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Another race, another win for Alice Robinson

  • editor59343
  • Dec 7, 2025
  • 2 min read
Alice Robinson celebrates her win in the FIS Giant Slalom World Cup at Tremblant PHOTO: STEPHEN CLOUTIER FIS ALPINE
Alice Robinson celebrates her win in the FIS Giant Slalom World Cup at Tremblant PHOTO: STEPHEN CLOUTIER FIS ALPINE

Queenstown's Alice Robinson has backed up last weekend’s victory to win again, this time at the Tremblant FIS Giant Slalom World Cup in Canada.


It is Robinson’s sixth career World Cup victory and her 19th World Cup podium.


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“That was such a testing race, it felt like the complete opposite of Copper last weekend, I’m so excited and I’m so glad I was able to hold on after the lead in the first run and build on it, it’s awesome.”


Conditions were challenging with flat light and snow falling, causing problems for some of the most seasoned racers on course. Robinson was unfazed by the conditions, putting down a lightning fast first run to lead the race by -0.33 seconds after the first run.


Robinson pushed out the start gate for her second run, delivering a dynamic top to bottom run, managing the terrain incredibly well, leaving nothing to chance and taking the win by almost a full second.


“The speed was faster [in the second run], I think the snow got colder. It stopped snowing as much and it froze so the tempo was up a bit, and it was definitely just working top to bottom. It’s a flat hill, but it’s not easy, it has got so much terrain, so you have to be tactically smart where you push and where you hold back a bit," said the 24-year-old Kiwi.


Her nearest competitor Zrinka Ljutic of Croatia finished +0.94 seconds behind Robinson, with Canadian Valerie Grenier rounding out the podium in third on home snow in front of a roaring crowd.


Comparing today to last week’s race at Copper Mountain Robinson felt it was a tougher course overall.


"The slope here is really different, Copper was steep and really fast the whole time, today was really grindy and had so much micro terrain, it definitely tested different skills than we tested in Copper.


I’m really proud of myself and the team, we did a lot of work this summer with terrain as it’s been a weakness of mine, so I am really glad it’s paid off!”


The Tremblant FIS Giant Slalom World Cup is a double-header, with Robinson competing again on the same slope Monday morning from 4am NZT.

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