
-
Francis still requires therapy, Vatican says, as pope looks ahead to 2028
-
Mbappe double at Villarreal takes Real Madrid top
-
Mumbai beat Delhi to clinch second WPL title
-
England stay in Six Nations title hunt with Wales rout
-
Guardiola backs Man City to overcome anxiety in European race
-
Marc Marquez beats brother in Argentina MotoGP sprint
-
Latest power outage leaves Cubans struggling to get by
-
US Democrats fume as some in party cave to Trump on spending bill
-
Ireland squeeze past Italy to stay in Six Nations title hunt
-
Oil spill in Ecuador river brings emergency declaration
-
Man City stumble, Forest soar in Champions League chase
-
Man City held by Brighton to leave Champions League hopes in balance
-
Ireland keep Six Nations title hopes alive as focus switches to Cardiff and Paris
-
Bayern held at Union Berlin to leave title door ajar
-
Amid tensions, Canada says reviewing purchase of US jets
-
Major storm in central US leaves at least 14 dead: officials
-
Deadly Israeli strikes mar fragile Gaza truce
-
Ratcliffe would walk away from Man Utd if abuse reaches Glazer level
-
Telegram founder Durov allowed to temporarily leave France
-
UN considering humanitarian channel from Bangladesh to Myanmar
-
Brazilians sentenced in beating death of Congolese migrant
-
Australian Storer wins penultimate Paris-Nice stage in the snow
-
Romania excludes second far-right poll hopeful
-
Marc Marquez storms to record Argentina MotoGP pole
-
Tens of thousands rally in Serbia's capital for anti-graft rally
-
'Incredible' Odermatt sweeps to fourth overall and giant slalom titles
-
Telegram founder Durov allowed to temporarily leave France: sources
-
Pope Francis receiving 'surge' in mail, says Italian post
-
Paris-Nice contender Skjelmose hospitalised after fall
-
Barca's Flick demands 'focus' ahead of crunch Atletico clash
-
Swiss skier Odermatt wins fourth overall crystal globe
-
Zelensky denies troops surrounded in Kursk as Russia retakes villages
-
Ohtani hits home run in Dodgers' Tokyo exhibition game
-
Ohtani fever heats up in Dodgers' Tokyo exhibition game
-
France launches manslaughter probe against TotalEnergies over Mozambique attack
-
Putin will have to 'come to table,' UK PM says hosting coalition call
-
Musk says Starship to depart for Mars at end of 2026
-
Verstappen 'surprised' by third in Australian qualifying
-
Norris hails 'perfect way' to start year after Melbourne pole
-
US expels South African ambassador, saying he 'hates' Trump
-
Norris edges Piastri for pole as McLaren lock out Melbourne front row
-
Armed groups covet cocoa in eastern DR Congo
-
Sri Lanka counts nuisance wildlife in bid to protect crops
-
Cleveland cruise to record 16th straight win, Boston clinch
-
Sabalenka routs Keys, books Indian Wells title clash with teen Andreeva
-
Cuba suffers fourth nationwide blackout in five months
-
Piastri tops final Melbourne practice ahead of Russell
-
Sabalenka crushes Keys to reach Indian Wells final
-
Residents flee new wave of violence in Haiti capital
-
Starmer to host coalition call as he says Putin 'not serious about peace'

'Incredible' Odermatt sweeps to fourth overall and giant slalom titles
Swiss ski star Marco Odermatt swept up his fourth consecutive World Cup overall and giant slalom crystal globes after finishing second on Saturday behind compatriot Loic Meillard in Hafjell.
Odermatt now has 1,596 points and a 635-point lead over Norway's Henrik Kristoffersen and cannot be caught with five races left this season.
A lacklustre Kristoffersen finished 16th in Saturday's race more than two seconds off the pace after failing to recover from a poor first run.
"It's incredible to win two more globes," said Odermatt, who also claimed the super-G for a third time to bring his World Cup trophy tally to 12 titles and is leading the way in the downhill.
"To push yourself over and over and over again in a long season is very tough, so I'm happy that this very successful Norway trip for me is over and now just a cool final week in Sun Valley."
Aside from slalom, a discipline in which he does not compete, Odermatt has won in every discipline this season -- downhill, super-G, and giant slalom —- for eight victories before the final World Cup stage in the United States.
Six years after his first podium finish, the 27-year-old becomes the second skier to win four consecutive overall globes, after Austrian great Marcel Hirscher, who held the title from 2012 to 2019 and won eight in total.
With four victories, he also equals Austria's Hermann Maier, Italy's Gustav Thöni, and his compatriot Pirmin Zurbriggen.
On Saturday, only Meillard was faster in both runs, beating "Odi" by 0.14 seconds with Thomas Tumler completing a Swiss podium sweep for the third time this season.
"Marco won a few, Tumler won one - we've all had a pretty good season," Meillard said.
"Everyone is in form and it just paid off today, we worked all together perfectly."
- 45 World Cup wins -
After his first World Cup victory in 2019 in the Beaver Creek super-G, Odermatt took centre stage in the overall standings the following season, finishing second behind Frenchman Alexis Pinturault.
Since then he has dominated, breaking the points record for a single winter in the 2022-2023 season (2,042 pts) and equalled the record for wins in a single season with 13 victories in 2022-2023 and 2023-2024.
This winter, he became the most decorated Swiss in the history of the world tour, surpassing Zubbriggen's 41 wins when he won the Alta Badia giant slalom in December. He has since raised the men's national record to 45.
"It's truly something very special to become the best Swiss skier in history after Pirmin Zurbriggen, who is a legend for us," Odermatt said, now aiming to equal his compatriot Vreni Schneider's 55 victories.
In the men's skiing world, five legends still stand ahead of him -- Swede Ingemar Stenmark with his 86 victories, Hirscher (67), Hermann Maier (54), Italian Alberto Tomba (50), and Luxembourg's Marc Girardelli (46).
However, the Swiss skier had a complicated start to the winter with two crashes in the first two giant slaloms, his speciality with 26 World Cup victories.
He then recovered to rack up a string of podium finishes, 16 before the three races remaining.
But the downfall of his season was his sixth place in the Kitzbuehel downhill.
Beaten last year by Frenchman Cyprien Sarrazin, when he thought he had the race of his life on the Streif, Odermatt had made this downhill in Austria his "most important" goal this year.
Odermatt also has mixed results at the world championships with only one title, in the super-G, relinquishing his downhill and giant slalom crowns.
But he has consoled himself in the World Cup and is well on his way to achieving the triple crown of the super-G, giant slalom, and downhill globes for the second consecutive season.
J.Williams--AMWN