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how fast do skiers go in super g

In Super-G, elite skiers typically reach speeds around 80–100 km/h (about 50–62 mph), with many World Cup and Olympic runs pushing just over 100 km/h on the fastest sections.

Quick Scoop: How fast do skiers go in Super-G?

Super-G is designed as a speed event, so racers spend much of the run at highway‑like velocities while still linking big, carved turns. On modern courses, it’s common for top skiers to be clocked in the 80+ km/h range, with well‑set, steeper sections allowing speeds that exceed 100 km/h (around 62 mph). Some coaching and racing resources describe expert Super‑G racers hitting roughly 80 mph in ideal conditions, but that’s at the very upper end and not the average for every run.

Compared with other Alpine events, Super‑G is slower than pure downhill (which can go well beyond 120 km/h) but significantly faster than giant slalom, which trades speed for more frequent turning. This balance between very high speed and technical turning is exactly what makes Super‑G look (and feel, for racers) so intense and “on the edge.”

Bottom line: expect Super‑G racers to be moving roughly as fast as a car on a freeway—often 80–100 km/h, with the best and boldest pushing just past that on the quickest hills.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.