Heavy Rain Wipes out World Cup Slalom after 31 Starters with Olympic Champion Clement Noel Leading

Olympic champion Clement Noel - The AP
Olympic champion Clement Noel - The AP
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Heavy Rain Wipes out World Cup Slalom after 31 Starters with Olympic Champion Clement Noel Leading

Olympic champion Clement Noel - The AP
Olympic champion Clement Noel - The AP

Heavy rain forced the cancellation of a men's World Cup slalom Sunday after 31 starters in the opening run, with Olympic champion Clement Noel leading the race.

Organizers initially interrupted the event but then called it off as conditions failed to improve.

The International Ski and Snowboard Federation said the safety of the racers was at stake due to the “inconsistent conditions with visibility.”

It wasn’t immediately clear whether the race will be rescheduled. The next two slaloms take place in the United States — in Palisades Tahoe on Feb. 25 and in Aspen on March 3, The AP reported.

Wet snow in the morning hours and persistent rain during the race softened the top layer of the Tomba course, and the track visibly worsened with each racer starting.

No skier after the top eight managed to finish within two seconds of Noel’s lead, a massive time difference for a slalom race.

Noel started second and the Frenchman beat Timon Haugan by 0.27 seconds, although TV footage suggested that Noel straddled a gate about 17 seconds into his run.

“I don’t know, it’s the first time in my life that I don’t know. I don’t think so, but my run was good,” Noel told Austrian TV.

Haugan’s Norwegian teammate Henrik Kristoffersen was 0.38 behind in third, as no other racer finished within a second of the lead.

Manuel Feller, who leads the discipline standings after seven races, was 1.30 behind in fifth.

It was the second slalom this season that was cancelled because of poor weather, after a race in Val d'Isere, France had to be called off in December.

The men's World Cup continues in Norway with a downhill and super-G in Kvitfjell next weekend.

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Diallo Goal Seals 2-2 Draw for Man United against Liverpool

Manchester United's Amad Diallo reacts at the end of the English Premier League soccer match against Liverpool at the Anfield stadium in Liverpool, England Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025. (AP)
Manchester United's Amad Diallo reacts at the end of the English Premier League soccer match against Liverpool at the Anfield stadium in Liverpool, England Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025. (AP)
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Diallo Goal Seals 2-2 Draw for Man United against Liverpool

Manchester United's Amad Diallo reacts at the end of the English Premier League soccer match against Liverpool at the Anfield stadium in Liverpool, England Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025. (AP)
Manchester United's Amad Diallo reacts at the end of the English Premier League soccer match against Liverpool at the Anfield stadium in Liverpool, England Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025. (AP)

Amad Diallo's late equalizer secured a 2-2 draw for Manchester United against Premier League leader Liverpool on Sunday.

The forward turned home Alejandro Garnacho's cross in the 80th minute at Anfield after Mohamed Salah's penalty had looking like giving Liverpool the win.

United led through Lisandro Martinez's strike in the 52nd, but Cody Gakpo leveled seven minutes later.

Salah fired Liverpool ahead from the spot in the 70th after Matthijs de Ligt handled in the box.

Late drama Raul Jimenez scored a 91st-minute penalty to salvage a 2-2 draw for Fulham against Ipswich.

It was Jimenez's second penalty of the match as Fulham twice came from a goal down at Craven Cottage.

Relegation-fighting Ipswich went ahead through Sam Szmodics in the 38th and Jimenez leveled from the spot in the 69th.

Ipswich went in front again through Liam Delap's penalty in the 71st and looked like climbing out of the relegation zone.

But when Jimenez was brought down by Leif Davis in the box, referee Darren Bond pointed to the spot again.

Jimenez made no mistake and fired into the top corner to share the points.

Fulham is ninth and six points off the top four, while Ipswich is 18th and below Wolverhampton on goal difference, having played a game more.