Magdalena Egger

Magdalena Egger
Egger in 2025
Personal information
Nickname
Mäggy
Born (2001-01-22) 22 January 2001
Lech, Vorarlberg, Austria
OccupationAlpine skier
Sport
Country Austria
Skiing career
DisciplinesDownhill, super-G, giant slalom, slalom
ClubSki Club Arlberg Lech[1]
World Cup debut14 January 2020 (age 19)
Websitemagdalena-egger.at
World Cup
Seasons6 – (20202023, 20252026)
Wins0
Podiums1 – (1 DH)
Overall titles0 – (79th in 2025)
Discipline titles0 – (33rd in DH, 2025)
Medal record
Women's alpine skiing
Representing  Austria
Junior World Championships
2020 Narvik Downhill
2020 Narvik Super-G
2020 Narvik Combined
2022 Panorama Downhill
2022 Panorama Super-G
2022 Panorama Giant slalom
2022 Panorama Combined
2022 Panorama Team event
2021 Bansko Super-G

Magdalena Egger (born 22 January 2001) is an Austrian World Cup alpine ski racer who competes in all disciplines.[2] She holds the record for most medals won at the World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships with nine (six gold, two silver, and one bronze).[3]

Early life

Egger grew up in the winter resort town of Lech am Arlberg, Vorarlberg, with her twin brother, Christoph.[3] She was on skis before her third birthday and started race training in grade school.[4] She attended the Stams Ski Academy and joined the Austrian ski team in 2017 at age sixteen.[5]

Career

The Austrian Ski Association named Egger their "Rookie of the Year" after her initial 2017–18 season.[5] The following season saw Egger's first victories at the international level, an invitation to the 2019 Junior World Championships in Val di Fassa, Italy, and winning the Austrian Junior Championship in giant slalom.[2][4]

After several starts on the Europa Cup in the first half of the 2019–20 season, Egger made her World Cup debut in the night slalom in Flachau, Austria, on 14 January 2020.[2] That March, Egger competed in all four of the women's races contested at the 2020 Junior World Championships in Narvik, Norway (the slalom was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic), and won gold in the downhill, super-G, and combined.[3]

The 2020–21 season began with Egger earning her first-ever World Cup points at the slalom in Levi, Finland. She only had two more World Cup starts that season however, with most of the season spent racing on the Europa Cup. The season was capped off with her third trip to the Junior World Championships, this time in Bansko, Bulgaria, where she took the bronze in the super-G but skied off in both the giant slalom and slalom.[2]

Success on the World Cup circuit eluded Egger in 2021–22; she failed to qualify for a second run in any of the four events (all slalom) she entered.[2] Her results improved at the 2022 Junior World Championships held at the Panorama Mountain Resort in British Columbia, Canada, where Egger made history as she claimed three gold medals (in downhill, super-G, and giant slalom) along with two silvers (in combined and the team parallel event) to break the record for most medals won at the Junior World Championships.[3] The wins in Panorama earned her a spot at the World Cup finals in Courchevel and Méribel, France, but she was not able to place high enough to earn World Cup points.[2] The season concluded with the Austrian National Championships where Egger topped the field in the super-G to take the title.[6]

Egger was again unable to earn any World Cup points in five starts in technical events to kick off the 2022–23 season, then spent the rest of that season and all of 2023–24 on the Europa Cup. On the lower tour she made the podium multiple times in speed events and finished the 2024 season second in the super-G standings and fourth in downhill and overall.[2]

In her return to World Cup events for the 2024–25 season, Egger only entered races in the speed disciplines and was able to secure points in six of the thirteen races she entered.[2]

Egger attained her first World Cup podium in December 2025 at St. Moritz, Switzerland, where she was runner-up to Lindsey Vonn in the opening downhill of the 2025–26 season.[7] She followed that up with a seventh-place finish in another downhill in St. Moritz the next day, and by earning points in each of the subsequent three speed races that December.[2] In January, Egger crashed during the downhill in Zauchensee, Austria, and tore the anterior cruciate ligament in her right knee, resulting in her having to sit out the rest of the season and the 2026 Winter Olympics.[8] Egger had been ranked sixth in the downhill standings and twentieth in super-G going in to the race,[9][10] and Roland Assinger, the head coach of the Austrian women's team, considered her loss to be a significant setback for the team going into the Olympics.[11]

World Cup results

Season standings

Season
Age Overall Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-G Downhill
2021 20 108 44
2022 21 no World Cup points earned
2023 22
2024 23 did not compete
2025 24 79 37 33
2026 25 47 32 18
Standings through 15 March 2026

Top-ten finishes

  • 0 wins
  • 1 podium – (1 DH); 2 top tens
Season
Date Location Discipline Place
2026 12 December 2025    St. Moritz, Switzerland Downhill 2nd
13 December 2025 Downhill 7th

References

  1. ^ "Magdalena Egger" (in German). Austrian Ski Association. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Magdalena Egger – Athlete Biography". International Ski and Snowboard Federation. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  3. ^ a b c d Cappelletti, Andrea (3 September 2022). "Magdalena Egger, record-breaking junior". Ski Racing Media. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  4. ^ a b "Magdalena Egger Austrian ski racer from Lech". Lech Zürs. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  5. ^ a b Hirner, Thomas (23 December 2018). "Magdalena Egger: Viele kleine Schritte zu den Großen" [Magdalena Egger: Many Small Steps Lead to Great Things]. Der Standard (in German). Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  6. ^ "Alpine Skiing Results - Montafon (AUT) 2021/2022". International Ski and Snowboard Federation. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  7. ^ "Lindsey Vonn, 41, earns 1st World Cup downhill win since 2018". ESPN. Associated Press. 12 December 2025. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  8. ^ Baldwin, Alan (10 January 2026). "Season over for Austrian speed specialist Egger". Reuters. Retrieved 21 February 2026.
  9. ^ "Audi FIS Ski World Cup Val d'Isère Women's DH (FRA)" (PDF). FIS. 13 December 2025. Retrieved 24 February 2026.
  10. ^ "Audi FIS Ski World Cup Val d'Isère Women's SG (FRA)" (PDF). FIS. 21 December 2025. Retrieved 24 February 2026.
  11. ^ "Major shock: Season over for up-and-coming Austrian player". SportNews.bz. 10 January 2026. Retrieved 21 February 2026.