-Cenis
- Men's Slalom winner:
Simon Maurberger (2 times)
- Men's Slalom winner:
- January 9 – 12: ECAS #13 in
Wengen
- Note: The second men's downhill event here was cancelled.
- Men's Downhill winner:
Mattia Casse
- January 11 & 12: ECAS #14 in
Göstling-Hochkar
- Event cancelled.
- January 14 & 15: ECAS #15 in
Reiteralm
- Event cancelled.
- January 15 – 18: ECAS #16 in
Fassa Valley
- Women's Downhill winners:
Elisabeth Reisinger (#1) /
Nadia Delago (#2)
- Women's Downhill winners:
- January 17: ECAS #17 in
Kronplatz
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Lucas Braathen
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- January 19 – 21: ECAS #18 in
Kitzbühel
- Men's Downhill winner:
Daniel Danklmaier
- Men's Downhill winner:
- January 21 & 22: ECAS #19 in
Zinal
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Franziska Gritsch (#1) /
Ylva Staalnacke (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
- January 23 & 24: ECAS #20 in
Courchevel
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Lucas Braathen (#1) /
Stefan Brennsteiner (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- January 24 & 25: ECAS #21 in
Melchsee-Frutt
- Women's Slalom winners:
Meta Hrovat (#1) /
Marlene Schmotz (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
- January 27 – 30: ECAS #22 in
Chamonix
- Men's Downhill winner:
Victor Schuller (2 times)
- Men's Downhill winner:
- January 28 & 29: ECAS #23 in
Les Diablerets
- Women's Alpine Combined winner:
Nicole Good
- Women's Super G winner:
Elisabeth Reisinger (2 times)
- Women's Alpine Combined winner:
- January 31 & February 1: ECAS #24 in
Tignes
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Lindy Etzensperger
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Pirmin Hacker (m) /
Marie Lamure (f)
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- January 6 & 7: ECAS #12 in
- February 2019
- February 4 & 5: ECAS #25 in
Gstaad-Saanenland
- Men's Slalom winners:
Istok Rodeš (#1) /
Jonathan Nordbotten (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- February 4 & 5: ECAS #26 in
Obdach
- Women's Slalom winners:
Katharina Huber (#1) /
Gabriela Capová (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
- February 9 & 10: ECAS #27 in
Berchtesgaden
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Alice Robinson (#1) /
Kaja Norbye (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
- February 11 – 15: ECAS #28 in
Sarntal
- Men's Downhill winners:
Thomas Biesemeyer (#1) /
Christopher Neumayer (#2)
- Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Christof Brandner
- Men's Super G winner:
Davide Cazzaniga
- Men's Downhill winners:
- February 14 – 17: ECAS #29 in
Crans-Montana
- Women's Downhill winner:
Elisabeth Reisinger (2 times)
- Women's Downhill winner:
- February 28 – March 2: ECAS #30 in
Oberjoch
- Note: Both men's slalom events here were cancelled.
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Andrea Ballerin
- February 4 & 5: ECAS #25 in
- March 2019
- March 2 & 3: ECAS #31 in
Jasná
- Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
Petra Vlhová
- Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner:
- March 5 – 7: ECAS #32 in
Hinterstoder
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Bjørnar Neteland
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 11 & 12: ECAS #33 in
Kranjska Gora
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Hannes Zingerle
- Men's Slalom winner:
Jonathan Nordbotten
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 11 – 17: ECAS #34 in
Sella Nevea
- Men's Super G winner:
Roy Piccard (2 times)
- Women's Super G winner:
Roberta Melesi
- Downhill winners:
Urs Kryenbühl (m) /
Priska Nufer (f)
- Men's Alpine Combined winner:
Simon Maurberger
- Men's Super G winner:
- March 16 & 17: ECAS #35 (final) in
Folgaria
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Julia Scheib
- Women's Slalom winner:
Charlie Guest
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 2 & 3: ECAS #31 in
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing Nor-Am Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 3 – 7, 2018: SNAC #1 in
Lake Louise Ski Resort
- Note: The alpine combined events here were cancelled.
- Men's Downhill winner:
James Crawford (2 times)
- Women's Downhill winner:
A.J. Hurt (2 times)
- Super G winners:
Samuel Dupratt (m) /
A.J. Hurt (f)
- December 10 – 16, 2018: SNAC #2 in
Panorama Mountain Village
- Alpine Combined winners:
Jeffery Read (m) /
A.J. Hurt (f)
- Men's Super G winners:
Samuel Dupratt (#1) /
Sam Mulligan (#2)
- Women's Super G winners:
Nina O'Brien (#1) /
A.J. Hurt (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Simon Fournier (#1) /
Nicholas Krause (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Nina O'Brien (#1) /
Patricia Mangan (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Mark Engel (#1) /
Simon Fournier (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Foreste Peterson (#1) /
Katie Hensien (#2)
- Alpine Combined winners:
- January 2 & 3: SNAC #3 in
Georgian Peaks Club
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Nina O'Brien (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
- January 3 – 5: SNAC #4 in
Camp Fortune
- Men's Slalom winners:
Simon Fournier (#1) /
Benjamin Ritchie (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- January 4: SNAC #5 in
Alpine Ski Club
- Women's Parallel Slalom winner:
Tuva Norbye
- Women's Parallel Slalom winner:
- January 4 – 6: SNAC #6 in
Osler Bluff
- Women's Slalom winners:
Katie Hensien (#1) /
Nina O'Brien (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
- January 5 – 7: SNAC #7 in
Mont Ste. Marie
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Aage Solheim (#1) /
Nicholas Krause (#2)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winner:
Tobias Kogler
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- February 5 – 8: SNAC #8 in
Sun Valley
- Men's Slalom winners:
Luke Winters (#1) /
Tobias Kogler (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Max Roeisland (#1) /
River Radamus (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- February 5 – 8: SNAC #9 in
Snow King Mountain
- Women's Slalom winner:
Amelia Smart (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Keely Cashman (#1) /
Adriana Jelinkova (#2)
- Women's Slalom winner:
- March 12 – 15: SNAC #10 in
Stowe Mountain Resort
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Mikaela Tommy (#1) /
Adriana Jelinkova (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Amelia Smart (#1) /
Nina O'Brien (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
- March 12 – 15: SNAC #11 in
Burke Mountain Ski Area
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Tanguy Nef (2 times)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Kyle Negomir (#1) /
Fritz Dopfer (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 16 – 21: SNAC #12 (final) in
Sugarloaf
- Men's Downhill winners:
Thomas Biesemeyer (#1) /
Ryan Cochran-Siegle (#2)
- Women's Downhill winners:
Nina O'Brien (#1) /
Alice Merryweather (#2)
- Alpine Combined winners:
Luke Winters (m) /
Nina O'Brien (f)
- Men's Super G winners:
Ryan Cochran-Siegle (#1) /
River Radamus (#2)
- Women's Super G winners:
Keely Cashman (#1) /
Nina O'Brien (#2)
- Men's Downhill winners:
2018–19 FIS Alpine Skiing Far East Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 4 – 7, 2018: FEC #1 in
Wanlong Ski Resorts
- Men's Slalom winners:
Jan Zabystřan (#1) /
Jung Dong-hyun (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Asa Ando (#1) /
Liv Ceder (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Jung Dong-hyun (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Asa Ando (#1) /
Piera Hudson (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- December 10 – 13, 2018: FEC #2 in
Taiwoo Ski Resorts
- Men's Slalom winners:
Kamen Zlatkov (#1) /
Jung Dong-hyun (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Liv Ceder (#1) /
Piera Hudson (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Jung Dong-hyun (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Piera Hudson (2 times)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- February 7 – 9: FEC #3 in
Yongpyong Resort
- Note: The Super G events here were cancelled.
- Slalom winners:
Jung Dong-hyun (m) /
Gim So-hui (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Jung Dong-hyun (m) /
Kang Young-seo (f)
- February 12 – 15: FEC #4 in
Bears Town Resort
- Men's Slalom winners:
Hideyuki Narita (#1) /
Yohei Koyama (#2)
- Women's Slalom winner:
Makiko Arai (2 times)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Noel von Gruenigen (#1) /
Seigo Kato (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Konatsu Hasumi (#1) /
Kang Young-seo (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
- February 24 – 27: FEC #5 in
Hanawa
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Reto Schmidiger (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Asa Ando (2 times)
- Slalom winners:
Reto Schmidiger (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- March 2 – 5: FEC #6 in
Engaru
- Giant Slalom winners:
Reto Schmidiger (m) /
Mio Arai (f)
- Men's Slalom winner:
Reto Schmidiger (2 times)
- Women's Slalom winner:
Michelle Kerven (2 times)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- March 19 – 25: FEC #7 (final) in
Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
- Men's Super G winners:
Ivan Kuznetsov (#1) /
Jan Zabystřan (#2)
- Women's Super G winner:
Iulija Pleshkova (2 times)
- Alpine Combined winners:
Ivan Kuznetsov (m) /
Nevena Ignjatović (f)
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Pavel Trikhichev (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Ana Bucik (2 times)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Pavel Trikhichev (#1) /
Jan Zabystřan (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Maruša Ferk (#1) /
Ana Bucik (#2)
- Men's Super G winners:
2018 FIS Alpine Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- August 20 – 24: A&NZ #1 in
Hotham Alpine Resort
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
Adam Žampa (2 times)
- Women's Giant Slalom winner:
Lena Dürr (2 times)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Steffan Winkelhorst (#1) /
Adam Žampa (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Charlotte Chable (#1) /
Neja Dvornik (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winner:
- August 27 – 30: A&NZ #2 in
Coronet Peak
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Adam Žampa (#1) /
Sam Maes (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Alice Robinson (#1) /
Katharina Truppe (#2)
- Men's Slalom winners:
Marc Rochat (#1) /
Adam Žampa (#2)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Charlotte Chable (#1) /
Charlie Guest (#2)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
- September 3 – 6: A&NZ #3 (final) in
Mount Hutt
- Men's Super G winner:
Maarten Meiners (2 times)
- Women's Super G winner:
Alice Robinson (2 times)
- Men's Super G winner:
2018 FIS Alpine Skiing South American Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- August 14 – 17: SAC #1 in
Cerro Catedral
- Note: The second set of Giant Slalom and Slalom events were cancelled.
- Slalom winners:
Tomas Birkner De Miguel (m) /
Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Vito Cottineau (m) /
Carolina Blaquier (f)
- August 25 – 28: SAC #2 in
Las Leñas
- Note: The Super G events were cancelled.
- Slalom winners:
Enrique Evia y Roca (m) /
Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (f)
- Men's Giant Slalom winners:
Diego Holscher (#1) /
Cristian Javier Simari Birkner (#2)
- Women's Giant Slalom winners:
Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (#1) /
Andrea Ellenberger (#2)
- September 1: SAC #3 in
El Colorado #1
- Giant Slalom winners:
Rasmus Windingstad (m) /
Kajsa Vickhoff Lie (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- September 2 – 7: SAC #4 in
La Parva
- Slalom winners:
Ondřej Berndt (m) /
Kristin Lysdahl (f)
- Men's Downhill winners:
Klemen Kosi (#1) /
Dominik Schwaiger (#2)
- Women's Downhill winner:
Aleksandra Prokopyeva (2 times)
- Men's Super G winners:
Johan Clarey (#1) /
Andreas Sander (#2)
- Women's Super G winner:
Aleksandra Prokopyeva (2 times)
- Slalom winners:
- September 10 – 13: SAC #5 in
El Colorado #2
- Note: All other alpine skiing events, except for the Super G ones, were cancelled.
- Men's Super G winners:
Manuel Schmid (#1) /
Klemen Kosi (#2)
- Women's Super G winners:
Ilka Štuhec (#1) /
Cande Moreno Becerra (#2)
- September 17 – 20: SAC #6 (final) in
Cerro Castor
- Men's Slalom winners:
Jean-Baptiste Grange (#1) /
Simon Maurberger (#2)
- Women's Slalom winner:
Mireia Gutiérrez (2 times)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Pavel Trikhichev (m) /
Tessa Worley (f)
- Men's Slalom winners:
2018 FIS Grass Skiing World Cup & Junior World Championship
- Note 1: For the FIS page about the World Cup events, click here.
- Note 2: For the FIS page about the Junior World Championships event, click here.
- June 16 & 17, 2018: GSWC #1 in
Rettenbach
- Giant Slalom winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
- Super Combined winners:
Mirko Hüppi (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
- Super G winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- June 30 & July 1, 2018: GSWC #2 in
Předklášteří
- Giant Slalom winners:
Hannes Angerer (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Slalom winners:
Mirko Hüppi (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- July 28 & 29, 2018: GSWC #3 in
Montecampione
- Giant Slalom winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Slalom winners:
Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- July 30 – August 4, 2018: 2018 FIS Grass Ski Junior World Championships in
Montecampione
- Giant Slalom winners:
Martin Barták (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Slalom winners:
Martin Barták (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Super Combined winners:
Martin Barták (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Super G winners:
Martin Barták (m) /
Chisaki Maeda (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
- August 18 & 19: GSWC #4 in
San Sicario
- Super Combined winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Super G winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Super Combined winners:
- August 31 – September 2: GSWC #5 in
Santa Caterina di Valfurva
- Note: The men's & women's parallel slalom events here were cancelled.
- Men's Slalom winner:
Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (2 times)
- Women's Slalom winners:
Lisa Wusits (#1) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (#2)
- September 13 – 16: GSWC #6 (final) in
Sauris
- Giant Slalom winners:
Stefan Portmann (m) /
Kristin Hetfleisch (f)
- Slalom winners:
Lorenzo Dante Marco Gritti (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Super Combined winners:
Edoardo Frau (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Super G winners:
Stefan Portmann (m) /
Jacqueline Gerlach (f)
- Giant Slalom winners:
Biathlon
International biathlon championships
- August 21 – 26, 2018: 2018 IBU Summer Biathlon World Championships in
Nové Město na Moravě
- Sprint winners:
Michal Krčmář (m) /
Paulína Fialková (f)
- Junior Sprint winners:
Jakub Stvrtecky (m) /
Kamila Żuk (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Ondřej Moravec (m) /
Veronika Vítková (f)
- Junior Pursuit winners:
Viacheslav Maleev (m) /
Valeriia Vasnetcova (f)
- Mixed Relay winners:
Russia (Ekaterina Yurlova-Percht, Margarita Vasileva, Nikita Porshnev, & Yury Shopin)
- Junior Mixed Relay winners:
Czech Republic (Petra Sucha, Tereza Vobornikova, Jakub Stvrtecky, & Vitezslav Hornig)
- Sprint winners:
- January 26 – February 3: 2019 IBU Youth/Junior World Championships in
Brezno-Osrblie
- Junior Individual winners:
Martin Bourgeois Republique (m) /
MENG Fanqi (f)
- Junior Sprint winners:
Vebjoern Soerum (m) /
Ekaterina Bekh (f)
- Junior Pursuit winners:
Vebjoern Soerum (m) /
Ekaterina Bekh (f)
- Junior Men's Relay winners:
Russia (Said Karimulla Khalili, Ilnaz Mukhamedzianov, Vadim Istamgulov, & Vasilii Tomshin)
- Junior Women's Relay winners:
France (Camille Bened, Sophie Chauveau, & Lou Jeanmonnot)
- Youth Individual winners:
Niklas Hartweg (m) /
Ukaleq Astri Slettemark (f)
- Youth Sprint winners:
Alex Cisar (m) /
Maren Bakken (f)
- Youth Pursuit winners:
Alex Cisar (m) /
Amy Baserga (f)
- Youth Men's Relay winners:
Germany (Hendrik Rudolph, Darius Philipp Lodl, & Hans Koellner)
- Youth Women's Relay winners:
Norway (Maren Bakken, Marte Moeller, & Anne de Besche)
- Junior Individual winners:
- February 18 – 24: 2019 IBU Open European Championships in
Minsk-Raubichi
- Individual winners:
Krasimir Anev (m) /
Hanna Öberg (f)
- Sprint winners:
Tarjei Bø (m) /
Mona Brorsson (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Tarjei Bø (m) /
Ekaterina Yurlova-Percht (f)
- Single Mixed Relay winners:
Russia (Evgeniya Pavlova & Dmitry Malyshko)
- Mixed Relay winners:
Sweden (Emma Nilsson, Mona Brorsson, Martin Ponsiluoma, & Sebastian Samuelsson)
- Individual winners:
- March 4 – 10: 2019 IBU Junior Open European Championships in
Sjusjøen
- Junior Individual winners:
Tim Grotian (m) /
Camille Bened (f)
- Junior Sprint winners:
Sivert Guttorm Bakken (m) /
Camille Bened (f)
- Junior Pursuit winners:
Julian Hollandt (m) /
Juliane Frühwirt (f)
- Junior Single Mixed Relay winners:
Russia (Ksenia Dovgaya & Igor Malinovskii)
- Junior Mixed Relay winners:
Russia (Anastasiia Goreeva, Alina Klevtsova, Aleksandr Bektuganov, & Said Karimulla Khalili)
- Junior Individual winners:
- March 7 – 17: Biathlon World Championships 2019 in
Östersund
- Individual winners:
Arnd Peiffer (m) /
Hanna Öberg (f)
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Dmytro Pidruchnyi (m) /
Denise Herrmann (f)
- Men's Relay winners:
Norway (Lars Helge Birkeland, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, Tarjei Bø, & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
- Women's Relay winners:
Norway (Synnøve Solemdal, Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold, Tiril Eckhoff, Marte Olsbu Røiseland)
- Single Mixed Relay winners:
Norway (Marte Olsbu Røiseland & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
- Mixed Relay winners:
Norway (Marte Olsbu Røiseland, Tiril Eckhoff, Johannes Thingnes Bø, & Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen)
- Mass Start winners:
Dominik Windisch (m) /
Dorothea Wierer (f)
- Individual winners:
2018–19 Biathlon World Cup
- November 30 – December 9, 2018: BWC #1 in
Pokljuka
- Individual winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Yuliia Dzhima (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f)
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f)
- Single Mixed Relay winners:
Norway (Thekla Brun-Lie & Lars Helge Birkeland)
- Mixed Relay winners:
France (Anaïs Bescond, Justine Braisaz, Martin Fourcade, & Simon Desthieux)
- Individual winners:
- December 10 – 16, 2018: BWC #2 in
Hochfilzen
- Pursuit winners:
Martin Fourcade (m) /
Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f)
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Dorothea Wierer (f)
- Men's Relay winners:
Sweden (Peppe Femling, Martin Ponsiluoma, Torstein Stenersen, & Sebastian Samuelsson)
- Women's Relay winners:
Italy (Lisa Vittozzi, Alexia Runggaldier, Dorothea Wierer, & Federica Sanfilippo)
- Pursuit winners:
- December 17 – 23, 2018: BWC #3 in
Nové Město na Moravě
- Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Marte Olsbu Røiseland (f)
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Marte Olsbu Røiseland (f)
- Mass Start winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Pursuit winners:
- January 7 – 13: BWC #4 in
Oberhof
- Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Lisa Vittozzi (f)
- Sprint winners:
Alexandr Loginov (m) /
Lisa Vittozzi (f)
- Men's Relay winners:
Russia (Maxim Tsvetkov, Evgeniy Garanichev, Dmitry Malyshko, & Alexandr Loginov)
- Women's Relay winners:
Russia (Evgeniya Pavlova, Margarita Vasileva, Larisa Kuklina, & Ekaterina Yurlova-Percht)
- Pursuit winners:
- January 14 – 20: BWC #5 in
Ruhpolding
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Men's Relay winners:
Norway (Lars Helge Birkeland, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, Tarjei Bø, & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
- Women's Relay winners:
France (Julia Simon, Anaïs Bescond, Justine Braisaz, & Anaïs Chevalier)
- Mass Start winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Franziska Preuß (f)
- Sprint winners:
- January 21 – 27: BWC #6 in
Antholz-Anterselva
- Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Dorothea Wierer (f)
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Markéta Davidová (f)
- Mass Start winners:
Quentin Fillon Maillet (m) /
Laura Dahlmeier (f)
- Pursuit winners:
- February 4 – 10: BWC #7 in
Canmore
- Note: The men's and women's sprint events here were cancelled.
- Short Individual winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Tiril Eckhoff (f)
- Men's Relay winners:
Norway (Lars Helge Birkeland, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, Erlend Bjøntegaard, & Johannes Thingnes Bø)
- Women's Relay winners:
Germany (Vanessa Hinz, Franziska Hildebrand, Denise Herrmann, & Laura Dahlmeier)
- February 11 – 17: BWC #8 in
Soldier Hollow
- Sprint winners:
Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (m) /
Marte Olsbu Røiseland (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Quentin Fillon Maillet (m) /
Denise Herrmann (f)
- Single Mixed Relay winners:
Italy (Lukas Hofer & Dorothea Wierer)
- Mixed Relay winners:
France (Quentin Fillon Maillet, Simon Desthieux, Célia Aymonier, & Anaïs Chevalier)
- Sprint winners:
- March 18 – 24: BWC #9 (final) in
Oslo-Holmenkollen
- Sprint winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Anastasiya Kuzmina (f)
- Mass Start winners:
Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) /
Hanna Öberg (f)
- Sprint winners:
2018–19 IBU Cup
- November 26 – December 2, 2018: IBU Cup #1 in
Idre
- Pursuit winners:
Philipp Nawrath (m) /
Svetlana Mironova (f)
- Men's Sprint winners:
Anton Babikov (#1) /
Aristide Begue (#2)
- Women's Sprint winners:
Ingela Andersson (#1) /
Elisabeth Högberg (#2)
- Pursuit winners:
- December 10 – 16, 2018: IBU Cup #2 in
Ridnaun-Val Ridanna
- December 17 – 22, 2018: IBU Cup #3 in
Obertilliach
- Individual winners:
Simon Fourcade (m) /
Caroline Colombo (f)
- Sprint winners:
Sivert Guttorm Bakken (m) /
Nadia Moser (f)
- Super Sprint winners:
Sindre Pettersen (m) /
Felicia Lindqvist (f)
- Individual winners:
- January 7 – 13: IBU Cup #4 in
Duszniki-Zdrój
- Men's Sprint winners:
Alexander Povarnitsyn (#1) /
Philipp Horn (#2)
- Women's Sprint winner:
Natalia Gerbulova (2 times)
- Men's Sprint winners:
- January 14 – 20: IBU Cup #5 in
Großer Arber
- Short Individual winners:
Alexander Povarnitsyn (m) /
Yuliya Zhuravok (f)
- Sprint winners:
Aristide Begue (m) /
Victoria Slivko (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Anton Babikov (m) /
Victoria Slivko (f)
- Short Individual winners:
- January 21 – 27: IBU Cup #6 in
Lenzerheide
- Sprint winners:
Fabien Claude (m) /
Victoria Slivko (f)
- Pursuit winners:
Fabien Claude (m) /
Uliana Kaisheva (f)
- Single Mixed Relay winners:
Russia (Sergey Korastylev & Uliana Kaisheva)
- Mixed Relay winners:
Russia (Anton Babikov, Alexey Slepov, Valeriia Vasnetcova, & Victoria Slivko)
- Sprint winners:
- February 25 – March 2: IBU Cup #7 in
Otepää
- Super Sprint winners:
Endre Stroemsheim (m) /
Anna Weidel (f)
- Sprint winners:
David Zobel (m) /
Chloe Chevalier (f)
- Super Sprint winners:
- March 11 – 17: IBU Cup #8 (final) in
Martell-Val Martello
- Men's Sprint winners:
Johannes Dale (#1) /
Lucas Fratzscher (#2)
- Women's Sprint winners:
Olga Abramova (#1) /
Caroline Colombo (#2)
- Mass Start winners:
Aristide Begue (m) /
Caroline Colombo (f)
- Men's Sprint winners:
2018–19 IBU Junior Cup
- December 10 – 16, 2018: IBUJC #1 in
Lenzerheide
- Junior Individual winners:
Patrick Braunhofer (m) /
Camille Bened (f)
- Junior Sprint winners:
Viacheslav Maleev (m) /
Paula Botet (f)
- Junior Individual winners:
- December 17 – 22, 2018: IBUJC #2 in
Les Rousses
- Junior Pursuit winners:
Said Karimulla Khalili (m) /
Juliane Frühwirt (f)
- Junior Sprint winners:
Sebastian Stalder (m) /
Anastasiia Kaisheva (f)
- Junior Single Mixed Relay winners:
Slovenia (Alex Cisar & Nika Vindisar)
- Junior Mixed Relay winners:
France (Sebastien Mahon, Pierre Monney, Gilonne Guigonnat, & Paula Botet)
- Junior Pursuit winners:
- February 25 – March 3: IBUJC #3 (final) in
Sjusjøen
- Note: This event was supposed to be held in Torsby, but it was moved to the new location here.
- Junior Men's Sprint winners:
Alex Cisar (#1) /
Tim Grotian (#2)
- Junior Women's Sprint winners:
Amanda Lundstroem (#1) /
Anastasiia Goreeva (#2)
Cross-country skiing
International cross-country skiing events
- January 19 – 27: Part of the 2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in
Lahti[7]
- Sprint Classical winners:
Alexander Terentev (m) /
Kristine Stavaas Skistad (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Jules Chappaz (m) /
Frida Karlsson (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Luca del Fabbro (m) /
Frida Karlsson (f)
- Men's Mass Start Relay winners:
United States (Luke Jager, Ben Ogden, Johnny Hagenbuch, & Gus Schumacher)
- Women's Mass Start Relay winners:
Norway (Kristin Austgulen Fosnaes, Astrid Stav, Helene Marie Fossesholm, & Kristine Stavaas Skistad)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- February 19 – March 3: Part of the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 in
Seefeld[8]
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
- Skiathlon winners:
Sjur Røthe (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Men's Team Sprint Classical winners:
Norway (Emil Iversen & Johannes Høsflot Klæbo)
- Women's Team Sprint Classical winners:
Sweden (Stina Nilsson & Maja Dahlqvist)
- Classical winners:
Martin Johnsrud Sundby (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Men's 4×10 km Relay winners:
Norway (Emil Iversen, Martin Johnsrud Sundby, Sjur Røthe, & Johannes Høsflot Klæbo)
- Women's 4×5 km Relay winners:
Sweden (Ebba Andersson, Frida Karlsson, Charlotte Kalla, & Stina Nilsson)
- Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Hans Christer Holund (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
2018–19 Tour de Ski
- December 29 & 30, 2018: TdS #1 in
Toblach
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Sergey Ustiugov (m) /
Natalya Nepryaeva (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 1: TdS #2 in
Val Müstair
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 2 & 3: TdS #3 in
Oberstdorf
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Emil Iversen (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
- January 5 & 6: TdS #4 (final) in
Fiemme Valley
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- Final Climb winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country World Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- November 24 & 25, 2018: CCWC #1 in
Ruka
- Classical winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Yuliya Belorukova (f)
- Classical winners:
- November 30 – December 2, 2018: CCWC #2 in
Lillehammer
- Freestyle winners:
Sjur Røthe (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Federico Pellegrino (m) /
Jonna Sundling (f)
- Classical Pursuit winners:
Didrik Tønseth (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Freestyle winners:
- December 8 & 9, 2018: CCWC #3 in
Beitostølen
- Freestyle winners:
Sjur Røthe (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Men's Mass Start Relay winners:
Norway (Emil Iversen, Martin Johnsrud Sundby, Sjur Røthe, & Finn Hågen Krogh)
- Women's Mass Start Relay winners:
Norway (Heidi Weng, Therese Johaug, Ragnhild Haga, & Ingvild Flugstad Østberg)
- Freestyle winners:
- December 15 & 16, 2018: CCWC #4 in
Davos
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Evgeniy Belov (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 12 & 13: CCWC #5 in
Dresden
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Sindre Bjørnestad Skar (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Men's Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
Norway (Erik Valnes & Sindre Bjørnestad Skar)
- Women's Team Sprint Freestyle winners:
Sweden (Stina Nilsson & Maja Dahlqvist)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 19 & 20: CCWC #6 in
Otepää
- Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
- Classical winners:
Iivo Niskanen (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- January 26 & 27: CCWC #7 in
Ulricehamn
- Freestyle winners:
Maurice Manificat (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Men's Mass Start Relay winners:
Russia (Evgeniy Belov, Alexander Bessmertnykh, Denis Spitsov, & Artem Maltsev)
- Women's Mass Start Relay winners:
Norway (Heidi Weng, Therese Johaug, Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen, & Ingvild Flugstad Østberg)
- Freestyle winners:
- February 9 & 10: CCWC #8 in
Lahti
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
- Men's Team Sprint Classical winners:
Norway (Emil Iversen & Johannes Høsflot Klæbo)
- Women's Team Sprint Classical winners:
Sweden (Ida Ingemarsdotter & Maja Dahlqvist)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- February 16 & 17: CCWC #9 in
Cogne
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Federico Pellegrino (m) /
Jessie Diggins (f)
- Classical winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Kerttu Niskanen (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- March 9 & 10: CCWC #10 in
Oslo
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
- March 12: CCWC #11 in
Drammen
- Sprint Classical winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Maiken Caspersen Falla (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- March 16 & 17: CCWC #12 in
Falun
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Alexander Bolshunov (m) /
Therese Johaug (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- March 22 – 24: CCWC #13 (final) in
Quebec City
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) /
Stina Nilsson (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Alpen Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 8 & 9, 2018: CCSAC #1 in
Prémanon
- Event cancelled.
- December 21 – 23, 2018: CCSAC #2 in
Valdidentro-Isolaccia
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Richard Jouve (m) /
Laurien van der Graaff (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Andreas Katz (m) /
Elisa Brocard (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Maurice Manificat (m) /
Antonia Fraebel (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 4 – 6: CCSAC #3 in
Nové Město na Moravě
- Sprint Classical winners:
Valentin Chauvin (m) /
Antonia Fraebel (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Robin Duvillard (m) /
Antonia Fraebel (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Valentin Chauvin (m) /
Antonia Fraebel (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- February 8 – 10: CCSAC #4 in
Planica
- Men's Sprint Freestyle winners:
Jules Chappaz (#1) /
Claudio Muller (#2)
- Women's Sprint Freestyle winners:
Anna-Maria Dietze (#1) /
Ilaria Debertolis (#2)
- Men's Classical winners:
Jules Chappaz (#1) /
Alexey Poltoranin (#2)
- Women's Classical winners:
Lisa Lohmann (#1) /
Lucia Scardoni (#2)
- Men's Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Jules Chappaz (#1) /
Max Hauke (#2)
- Women's Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Barbora Havlíčková (#1) /
Ilaria Debertolis (#2)
- Men's Sprint Freestyle winners:
- March 2 & 3: CCSAC #5 in
Le Brassus
- Freestyle winners:
Hugo Lapalus (m) /
Laura Chamiot Maitral (f)
- Classical Pursuit winners:
Valentin Chauvin (m) /
Julia Belger (f)
- Freestyle winners:
- March 15 – 17: CCSAC #6 (final) in
Oberwiesenthal
- Men's Sprint Freestyle winners:
Davide Graz (#1) /
Janik Riebli (#2)
- Women's Sprint Freestyle winners:
Lisa Lohmann (#1) /
Katerina Janatova (#2)
- Men's Classical Mass Start winners:
Luca del Fabbro (#1) /
Valentin Chauvin (#2)
- Women's Classical Mass Start winners:
Barbora Havlíčková (#1) /
Antonia Fraebel (#2)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Clement Arnault (m) /
Kateřina Razýmová (f)
- Men's Freestyle Relay winners:
France (Theo Schely, Victor Lovera, & Jules Chappaz)
- Women's Freestyle Relay winners:
Czech Republic (Pavlina Votockova, Zuzana Holikova, & Barbora Havlíčková)
- Men's Sprint Freestyle winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Eastern Europe Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- November 22 – 26, 2018: EEC #1 in
Vershina Tea
- Sprint Classical winners:
Ilia Poroshkin (m) /
Olga Tsareva (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Alexander Terentev (m) /
Olga Tsareva (f)
- Classical winners:
Sergey Ardashev (m) /
Diana Golovan (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Alexander Bessmertnykh (m) /
Anna Nechaevskaya (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- December 22 – 26, 2018: EEC #2 in
Krasnogorsk #1
- Sprint Classical winners:
Ermil Vokuev (m) /
Natalia Matveeva (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Ivan Yakimushkin (m) /
Tatiana Aleshina (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Ivan Yakimushkin (m) /
Natalia Matveeva (f)
- Classical winners:
Alexander Bessmertnykh (m) /
Alisa Zhambalova (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- January 10 – 13: EEC #3 in
Raubichi
- Sprint Classical winners:
Ilia Semikov (m) /
Anastasia Kirillova (f)
- Classical winners:
Ermil Vokuev (m) /
Alisa Zhambalova (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Ilia Poroshkin (m) /
Alisa Zhambalova (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- February 8 – 10: EEC #4 in
Krasnogorsk #2
- Classical winners:
Andrey Parfenov (m) /
Alisa Zhambalova (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Andrey Parfenov (m) /
Anastasia Vlasova (f)
- Classical winners:
- February 23 – 27: EEC #5 (final) in
Syktyvkar
- Classical winners:
Ilia Semikov (m) /
Yevgeniya Shapovalova (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Andrey Parfenov (m) /
Aida Bayazitova (f)
- Skiathlon winners:
Alexey Vitsenko (m) /
Svetlana Plotnikova (f)
- Classical winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing US Super Tour
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 1 & 2, 2018: UST #1 in
Rendezvous Ski Trails (West Yellowstone)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Andrew Newell (m) /
Julia Kern (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Benjamin Lustgarten (m) /
Rosie Frankowski (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- January 25 – 27: UST #2 in
Mount Van Hoevenberg (Lake Placid)
- Freestyle winners:
Kyle Bratrud (m) /
Jessica Yeaton (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
Antoine Briand (m) /
Sophie Caldwell (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Kyle Bratrud (m) /
Kaitlynn Miller (f)
- Freestyle winners:
- February 15 – 17: UST #3 in
Theodore Wirth Park (Minneapolis)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Antoine Briand (m) /
Alayna Sonnesyn (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Zak Ketterson (m) /
Kaitlynn Miller (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Matthew Edward Liebsch (m) /
Nicole Schneider (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- March 28 – April 2: UST #4 (final) in
Presque Isle
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Simi Hamilton (m) /
Sadie Bjornsen (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Erik Bjornsen (m) /
Sadie Bjornsen (f)
- Mass Start Mixed Relay winners:
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Nor-Am Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 8 & 9, 2018: SNAC #1 in
Vernon
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Andrew Newell (m) /
Julia Kern (f)
- Classical winners:
Kyle Bratrud (m) /
Katherine Stewart-Jones (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- December 13 – 16, 2018: SNAC #2 in
Canmore Nordic Centre
- Sprint Classical winners:
Bob Thompson (m) /
Dahria Beatty (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Russell Kennedy (m) /
Dahria Beatty (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Bob Thompson (m) /
Dahria Beatty (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- January 18 – 20: SNAC #3 in
Sherbrooke
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Russell Kennedy (m) / (f)
- Classical winners:
Scott James Hill (m) /
Katherine Stewart-Jones (f)
- Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Russell Kennedy (m) /
Katherine Stewart-Jones (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- February 1 – 3: SNAC #4 (final) in
Duntroon
- Sprint Classical winners:
Julien Locke (m) /
Zoe Williams (f)
- Classical winners:
Alexis Dumas (m) /
Zoe Williams (f)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Jack Carlyle (m) /
Laura Leclair (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Slavic Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 15 & 16, 2018: SSC #1 in
Štrbské Pleso #1
- Classical winners:
Peter Mlynár (m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Paweł Klisz (m) /
Eliza Rucka (f)
- Classical winners:
- December 29 & 30, 2018: SSC #2 in
Štrbské Pleso #2
- Freestyle winners:
Jan Koristek (m) /
Izabela Marcisz (f)
- Classical winners:
Jan Koristek (m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
- Freestyle winners:
- February 2 & 3: SSC #3 in
Zakopane
- Classical winners:
Jan Koristek (m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Jan Koristek (m) /
Izabela Marcisz (f)
- Classical winners:
- March 9 & 10: SSC #4 in
Wisła Kubalonka
- Sprint Classical winners:
Maciej Staręga (m) /
Alena Procházková (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Dominik Bury (m) /
Izabela Marcisz (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
- March 23 & 24: SSC #5 (final) in
Kremnica-Skalksa
- Classical winners:
Dominik Bury (m) /
Justyna Kowalczyk (f)
- Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Dominik Bury (m) /
Izabela Marcisz (f)
- Classical winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Far East Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 16 & 17, 2018: FEC #1 in
Alpensia Cross-Country and Biathlon Centre #1
- Classical winners:
Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) /
Yukari Tanaka (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Hikari Fujinoki (m) /
Lee Chae-won (f)
- Classical winners:
- December 25 – 27, 2018: FEC #2 in
Otoineppu
- Classical winners:
Naoto Baba (m) /
Chika Kobayashi (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Naoto Baba (m) /
Miki Kodama (f)
- Classical winners:
- January 6 – 8: FEC #3, FEC #4, & FEC #5 in
Sapporo
- Classical winners:
Takanori Ebina (m) /
Kozue Takizawa (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) /
Yuka Watanabe (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Naoto Baba (m) /
Miki Kodama (f)
- Classical winners:
- January 16 & 17: FEC #6 in
Alpensia Cross-Country and Biathlon Centre #2
- Classical winners:
Hikari Fujinoki (m) /
Yukari Tanaka (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Hikari Fujinoki (m) /
Lee Chae-won (f)
- Classical winners:
- March 2 & 3: FEC #7 (final) in
Shiramine
- Sprint Classical winners:
Hikari Fujinoki (m) /
Yukari Tanaka (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Tomoki Sato (m) /
Yukari Tanaka (f)
- Sprint Classical winners:
2018–19 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Scandinavian Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 14 – 16, 2018: CCSC #1 in
Östersund
- Note: The classical events here were cancelled.
- Sprint Classical winners:
Paal Troean Aune (m) /
Anna Svendsen (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Daniel Rickardsson (m) /
Astrid Oeyre Slind (f)
- January 4 – 6: CCSC #2 in
Vuokatti
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Erik Valnes (m) /
Johanna Hagström (f)
- Classical winners:
Livo Niskanen (m) /
Frida Karlsson (f)
- Freestyle Mass Start winners:
Mattis Stenshagen (m) /
Frida Karlsson (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
- March 1 – 3: CCSC #3 (final) in
Madona
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
Gjoeran Tefre (m) /
Moa Lundgren (f)
- Classical winners:
Daniel Stock (m) /
Johanna Hagström (f)
- Freestyle Pursuit winners:
Martin Loewstroem Nyenget (m) /
Moa Lundgren (f)
- Sprint Freestyle winners:
2019 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Balkan Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- January 12 & 13: BC #1 in
Ravna Gora
- Event cancelled.
- February 2 & 3: BC #2 in
Pigadia
- Men's Freestyle winner:
Martin Penchev (2 times)
- Women's Freestyle winner:
Vedrana Malec (2 times)
- Men's Freestyle winner:
- February 9 & 10: BC #3 in
Sjenica
- Men's Freestyle winner:
Strahinja Eric (2 times)
- Women's Freestyle winner:
Sanja Kusmuk (2 times)
- Men's Freestyle winner:
- February 13 & 14: BC #4 in
Mavrovo
- Note: The second men's and women's freestyle events here was cancelled.
- Freestyle winners:
Edi Dadić (m) /
Vedrana Malec (f)
- March 2 & 3: BC #5 in
Ravna Gora
- Men's Classical & Freestyle winner:
Tobias Habenicht
- Women's Classical & Freestyle winner:
Nika Jagecic
- Men's Classical & Freestyle winner:
- March 9 & 10: BC #6 in
Dvorista
- Men's Freestyle winner:
Edi Dadić (2 times)
- Women's Freestyle winner:
Vedrana Malec (2 times)
- Men's Freestyle winner:
- March 17 & 18: BC #7 in
Borovets
- Event cancelled.
- March 23 & 24: BC #8 (final) in
Bolu-Gerede
- Classical winners:
Paul Constantin Pepene (m) /
Vedrana Malec (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Petrică Hogiu (m) /
Vedrana Malec (f)
- Classical winners:
2018 FIS Cross-Country Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- July 21 & 22: ANZC #1 in
Perisher Valley
- Classical winners:
Phillip Bellingham (m) /
Chelsea Moore (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Callum Watson (m) /
Barbara Jezeršek (f)
- Classical winners:
- August 18 & 19: ANZC #2 in
Falls Creek
- Sprint 1 km Freestyle winners:
Ole Jacob Forsmo (m) /
Emily Champion (f)
- Classical winners:
Phillip Bellingham (m) /
Casey Wright (f)
- Sprint 1 km Freestyle winners:
- September 4 – 6: ANZC #3 (final) in
Snow Farm
- Freestyle winners:
Kyle Bratrud (m) /
Jessie Diggins (f)
- Sprint 1.6 km Freestyle winners:
Kevin Bolger (m) /
Sophie Caldwell (f)
- Classical Mass Start winners:
Benjamin Saxton (m) /
Jessie Diggins (f)
- Freestyle winners:
Freestyle skiing
World championships (Freestyle)
- August 24 – September 8, 2018: Part of the FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2018 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort[9]
- Big Air winners:
Mac Forehand (m) /
Anastasia Tatalina (f)
- Ski Cross winners:
Oliver Davies (m) /
Mikayla Martin (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Oliwer Magnusson (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Nico Porteous (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
- Big Air winners:
- January 26 – April 14: FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2019 (Freestyle) in
Leysin,
Reiteralm,
Chiesa in Valmalenco, &
Klaeppen[10]
- Leysin (January 26 & 27)
- Halfpipe winners:
Connor Ladd (m) /
Constance Brogden (f)
- Reiteralm (March 28 & 29)
- Ski Cross winners:
David Mobaerg (m) /
Zoe Chore (f)
- Chiesa in Valmalenco (April 1 – 6)
- Aerials winners:
Viachaslau Tsimertsau (m) /
Sniazhana Drabiankova (f)
- Moguls winners:
Nikita Novitckii (m) /
Sabrina Cass (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Elliot Vaillancourt (m) /
Anastasia Smirnova (f)
- Klaeppen (April 4 – 14)
- Slopestyle winners:
Edouard Therriault (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
- Big Air winners:
Ulrik Samnoey (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
- February 1 – 10: Part of the FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 in
Park City, Deer Valley, & Solitude Mountain Resort[11][12]
- The women's slopestyle event here was cancelled.
- Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Yuliya Galysheva (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
- Aerials winners:
Maxim Burov (m) /
Aliaksandra Ramanouskaya (f)
- Team Aerials winners:
Switzerland (Carol Bouvard, Nicolas Gygax, & Noé Roth)
- Big Air winners:
Fabian Bösch (m) /
Tess Ledeux (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Aaron Blunck (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
- Men's Slopestyle winner:
James Woods
- Ski Cross winners:
François Place (m) /
Marielle Thompson (f)
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup
- September 5, 2018 – March 30, 2019: 2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Schedule[13]
Moguls and Aerials
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 7, 2018: MAWC #1 in
Ruka
- Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
- Moguls winners:
- December 15 & 16, 2018: MAWC #2 in
Thaiwoo (Chongli District, Zhangjiakou)
- Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Jaelin Kauf (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Jaelin Kauf (f)
- Moguls winners:
- January 11 & 12: MAWC #3 in
Calgary
- Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Yuliya Galysheva (f)
- Moguls winners:
- January 17 – 19: MAWC #4 in
Lake Placid
- Moguls winners:
Benjamin Cavet (m) /
Jakara Anthony (f)
- Aerials winners:
Maxim Burov (m) /
Xu Mengtao (f)
- Moguls winners:
- January 26: MAWC #5 in
Mont Tremblant Resort
- Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 16: MAWC #6 in
Moscow
- Aerials winners:
Stanislav Nikitin (m) /
Aliaksandra Ramanouskaya (f)
- Aerials winners:
- February 23: MAWC #7 in
Minsk
- Aerials winners:
Maxim Burov (m) /
Xu Mengtao (f)
- Aerials winners:
- February 23 & 24: MAWC #8 in
Tazawako
- Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (m) /
Perrine Laffont (f)
- Moguls winners:
- March 2 & 3: MAWC #9 (co-final) in
Shymbulak
- Note: The men's and women's dual moguls events here were cancelled.
- Moguls winners:
Ikuma Horishima (m) /
Yuliya Galysheva (f)
- March 2 & 3: MAWC #10 (co-final) in
Shimao Lotus Mountain
- Men's Aerials winner:
Sun Jiaxu (2 times)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Laura Peel (#1) /
Xu Mengtao (#2)
- Team Aerials winners:
China
- Men's Aerials winner:
Half-pipe, Big air, and Slopestyle
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- September 5 – 7, 2018: HB&SWC #1 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
- Big Air winners:
Andri Ragettli (m) /
Elena Gaskell (f)
- Big Air winners:
- November 4, 2018: HB&SWC #2 in
Modena SKIPASS
- Big Air winners:
Birk Ruud (m) /
Mathilde Gremaud (f)
- Big Air winners:
- November 22 – 24, 2018: HB&SWC #3 in
Stubai Alps
- Slopestyle winners:
Henrik Harlaut (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- December 5 & 7, 2018: HB&SWC #4 in
Copper Mountain
- Halfpipe winners:
Aaron Blunck (m) /
Kelly Sildaru (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- December 20 – 22, 2018: HB&SWC #5 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden (Chongli District. Zhangjiakou)
- Halfpipe winners:
Simon d'Artois (m) /
Zhang Kexin (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- January 10 – 12: HB&SWC #6 in
Font-Romeu
- Slopestyle winners:
Alex Hall (m) /
Sarah Höfflin (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 25 – 27: HB&SWC #7 in
Seiser Alm
- Slopestyle winners:
Max Moffatt (m) /
Eileen Gu (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- February 14 – 16: HB&SWC #8 in
Calgary
- Halfpipe winners:
David Wise (m) /
Cassie Sharpe (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- March 6 – 9: HB&SWC #9 in
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
- Halfpipe winners:
Birk Irving (m) /
Cassie Sharpe (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Mac Forehand (m) /
Mathilde Gremaud (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- March 14 – 17: HB&SWC #10 in
Quebec City
- Note: The slopestyle events here was cancelled.
- Big Air winners:
Lukas Müllauer (m) /
Mathilde Gremaud (f)
- March 20 & 21: HB&SWC #11 in
Tignes
- Event cancelled.
- March 23: HB&SWC #12 in
Oslo
- Event cancelled.
- March 29 & 30: HB&SWC #13 (final) in
Silvaplana
- Slopestyle winners:
Andri Ragettli (m) /
Megan Oldham (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Ski cross
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 6 – 8, 2018: SCWC #1 in
Val Thorens
- Event cancelled.
- December 13 – 15, 2018: SCWC #2 in
Montafon
- Event cancelled.
- December 16 & 17, 2018: SCWC #3 in
Arosa
- Ski Cross winners:
Jonas Lenherr (m) /
Fanny Smith (f)
- Ski Cross winners:
- December 20 – 22, 2018: SCWC #4 in
Innichen
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Jonathan Midol (#1) /
Joos Berry (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Fanny Smith (#1) /
Sandra Näslund (#2)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- January 18 – 20: SCWC #5 in
Idre
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Alex Fiva (#1) /
Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Heidi Zacher (#1) /
Fanny Smith (#2)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- January 25 & 26: SCWC #6 in
Blue Mountain
- Ski Cross winners:
Brady Leman (m) /
Fanny Smith (f)
- Ski Cross winners:
- February 15 – 17: SCWC #7 in
Feldberg
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Ryan Regez (#1) /
Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Sandra Näslund (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- February 22 – 24: SCWC #8 in
Sunny Valley Ski Resort (Miass)
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
Bastien Midol (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Fanny Smith (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
- March 17: SCWC #9 (final) in
Veysonnaz
- Ski Cross winners:
Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (m) /
Marielle Thompson (f)
- Ski Cross winners:
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing Europa Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- November 2018
- November 24 & 25, 2018: FSEC #1 in
Pitztal
- Ski Cross winners:
Jonas Lenherr (m) /
Marielle Thompson (f)
- Ski Cross winners:
- November 30 & December 1, 2018: FSEC #2 in
Ruka
- Men's Aerials winners:
Noé Roth (#1) /
Dimitri Isler (#2)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Iori Usui (#1) /
Laura Peel (#2)
- Men's Aerials winners:
- November 24 & 25, 2018: FSEC #1 in
- January 2019
- January 11: FSEC #3 in
Villars-sur-Ollon
- Ski Cross winners:
Romain Detraz (m) /
Fanny Smith (f)
- Ski Cross winners:
- January 16 & 17: FSEC #4 in
Kreischberg
- Slopestyle winners:
Hannes Rudigier (m) /
Maialen Oiartzabal (f; default)
- Big Air winners:
Kuura Koivisto (m) /
Maialen Oiartzabal (f; default)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 17 – 19: FSEC #5 in
Val Thorens
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Youri Duplessis Kergomard (#1) /
Gil Martin (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Amelie Schneider (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- January 20 – 23: FSEC #6 in
Vars
- Slopestyle winners:
Nils Rhyner (m) /
Lou Barin (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 24 – 26: FSEC #7 in
Lenk im Simmental
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
Niki Lehikoinen (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Katrin Ofner (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
- January 26 & 27: FSEC #8 in
Moscow
- Men's Aerials winners:
Ilya Harelik (#1) /
Ruslan Katmanov (#2)
- Women's Aerials winner:
Sniazhana Drabiankova (2 times)
- Men's Aerials winners:
- January 26 & 27: FSEC #9 in
St Anton am Arlberg
- Slopestyle winners:
Simo Peltola (m) /
Ruzena Cermakova (f; default)
- Big Air winners:
Matej Svancer (m) /
Ruzena Cermakova (f; default)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 26 & 27: FSEC #8 in
Krasnoe Ozero
- Event cancelled.
- January 31 – February 2: FSEC #11 in
Saint François Longchamp
- Note: The second ski cross events for men and women here were cancelled.
- Ski Cross winners:
Youri Duplessis Kergomard (m) /
Amelie Schneider (f)
- January 11: FSEC #3 in
- February 2019
- February 1 & 2: FSEC #12 in
Taivalvaara
- Moguls winners:
Viacheslav Tcvetkov (m) /
Anna Gerasimova (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
Maxim Kudryavtsev (m) /
Anna Gerasimova (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 5 & 6: FSEC #13 in
Jyväskylä
- Moguls winners:
Miska Mustonen (m) /
Lulu Shaffer (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
Johannes Suikkari (m) /
Anna Gerasimova (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 5 – 7: FSEC #14 in
La Clusaz
- Slopestyle winners:
Kuura Koivisto (m) /
Lou Barin (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- February 9 & 10: FSEC #15 in
Grasgehren
- Note: The second ski cross events for men and women were cancelled.
- Ski Cross winners:
Florian Wilmsmann (m) /
Heidi Zacher (f)
- February 9 & 10: FSEC #16 in
Bygdsiljum
- Moguls winners:
Johannes Suikkari (m) /
Fantine Degroote (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
Albin Holmgren (m) /
My Bjerkman (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 15 – 17: FSEC #17 in
Minsk
- Men's Aerials winners:
Ihar Drabiankou (#1) /
Makar Mitrafanau (#2)
- Women's Aerials winner:
Sniazhana Drabiankova (2 times)
- Team Aerials winners:
- Men's Aerials winners:
- February 16: FSEC #18 in
Kotelnica Bialczanska
- Big Air winners:
Hannes Rudigier (m) /
Elvira Marie Ros (f)
- Big Air winners:
- February 22 & 23: FSEC #19 in
Davos
- Big Air winners:
Kim Gubser (m) /
Kea Kühnel (f)
- Big Air winners:
- February 23: FSEC #20 in
Deštné v Orlických horách
- Slopestyle winners:
Orest Kovalenko (m) /
Tora Johansen (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- February 1 & 2: FSEC #12 in
- March 2019
- March 1: FSEC #21 in
Dolní Morava
- Ski Cross winners:
Ryan Regez (m) /
Ekaterina Maltseva (f)
- Ski Cross winners:
- March 2 & 3: FSEC #22 in
Krispl
- Event cancelled.
- March 12 & 13: FSEC #23 in
Tignes
- Moguls winners:
Nicolas Degaches (m) /
Josefina Wersen (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
Nicolas Degaches (m) /
My Bjerkman (f)
- Moguls winners:
- March 15 – 18: FSEC #24 in
Gudauri
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Igor Omelin (#1) /
Youri Duplessis Kergomard (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Ekaterina Maltseva (#1) /
Mikayla Martin (#2)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- March 16 & 17: FSEC #25 in
Jasná
- Slopestyle winners:
Vojtěch Bresky (m) /
Kateryna Kotsar (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 17 – 19: FSEC #26 in
Airolo #1
- Moguls winners:
Thomas Gerken Schofield (m) /
My Bjerkman (f)
- Men's Dual Moguls winners:
Thomas Gerken Schofield (#1) /
Miska Mustonen (#2)
- Women's Dual Moguls winners:
Thea Wallberg (#1) /
Makayla Gerken Schofield (#2)
- Moguls winners:
- March 21 – 24: FSEC #27 in
Reiteralm
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Cornel Renn (#1) /
Tobias Müller (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
India Sherret (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- March 22 & 23: FSEC #28 in
Goetschen
- Big Air winners:
Simo Peltola (m) /
Tora Johansen (f)
- Big Air winners:
- March 22 – 24: FSEC #29 in
Airolo #2
- Men's Aerials winner:
Noé Roth (2 times)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Sniazhana Drabiankova (#1) /
Volha Chromova (#2)
- Team Aerials winners:
- Men's Aerials winner:
- March 25 & 26: FSEC #30 in
Livigno
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Kim Gubser (#1) /
Matej Svancer (#2)
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
Kirsty Muir (#1) /
Elisa Maria Nakab (#2)
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
- March 31 & April 1: FSEC #31 (final) in
Chiesa in Valmalenco
- Men's Aerials winner:
Noé Roth (2 times)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Sniazhana Drabiankova (#1) /
Karyl Loeb (#2)
- Men's Aerials winner:
- March 1: FSEC #21 in
2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing Nor-Am Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 2018
- December 14 & 15, 2018: FSNA #1 in
Copper Mountain
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
Cassidy Jarrell (#1) /
Sam McKeown (#2)
- Women's Halfpipe winner:
Zoe Atkin (2 times)
- Men's Halfpipe winners:
- December 14 & 15, 2018: FSNA #1 in
- January 2019
- January 5 & 6: FSNA #2 in
Utah Olympic Park
- Men's Aerials winners:
Jonathon Lillis (#1) /
Christopher Lillis (#2)
- Women's Aerials winners:
Olga Polyuk (#1) /
Madison Varmette (#2)
- Men's Aerials winners:
- January 17 & 18: FSNA #3 in
Waterville Valley Resort
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Deven Fagan (#1) /
Hunter Henderson (#2)
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
Marin Hamill (#1) /
Skye Clarke (#2)
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
- January 17 – 20: FSNA #4 in
Calabogie Peaks #1
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Gavin Rowell (#1) /
Jared Schmidt (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Zoe Chore (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- January 27 – 29: FSNA #5 in
Lake Placid
- Note: The second aerials events for men and women were cancelled.
- Aerials winners:
Noé Roth (m) /
Brittany George (f)
- January 5 & 6: FSNA #2 in
- February 2019
- February 1 & 2: FSNA #6 in
Calabogie Peaks #2
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
Jared Schmidt (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Zoe Chore (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
- February 1 & 2: FSNA #7 in
Le Relais #1
- Men's Aerials winners:
Miha Fontaine (#1) /
Quinn Dehlinger (#2)
- Women's Aerials winner:
Megan Smallhouse (2 times)
- Men's Aerials winners:
- February 2 & 3: FSNA #8 in
Stratton Mountain Resort
- Moguls winners:
George McQuinn (m) /
Kasey Hogg (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
Sō Matsuda (m) /
Kenzie Radway (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 8 – 10: FSNA #9 in
Calgary
- Halfpipe winners:
Hunter Hess (m) /
Svea Irving (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Étienne Geoffroy Gagnon (m) /
Marin Hamill (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- February 9 & 10: FSNA #10 in
Val Saint-Côme
- Moguls winners:
Alex Lewis (m) /
Ali Kariotis (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
Gabriel Dufresne (m) /
Florence Delsame (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 14 – 16: FSNA #11 in
Aspen/Snowmass
- Note: The women's big air event here was cancelled.
- Slopestyle winners:
Rylan Evans (m) /
Megan Oldham (f)
- Men's Big Air winner:
Ryan Stevenson
- Halfpipe winners:
Samson Schuiling (m) /
Zoe Atkin (f)
- February 18 – 23: FSNA #12 in
Ski Cooper
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Gavin Rowell (#1) /
Carson Cook (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winners:
Zoe Chore (#1) /
Hannah Schmidt (#2)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- February 21 – 24: FSNA #13 in
Steamboat Ski Resort
- Moguls winners:
Jack Kariotis (m) /
Kai Owens (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
Elliot Vaillancourt (m) /
Kenzie Radway (f)
- Moguls winners:
- February 1 & 2: FSNA #6 in
- March & April 2019
- March 2 & 3: FSNA #14 in
Apex Mountain Resort
- Moguls winners:
Nick Page (m) /
Shunka Fukushima (f)
- Dual moguls winners:
Sō Matsuda (m) /
Kai Owens (f)
- Moguls winners:
- March 12 – 17: FSNA #15 in
Holiday Valley
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
Phillip Tremblay (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winners: (#1) / (#2)
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
- March 16 & 17: FSNA #16 in
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
- Halfpipe winners:
Dylan Ladd (m) /
Svea Irving (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Hunter Henderson (m) /
Marin Hamill (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- March 26: FSNA #17 in
Stoneham Mountain Resort
- Halfpipe winners:
Jaxin Hoerter (m) /
Svea Irving (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- March 29 & 30: FSNA #18 in
Le Relais #2
- Slopestyle winners:
Hunter Henderson (m) /
Amy Fraser (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- April 13 & 14: FSNA #19 (final) in
Banff Sunshine
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Reece Howden (#1) /
Brady Leman (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Kelsey Serwa (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
- March 2 & 3: FSNA #14 in
2018 FIS Freestyle Skiing South American Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- August 3 – 5: SAC #1 in
La Parva #1
- Note: The second Women's slopestyle event was cancelled.
- Men's Slopestyle winner:
Mateo Bonacalza (2 times)
- Women's Slopestyle winner:
Dominique Ohaco
- August 10 – 12: SAC #2 in
La Parva #2
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
Joaquin Valdes (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Saga Goni (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
- September 14 & 15: SAC #3 in
Cerro Catedral
- Men's Big Air winner:
Luke Price (2 times)
- Women's Big Air winners:
Abril Melisa Bertzky (#1) /
Josefina Vitiello (#2)
- Men's Big Air winner:
- September 18 – 20: SAC #4 (final) in
Cerro Castor
- Big Air winners:
Luke Price (m) /
Josefina Vitiello (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Ivan Kuray (m) /
Josefina Vitiello (f)
- Big Air winners:
2018 FIS Freestyle Skiing Australia & New Zealand Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- August 14 – 16: ANCFS #1 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
- Slopestyle winners:
Taisei Yamamoto (m) /
Eileen Gu (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
Sam Ward (m) /
Zoe Atkin (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- August 15 – 18: ANCFS #2 in
Falls Creek
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
Oliver Davies (2 times)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Sami Kennedy-Sim (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winner:
- August 28 & 29: ANCFS #3 in
Perisher Ski Resort
- Men's Moguls winners:
Mikaël Kingsbury (#1) /
Ikuma Horishima (#2)
- Women's Moguls winner:
Junko Hoshino (#1) /
Jakara Anthony (#2)
- Men's Moguls winners:
- September 1: ANCFS #4 in
Mount Buller Alpine Resort
- Dual Moguls winners:
James Matheson (m) /
Jakara Anthony (f)
- Dual Moguls winners:
- September 3 – 6: ANCFS #5 (final) in
Mount Hotham
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Douglas Crawford (#1) /
Robbie Morrison (#2)
- Women's Ski Cross winner:
Sami Kennedy-Sim (2 times)
- Men's Ski Cross winners:
Nordic combined
International nordic combined events
- January 19 – 27: Part of the 2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in
Lahti[14]
- Men's individual winners:
Julian Schmid (#1) /
Johannes Lamparter (#2)
- Women's individual winner:
Ayane Miyazaki
- Men's team winners:
Germany (Luis Lehnert, Simon Huettel, David Mach, & Julian Schmid)
- Men's individual winners:
- February 20 – March 3: Part of the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 in
Seefeld[15]
- Men's individual winners:
Eric Frenzel (#1) /
Jarl Magnus Riiber (#2)
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Espen Bjørnstad, Jan Schmid, Jørgen Graabak, & Jarl Magnus Riiber)
- Men's team sprint winners:
Germany (Eric Frenzel & Fabian Rießle)
- Men's individual winners:
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- November 23 – 25, 2018: NCWC #1 in
Ruka
- Men's individual winner:
Mario Seidl
- Men's team winners:
Germany (Eric Frenzel, Fabian Rießle, Johannes Rydzek, & Vinzenz Geiger)
- Men's individual winner:
- November 29 – December 2, 2018: NCWC #2 in
Lillehammer
- Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times)
- Men's Mass Start winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber
- Men's individual winner:
- December 21 – 23, 2018: NCWC #3 in
Ramsau am Dachstein
- Men's individual winners:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (#1) /
Jørgen Graabak (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 4 – 6: NCWC #4 in
Otepää
- Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- January 10 – 13: NCWC #5 in
Fiemme Valley
- Men's individual winners:
Johannes Rydzek (#1) /
Vinzenz Geiger (#2)
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Jan Schmid & Jørgen Graabak)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 17 – 20: NCWC #6 in
Chaux-Neuve
- Men's individual winners:
Franz-Josef Rehrl (#1; 2 times) /
Mario Seidl (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 25 – 27: NCWC #7 in
Trondheim
- Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 1 – 3: NCWC #8 in
Klingenthal
- Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 8 – 10: NCWC #9 in
Lahti
- Men's individual winner:
Jørgen Graabak
- Men's team winners:
Finland (Ilkka Herola & Eero Hirvonen)
- Men's individual winner:
- March 8 & 9: NCWC #10 in
Oslo
- Men's individual winner:
Jarl Magnus Riiber
- Men's individual winner:
- March 15 – 17: NCWC #11 (final) in
Schonach im Schwarzwald
- Men's individual winners:
Bernhard Gruber (#1) /
Jarl Magnus Riiber (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined Continental Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 14 & 15, 2018: CCNC #1 in
Steamboat Ski Resort
- Men's individual winners:
Taylor Fletcher (#1) /
Paul Gerstgraser (#2)
- Women's individual winner:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 19 & 20, 2018: CCNC #2 in
Utah Olympic Park
- Men's individual winners:
Lukas Runggaldier (#1) /
Taylor Fletcher (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (#1) /
Gyda Westvold Hansen (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 4 – 6: CCNC #3 in
Klingenthal
- Note: The men's team event here was cancelled.
- Men's individual winner:
Jens Lurås Oftebro (2 times)
- January 5 & 6: CCNC #4 in
Otepää
- Women's individual winner:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- January 11 – 13: CCNC #5 in
Ruka
- Men's individual winner:
Leif Torbjoern Naesvold
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Simen Tiller, Sindre Ure Soetvik, Harald Johnas Riiber, & Leif Torbjoern Naesvold)
- Men's Mass Start winner:
Leif Torbjoern Naesvold
- Men's individual winner:
- January 26 & 27: CCNC #6 in
Planica
- Men's individual winners:
Leif Torbjoern Naesvold (#1) /
Paul Gerstgraser (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- February 8 – 10: CCNC #7 in
Eisenerz
- Men's individual winners:
Paul Gerstgraser (2 times)
- Men's team winners:
Austria (Philipp Orter, Christian Deuschl, Florian Dagn, & Paul Gerstgraser)
- Men's individual winners:
- February 16 & 17: CCNC #8 in
Rena
- Men's individual winner:
Paul Gerstgraser (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- March 8 – 10: CCNC #9 (final) in
Nizhny Tagil
- Men's individual winners:
Luis Lehnert (#1) /
Thomas Joebstl (#2)
- Women's individual winner:
Tara Geraghty-Moats (2 times)
- Mass Start winners:
Thomas Joebstl (m) /
Tara Geraghty-Moats (f)
- Men's individual winners:
2018–19 FIS Nordic Combined Alpen Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- August 6, 2018: ACNC #1 in
Klingenthal
- Women's individual winner:
Daniela Dejori
- Women's individual winner:
- August 10, 2018: ACNC #2 in
Bischofsgrün
- Women's individual winner:
Lisa Hirner
- Women's individual winner:
- September 8 – 10, 2018: ACNC #3 in
Winterberg
- Men's individual winners:
Rok Jelen (#1) /
Manuel Einkemmer (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- October 5 – 7, 2018: ACNC #4 in
Fiemme Valley-Predazzo
- Men's individual winners:
David Mach (#1) /
Johannes Lamparter (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
Jenny Nowak (#1) /
Lisa Hirner (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 21 – 23, 2018: ACNC #5 in
Villach
- Men's individual winners:
Luis Lehnert (#1) /
Thomas Rettenegger (#2)
- Women's individual winner:
Lisa Hirner (2 times)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 12 & 13: ACNC #6 in
Schonach im Schwarzwald
- Men's individual winners:
Edgar Vallet (#1) /
Max Teeling (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
Ema Volavsek (#1) /
Annika Sieff (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- February 8 – 10: ACNC #7 in
Kandersteg
- Men's individual winners:
Severin Reiter (#1) /
Nicolas Pfandl (#2)
- Men's team winners:
- Women's individual winners:
Cindy Haasch (#1) /
Lisa Hirner (#2)
- Women's team winners:
- Men's individual winners:
- February 16 & 17: ACNC #8 in
Kranj
- Men's individual winners:
Vid Vrhovnik (#1) /
Christian Frank (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- March 9 & 10: ACNC #9 (final) in
Chaux-Neuve
- Men's individual winners:
Max Teeling (#1) /
Rok Jelen (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
Daniela Dejori (#1) /
Annika Sieff (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
2018 FIS Nordic Combined Grand Prix
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- August 17 – 19: GPNC #1 in
Oberwiesenthal
- Men's individual winner:
Johannes Rydzek
- Men's team winners:
Austria (Franz-Josef Rehrl & Mario Seidl)
- Women's individual winners:
Stefaniya Nadymova (#1) /
Tara Geraghty-Moats (#2)
- Men's individual winner:
- August 21 & 22: GPNC #2 in
Villach
- Men's individual winner:
Ilkka Herola
- Men's individual winner:
- August 23 – 25: GPNC #3 in
Oberstdorf
- Men's individual winners:
Vinzenz Geiger (#1) /
Akito Watabe (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- September 21 – 23: GPNC #4 (final) in
Planica
- Men's individual winner:
Mario Seidl (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
Nordic skiing
- January 19 – 27: 2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in
Lahti[16]
- February 19 – March 3: FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 in
Seefeld[17]
Norway won both the gold and overall medal tallies.
Ski jumping
International ski jumping events
- January 19 – 27: Part of the 2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in
Lahti[18]
- Individual winners:
Thomas Aasen Markeng (m) /
Anna Shpyneva (f)
- Men's team winners:
Germany (Luca Roth, Kilian Maerkl, Philipp Raimund, & Constantin Schmid)
- Women's team winners:
Russia (Mariia Iakovleva, Aleksandra Barantceva, Anna Shpyneva, & Lidiia Iakovleva)
- Mixed team winners:
Russia (Anna Shpyneva, Mikhail Purtov, Lidiia Iakovleva, & Maksim Sergeev)
- Individual winners:
- February 20 – March 3: Part of the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 in
Seefeld[19]
- Men's individual winners:
Markus Eisenbichler (#1) /
Dawid Kubacki (#2)
- Men's team winners:
Germany (Karl Geiger, Richard Freitag, Stephan Leyhe, & Markus Eisenbichler)
- Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby
- Women's team winners:
Germany (Juliane Seyfarth, Ramona Straub, Carina Vogt, & Katharina Althaus)
- Mixed team winners:
Germany (Katharina Althaus, Markus Eisenbichler, Juliane Seyfarth, & Karl Geiger)
- Men's individual winners:
2018–19 Four Hills Tournament
- December 29 & 30, 2018: FHT #1 in
Oberstdorf
- Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
- Men's individual winner:
- December 31, 2018 & January 1, 2019: FHT #2 in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
- Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
- Men's individual winner:
- January 3 & 4: FHT #3 in
Innsbruck
- Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
- Men's individual winner:
- January 5 & 6: FHT #4 (final) in
Bischofshofen
- Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi
- Men's individual winner:
Raw Air 2019
- March 8 – 10: RA #1 in
Oslo (SJWC #20)
- Individual winners:
Robert Johansson (m) /
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (f)
- Men's team winners:
Norway (Johann André Forfang, Robin Pedersen, Marius Lindvik, & Robert Johansson)
- Individual winners:
- March 11 & 12: RA #2 in
Lillehammer (SJWC #21)
- Individual winners:
Stefan Kraft (m) /
Maren Lundby (f)
- Individual winners:
- March 13 & 14: RA #3 in
Trondheim (SJWC #22)
- Individual winners:
Ryoyu Kobayashi (m) /
Maren Lundby (f)
- Individual winners:
- March 15 – 17: RA #4 (final) in
Vikersund (SJWC #23)
- Men's individual winner:
Domen Prevc
- Men's team winners:
Slovenia (Anže Semenič, Peter Prevc, Domen Prevc, & Timi Zajc)
- Men's individual winner:
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- November 16 – 18, 2018: SJWC #1 in
Wisła
- Men's individual winner:
Evgeni Klimov
- Men's team winners:
Poland (Piotr Żyła, Jakub Wolny, Dawid Kubacki, & Kamil Stoch)
- Men's individual winner:
- November 23 – 25, 2018: SJWC #2 in
Ruka
- Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- November 29 – December 2, 2018: SJWC #3 in
Lillehammer
- Women's individual winners:
Juliane Seyfarth (#1) /
Lidiia Iakovleva (#2) /
Katharina Althaus (#3)
- Women's individual winners:
- November 30 – December 2, 2018: SJWC #4 in
Nizhny Tagil #1
- Men's individual winners:
Johann André Forfang (#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 7 – 9, 2018: SJWC #5 in
Titisee-Neustadt
- Event cancelled.
- December 14 – 16, 2018: SJWC #6 in
Engelberg
- Men's individual winners:
Karl Geiger (#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 14 – 16: SJWC #7 in
Prémanon
- Women's individual winner:
Katharina Althaus (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- January 11 – 13: SJWC #8 in
Sapporo #1
- Women's individual winners:
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (#1) /
Maren Lundby (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
- January 11 – 13: SJWC #9 in
Fiemme Valley
- Men's individual winners:
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#1) /
Dawid Kubacki (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 17 – 20: SJWC #10 in
Zaō, Miyagi
- Women's individual winners:
Daniela Iraschko-Stolz (#1) /
Maren Lundby (#2)
- Women's team winners:
Germany (Juliane Seyfarth, Ramona Straub, Carina Vogt, & Katharina Althaus)
- Women's individual winners:
- January 18 – 20: SJWC #11 in
Zakopane
- Men's individual winner:
Stefan Kraft
- Men's team winners:
Germany (Karl Geiger, Markus Eisenbichler, David Siegel, & Stephan Leyhe)
- Men's individual winner:
- January 25 – 27: SJWC #12 in
Râșnov
- Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- January 25 – 27: SJWC #13 in
Sapporo #2
- Men's individual winner:
Stefan Kraft (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 1 – 3: SJWC #14 in
Oberstdorf #1
- Men's individual winners:
Timi Zajc (#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2) /
Kamil Stoch (#3)
- Men's individual winners:
- February 1 – 3: SJWC #15 in
Hinzenbach
- Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- February 7 – 10: SJWC #16 in
Ljubno ob Savinji
- Note: The second women's event here was cancelled.
- Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby
- Women's team winners:
Germany (Carina Vogt, Anna Rupprecht, Juliane Seyfarth, & Katharina Althaus)
- February 8 – 10: SJWC #17 in
Lahti
- Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Men's team winners:
Austria (Philipp Aschenwald, Gregor Schlierenzauer, Michael Hayböck, & Stefan Kraft)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 15 – 17: SJWC #18 in
Willingen
- Men's individual winners:
Karl Geiger (#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
- Men's team winners:
Poland (Piotr Żyła, Jakub Wolny, Dawid Kubacki, & Kamil Stoch)
- Men's individual winners:
- February 15 – 17: SJWC #19 in
Oberstdorf #2
- Women's individual winner:
Maren Lundby (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- March 15 – 17: SJWC #24 in
Nizhny Tagil #2
- Women's individual winner:
Juliane Seyfarth (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- March 21 – 24: SJWC #25 in
Planica
- Men's individual winners:
Markus Eisenbichler (#1) /
Ryoyu Kobayashi (#2)
- Men's team winners:
Poland (Jakub Wolny, Kamil Stoch, Dawid Kubacki, & Piotr Żyła)
- Men's individual winners:
- March 22 – 24: SJWC #26 (final) in
Chaykovsky, Perm Krai
- Women's individual winners:
Juliane Seyfarth (#1) /
Maren Lundby (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- July 7 & 8: SJCC #1 in
Kranj
- Men's individual winner:
Killian Peier (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- August 16 – 19: SJCC #2 in
Frenštát pod Radhoštěm
- Men's individual winner:
Lukáš Hlava
- Men's individual winner:
- August 17: SJCC #3 in
Szczyrk
- Men's individual winner:
Philipp Aschenwald
- Men's individual winner:
- August 18: SJCC #4 in
Wisła
- Men's individual winner:
Philipp Aschenwald
- Men's individual winner:
- September 8 & 9: SJCC #5 in
Stams
- Men's individual winners:
Philipp Aschenwald (#1) /
Killian Peier (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- September 15 & 16: SJCC #6 in
Oslo
- Men's individual winner:
Philipp Aschenwald (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
Katharina Althaus (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- September 22 & 23: SJCC #7 in
Zakopane #1
- Men's individual winners:
Stefan Huber (#1) /
Philipp Aschenwald (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- September 29 & 30: SJCC #8 in
Klingenthal #1
- Men's individual winners:
Dimitry Vassiliev (#1) /
Aleksander Zniszczoł (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 8 & 9: SJCC #9 in
Lillehammer
- Men's individual winner:
Marius Lindvik (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- December 14 & 15: SJCC #10 in
Notodden
- Women's individual winners:
Selina Freitag (#1) /
Claudia Purker (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
- December 15 & 16: SJCC #11 in
Ruka
- Men's individual winner:
Robin Pedersen (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- December 27 & 28: SJCC #12 in
Engelberg
- Men's individual winners:
Markus Schiffner (#1) /
Philipp Aschenwald (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 5 & 6: SJCC #13 in
Klingenthal #2
- Men's individual winners:
Moritz Baer (#1) /
Tilen Bartol (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 12 & 13: SJCC #14 in
Bischofshofen
- Men's individual winners:
Clemens Aigner (#1) /
Žiga Jelar (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 18 – 20: SJCC #15 in
Sapporo Okurayama
- Men's individual winner:
Clemens Aigner (3 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- January 19 & 20: SJCC #16 in
Planica #1
- Women's individual winner:
Jerneja Brecl (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- January 26 & 27: SJCC #17 in
Planica #2
- Men's individual winners:
Bor Pavlovčič (#1) /
Martin Hamann (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- February 1 & 2: SJCC #18 in
Erzurum
- Event cancelled.
- February 8 – 10: SJCC #19 in
Iron Mountain
- Men's individual winners:
Pius Paschke (#1) /
Marius Lindvik (#2) /
Thomas Aasen Markeng (#3)
- Men's individual winners:
- February 15 & 16: SJCC #20 in
Oberstdorf
- Men's individual winner:
Clemens Aigner (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 23 & 24: SJCC #21 in
Brotterode
- Men's individual winners:
Clemens Aigner (#1) /
Marius Lindvik (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
Pauline Heßler (#1) /
Katra Komar (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- March 2 & 3, 2019: SJCC #22 in
Rena
- Men's individual winner:
Marius Lindvik (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- March 16 & 17: SJCC #23 in
Zakopane #2
- Men's individual winners:
Stefan Huber (#1) /
Aleksander Zniszczoł (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- March 23 & 24: SJCC #24 (final) in
Chaykovsky
- Men's individual winner:
Aleksander Zniszczoł (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
2018–19 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- August 5 & 6: SJAC #1 in
Klingenthal
- Women's individual winners:
Lisa Hirner (#1) /
Josephin Laue (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
- August 8 & 9: SJAC #2 in
Pöhla
- Women's individual winners:
Lisa Hirner (#1) /
Alina Ihle (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
- August 10 & 11: SJAC #3 in
Bischofsgrün
- Women's individual winners:
Lisa Hirner (#1) /
Oceane Paillard (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
- September 8 & 9: SJSC #4 in
Einsiedeln
- Men's individual winner:
David Haagen (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- October 5 – 7: SJSC #5 in
Fiemme Valley-Predazzo
- Men's individual winners:
David Haagen (#1) /
Jan Bombek (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
Lara Malsiner (#1) /
Agnes Reisch (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- December 21 – 23: SJSC #6 in
Villach
- Men's individual winners:
Stefan Rainer (#1) /
Luca Roth (#2)
- Women's individual winners:
Lisa Eder (#1) /
Lisa Hirner (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- January 11 & 12: SJSC #7 in
Schonach im Schwarzwald
- Women's individual winner:
Josephine Pagnier (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- January 12 & 13: SJSC #8 in
Oberwiesenthal
- Event cancelled.
- February 8 – 10: SJSC #9 in
Kandersteg
- Men's individual winners:
Rok Masle (#1) /
Marco Woergoetter (#2)
- Men's team winners:
- Women's individual winners:
Ana Jereb (#1) /
Lisa Hirner (#2)
- Women's team winners:
- Men's individual winners:
- February 15 & 16: SJSC #10 in
Kranj
- Men's individual winner:
Aljaž Osterc (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- February 23 & 24: SJSC #11 in
Oberhof
- Men's individual winners:
Dominik Peter (#1) /
Claudio Moerth (#2)
- Men's individual winners:
- March 9 & 10: SJSC #12 (final) in
Chaux-Neuve
- Note: The second women's individual event here was cancelled.
- Men's individual winners:
Dominik Peter (#1) /
David Haagen (#2)
- Women's individual winner:
Pia Mazi
2018 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- July 20 – 22: SJGP #1 in
Wisła
- Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Men's team winners:
Poland (Maciej Kot, Dawid Kubacki, Kamil Stoch, & Piotr Żyła)
- Men's individual winner:
- July 27 & 28: SJGP #2 in
Hinterzarten
- Individual winners:
Kamil Stoch (m) /
Sara Takanashi (f)
- Individual winners:
- August 3 & 4: SJGP #3 in
Einsiedeln
- Men's individual winner:
Kamil Stoch
- Men's individual winner:
- August 9 – 11: SJGP #4 in
Courchevel
- Individual winners:
Evgeni Klimov (m) /
Sara Takanashi (f)
- Individual winners:
- August 16 – 19: SJGP #5 in
Frenštát pod Radhoštěm
- Women's individual winner:
Sara Takanashi (2 times)
- Women's individual winner:
- August 23 – 25: SJGP #6 in
Hakuba
- Men's individual winner:
Ryoyu Kobayashi (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- September 7 – 9: SJGP #7 in
Chaykovsky, Perm Krai
- Note: The men's individual event was cancelled.
- Women's individual winner:
Ema Klinec
- Mixed Team winners:
Japan (Nozomi Maruyama, Yukiya Sato, Sara Takanashi, & Junshirō Kobayashi)
- September 21 – 23: SJGP #8 in
Râșnov
- Men's individual winner:
Karl Geiger (2 times)
- Men's individual winner:
- September 27 & 28: SJGP #9 in
Liberec
- Event cancelled.
- September 29 & 30: SJGP #10 in
Hinzenbach
- Men's individual winner:
Daniel Huber
- Men's individual winner:
- October 2 & 3: SJGP #11 (final) in
Klingenthal
- Note: The men's individual event was cancelled.
- Women's individual winner:
Anna Rupprecht
2018 FIS Ski Jumping Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- July 7 & 8: SJC #1 in
Villach #1
- Men's winners:
Justin Nietzel (#1) /
Luca Egloff (#2)
- Women's winner:
Chiara Hoelzl (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- July 14 & 15: SJC #2 in
Szczyrk
- Men's winners:
Maximilian Steiner (#1) /
Justin Nietzel (#2)
- Women's winner:
Daniela Haralambie (2 times)
- Men's winners:
- August 18 & 19: SJC #3 in
Sochi
- Event cancelled.
- September 15 & 16: SJC #4 in
Râșnov
- Men's winner:
Ren Nikaido (2 times)
- Women's winner:
Daniela Haralambie (2 times)
- Men's winner:
- December 14 & 15: SJC #5 in
Notodden
- Men's winners:
Stefan Rainer (#1) /
Fabian Seidl (#2)
- Men's winners:
- December 19 & 20: SJC #6 in
Utah Olympic Park
- Men's winner:
Luca Egloff (2 times)
- Women's winners:
Natalie Eilers (#1) /
Taylor Henrich (#2)
- Men's winner:
- January 12 & 13: SJC #7 in
Zakopane
- Men's winners:
Claudio Moerth (#1) /
David Haagen (#2)
- Men's winners:
- January 19 & 20: SJC #8 in
Planica
- Men's winner:
Cene Prevc (2 times)
- Men's winner:
- January 30 & 31: SJC #9 in
Erzurum
- Event cancelled.
- February 9 & 10: SJC #10 in
Rastbuechl
- Men's winner:
Andreas Wank (2 times)
- Women's winner:
Agnes Reisch (2 times)
- Men's winner:
- February 23 & 24: SJC #11 (final) in
Villach #2
- Men's winner:
Andreas Wank (2 times)
- Women's winners:
Giada Tomaselli (#1) /
Veronica Gianmoena (#2)
- Men's winner:
Other ski jumping events
- July 26, 2018: 2018 FIS Europa-Park FIS Youth Cup in
Hinterzarten
- Winners:
Rok Masle (m) /
Ana Jereb (f)
- Winners:
- September 14, 2018: 2018 FIS Carpath Cup in
Râșnov
- Winners:
Andrew Urlaub (m) /
Annika Sieff (f)
- Winners:
- March 7 – 10: 2019 Miyasama Ski Games in both
Okurayama Ski Jump Stadium & Miyanomori Ski Jump Stadium (Sapporo)
- Miyanomori Winners:
Keiichi Sato (m) /
Misaki Shigeno (f)
- Okurayama Winners:
Yumu Harada (m) /
Misaki Shigeno (f)
- Miyanomori Winners:
Snowboarding
Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships
- August 24 – September 6, 2018: Part of the FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2018 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort[20]
- Note: The team snowboard cross events here were cancelled.
- Big Air winners:
Takeru Otsuka (m) /
Kokomo Murase (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Jake Vedder (m) /
Kristina Paul (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Takeru Otsuka (m) /
Kokomo Murase (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Toby Miller (m) /
Mitsuki Ono (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Milena Bykova (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Daniela Ulbing (f)
- January 26 – April 14: FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2019 in
Leysin,
Rogla Ski Resort,
Reiteralm, &
Klaeppen[21]
- Leysin (January 26 & 27)
- Halfpipe winners:
Ruka Hirano (m) /
Mitsuki Ono (f)
- Rogla (March 29 – April 5)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Anastasia Kurochkina (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Mykhailo Kharuk (m) /
Maria Valova (f)
- Team Parallel winners:
Russia (Anastasia Kurochkina & Dmitry Loginov)
- Reiteralm (April 1 – 3)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Loan Bozzolo (m) /
Jana Fischer (f)
- Team Snowboard Cross winners:
France (Chloe Passerat & Loan Bozzolo)
- Klaeppen (April 4 – 14)
- Slopestyle winners:
William Buffey (m) /
Sommer Gendron (f)
- Big Air winners:
Ryoma Kimata (m) /
Sommer Gendron (f)
- February 1 – 10: Part of the FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 in
Park City, Deer Valley, & Solitude Mountain Resort[11][22]
- Note: The big air events here were cancelled.
- Halfpipe winners:
Scotty James (m) /
Chloe Kim (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Chris Corning (m) /
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Mick Dierdorff (m) /
Eva Samková (f)
- Team Snowboard Cross winners:
United States (Mick Dierdorff & Lindsey Jacobellis)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Selina Jörg (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Dmitry Loginov (m) /
Julie Zogg (f)
Alpine snowboarding
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 13, 2018: ASWC #1 in
Carezza
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Tim Mastnak (m) /
Nadya Ochner (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- December 14 & 15, 2018: ASWC #2 in
Cortina d'Ampezzo
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Roland Fischnaller (m) /
Ester Ledecká (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 8 & 9: ASWC #3 in
Bad Gastein
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Stefan Baumeister (m) /
Claudia Riegler (f)
- Team Parallel Slalom winners:
Austria (Benjamin Karl & Daniela Ulbing)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
- January 19: ASWC #4 in
Rogla Ski Resort
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Edwin Coratti (m) /
Selina Jörg (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 26 & 27: ASWC #5 in
Moscow
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Andrey Sobolev (m) /
Julie Zogg (f)
- Team Parallel Slalom winners:
Austria (Daniela Ulbing & Benjamin Karl)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
- February 16 & 17: ASWC #6 in
PyeongChang
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Žan Košir (#1) /
Andreas Prommegger (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Ester Ledecká (#1) /
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- February 23 & 24: ASWC #7 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Tim Mastnak (m) /
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Daniele Bagozza (m) /
Gong Naiying (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- March 9: ASWC #8 in
Scuol
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Andrey Sobolev (m) /
Milena Bykova (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- March 23 & 24: ASWC #9 (final) in
Winterberg
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Lukas Mathies (m) /
Patrizia Kummer (f)
- Team Parallel Slalom winners:
Austria (Daniela Ulbing & Benjamin Karl)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Snowboard cross
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 12 – 16, 2018: SBXWC #1 in
Montafon
- Event cancelled.
- December 20 – 22, 2018: SBXWC #2 in
Breuil-Cervinia
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Martin Nörl (#1) /
Emanuel Perathoner (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Lindsey Jacobellis (#1) /
Eva Samková (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 8 – 10: SBXWC #3 in
Feldberg
- Note: The team snowboard cross event here was cancelled.
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Cameron Bolton (m) /
Lindsey Jacobellis (f)
- March 1 & 2: SBXWC #4 in
Baqueira-Beret
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Alessandro Hämmerle (m) /
Eva Samková (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
- March 16: SBXWC #5 (final) in
Veysonnaz
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Lucas Eguibar (m) /
Eva Samková (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Freestyle snowboarding
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- September 6 & 8, 2018: FSWC #1 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
- Big Air winners:
Chris Corning (m) /
Reira Iwabuchi (f)
- Big Air winners:
- November 3, 2018: FSWC #2 in
Modena Skipass
- Big Air winners:
Takeru Otsuka (m) /
Reira Iwabuchi (f)
- Big Air winners:
- November 23 & 24, 2018: FSWC #3 in
Beijing
- Big Air winners:
Sven Thorgren (m) /
Anna Gasser (f)
- Big Air winners:
- December 6 & 8, 2018: FSWC #4 in
Copper Mountain
- Halfpipe winners:
Scotty James (m) /
Chloe Kim (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- December 19 – 21, 2018: FSWC #5 in
Genting Resort Secret Garden
- Halfpipe winners:
Jan Scherrer (m) /
Cai Xuetong (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Takeru Otsuka (m) /
Miyabi Onitsuka (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- January 11 & 12: FSWC #6 in
Kreischberg
- Slopestyle winners:
Mons Røisland (m) /
Miyabi Onitsuka (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 15 – 19: FSWC #7 in
Laax
- Slopestyle winners:
Chris Corning (m) /
Silje Norendal (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Scotty James (m) /
Chloe Kim (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 24 & 26: FSWC #8 in
Seiser Alm
- Slopestyle winners:
Markus Olimstad (m) /
Isabel Derungs (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- February 13 & 15: FSWC #9 in
Calgary
- Halfpipe winners:
Yūto Totsuka (m) /
Queralt Castellet (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- March 5 – 9: FSWC #10 in
Mammoth Mountain
- Note: The women's slopestyle event here was cancelled.
- Men's Slopestyle winner:
Red Gerard
- Halfpipe winners:
Yūto Totsuka (m) /
Cai Xuetong (f)
- March 14 – 17: FSWC #11 (final) in
Quebec City
- Note: The slopestyle events here was cancelled.
- Big Air winners:
Seppe Smits (m) /
Julia Marino (f)
- March 22: FSWC #12 (final) in
Oslo
- Event cancelled.
2018–19 FIS Snowboard Europa Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- November 2018
- November 21 & 22, 2018: SBEC #1 in
Landgraaf
- Slopestyle winners:
Erik Bastiaansen (m) /
Melissa Peperkamp (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- November 24 & 25, 2018: SBEC #2 in
Kaunertal
- Event cancelled.
- November 28 & 29, 2018: SBEC #3 in
Pitztal
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Konstantin Schad (#1) /
Lucas Eguibar (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Charlotte Bankes (#1) /
Eva Samková (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- December 2018
- December 22 & 23, 2018: SBEC #4 in
Hochfügen
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Maurizio Bormolini (#1) /
Arvid Auner (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Ramona Theresia Hofmeister (#1) /
Jemima Juritz (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 2019
- January 8 & 9: SBEC #5 in
Jasná
- Event cancelled.
- January 10 & 11: SBEC #6 in
Bad Gastein
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Lee Sang-ho (#1) /
Dmitriy Karlagachev (#2)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Patrizia Kummer (#1) /
Maria Valova (#2)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
- January 12 & 13: SBEC #7 in
Puy-Saint-Vincent
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Lorenzo Sommariva (#1) /
Florian Gregor (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Charlotte Bankes (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- January 16 & 17: SBEC #8 in
Kreischberg
- Big Air winners:
Boris Mouton (m) /
Melissa Peperkamp (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Moritz Boll (m) /
Melissa Peperkamp (f)
- Big Air winners:
- January 19 & 20: SBEC #9 in
Grasgehren
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jakob Dusek (#1) /
Kalle Koblet (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Lara Casanova (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- January 22 & 23: SBEC #10 in
Font-Romeu
- Note: The slopestyle events here were cancelled.
- Big Air winners:
Moritz Boll (m) /
Lucie Silvestre (f)
- January 25 & 26: SBEC #11 in
Vars
- Slopestyle winners:
Moritz Boll (m) /
Lucie Silvestre (f)
- Big Air winners:
Leon Guetl (m) /
Noemie Equy (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- January 26 & 27: SBEC #12 in
Lachtal
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Igor Sluev (#1) /
Ilia Vitugov (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Jessica Keiser (#1) /
Sofia Nadyrshina (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 29 & 30: SBEC #13 in
Val Thorens
- Note: The second snowboard cross events for men and women were cancelled.
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Florian Gregor (m) /
Katharina Neussner (f)
- January 31 & February 1: SBEC #14 in
Monte Bondone
- Event cancelled.
- February 2019
- February 2 & 3: SBEC #15 in
Sarajevo
- Men's Big Air winners:
Matija Milenković (#1) /
Tino Stojak (#2)
- Women's Big Air winner:
Martyna Maciejewska (2 times)
- Men's Big Air winners:
- February 6 & 7: SBEC #16 in
Dolní Morava
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
David Pickl (#1) /
Sebastian Jud (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Chloe Passerat (#1) /
Katharina Neussner (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 7 & 8: SBEC #17 in
Kopaonik
- Men's Big Air winners:
Tino Stojak (#1) /
Noah Vicktor (#2)
- Women's Big Air winners:
Jelena Ignjatov (#1) /
Tinkara Tanja Valcl (#2)
- Men's Big Air winners:
- February 9 & 10: SBEC #18 in
Lenzerheide
- Men's Parallel Slalom winner:
Fabian Obmann (2 times)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winner:
Anastasia Kurochkina (2 times)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winner:
- February 9 & 10: SBEC #19 in
Crans-Montana
- Halfpipe winners:
Lorenzo Gennero (m) /
Berenice Wicki (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
- February 15 & 16: SBEC #20 in
Kotelnica Bialczanska
- Big Air winners:
Tino Stojak (m) /
Martyna Maciejewska (f)
- Big Air winners:
- February 22 & 23: SBEC #21 in
Davos #1
- Big Air winners:
Nick Puenter (m) /
Lia-Mara Boesch (f)
- Big Air winners:
- February 26 & 27: SBEC #22 in
Götschen
- Men's Big Air winners:
Gabriel Adams (#1) /
Tino Stojak (#2)
- Women's Big Air winners:
Nadja Flemming (#1) /
Emma Lantos (#2)
- Men's Big Air winners:
- March 2019
- March 2 & 3: SBEC #23 in
Davos #2
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner:
Masaki Shiba
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner:
Patrizia Kummer
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom & Parallel Slalom winner:
- March 8 – 10: SBEC #24 in
Gudauri
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jakob Dusek (#1) /
Merlin Surget (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Hanna Ihedioha (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- March 10 – 16: SBEC #25 in
Sunny Valley (Miass)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jakob Dusek (#1) /
Loan Bozzolo (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Jana Fischer (#1) /
Sophie Hediger (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- March 15 – 17: SBEC #26 in
Kühtai Saddle
- Big Air winners:
Jules de Sloover (m) /
Evy Poppe (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Christoph Lechner (m) /
Leilani Ettel (f)
- Big Air winners:
- March 16: SBEC #27 in
Pec pod Sněžkou
- Slopestyle winners:
Leon Guetl (m) /
Šárka Pančochová (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 16 & 17: SBEC #28 in
Rogla Ski Resort
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Tim Mastnak (2 times)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Elizaveta Salikhova (#1) /
Anastasia Kurochkina (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
- March 18 & 19: SBEC #29 in
Jasná
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Noah Vicktor (#1) /
Leon Guetl (#2)
- Women's Slopestyle winner:
Lucie Silvestre (2 times)
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
- March 21 – 24: SBEC #30 in
Laax
- Slopestyle winners:
Noah Vicktor (m) /
Bianca Gisler (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Andre Hoeflich (m) /
Verena Rohrer (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 22 – 24: SBEC #31 in
Lenk
- Men's Snowboard Cross winner:
Loan Bozzolo (2 times)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Chloé Trespeuch (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winner:
- March 26 – 28: SBEC #32 in
Sochi
- Slopestyle winners:
Mark Teimurov (m) /
Ekaterina Kosova (f)
- Big Air winners:
Mikhail Matveev (m) /
Ekaterina Kosova (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 28 & 29: SBEC #33 in
Livigno
- Men's Slopestyle winner:
Jonas Bösiger (2 times)
- Women's Slopestyle winner:
Loranne Smans (2 times)
- Men's Slopestyle winner:
- April 2019
- April 6 & 7: SBEC #34 in
Racines
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Arvid Auner (#1) /
Stefan Baumeister (#2)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Tsubaki Miki (#1) /
Jemima Juritz (#2)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
- April 10 – 14: SBEC #35 (final) in
Silvaplana
- Note: The men's slopestyle event here was cancelled.
- Women's Slopestyle winner:
Isabel Derungs
- Big Air winners:
Jonas Bösiger (m) /
Carla Somaini (f)
2018–19 FIS Snowboard Nor-Am Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- December 8 & 9, 2018: SNAC #1 in
Steamboat Ski Resort
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Robert Burns (m) /
Tsubaki Miki (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Robert Burns (m) /
Maggie Carrigan (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- December 11 & 12, 2018: SNAC #2 in
Copper Mountain
- Men's Halfpipe winner:
Yūto Totsuka (2 times)
- Women's Halfpipe winners:
Kurumi Imai (#1) /
Hikaru Ōe (#2)
- Men's Halfpipe winner:
- December 14 – 16, 2018: SNAC #3 in
Buck Hill
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
Cody Winters (#1; 2 times) /
Robert Burns (#2)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winners:
Tsubaki Miki (#1) /
Kaylie Buck (#2; 2 times)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winners:
- January 2 – 4: SNAC #4 in
Le Relais
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Jasey-Jay Anderson (#1) /
Ryan Rosencranz (#2)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Kaylie Buck (#1) /
Lynn Ott (#2)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- January 7 – 9: SNAC #5 in
Panorama Mountain Village
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Glenn de Blois (#1) /
Hagen Kearney (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Tess Critchlow (#1) /
Carle Brenneman (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- January 14 & 15: SNAC #6 in
Waterville Valley Resort
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Jake Canter (#1) /
Luke Winkelmann (#2)
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
Addison Gardner (#1) /
Courtney Rummel (#2)
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
- January 22 – 24: SNAC #7 in
Sun Peaks Resort
- Slopestyle winners:
Luke Winkelmann (m) /
Addison Gardner (f)
- Big Air winners:
Storm Rowe (m) /
Jade Thurgood (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- February 6 – 8: SNAC #8 in
Craigleith Ski Club
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Cole Johnson (#1) /
Mike Lacroix (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Christina Taylor (#1) /
Emma Downing (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 6 – 8: SNAC #9 in
Mount St. Louis Moonstone
- Note: The big air events here were cancelled.
- Slopestyle winners:
Storm Rowe (m) /
Addison Gardner (f)
- February 9 & 10: SNAC #10 in
Alpine Ski Club
- Men's Parallel Slalom winner:
Arnaud Gaudet (2 times)
- Women's Parallel Slalom winner:
Kaylie Buck (2 times)
- Men's Parallel Slalom winner:
- February 11 – 13: SNAC #11 in
Mont Original
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Éliot Grondin (#1) /
Liam Moffatt (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Livia Molodyh (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 18 – 23: SNAC #12 in
Ski Cooper
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Senna Leith (#1) /
WOO Jin (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winners:
Anna Miller (#1) /
Stacy Gaskill (#2)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- February 28 & March 1: SNAC #13 in
Holiday Valley #1
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Arnaud Gaudet (2 times)
- Women's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
Megan Farrell (2 times)
- Men's Parallel Giant Slalom winner:
- March 3 – 8: SNAC #14 in
Blue Mountain
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
Sebastien Beaulieu (m) /
Katrina Gerencser (f)
- Parallel Slalom winners:
Jules Lefebvre (m) /
Megan Farrell (f)
- Parallel Giant Slalom winners:
- March 12 – 17: SNAC #15 in
Holiday Valley #2
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Liam Moffatt (#1) /
Mike Lacroix (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Audrey McManiman (2 times)
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
- March 13 & 14: SNAC #16 in
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
- Slopestyle winners:
Liam Brearley (m) /
Addison Gardner (f)
- Halfpipe winners:
Shawn Fair (m) /
Brooke Dhondt (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- March 18 – 24: SNAC #17 in
Canada Olympic Park (Calgary)
- Halfpipe winners:
Shawn Fair (m) /
Brooke Dhondt (f)
- Men's Slopestyle & Big Air winner:
Nicolas Laframboise
- Women's Slopestyle & Big Air winner:
Jasmine Baird
- Halfpipe winners:
- March 26 – 28: SNAC #18 (final) in
Big White Ski Resort
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Danny Bourgeois (m) /
Tess Critchlow (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
2018 FIS Snowboard South American Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- August 3 – 5: SACSB #1 in
La Parva #1
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
Martin Jaureguialzo (#1) /
Inaqui Irarrazaval (#2)
- Women's Slopestyle winner:
Antonia Yanez (2 times)
- Men's Slopestyle winners:
- August 10 – 12: SACSB #2 in
La Parva #2
- Note: Both women's snowboard cross events here were cancelled.
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Simon White (#1) /
Steven Williams (#2)
- September 14 & 15: SACSB #3 in
Cerro Catedral
- Men's Big Air winners:
Matías Schmitt (#1) /
Federico Chiaradio de la Iglesia (#2)
- Women's Big Air winner:
Antonia Yanez (2 times)
- Men's Big Air winners:
- September 18 – 23: SACSB #4 & #5 (final) in
Cerro Castor
- Big Air winners:
Federico Chiaradio de la Iglesia (m) /
Maria Azul Chavez Martinez (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
Matías Schmitt (m) /
Morena Poggi Silveira (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Regino Hernández (m) /
Maria Agustina Pardo (f)
- Big Air winners:
2018 FIS Snowboard Australia & New Zealand Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- July 30 – August 1: SBANC #1 in
Mount Hotham #1
- Snowboard Cross winners:
Alex Pullin (m) /
Emily Boyce (f)
- Snowboard Cross winners:
- August 14 – 16: SBANC #2 in
Cardrona Alpine Resort
- Slopestyle winners:
Ryo Aizawa (m) /
Rina Yoshika (f)
- Half-pipe winners:
Lee Kwang-ki (m) /
LEE Min-ju (f)
- Slopestyle winners:
- September 3 – 5: SBANC #3 (final) in
Mount Hotham #2
- Note: The third set of snowboard cross events here was cancelled.
- Men's Snowboard Cross winners:
Paul Berg (#1) /
Alex Pullin (#2)
- Women's Snowboard Cross winner:
Emily Boyce (2 times)
Telemark skiing
Telemark Skiing World Championships
- February 14 – 18: 2019 Junior Telemark Skiing World Championships in
Krvavec Ski Resort[23]
- Note: The Junior World Championship and the World Cup are separate events, even though they are located in an identical location and dates.
- Classic winners:
Noe Claye (m) /
Chloe Blyth (f)
- Team Parallel Sprint winners:
France
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Christoph Frank (m) /
Goril Strom Eriksen (f)
- Sprint winners:
Theo Sillon (m) /
Julie Bourbon (f)
- March 20 – 23: 2019 Telemark Skiing World Championships in
Rjukan[24]
- Classic winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Sprint winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
- Team Parallel Sprint winners:
Switzerland
- Classic winners:
2019 Telemark Skiing World Cup
- Note: For the FIS page about these events, click here.
- January 20 & 21: TSWC #1 in
La Thuile
- Classic winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Sprint winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
- Classic winners:
- January 25 & 26: TSWC #2 in
Pralognan-la-Vanoise
- Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Jasmin Taylor (f)
- Classic winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Sprint winners:
- January 29 – February 1: TSWC #3 in
Pra-Loup
- Classic winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Sprint winners:
Bastien Dayer (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Argeline Tan Bouquet (f)
- Classic winners:
- February 9 & 10: TSWC #4 in
Bad Hindelang-Oberjoch
- Sprint winners:
Bastien Dayer (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Trym Nygaard Loeken (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Sprint winners:
- February 14 – 18: TSWC #5 (final) in
Krvavec Ski Resort
- Classic winners:
Bastien Dayer (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Parallel Sprint winners:
Philippe Lau (m) /
Johanna Holzmann (f)
- Sprint winners:
Stefan Matter (m) /
Amelie Wenger-Reymond (f)
- Classic winners:
References
- "FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 Website". Archived from the original on 2014-12-13. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
- FIS' Alpine World Ski Championships 2019 Results Page
- FIS' World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2019 Website
- FIS' World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2019 Results Page
- "FIS' Men's GS in Sölden dogged by bad luck". Archived from the original on 2018-10-28. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
- ITG's Cancelled men's Alpine Skiing World Cup opener re-scheduled for December in Saalbach-Hinterglemm
- FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Cross-Country) Results Page
- FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Cross-Country) Results Page
- FIS' 2018 Freestyle Junior World Ski Championships Results Page
- FIS Junior Freestyle Ski & Snowboard World Championships 2019 (Freestyle) Results Page
- "FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 Website". Archived from the original on 2018-11-23. Retrieved 2019-01-23.
- FIS' Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 (Freestyle) Results Page
- FIS' 2018–19 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Page
- FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Nordic Combined) Results Page
- FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Nordic Combined) Results Page
- "2019 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships Website". Archived from the original on 2019-01-03. Retrieved 2019-01-24.
- FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 Website
- FIS' Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2019 (Ski Jumping) Results Page
- FIS' Nordic World Ski Championships 2019 (Ski Jumping) Results Page
- FIS' 2018 Snowboard Junior World Championships Results Page
- FIS' 2019 Snowboard Junior World Championships Results Page
- FIS' Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2019 (Snowboard) Results Page
- FIS' 2019 Junior Telemark Skiing World Championships Page
- FIS' 2019 Telemark Skiing World Championships Page
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.