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Grange wins again

ByReuters

Updated 26/01/2011 at 10:01 GMT

France's Jean-Baptiste Grange won the classic Schladming night slalom for his second World Cup victory in three days.

Jean-Baptiste Grange of France passes a gate during the first run of the men's slalom race at the Alpine Skiing World Cup in Schladming

Image credit: Reuters

Winner of a slalom in Kitzbuehel on Sunday, the 2009 slalom World Cup winner clocked a combined time of one minute and 46.54 seconds for his third victory of the season and ninth of his career.
The 26-year-old, who missed most of last season through injury, was also the first Frenchman to win what is arguably the most coveted slalom of the men's season.
With some 55,000 fans chanting, and drinking beer and white wine, Grange beat the Swedish pair of Andre Myhrer and Mattias Hargin -- leaders after the first leg -- to collect a winner's jackpot of 27,500 euros ($37,440).
Myhrer was 0.04 seconds short of victory while Hargin finished 0.60 adrift.
"I came here first in 2006 and I told myself this is unbelievable, I must win this one day. It was one of the great goals in my career and it's done," said Grange.
Grange's win put an end to four years of Austrian domination in an event that had no local skier on the podium for the first time since 2002.
Without a home skier in the medal positions in Kitzbuehel either, the atmosphere is becoming tenser in the Austrian team with the world championships approaching in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, next month.
Silence fell on the course when local favourite Reinfried Herbst, winner of the last two editions, crashed out just before Grange's start.
The Frenchman's run was even delayed by smoke flares thrown by disappointed fans.
"It was a little difficult to handle but once I got started I picked my pace. It was the near-perfect run. I had the impression I was flying on the snow," Grange said.
The Valloire skier was not the first to win both Kitzbuehel and Schladming, a feat achieved in the last decade by Austrians Benjamin Raich and Manfred Pranger as well as Finn Kalle Palander.
But he was proud to be the first of his countrymen crowned on the Planai piste.
"We Frenchmen have always been successful in Kitzbuehel but not here. I hope I've opened the way and that me and other French guys will win again," he said.
Myhrer, who relishes night events and was hoping to make it two after his Zagreb victory, was sad to have missed his chance.
"It's frustrating when I could have been the first Swede to win here," he said.
American Bode Miller, the 2002 winner, did not start.
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