The World Cup begins in the Glacial Heights of Sölden

Everything you need to know heading into the first race of the season


The World Cup begins in the Glacial Heights of Sölden

Everything you need to know heading into the first race of the season



It’s Showtime on the Glacier

The opening of the Alpine season takes place high above the village of Sölden in Tyrol, Austria, on the glacial slopes of the RettenbachGlacier. The race venue sits at impressive altitudes: start around 3,040 m, finish near 2,670 m, with a vertical drop of 370 m. First used in the World Cup circuit in 1993, the Rettenbach course has since become the traditional season-opener for the men's and women's giant slalom events.

 

Why it Matters:

  • The glacier setting ensures early-season snow and a dramatic alpine backdrop.
  • The steep slopes and altitude introduce a unique challenge to kick off the year. Altitude, weather, and course conditions can play a significant role.
  • Because it's the opener, athletes are sharpened for the season ahead; any early signs of form matter.


It’s Showtime on the Glacier

The opening of the Alpine season takes place high above the village of Sölden in Tyrol, Austria, on the glacial slopes of the RettenbachGlacier. The race venue sits at impressive altitudes: start around 3,040 m, finish near 2,670 m, with a vertical drop of 370 m. First used in the World Cup circuit in 1993, the Rettenbach course has since become the traditional season-opener for the men's and women's giant slalom events.

 

Why it Matters:

  • The glacier setting ensures early-season snow and a dramatic alpine backdrop.
  • The steep slopes and altitude introduce a unique challenge to kick off the year. Altitude, weather, and course conditions can play a significant role.
  • Because it's the opener, athletes are sharpened for the season ahead; any early signs of form matter.




Storylines to Watch this Season

1. The Opening Signal

This event doesn't just mark the year's first race; it signals the tone. A strong result in Sölden can instantly galvanize an athlete's confidence, and the opposite can leave questions. The 2025-26 season opens in Sölden on October 25/26.

 

2. Conditions & Uncertainty

High altitude + glacier terrain = variables. Conditions (snow type, visibility, wind) may be less stable than later in the season. That means surprises are possible.

 

3. Rookies vs. Vets

While the sport's big names often show up, this event is a chance for rising skiers to make noise before the rest of the field catches up. Anyone who hits form early can build momentum.


Sölden is more than just the first race, it's the launchpad. Venue, conditions, and early results can ripple through the whole season.





Eyes on River Radamus

Here's why River Radamus is a storyline you'll want to follow at Sölden and throughout the season.

 

  • Background: Colorado-born and Vail-raised, Radamus is a three-time Youth Olympic Games gold-medalist and two-time Junior World Champion.
  • He made his World Cup debut in December 2017 and has evolved from being "a nice story" into a real top-10 threat.
  • A breakthrough moment: he earned his first World Cup podium in GS in February 2024.

 

Why Sölden is especially interesting for him:

  • Although Sölden is a GS event, the season's opener gives Radamus a chance to start strong and build momentum early in a Olympic year.
  • This type of course suits his expertise as a tech skier. The hill is always icy and hard, making edge angle critical, which River does better than most.

What to Pay Attention to at Sölden

  • Start order: Early-season rankings can be misleading; look for athletes who didn't get high seedings but perform strongly.
  • Conditions: Glacier snow often means firm, icy surfaces; those who adapt quickly will have the advantage. The Rettenbach slope's steep sections (up to ~68 % gradient) make it especially demanding.
  • Flipping into race mode: Some racers hit form early, while others are still finding rhythm. An early standout can carry confidence forward.
  • Advantage to the tech skiers: Because this is GS, and often followed by other tech events, athletes who start strong here might carry momentum.
  • Radamus' benchmark: Keep an eye on how Radamus positions himself — a strong run here could signal he's entering a new phase.
A skier navigating a slalom course on a snowy slope.

Final Thoughts

Sölden is more than just the first race, it's the launchpad. Venue, conditions, and early results can ripple through the whole season. And when you factor in a focused and rising athlete like River Radamus, you've got a perfect mix of tried-and-true tradition and forward-looking storyline. If we're picking one skier to put our money on this weekend, Radamus is our guy.