Laurie Taylor Seals Career-Best 4th in World Cup Slalom Opener, Dave Ryding Seventh as GB Team Achieves Best Combined Performance
Great Britain's Laurie Taylor produced a career-best fourth-place finish to lead the British team's best-ever combined showing in men's slalom at the World Cup season opener in Levi, Finland. In his first event since Aspen in March 2024, where he finished eighth, the 29-year-old put pressure on the leaders before narrowly missing out on a podium spot.
Taylor was initially 15th after the first run but staged a dramatic turnaround to lead for the majority of the second leg, ultimately crossing the line in a total time of one minute and 51.33 seconds – just 0.31 secs behind winner Lucas Pinheiro Braathen of Brazil.
Braathen, who secured his sixth World Cup victory this season and first representing Brazil, edged France's Clement Noel for second place by a whisker. Meanwhile, Finland's Eduard Hallberg pipped Taylor to third by an equally slim margin.
"It felt amazing – I had no idea that's where I was going to end up," Taylor exclaimed in the aftermath of his impressive performance. "The run felt solid and in charge. I just kept climbing [in the standings]; it was quite surreal. It means a huge lot."
Taylor's career-best finish is a significant milestone in his journey, as he has worked tirelessly for years to get to this point.
Meanwhile, veteran Dave Ryding secured seventh place in what proved to be his final World Cup event before retirement – a fitting conclusion to an illustrious career that saw him previously claim the only other time GB achieved two top-10 finishers in a World Cup race.
GB's combined performance across both events was an encouraging sign for the team. Coach Jai Geyer stated, "What a day. That's the best start to the season we've had as a team with something we've never done before – two in the top seven – so we're all pumped, great for the team."
The World Cup opener marked an additional milestone for Pinheiro Braathen, who secured his first victory representing Brazil – ending Norway's dominance.
Great Britain's Laurie Taylor produced a career-best fourth-place finish to lead the British team's best-ever combined showing in men's slalom at the World Cup season opener in Levi, Finland. In his first event since Aspen in March 2024, where he finished eighth, the 29-year-old put pressure on the leaders before narrowly missing out on a podium spot.
Taylor was initially 15th after the first run but staged a dramatic turnaround to lead for the majority of the second leg, ultimately crossing the line in a total time of one minute and 51.33 seconds – just 0.31 secs behind winner Lucas Pinheiro Braathen of Brazil.
Braathen, who secured his sixth World Cup victory this season and first representing Brazil, edged France's Clement Noel for second place by a whisker. Meanwhile, Finland's Eduard Hallberg pipped Taylor to third by an equally slim margin.
"It felt amazing – I had no idea that's where I was going to end up," Taylor exclaimed in the aftermath of his impressive performance. "The run felt solid and in charge. I just kept climbing [in the standings]; it was quite surreal. It means a huge lot."
Taylor's career-best finish is a significant milestone in his journey, as he has worked tirelessly for years to get to this point.
Meanwhile, veteran Dave Ryding secured seventh place in what proved to be his final World Cup event before retirement – a fitting conclusion to an illustrious career that saw him previously claim the only other time GB achieved two top-10 finishers in a World Cup race.
GB's combined performance across both events was an encouraging sign for the team. Coach Jai Geyer stated, "What a day. That's the best start to the season we've had as a team with something we've never done before – two in the top seven – so we're all pumped, great for the team."
The World Cup opener marked an additional milestone for Pinheiro Braathen, who secured his first victory representing Brazil – ending Norway's dominance.