| Years in skiing | 
| 
 2017 in sports  | 
|---|
  | 
From July 1, 2016 to April 23, 2017, the following skiing events took place at various locations around the world.
Alpine skiing
World championships (alpine)
- January 22–31 2017 World Para Alpine Skiing Championships in 
 Tarvisio[1]
- For results, click here.
 
 - February 6–19: FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2017 in 
 St. Moritz[2]
 Austria and 
  Switzerland won 3 gold medals each. Austria won the overall medal tally.
 - March 6–14: 2017 World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships in 
 Åre[3]
 Austria and 
  Switzerland won 3 gold medals each. Austria won the overall medal tally.
 
2017 Alpine Skiing World Cup
- October 22, 2016 – March 19, 2017: FIS 2016–17 Alpine Skiing World Cup[4]
 
- October
 
- October 22 & 23: ASWC #1 in 
 Sölden
- Giant slalom winners: 
 Alexis Pinturault (m) / 
 Lara Gut (f) 
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 
- November
 
- November 12 & 13: ASWC #2 in 
 Levi
- Slalom winners: 
 Marcel Hirscher (m) / 
 Mikaela Shiffrin (f) 
 - Slalom winners: 
 - November 23–27: ASWC #3 in 
 Lake Louise #1
- All events cancelled, due to unfavorable weather conditions.[5]
 
 - November 26 & 27: ASWC #4 in 
 Killington
- Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Tessa Worley - Women's slalom winner: 
 Mikaela Shiffrin 
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 - November 29 – December 4: ASWC #5 in 
 Val-d'Isère #1[6]
- Note: This event was supposed to be held at Beaver Creek Resort, but it was cancelled, due to unfavorable weather conditions.[7]
 - Men's super-G winner: 
 Kjetil Jansrud - Men's downhill winner: 
 Kjetil Jansrud - Men's giant slalom winner: 
 Mathieu Faivre 
 - November 29 – December 4: ASWC #6 in 
 Lake Louise #2
- Women's downhill winner: 
 Ilka Štuhec (2 times) - Women's super-G winner: 
 Lara Gut 
 - Women's downhill winner: 
 
- December
 
- December 10 & 11: ASWC #7 in 
 Val-d'Isère #2
- Men's giant slalom winner: 
 Alexis Pinturault - Men's slalom winner: 
 Henrik Kristoffersen 
 - Men's giant slalom winner: 
 - December 10 & 11: ASWC #8 in 
 Sestriere
- Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Tessa Worley - Women's slalom winner: 
 Mikaela Shiffrin 
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 - December 14–17: ASWC #9 in 
 Val Gardena
- Men's super-G winner: 
 Kjetil Jansrud - Men's downhill winner: 
 Max Franz 
 - Men's super-G winner: 
 - December 14–18: ASWC #10 in 
 Val-d'Isère #3
- Women's alpine combined winner: 
 Ilka Štuhec - Women's downhill winner: 
 Ilka Štuhec - Women's super-G winner: 
 Lara Gut 
 - Women's alpine combined winner: 
 - December 18 & 19: ASWC #11 in 
 Alta Badia
- Men's giant slalom winner: 
 Marcel Hirscher - Men's Parallel giant slalom winner: 
 Cyprien Sarrazin 
 - Men's giant slalom winner: 
 - December 20: ASWC #12 in 
 Courchevel
- Event cancelled, due to strong winds.[8]
 
 - December 22: ASWC #13 in 
 Madonna di Campiglio
- Men's slalom winner: 
 Henrik Kristoffersen 
 - Men's slalom winner: 
 - December 26–29: ASWC #14 in 
 Santa Caterina
- The Men's Downhill event here was cancelled.
 - Men's super-G winner: 
 Kjetil Jansrud - Men's alpine combined winner: 
 Alexis Pinturault 
 - December 27–29: ASWC #15 in 
 Semmering
- Note: One Giant slalom event was rescheduled from the Courchevel venue to this one.[9]
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Mikaela Shiffrin (2 times) - Women's slalom winner: 
 Mikaela Shiffrin 
 
- January
 
- January 3 & 5: ASWC #15 in 
 Zagreb
- Slalom winners: 
 Manfred Mölgg (m) / 
 Veronika Velez-Zuzulová (f) 
 - Slalom winners: 
 - January 7 & 8: ASWC #16 in 
 Adelboden
- Men's giant slalom winner: 
 Alexis Pinturault - Men's slalom winner: 
 Henrik Kristoffersen 
 - Men's giant slalom winner: 
 - January 7 & 8: WC #17 in 
 Maribor
- Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Tessa Worley - Women's slalom winner: 
 Mikaela Shiffrin 
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 - January 10: ASWC #18 in 
 Flachau
- Women's slalom winner: 
 Frida Hansdotter 
 - Women's slalom winner: 
 - January 10–15: ASWC #19 in 
 Wengen
- Note: The men's downhill event here was cancelled.
 - Men's alpine combined winner: 
 Niels Hintermann - Men's slalom winner: 
 Henrik Kristoffersen 
 - January 12–15: ASWC #20 in 
 Altenmarkt im Pongau
- Note: The women's alpine combined event here was cancelled.
 - Women's downhill winner: 
 Christine Scheyer 
 - January 17–22: ASWC #21 in 
 Kitzbühel
- Men's super-G winner: 
 Matthias Mayer - Men's downhill winner: 
 Dominik Paris - Men's slalom winner: 
 Marcel Hirscher 
 - Men's super-G winner: 
 - January 19–22: ASWC #22 in 
 Garmisch-Partenkirchen #1
- Women's downhill winner: 
 Lindsey Vonn - Women's super-G winner: 
 Lara Gut 
 - Women's downhill winner: 
 - January 24: ASWC #23 in 
 Schladming
- Men's slalom winner: 
 Henrik Kristoffersen 
 - Men's slalom winner: 
 - January 24: ASWC #24 in 
 Kronplatz
- Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Federica Brignone 
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 - January 26–29: ASWC #25 in 
 Garmisch-Partenkirchen #2
- Men's downhill winners: 
 Travis Ganong (#1) / 
 Hannes Reichelt (#2) - Men's giant slalom winner: 
 Marcel Hirscher 
 - Men's downhill winners: 
 - January 26–29: ASWC #26 in 
 Cortina d'Ampezzo
- Women's downhill winner: 
 Lara Gut - Women's super-G winner: 
 Ilka Štuhec 
 - Women's downhill winner: 
 - January 31: ASWC #27 in 
 Stockholm
- City Event winners: 
 Linus Straßer (m) / 
 Mikaela Shiffrin (f) 
 - City Event winners: 
 
- February
 
- February 23–26: ASWC #28 in 
 Kvitfjell
- Men's downhill winners: 
 Boštjan Kline (#1) / 
 Kjetil Jansrud (#2) - Men's super-G winner: 
 Peter Fill 
 - Men's downhill winners: 
 - February 24–26: ASWC #29 in 
 Crans-Montana
- Women's alpine combined winners: 
 Federica Brignone (#1) / 
 Mikaela Shiffrin (#2) - Women's super-G winner: 
 Ilka Štuhec 
 - Women's alpine combined winners: 
 
- March
 
- March 2–5: ASWC #30 in 
 Jeongseon
- Women's Downhill & Super G winner: 
 Sofia Goggia 
 - Women's Downhill & Super G winner: 
 - March 4 & 5: ASWC #31 in 
 Kranjska Gora
- Men's giant slalom winner: 
 Marcel Hirscher - Men's slalom winner: 
 Michael Matt 
 - Men's giant slalom winner: 
 - March 10 & 11: ASWC #32 in 
 Squaw Valley
- Women's giant slalom and Slalom winner: 
 Mikaela Shiffrin 
 - Women's giant slalom and Slalom winner: 
 - March 13–19: ASWC #33 (final) in 
 Aspen
- Downhill winners: 
 Dominik Paris (m) / 
 Ilka Štuhec (f) - Super G winners: 
 Hannes Reichelt (m) / 
 Tina Weirather (f) - Giant slalom winners: 
 Marcel Hirscher (m) / 
 Federica Brignone (f) - Slalom winners: 
 André Myhrer (m) / 
 Petra Vlhová (f) - Alpine Team Event winners: 
 Sweden (Frida Hansdotter, Maria Pietilä Holmner, Emelie Wikstroem, Mattias Hargin, André Myhrer, & Matts Olsson) 
 - Downhill winners: 
 
2016–17 Europa Cup
- November 29 & 30: ASEC #1 in 
 Levi
- Men's slalom winners: 
 Leif Kristian Haugen (#1); 
 Marc Digruber (#2) 
 - Men's slalom winners: 
 - December 3 & 4: ASEC #2 in 
 Gällivare
- Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Cyprien Sarrazin (m) / Second event is cancelled 
 - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 - December 4–6: ASEC #3 in 
 Trysil
- Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Kristin Anna Lysdahl - Women's slalom winners: 
 Maren Skjøld (#1); 
 Maren Wiesler (#2) 
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 - December 8–10: ASEC #4 in 
 Kvitfjell
- Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Clara Direz - Women's super-G winner: 
 Dajana Dengscherz - Women's Alpine combined winner: 
 Kristina Riis-Johannessen 
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 - December 8–11: ASEC #5 in 
 Hafjell
- Unfortunately the races in Hafjell are cancelled.[10]
 
 - December 14: ASEC #6 in 
 Obereggen
- Men's slalom winner: 
 Loïc Meillard 
 - Men's slalom winner: 
 - December 15: ASEC #7 in 
 Val di Fassa
- Men's slalom winner: 
 Daniel Yule 
 - Men's slalom winner: 
 - December 15 & 16: ASEC #8 in 
 Andalo
- Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Simone Wild - Women's slalom winner: 
 Resi Stiegler 
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 - December 17: ASEC #8 in 
 Kronplatz
- Parallel slalom winners: 
 Reto Schmidiger (m) / 
 Katharina Gallhuber (f) - Slalom winners (1 run): 
 Matej Vidović (m) / 
 Resi Stiegler (f) 
 - Parallel slalom winners: 
 - December 20 & 21: ASEC #9 in 
 Schladming
- Men's super-G winners: 
 Bjørnar Neteland (#1) / 
 Christoph Krenn (#2) 
 - Men's super-G winners: 
 - January 6 & 7, 2017: ASEC #10 in 
 Wengen
- Men's super-G winners: 
 Mattia Casse (2 times) 
 - Men's super-G winners: 
 - January 9–13: ASEC #11 in 
 Saalbach-Hinterglemm
- Women's downhill winners: 
 Christina Ager (#1) / (#2) - Women's Super G here is cancelled
 
 - Women's downhill winners: 
 - January 9 & 10: ASEC #12 in 
 Davos #1
- Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Marcus Monsen (#1) / 
 Samu Torsti (#2) 
 - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 - January 11 & 12: ASEC #13 in 
 Zell am See
- Men's slalom winners: 
 Matej Vidović (#1) / 
 Thomas Hettegger (#2) 
 - Men's slalom winners: 
 - January 14–16: ASEC #14 in 
 Kitzbühel
- Men's downhill winner: 
 Gilles Roulin 
 - Men's downhill winner: 
 - January 16 & 17: ASEC #15 in 
 Zinal
- Women's giant slalom winners: 
 Kristina Riis-Johannessen (#1) / 
 Jessica Hilzinger (#2) 
 - Women's giant slalom winners: 
 - January 19 & 20: ASEC #16 in 
 Melchsee-Frutt
- Women's slalom winners: 
 Marina Wallner (#1) / 
 Jessica Hilzinger (#2) 
 - Women's slalom winners: 
 - January 19 & 20: ASEC #17 in 
 Val-d'Isère
- Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Cyprien Sarrazin (#1) / 
 Gino Caviezel (#2) 
 - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 - January 23–27: ASEC #18 in 
 Davos #2
- Women's downhill winners: 
 Kristina Riis-Johannessen (#1) / 
 Sabrina Maier (#2) - Women's Super-G winners: 
 Stephanie Brunner (#1) / 
 Nadine Fest (#2) 
 - Women's downhill winners: 
 - January 23–27: ASEC #19 in 
 Méribel
- Men's downhill winners: 
 Johannes Kröll (#1) / 
 Gilles Roulin (#2) - Men's Super-G winner: 
 Gilles Roulin - Men's alpine combined winner: 
 Marcus Monsen 
 - Men's downhill winners: 
 - January 31 – February 3: ASEC #20 in 
 Châtel
- Women's Super-G winners: 
 Nadine Fest (#1) / 
 Kristina Riis-Johannessen (#2) - Women's giant slalom winners: 
 Kristin Anna Lysdahl (#1) / 
 Tina Robnik (#2) - Women's alpine combined winner: 
 Nadine Fest 
 - Women's Super-G winners: 
 - January 31 – February 3: ASEC #21 in 
 Hinterstoder
- Men's downhill winners: 
 Gilles Roulin (2 times) - Men's Super-G winner: 
 Gilles Roulin - Men's Alpine Combined: 
 Gilles Roulin 
 - Men's downhill winners: 
 - February 8 & 9: ASEC #22 in 
 Jasná
- Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Rasmus Windingstad (#1) / 
 Elia Zurbriggen (#2) 
 - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 - February 9 & 10: ASEC #23 in 
 Bad Wiessee
- Women's slalom winners: 
 Mélanie Meillard (2 times) 
 - Women's slalom winners: 
 - February 11 & 12: ASEC #24 in 
 Zakopane
- Men's slalom winners: 
 Reto Schmidiger (#1) / 
 Marc Digruber (#2) 
 - Men's slalom winners: 
 - February 13 & 14: ASEC #25 in 
 Göstling-Hochkar
- Women's giant slalom winner: 
 Tina Robnik - Women's slalom winner: 
 Anna Swenn-Larsson 
 - Women's giant slalom winner: 
 - February 17–20: ASEC #26 in 
 Crans-Montana
- Women's downhill winners: 
 Laura Pirovano (#1) / 
 Sabrina Maier (#2) - Women's Alpine combined winner: 
 Rosina Schneeberger 
 - Women's downhill winners: 
 - February 17 & 18: ASEC #27 in 
 Oberjoch
- Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Elia Zurbriggen (#1) / 
 Cyprien Sarrazin (#2) - Men's slalom winner: 
 Marc Digruber 
 - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 - February 20–25: ASEC #28 in 
 Sarntal
- Super G winners: 
 Christian Walder (m) / 
 Nina Ortlieb (f) - Men's Alpine combined winner: 
 Sandro Simonet - Men's downhill winners: 
 Joachim Puchner (#1) / 
 Johannes Kröll (#2) - Women's downhill winner: 
 Lisa Hörnblad 
 - Super G winners: 
 - March 17–19: ASEC #29 in 
 San Candido (final)
- Giant slalom winners: 
 Elia Zurbriggen (m) / 
 Elisabeth Kappaurer (f) - Slalom winners: 
 Ramon Zenhäusern (m) /  
 Camille Rast (f) 
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 
2016–17 North America Cup
- November 29 & 30, 2016: ASNAC #1 in 
 Snow King Mountain/Jackson, Wyoming
- Due to the lack of snow, the Snow King Race to the Cup has been canceled.
 
 - December 5–9, 2016: ASNAC #2 in 
 Lake Louise
- Downhill #1 winners: 
 Nicholas Krause (m) / 
 Stefanie Fleckenstein (f) - Downhill #2 winners: 
 Tyler Werry (m) / 
 Georgia Willinger (f) 
 - Downhill #1 winners: 
 - December 11–18, 2016: ASNAC #3 in 
 Panorama Mountain Village
- Super G #1 winners: 
 Joan Verdu Sanchez (m) / 
 Maureen Lebel (f) - Super G #2 winners: 
 Joan Verdu Sanchez (m) / 
 Alice Merryweather (f) - Alpine combined winners: 
 Kieffer Christianson (m) / 
 Patricia Mangan (f) - Giant slalom #1 winners: 
 Phil Brown (m) / 
 Erin Mielzynski (f) - Giant slalom #2 winners: 
 Phil Brown (m) / 
 Amelia Smart (f) - Slalom #1 winners: 
 Hig Roberts (m) / 
 Erin Mielzynski (f) - Slalom #2 winners: 
 David Ketterer (m) / 
 Erin Mielzynski (f) 
 - Super G #1 winners: 
 - January 2–5: ASNAC #4 in 
 Burke Mountain Ski Area
- Giant slalom winners: 
 Paula Moltzan (#1) / 
 Ali Nullmeyer (#2) - Slalom winners: 
 Paula Moltzan (#1) / 
 Ali Nullmeyer (#2) 
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 - January 2–5: ASNAC #5 in 
 Stowe Mountain Resort
- Giant slalom winners: 
 Nicholas Krause (#1) / 
 Hig Roberts (#2) - Slalom winners: 
 David Ketterer (#1) / 
 Jett Seymour (#2) 
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 - February 1–4: ASNAC #6 in 
 Vail Ski Resort
- Men's slalom winners: 
 David Ketterer (#1) / 
 Mark Engel (#2) - Women's slalom winners: 
 Ali Nullmeyer (2 times) 
 - Men's slalom winners: 
 - February 1–11: ASNAC #7 in 
 Copper Mountain
- Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Erik Read (#1) / 
 Trevor Philp (#2) - Women's giant slalom winners: 
 Megan McJames (#1) / 
 Ali Nullmeyer (#2) - Men's downhill winners: 
 Broderick Thompson (#1) / 
 Tyler Werry (#2) - Women's downhill winners: 
 Alice McKennis (2 times) - Super G #1 winners: 
 Nicholas Krause (m) / 
 Patricia Mangan (f) - Super G #2 winners: 
 Nicholas Krause (m) / 
 Patricia Mangan (f) - Alpine combined winners: 
 Tyler Werry (m) / 
 Nina O'Brien (f) 
 - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 - March 17–20: ASNAC #8 in 
 Mont Ste. Marie
- Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Tim Jitloff (#1) / 
 Trevor Philp (#2) - Men's slalom winner: 
 David Ketterer (2 times) 
 - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 - March 17 & 18: ASNAC #9 in 
 Val Saint-Côme Ski Resort
- Women's slalom winners: 
 Laurie Mougel (#1) / 
 Ali Nullmeyer (#2) 
 - Women's slalom winners: 
 - March 19 & 20: ASNAC #10 in 
 Garceau
- Women's giant slalom winners: 
 Nina O'Brien (#1) / 
 Mikaela Tommy (#2) 
 - Women's giant slalom winners: 
 - March 22 & 23: ASNAC #11 (final) in 
 Sugarloaf
- Alpine combined winners: 
 Sam Mulligan (m) / 
 Mikaela Tommy (f) - Super G #1 winners: 
 Erik Arvidsson (m) / 
 Stacey Cook (f) - Super G #2 winners: 
 Kipling Weisel (m) / 
 Megan McJames (f) 
 - Alpine combined winners: 
 
2016–17 Far East Cup
- December 11–14: FEC #1 in 
 Wanlong Ski Resort/Zhangjiakou
- Men's slalom winners: 
 Simon Efimov (#1) / 
 Ryunosuke Ohkoshi (#2) - Women's slalom winners: 
 Rinata Abdulkaiumova (#1) / 
 Sakurako Mukogawa (#2) - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Ian Gut (2 times) - Women's giant Slalom winners: 
 Mio Arai (2 times) 
 - Men's slalom winners: 
 - January 16–19: FEC #2 in 
 Yongpyong Resort
- Men's slalom winners: 
 Ryunosuke Ohkoshi (#1) / 
 Žan Kranjec (#2) - Women's slalom winners: 
 Emi Hasegawa (#1) / 
 Nevena Ignjatović (#2) - Men's giant slalom winners: 
 Žan Kranjec (#1) / 
 Pavel Trikhichev (#2) - Women's giant slalom winners: 
 Alexandra Tilley (#1) / 
 Asa Andō (#2) 
 - Men's slalom winners: 
 - January 22–24: FEC #3 in 
 Alpensia Resort
- Slalom #1 winners: 
 Pavel Trikhichev (m) / 
 Nevena Ignjatović (f) - Slalom #2 winners: 
 Pavel Trikhichev (m) / 
 Ekaterina Tkachenko (f) - Slalom #3 winners: 
 Žan Grošelj (m) / 
 Ekaterina Tkachenko (f) 
 - Slalom #1 winners: 
 - March 3–5: FEC #4 in 
 Sapporo Teine
- Note: One Giant slalom event here was cancelled.
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 Marco Reymond (m) / 
 Asa Andō (f) - Slalom winners: 
 Sebastian Holzmann (m) / 
 Ylva Stålnacke (f) 
 - March 8–10: FEC #5 in 
 Engaru, Hokkaido
- Giant slalom winners: 
 Alexander Schmid (m) / 
 Asa Andō (f) - Slalom #1 winners: 
 Sebastian Holzmann (m) / 
 Ylva Stålnacke (f) - Slalom #2 winners: 
 Sebastian Holzmann (m) / 
 Ylva Stålnacke (f) 
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 - March 17–22: FEC #6 in 
 Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
- Super G #1 winners: 
 Riccardo Tonetti (m) / 
 Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f) - Super G #2 winners: 
 Štefan Hadalin (m) / 
 Aleksandra Prokopyeva (f) - Giant slalom #1 winners: 
 Pavel Trikhichev (m) / 
 Emi Hasegawa (f) - Giant slalom #2 winners: 
 Roberto Nani (m) / 
 Emi Hasegawa (f) - Slalom #1 winners: 
 Jung Dong-hyun (m) / 
 Maruša Ferk (f) - Slalom #2 winners: 
 Pavel Trikhichev (m) / 
 Emi Hasegawa (f) 
 - Super G #1 winners: 
 - March 30 & 31: FEC #7 (final) in 
 Ontake
- Alpine combined winners: 
 Yumenosuke Kakizaki (m) / 
 Sakurako Mukogawa (f) - Super G #1 winners: 
 Yumenosuke Kakizaki (m) / 
 Sakurako Mukogawa (f) - Super G #2 winners: 
 Dai Shimizu (m) / 
 Sakurako Mukogawa (f) 
 - Alpine combined winners: 
 
2016 FIS Alpine South American Cup
- August 4–5: SAC #1 in 
 Chapelco Ski Resort
- This event was cancelled due warm temperatures.
 
 - August 8–11: SAC #2 in 
 Cerro Catedral
- Giant slalom winners: 
 Pietro Franceschetti (m) / 
 María Belén Simari Birkner (f) - Events in slalom was cancelled.
 
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 - August 13–15: SAC #3 in 
 Antillanca ski resort
- Slalom winners: 
 Sebastiano Gastaldi (m) / 
 Martina Dubovská (f) 
 - Slalom winners: 
 - August 24–26: SAC #4 in 
 Valle Nevado
- Super G winners: 
 Klemen Kosi (m) / 
 Noelle Barahona (f) 
 - Super G winners: 
 - August 27: SAC #5 in 
 El Colorado #1
- Giant slalom winners: 
 Štefan Hadalin (m) / 
 Jade Grillet-Aubert (f) 
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 - August 28: SAC #6 in 
 La Parva #1
- Slalom winners: 
 Salomé Báncora (m) / 
 Francesca Baruzzi Farriol (f) 
 - Slalom winners: 
 - August 31 – September 2: SAC #7 in 
 Las Leñas
- Cancelled
 
 - September 5–9: SAC #8 in 
 La Parva #2
- Downhill #1 winners: 
 Brice Roger (m) / 
 Noelle Barahona (f) - Downhill #2 winners: 
 Brice Roger (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) - Super G winners: 
 Valentin Giraud Moine (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) 
 - Downhill #1 winners: 
 - September 12–16: SAC #9 in 
 El Colorado #2
- Alpine combined #1 winners: 
 Martin Cater (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) - Alpine combined #2 winners: 
 Thomas Dreßen (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) - Super G #1 winners: 
 Josef Ferstl (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) - Super G #2 winners: 
 Josef Ferstl (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) - Downhill #1 winners: 
 Josef Ferstl (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) - Downhill #1 winners: 
 Mattia Casse (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) 
 - Alpine combined #1 winners: 
 - September 26–29: SAC #10 (final) in 
 Cerro Castor
- Giant slalom winners: 
 Cyprien Sarrazin (m) / 
 Adeline Baud (f) - Slalom winners: 
 Sebastiano Gastaldi (m) / 
 Adeline Baud (f) 
 - Giant slalom winners: 
 
2016 FIS Alpine Australia/New Zealand Cup
- August 22–26: ANC #1 in 
 Mount Hotham
- Giant slalom #1 winners: 
 Willis Feasey (m) / 
 Julia Mutschlechner (f) - Giant slalom #2 winners: 
 Andreas Žampa (m) / 
 Julia Mutschlechner (f) - Slalom #1 winners: 
 Robby Kelley (m) / 
 Rikke Gasmann-Brott (f) - Slalom #2 winners: 
 Robby Kelley (m) / 
 Rikke Gasmann-Brott (f) 
 - Giant slalom #1 winners: 
 - August 29 – September 1: ANC #2 in 
 Coronet Peak
- Giant slalom #1 winners: 
 Tim Jitloff (m) / 
 Ragnhild Mowinckel (f) - Giant slalom #2 winners: 
 Manuel Feller (m) / 
 Bernadette Schild (f) - Slalom #1 winners: 
 Manuel Feller (m) / 
 Ricarda Haaser (f) - Slalom #2 winners: 
 Ramon Zenhäusern (m) / 
 Katharina Huber (f) 
 - Giant slalom #1 winners: 
 - September 6 & 7: ANC #3 (final) in 
 Mount Hutt
- Super G #1 winners: 
 Willis Feasey (m) / 
 Piera Hudson (f) - Super G #2 winners: 
 Marc Gehrig (m) / 
 Piera Hudson (f) - Alpine combined and Super G #3 here was cancelled
 
 - Super G #1 winners: 
 
Biathlon
International biathlon championships
- January 22–29: 2017 IBU Open European Championships in 
 Duszniki-Zdrój[12]
- Individual winners: 
 Alexandr Loginov (m) / 
 Irina Starykh (f) - Pursuit winners: 
 Alexandr Loginov (m) / 
 Irina Starykh (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Vladimir Iliev (m) / 
 Juliya Dzhyma (f) - Single Mixed Relay winners: 
 Russia (Daria Virolaynen & Evgeniy Garanichev) - Mixed Relay winners: 
 Russia (Irina Starykh, Svetlana Sleptsova, Alexey Volkov & Alexandr Loginov) 
 - Individual winners: 
 - February 1–5: 2017 IBU Junior Open European Championships in 
 Nové Město na Moravě
- Junior Individual winners: 
 Igor Malinovskii (m) / 
 Anna Weidel (f) - Junior Pursuit winners: 
 Milan Zemlicka (m) / 
 Marketa Davidova (f) - Junior Sprint winners: 
 Nikita Porshnev (m) / 
 Marketa Davidova (f) 
 - Junior Individual winners: 
 - February 6–19: Biathlon World Championships 2017 in 
 Hochfilzen[13]
- Individual winners: 
 Lowell Bailey (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Pursuit winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Benedikt Doll (m) / 
 Gabriela Koukalová (f) - Men's Relay winners: 
 Russia (Alexey Volkov, Maxim Tsvetkov, Anton Babikov, & Anton Shipulin) - Women's Relay winners: 
 Germany (Vanessa Hinz, Maren Hammerschmidt, Franziska Hildebrand, & Laura Dahlmeier) - Mixed Relay winners: 
 Germany (Vanessa Hinz, Laura Dahlmeier, Arnd Peiffer & Simon Schempp) - Mass Start winners: 
 Simon Schempp (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) 
 - Individual winners: 
 - February 22–28: 2017 IBU Youth/Junior World Championships in 
 Brezno-Osrblie
 - August 24–27: 2017 IBU Summer Biathlon World Championships in 
 Chaykovsky, Perm Krai
 Russia won both the gold and overall medal tallies.
 
2016–17 Biathlon World Cup
- November 25 – December 4, 2016: BWC #1 in 
 Östersund
- Individual winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Pursuit winners: 
 Anton Babikov (m) / 
 Gabriela Koukalová (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Marie Dorin Habert (f) - Single Mixed Relay winners: 
 France (Martin Fourcade, Marie Dorin Habert) - Mixed 2x6 + 2x7.5 km Relay winners: 
 Norway (Johannes Thingnes Bø, Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Fanny Horn Birkeland, Marte Olsbu) 
 - Individual winners: 
 - December 5–11, 2016: BWC #2 in 
 Pokljuka
- Pursuit winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Men's Relay winners: 
 France (Jean-Guillaume Béatrix, Quentin Fillon Maillet, Simon Desthieux, Martin Fourcade) - Women's Relay winners: 
 Germany (Vanessa Hinz, Franziska Hildebrand, Maren Hammerschmidt, Laura Dahlmeier) 
 - Pursuit winners: 
 - December 12–18, 2016: BWC #3 in 
 Nové Město na Moravě
- Pursuit winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Anaïs Chevalier (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Tatiana Akimova (f) - Mass start winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Gabriela Koukalová (f) 
 - Pursuit winners: 
 - January 2–8: BWC #4 in 
 Oberhof, Germany
- Pursuit winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Marie Dorin Habert (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Julian Eberhard (m) / 
 Gabriela Koukalová (f) - Mass start winners: 
 Simon Schempp (m) / 
 Gabriela Koukalová (f) 
 - Pursuit winners: 
 - January 10–15: BWC #5 in 
 Ruhpolding
- Pursuit winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Kaisa Mäkäräinen (f) - Men's Relay winners: 
 Norway (Ole Einar Bjørndalen, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, Henrik L'Abée-Lund, Emil Hegle Svendsen) - Women's Relay winners: 
 Germany (Vanessa Hinz, Maren Hammerschmidt, Franziska Preuß, Laura Dahlmeier) 
 - Pursuit winners: 
 - January 16–22: BWC #6 in 
 Antholz-Anterselva
- Individual winners: 
 Anton Shipulin (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Mass start winners: 
 Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / 
 Nadine Horchler (f) - Men's Relay winners: 
 Germany (Erik Lesser, Benedikt Doll, Arnd Peiffer, Simon Schempp) - Women's Relay winners: 
 Germany (Vanessa Hinz, Maren Hammerschmidt, Franziska Hildebrand, Laura Dahlmeier) 
 - Individual winners: 
 - February 27 – March 5: BWC #7 in 
 Pyeongchang
- Pursuit winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Julian Eberhard (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Men's Relay winners: 
 France (Jean-Guillaume Béatrix, Simon Fourcade, Simon Desthieux, Martin Fourcade) - Women's Relay winners: 
 Germany (Nadine Horchler, Maren Hammerschmidt, Denise Herrmann, Franziska Hildebrand) 
 - Pursuit winners: 
 - March 6–12: BWC #8 in 
 Kontiolahti[15]
- Note: This event was supposed to be hosted in Tyumen, but the IBU took it back.[16]
 - Pursuit winners: 
 Arnd Peiffer (m) / 
 Laura Dahlmeier (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Tiril Eckhoff (f) - Single Mixed Relay winners: 
 Austria (Lisa Hauser & Simon Eder) - Mixed Relay winners: 
 France (Marie Dorin Habert, Anaïs Bescond, Simon Desthieux, & Quentin Fillon Maillet) 
 - March 13–19: BWC #9 (final) in 
 Oslo-Holmenkollen
- Pursuit winners: 
 Anton Shipulin (m) / 
 Mari Laukkanen (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / 
 Mari Laukkanen (f) - Mass Start winners: 
 Martin Fourcade (m) / 
 Tiril Eckhoff (f) 
 - Pursuit winners: 
 
2016–17 IBU Cup
- November 23–27, 2016: IBU Cup #1 in 
 Beitostølen
- Note: Both relay events here are cancelled.
 - Men's 10 km Sprint winners: 
 Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen (#1) / 
 Matvey Eliseev (#2) - Women's 7.5 km Sprint winners: 
 Denise Herrmann (#1) / 
 Markéta Davidová (#2) 
 - December 6–11, 2016: IBU Cup #2 in 
 Ridnaun-Val Ridanna
- Sprint winners: 
 Fredrik Gjesbakk (m) / 
 Anastasiya Merkushyna (f) - Pursuit winners: 
 Aristide Begue (m) / 
 Uliana Kaisheva (f) - Single Mixed Relay winners: 
 Ukraine (Anastasiya Merkushyna, Artem Tyshchenko) - Mixed 2x6 + 2x7.5 km Relay winners: 
 Russia (Victoria Slivko, Uliana Kaisheva, Semen Suchilov, Alexey Slepov) 
 - Sprint winners: 
 - December 14–17, 2016: IBU Cup #3 in 
 Obertilliach
- Individual winners: 
 Antonin Guigonnat (m) / 
 Karolin Horchler (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Henrik L'Abée-Lund (m) / 
 Daria Virolaynen (f) 
 - Individual winners: 
 - January 3–8: IBU Cup #4 in 
 Martell-Val Martello
- Pursuit winners: 
 Alexandr Loginov (m) / 
 Daria Virolaynen (f) - Sprint winners #1: 
 Andreas Dahlø Waernes (m) / 
 Fabienne Hartweger (f) - Sprint winners #2: 
 Alexandr Loginov (m) / 
 Julia Simon (f) 
 - Pursuit winners: 
 - January 11–14: IBU Cup #5 in 
 Arber
- Note: Both relay events here are cancelled.
 - Individual winners: 
 Alexandr Loginov (m) / 
 Irina Starykh (f) 
 - February 1–4: IBU Cup #6 in 
 Brezno-Osrblie
- Pursuit winners: 
 Kristoffer Skjelvik (m) / 
 Daria Virolaynen (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Alexey Volkov (m) / 
 Denise Herrmann (f) 
 - Pursuit winners: 
 - February 28 – March 5: IBU Cup #7 in 
 Kontiolahti
- Individual winners: 
 Ondřej Moravec (m) / 
 Ekaterina Shumilova (f) - Pursuit winners: 
 Alexandr Loginov (m) / 
 Anna Weidel (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Alexander Povarnitsyn (m) / 
 Daria Virolaynen (f) 
 - Individual winners: 
 - March 7–12: IBU Cup #8 (final) in 
 Otepää
- Men's 10 km Sprint winner: 
 Alexandr Loginov (2 times) - Women's 7.5 km Sprint winners: 
 Anastasia Zagoruiko (#1) / 
 Enora Latuillière (#2) - Single Mixed Relay #1 winners: 
 Norway (Thekla Brun-Lie & Martin Femsteinevik) - Mixed Relay #1 winners: 
 Germany (Karolin Horchler, Marion Deigentesch, Matthias Dorfer, David Zobel) - Single Mixed Relay #2 winners: 
 Russia (Anna Nikulina & Yury Shopin) - Mixed Relay #2 winners: 
 Norway (Sigrid Bilstad Neraasen, Rikke Andersen, Sindre Pettersen, & Henrik L'Abée-Lund) 
 - Men's 10 km Sprint winner: 
 
2016–17 IBU Junior Cup
- December 9–11, 2016: IBU JC #1 in 
 Lenzerheide
- Junior individual winners: 
 Anton Dudchenko (m) / 
 Julia Simon (f) - Junior sprint winners: 
 Vitaliy Trush (m) / 
 Caroline Colombo (f) 
 - Junior individual winners: 
 - December 14–17, 2016: IBU JC #2 in 
 Hochfilzen
 - January 26–29: IBU JC #3 (final) in 
 Pokljuka
- Junior men's sprint winners: 
 Kirill Streltsov (#1) / 
 Nikita Porshnev (#2) - Junior women's sprint winners: 
 Ekaterina Moshkova (#1) / 
 Valeriia Vasnetcova (#2) - Junior single mixed relay winners: 
 Russia (Liudmila Ulybina & Semen Bey) - Junior mixed relay winners: 
 Russia (Ekaterina Sannikova, Valeriia Vasnetcova, Nikita Porshnev, & Igor Malinovskii) 
 - Junior men's sprint winners: 
 
Cross-country skiing
World Championships (XC)
- January 30 – February 5: Part of the 2017 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in 
 Park City[17]
 Russia won both the gold and overall medal tallies.
 - February 22 – March 5: Part of the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017 in 
 Lahti[18]
- Classical winners: 
 Iivo Niskanen (m) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f) - Skiathlon winners: 
 Sergey Ustiugov (m) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Federico Pellegrino (m) / 
 Maiken Caspersen Falla (f) - Team Sprint winners: 
 Russia (Nikita Kryukov & Sergey Ustiugov) (m) / 
 Norway (Heidi Weng & Maiken Caspersen Falla) (f) - Men's 4 × 10 km relay winners: 
 Norway (Didrik Tønseth, Niklas Dyrhaug, Martin Johnsrud Sundby, & Finn Hågen Krogh) - Women's 4 × 5 km relay winners: 
 Norway (Maiken Caspersen Falla, Heidi Weng, Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen, & Marit Bjørgen) - Mass Start winners: 
 Alex Harvey (m) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f) 
 - Classical winners: 
 
2016–17 Tour de Ski
- December 31, 2016 & January 1, 2017: TdS #1 in 
 Val Müstair
- Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Sergey Ustiugov (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) - Classical Mass Start winners: 
 Sergey Ustiugov (m) / 
 Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f) 
 - Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 - January 3 & 4: TdS #2 in 
 Oberstdorf
- Skiathlon winners: 
 Sergey Ustiugov (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) - Freestyle Pursuit winners: 
 Sergey Ustiugov (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) 
 - Skiathlon winners: 
 - January 6: TdS #3 in 
 Toblach #1
- Freestyle winners: 
 Sergey Ustiugov (m) / 
 Jessie Diggins (f) 
 - Freestyle winners: 
 - January 7 & 8: TdS #4 (final) in 
 Fiemme Valley
- Classical Mass Start winners: 
 Martin Johnsrud Sundby (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) - Freestyle Pursuit winners: 
 Sergey Ustiugov (m) / 
 Heidi Weng (f) 
 - Classical Mass Start winners: 
 
2016–17 FIS Cross-Country World Cup
- November 26, 2016 – March 19, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Cross-Country World Cup[19]
- November 26 & 27, 2016: XCWC #1 in 
 Ruka
- Sprint Classical winners: 
 Pål Golberg (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) - Classical winners: 
 Iivo Niskanen (m) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f) 
 - Sprint Classical winners: 
 - December 2–4, 2016: XCWC #2 in 
 Lillehammer
- Sprint Classical winners: 
 Calle Halfvarsson (m) / 
 Heidi Weng (f) - Freestyle winners: 
 Calle Halfvarsson (m) / 
 Jessie Diggins (f) - Classical Pursuit winners: 
 Martin Johnsrud Sundby (m) / 
 Heidi Weng (f) 
 - Sprint Classical winners: 
 - December 10 & 11, 2016: XCWC #3 in 
 Davos
- Freestyle Mass Start winners: 
 Martin Johnsrud Sundby (m) / 
 Ingvild Flugstad Østberg (f) - Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Sergey Ustiugov (m) / 
 Maiken Caspersen Falla (f) 
 - Freestyle Mass Start winners: 
 - December 17 & 18, 2016: XCWC #4 in 
 La Clusaz
- Freestyle Mass Start winners: 
 Finn Hågen Krogh (m) / 
 Heidi Weng (f) - Men's Team Relay winners: 
 Norway I (Didrik Tønseth, Martin Johnsrud Sundby, Anders Gløersen, Finn Hågen Krogh) - Women's Team Relay winners: 
 Norway (Ingvild Flugstad Østberg, Marit Bjørgen, Ragnhild Haga, Heidi Weng) 
 - Freestyle Mass Start winners: 
 - January 14 & 15: XCWC #5 in 
 Toblach #2
- Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Sindre Bjørnestad Skar (m) / 
 Natalia Matveeva (f) - Men's Team Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Canada (Len Väljas & Alex Harvey) - Women's Team Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Russia (Yulia Belorukova & Natalia Matveeva) 
 - Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 - January 21 & 22: XCWC #6 in 
 Ulricehamn
- Freestyle winners: 
 Alex Harvey (m) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f) - Men's Team Relay winners: 
 Norway (Simen Hegstad Krueger, Martin Johnsrud Sundby, Anders Gløersen, Finn Hågen Krogh) - Women's Team Relay winners: 
 Norway (Ingvild Flugstad Østberg, Heidi Weng, Astrid Uhrenholdt Jacobsen, Marit Bjørgen) 
 - Freestyle winners: 
 - January 28 & 29: XCWC #7 in 
 Falun
- Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Federico Pellegrino (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) - Classical Mass Start winners: 
 Emil Iversen (m) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f) 
 - Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 - February 3–5: XCWC #8 in 
 Pyeongchang
- Sprint Classical winners: 
 Gleb Retivykh (m) / 
 Anamarija Lampic (f) - Skiathlon winners: 
 Petr Sedov (m) / 
 Justyna Kowalczyk (f) - Men's Team Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Russia (Andrey Parfenov & Gleb Retivykh) - Women's Team Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Sweden (Elin Mohlin & Maria Nordstroem) 
 - Sprint Classical winners: 
 - February 18 & 19: XCWC #9 in 
 Otepää
- Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) - Classical winners: 
 Martin Johnsrud Sundby (m) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f) 
 - Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 - March 8: XCWC #10 in 
 Drammen
- Sprint Classical winners: 
 Eirik Brandsdal (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) 
 - Sprint Classical winners: 
 - March 11 & 12: XCWC #11 in 
 Oslo
- Classical Mass Start winners: 
 Martin Johnsrud Sundby (m) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f) 
 - Classical Mass Start winners: 
 - March 17–19: XCWC #12 (final) in 
 Quebec City
- Note: Due to the release of the McLaren Report, Russia has voluntarily handed back the event to the FIS from Tyumen.[20]
 - Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Alex Harvey (m) / 
 Stina Nilsson (f) - Freestyle Pursuit & Classical Mass Start winners: 
 Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m; 2 times) / 
 Marit Bjørgen (f; 2 times) 
 
 - November 26 & 27, 2016: XCWC #1 in 
 
2016–17 FIS OPA Continental Cup
- December 10 & 11: OPA #1 in 
 Valdidentro
- Men's 15 km Classic winners: 
 Alexis Jeannerod (#1) / 
 Irineu Esteve Altimiras (#2) - Women's 10 km Classic winners: 
 Justyna Kowalczyk (#1) / 
 Caterina Ganz (#2) 
 - Men's 15 km Classic winners: 
 - December 16–18: OPA #2 in 
 Goms
- Men's 1.4 km Sprint Classic winner: 
 Anton Gafarov - Women's 1.2 km Sprint Classic winner: 
 Natalya Matveyeva - Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Giandomenico Salvadori - Women's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Caterina Ganz - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Maicol Rastelli - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Sofie Krehl 
 - Men's 1.4 km Sprint Classic winner: 
 - January 6–8: OPA #3 in 
 Planica
- Men's 1.2 km Sprint Freestyle winner: 
 Simi Hamilton - Women's 1.2 km Sprint Freestyle winner: 
 Sophie Caldwell - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Jean Tiberghien - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Sara Pellegrini - Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Dietmar Nöckler - Women's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Francesca Baudin 
 - Men's 1.2 km Sprint Freestyle winner: 
 - February 17–19: OPA #4 in 
 Zwiesel
- 1.6 Sprint Classic winners: 
 Sergio Rigoni (m) / 
 Caterina Ganz (f) - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Paul Goalabre - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Monique Siegel - Men's 15 km Classic Pursuit winner: 
 Giandomenico Salvadori - Women's 10 km Classic Pursuit winner: 
 Caterina Ganz 
 - 1.6 Sprint Classic winners: 
 - March 4 & 5: OPA #5 in 
 St. Ulrich
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Adrien Backscheider - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Lisa Unterweger - Men's 30 km Classic winner: 
 Thomas Wick - Women's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Theresa Eichhorn 
 - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 - March 17–19: OPA #6 in 
 Seefeld in Tirol (final)
- Men's 3.3 km Freestyle winner: 
 Jean Tiberghien - Women's 2.5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Caitlin Compton Gregg - Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Maicol Rastelli - Women's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Theresa Eichhorn - Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: 
 Maicol Rastelli - Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: 
 Theresa Eichhorn 
 - Men's 3.3 km Freestyle winner: 
 
2016 Australia/New Zealand Cup
- August 6 & 7: ANC #1 in 
 Perisher Ski Resort (part of Australian Championships)
- Speed 1 km winners: 
 Mark Pollock (m) / 
 Katerina Paul (f) - Men's 10 km Free winner: 
 Mark Pollock - Women's 5 km Free winner: 
 Lillian Boland 
 - Speed 1 km winners: 
 - August 20 & 21: ANC #2 in 
 Falls Creek, Victoria (part of Australian Championships)
- Speed 1 km Free winners: 
 Phillip Bellingham (m) / 
 Kelsey Phinney - Men's 15 km winner: 
 Phillip Bellingham - Women's 10 km winner: 
 Chisa Ōbayashi 
 - Speed 1 km Free winners: 
 - September 9–11: ANC #3 (final) in 
 Snow Farm
- Sprint Cross winners: 
 Andrew Newell (m) / 
 Ida Sargent (f) - Men's 15 km Cross winner: 
 Andrew Newell - Women's 10 km Cross winner: 
 Jessie Diggins - Men's 10 km Free winner: 
 Simi Hamilton - Women's 5 km winner: 
 Liz Stephen 
 - Sprint Cross winners: 
 
2016–17 North American Cup
- December 10 & 11, 2016: NAC #1 in 
 Sovereign Lake Nordic Centre/Vernon, British Columbia
- Men's Sprint Classical winner: 
 Reese Hanneman - Women's Sprint Classical winner: 
 Julia Kern - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Scott Patterson - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Chelsea Holmes 
 - Men's Sprint Classical winner: 
 - December 16–18, 2016: NAC #2 in 
 Rossland, British Columbia
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Evan Palmer-Charrette - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Chelsea Holmes - Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Andrew Newell (m) / 
 Erika Flowers (f) - Men's 15 km Classical Pursuit winner: 
 Evan Palmer-Charrette - Women's 10 km Classical Pursuit winner: 
 Chelsea Holmes 
 - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 - January 20 & 21: NAC #3 in 
 Whistler Olympic Park
- Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Jesse Cockney (m) / 
 Dahria Beatty (f) - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Andy Shields - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Emily Nishikawa 
 - Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 - February 3–5: NAC #4 (final) in 
 Nakkertok Nordic Ski Centre/Gatineau
- Sprint Classical winners: 
 Dominique Moncion-Groulx (m) / 
 Maya MacIsaac-Jones (f) - Men's 15 km Classical winner: 
 Andy Shields - Women's 10 km Classical winner: 
 Annie Hart - Men's 20 km Freestyle winner: 
 Russell Kennedy - Women's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Annie Hart 
 - Sprint Classical winners: 
 
2016–17 Balkan Cup
- January 7 & 8: BC #1 in 
 Gerede
- Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Edi Dadić - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Vedrana Malec - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Edi Dadić - Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Vedrana Malec 
 - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 - January 17 & 18: BC #2 in 
 Zlatibor
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Veselin Tzinzov - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Vedrana Malec - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Veselin Tzinzov - Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Vedrana Malec 
 - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 - January 21 & 22: BC #3 in 
 Metsovo
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Veselin Tzinzov (2 times) - Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Dejana Košarac (#1) / 
 Maria Tsakiri 
 - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 - January 28 & 29: BC #4 in 
 Pale
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Veselin Tzinzov - Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Sanja Kusmuk - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Veselin Tzinzov - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Sanja Kusmuk 
 - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 - February 4 & 5: BC #5 in 
 Ravna Gora
- Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Veselin Tzinzov - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Lisa Unterweger - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Damir Rastić - Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Lisa Unterweger 
 - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 - February 14 & 15: BC #6 in 
 Mavrovo
- Men's 10 km Freestyle winners: 
 Edi Dadić (#1) / 
 Veselin Tzinzov (#2) - Women's 5 km Freestyle winners: 
 Dejana Košarac (#1) / 
 Sanja Kusmuk (#2) 
 - Men's 10 km Freestyle winners: 
 - March 24 & 25: BC #7 (final) in 
 Bansko
- Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Veselin Tzinzov - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Nansi Okoro - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Damir Rastić - Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Stefani Popova 
 - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 
2016–17 Scandinavian Cup
- December 9–11: SCAN #1 in 
 Lillehammer
- Men's 1.5 km Sprint Classic winner: 
 Sindre Odberg Palm - Women's 1.3 km Sprint Classic winner: 
 Anna Dyvik - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Daniel Stock - Women's 5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Charlotte Kalla - Men's 30 km Classic winner: 
 Niklas Dyrhaug - Women's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Charlotte Kalla 
 - Men's 1.5 km Sprint Classic winner: 
 - January 6–8: SCAN #2 in 
 Lahti
- 1 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 Oskar Svensson (m) / 
 Hanna Falk (f) - Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Iivo Niskanen - Women's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Justyna Kowalczyk 
 - 1 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 - March 3–5: SCAN #3 (final) in 
 Madona
- 1 km Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Håvard Solås Taugbøl (m) / 
 Anna Dyvik (f) - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Daniel Stock - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Maria Nordstroem - Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: 
 Mathias Rundgreen - Women's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: 
 Linn Sömskar 
 - 1 km Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 
2016–17 Slavic Cup
- December 16–18: SC #1 in 
 Štrbské pleso
- Men's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 Aliaksandr Voranau (#1) / 
 Jan Barton (#2) - Women's 1.4 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 Alena Procházková (2 times) - Men's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Mikhail Kuklin - Women's 7.5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Alena Procházková 
 - Men's 1.6 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 - February 18 & 19: SC #2 in 
 Zakopane
- Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Andrej Segeč - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Urszula Łętocha - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Andrzej Pradziad - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Urszula Łętocha 
 - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 - February 24–26: SC #3 in 
 Jablonec nad Nisou
- Men's 3 km Freestyle winner: 
 Dušan Kožíšek - Women's 2 km Freestyle winner: 
 Zuzana Staňková - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Luděk Šeller - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Urszula Łętocha - Men's 10 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: 
 Adam Fellner - Women's 5 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: 
 Anna Sixtová 
 - Men's 3 km Freestyle winner: 
 - March 11 & 12: SC #4 (final) in 
 Harrachov
- 1 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 Michal Novák (m) / 
 Karolína Grohová (f) - Men's 15 km Freestyle Pursuit winner: 
 Martin Jakš - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Kateřina Beroušková 
 - 1 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 
2016–17 Eastern Europe Cup
- November 20–24, 2016: EEC #1 in 
 Vershina Tea
- Men's 1.7 km Free winner: 
 Ivan Yakimushkin - Women's 1.3 km Free winner: 
 Polina Nekrasova - Men's 10 km Free winner: 
 Aleksey Chervotkin - Women's 5 km Free winner: 
 Anna Nechaevskaya - Men's 1.7 km Classic winner: 
 Aleksey Chervotkin - Women's 1.3 km Classic winner: 
 Polina Nekrasova - Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Alexey Vitsenko - Women's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Mariya Guschina 
 - Men's 1.7 km Free winner: 
 - December 20–22, 2016: EEC #2 in 
 Sianky
- Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Yury Astapenka - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Tetyana Antypenko - Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Yury Astapenka - Women's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Valentyna Shevchenko - 1.6 km Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Ruslan Perekhoda (m) / 
 Tetyana Antypenko 
 - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 - December 24–28, 2016: EEC #3 in 
 Krasnogorsk
- 1.4 km Sprint Classic #1 winners: 
 Alexander Panzhinskiy (m) / 
 Natalya Matveyeva (f) - 1.4 km Sprint Classic #2 winners: 
 Alexander Bolshunov (m) / 
 Natalya Matveyeva (f) - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Andrey Melnichenko - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Anna Nechaevskaya - Men's 30 km Classic winner: 
 Alexander Bolshunov - Women's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Olga Rocheva 
 - 1.4 km Sprint Classic #1 winners: 
 - January 11–15: EEC #4 in 
 Minsk
- 1.5 km Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Andrey Parfenov (m) / 
 Yulia Tikhonova (f) - Men's 15 km Classic winners: 
 Nikita Stupak (#1) / 
 Vladislav Skobelev (#2) - Women's 10 km Classic winners: 
 Justyna Kowalczyk (#1) / 
 Anna Nechaevskaya (#2) 
 - 1.5 km Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 - February 10: EEC #5 in 
 Krasnogorsk
- Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Alexey Vitsenko - Women's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Zhanna Muraveva 
 - Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 - February 12: EEC #6 in 
 Moscow
- 1.4 km Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Nikolay Morilov (m) / 
 Maria Davydenkova (f) 
 - 1.4 km Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 - February 25 – March 1: EEC #7 (final) in 
 Syktyvkar
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Ermil Vokuev - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Anna Nechaevskaya - 1.4 km Sprint Freestyle winners: 
 Andrey Krasnov (m) / 
 Natalia Nepryaeva (f) - Skiathlon winners: 
 Denis Spitsov (m) / 
 Anna Nechaevskaya (f) 
 - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 
2016–17 Far East Cup
- December 16 & 17: FEC #1 in 
 Alpensia Resort
- Sprint Classic winners: 
 Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) / 
 Nanase Fujita (f) - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Hikari Fujinoki - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Lee Chae-won 
 - Sprint Classic winners: 
 - December 26 & 27: FEC #2 in 
 Otoineppu, Hokkaido
- Men's 10 km Classic winners: 
 Akira Lenting (#1) / 
 Keishin Yoshida (#2) - Women's 5 km Classic winners: 
 Masako Ishida (2 times) 
 - Men's 10 km Classic winners: 
 - January 6: FEC #3 in 
 Sapporo
- Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Keishin Yoshida - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Yuki Kobayashi 
 - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 - January 7: FEC #4 in 
 Sapporo
- 1.4 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 Nobuhito Kashiwabara (m) / 
 Masako Ishida 
 - 1.4 km Sprint Classic winners: 
 - January 8: FEC #5 in 
 Sapporo
- Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Keishin Yoshida - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Masako Ishida 
 - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 - January 15 & 16: FEC #6 (final) in 
 Alpensia Resort
- Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Akira Lenting - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Lee Chae-won - Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: 
 Akira Lenting - Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: 
 Lee Chae-won 
 - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 
2016–17 USSA Super Tour
- December 3 & 4: UST #1 in 
 Rendezvous Ski Trails/West Yellowstone, Montana
- Note: This event replaced Bozeman, Montana.
 - 1.5 km Freestyle winners: 
 Matthew Gelso (m) / 
 Jennie Bender (f) - Men's 15 km Classic winner: 
 Matthew Gelso - Women's 10 km Classic winner: 
 Elizabeth Guiney 
 - January 21 & 22: UST #2 in 
 Soda Springs
- Sprint Classic winners: 
 Benjamin Lustgarten (m) / 
 Jennie Bender (f) 
 - Sprint Classic winners: 
 - February 17–19: UST #3 in 
 Al Quaal Recreation Area
- 1.6 km Freestyle winners: 
 Tyler Kornfield (m) / 
 Julia Kern (f) - Men's 10 km Classic winner: 
 David Norris - Women's 5 km Classic winner: 
 Kaitlynn Miller 
 - 1.6 km Freestyle winners: 
 - March 27 – April 2: UST #4 in 
 Birch Hill Recreation Area/Fairbanks (final)
- Skiathlon winners: 
 Scott Patterson (m) / 
 Jessie Diggins (f) - Men's 1.5 km Freestyle winner: 
 Logan Hanneman - Women's 1.4 km Freestyle winner: 
 Jessie Diggins - Men's 50 km Must Start winner: 
 Scott Patterson - Women's 30 km Must Start winner: 
 Jessie Diggins 
 - Skiathlon winners: 
 
Freestyle skiing
World Championships (Freestyle)
- March 6–19: FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2017 in 
 Sierra Nevada[21]
- Aerials winners: 
 Jonathon Lillis (m) / 
 Ashley Caldwell (f) - Half-pipe winners: 
 Aaron Blunk (m) / 
 Ayana Onozuka (f) - Moguls winners: 
 Ikuma Horishima (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Ikuma Horishima (m) / 
 Perrine Laffont (f) - Ski Cross winners: 
 Victor Öhling Norberg (m) / 
 Sandra Näslund (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 McRae Williams (m) / 
 Tess Ledeux (f) 
 - Aerials winners: 
 - March 26: FIS Junior Freestyle Ski World Championships 2017 (Half-pipe only) in 
 Crans-Montana[22]
- Half-pipe winners: 
 Rafael Kreienbuehl (m) / 
 Kelly Sildaru (f) 
 - Half-pipe winners: 
 - April 3–7: FIS Junior Freestyle Ski World Championships 2017 (AE, MO, DM, SS, & SX events) in 
 Chiesa in Valmalenco[22]
- Aerials winners: 
 Dzmitry Mazurkevich (m) / 
 Liubov Nikitina (f) - Moguls winners: 
 Jack Kariotis (m) / 
 Trudy Mickel (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Riku Voutilainen (m) / 
 Olivia Giaccio (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 Taisei Yamamoto (m) / 
 Kelly Sildaru (f) - Ski Cross winners: 
 Florian Wilmsmann (m) / 
 Sandra Näslund (f) 
 - Aerials winners: 
 
FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup
- December 9, 2016 – March 26, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup[23]
 
Moguls and Aerials
- December 10, 2016 – March 4, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Moguls and Aerials World Cup Schedule[24][25][26]
- December 10, 2016: MAWC #1 in 
 Ruka
- Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - December 17 & 18, 2016: MAWC #2 in 
 Beijing (Beida Lake)
- Individual aerials #1 winners: 
 Anton Kushnir (m) / 
 Xu Mengtao (f) - Individual aerials #2 winners: 
 Qi Guangpu (m) / 
 Danielle Scott (f) - Team aerials winners: 
 Russia (Aleksandra Orlova, Liubov Nikitina, Maxim Burov) 
 - Individual aerials #1 winners: 
 - January 13 & 14: MAWC #3 in 
 Lake Placid, New York
- Moguls winners: 
 Dmitry Reiherd (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) - Aerials winners: 
 Anton Kushnir (m) / 
 Ashley Caldwell (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - January 21: MAWC #4 in 
 Val Saint-Côme
- Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Justine Dufour-Lapointe (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - January 28: MAWC #5 in 
 Calgary
- Moguls winners: 
 Matt Graham (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - February 2–4: MAWC #6 in 
 Deer Valley
- Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Morgan Schild (f) - Aerials winners: 
 Qi Guangpu (m) / 
 Lydia Lassila (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - February 10 & 11: MAWC #7 in 
 Bokwang
- Aerials winners: 
 Anton Kushnir (m) / 
 Xu Mengtao (f) - Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) 
 - Aerials winners: 
 - February 18 & 19: MAWC #8 in 
 Tazawako
- Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Jaelin Kauf (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - February 25: MAWC #9 in 
 Minsk
- Aerials winners: 
 WANG Xindi (m) / 
 Lydia Lassila (f) 
 - Aerials winners: 
 - February 25 & 26: MAWC #10 in 
 Thaiwoo (Hebei)
- Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Perrine Laffont (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - March 4: MAWC #11 (final) in 
 Moscow
- Aerials winners: 
 ZHOU Hang (m) / 
 Lydia Lassila (f) 
 - Aerials winners: 
 
 - December 10, 2016: MAWC #1 in 
 
Half-pipe, Big air, and Slopestyle
- September 2, 2016 – March 25, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Half-pipe, Big air, and Slopestyle World Cup Schedule[27][28][29]
- September 2 & 3, 2016: HB&SWC #1 in 
 El Colorado
- Big Air winners: 
 Henrik Harlaut (m) / 
 Emma Dahlström (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - November 11, 2016: HB&SWC #2 in 
 Milan
- Big Air winners: 
 Kai Mahler (m) / 
 Lisa Zimmermann (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - December 2, 2016: HB&SWC #3 in 
 Mönchengladbach
- Big Air winners: 
 Henrik Harlaut (m) / 
 Silvia Bertagna (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - December 15 & 17, 2016: HB&SWC #4 in 
 Copper Mountain
- Half-pipe winners: 
 Kevin Rolland (m) / 
 Marie Martinod (f) 
 - Half-pipe winners: 
 - January 13 & 14: HB&SWC #5 in 
 Font-Romeu
- Slopestyle winners: 
 McRae Williams (m) / 
 Tess Ledeux (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - January 26–28: HB&SWC #6 in 
 Seiser Alm
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Colby Stevenson (m) / 
 Sarah Hoefflin (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - February 1–5: HB&SWC #7 in 
 Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
- Note: The men's slopestyle event here was cancelled.
 - Half-pipe winners: 
 Torin Yater-Wallace (m) / 
 Marie Martinod (f) - Women's Slopestyle winner: 
 Maggie Voisin 
 - February 9–12: HB&SWC #8 in 
 Quebec City
- Big Air winners: 
 Kai Mahler (m) / 
 Mathilde Gremaud (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 Andri Ragettli (m) / 
 Johanne Killi (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - February 16 & 18: HB&SWC #9 in 
 Bokwang
- Half-pipe winners: 
 Torin Yater-Wallace (m) / 
 Marie Martinod (f) 
 - Half-pipe winners: 
 - March 2 & 3: HB&SWC #10 in 
 Silvaplana
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Teal Harle (m) / 
 Isabel Atkin (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - March 5 & 7: HB&SWC #11 in 
 Tignes
- Half-pipe winners: 
 Alex Ferreira (m) / 
 Cassie Sharpe (f) 
 - Half-pipe winners: 
 - March 24 & 25: HB&SWC #12 (final) in 
 Myrkdalen-Voss
- Men's Big Air winners: 
 Christian Nummedal (#1) / 
 Birk Ruud (#2) - Women's Big Air winner: 
 Emma Dahlström (2 times) 
 - Men's Big Air winners: 
 
 - September 2 & 3, 2016: HB&SWC #1 in 
 
Ski cross
- December 8, 2016 – March 5, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Ski Cross World Cup Schedule[30]
- December 8–10, 2016: SCWC #1 in 
 Val Thorens
- Ski cross #1 winners: 
 Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) - Ski cross #2 winners: 
 Alex Fiva (m) / 
 Anna Holmlund (f) 
 - Ski cross #1 winners: 
 - December 12 & 13, 2016: SCWC #2 in 
 Arosa
- Ski cross winners: 
 Romain Detraz (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) 
 - Ski cross winners: 
 - December 16 & 17, 2016: SCWC #3 in 
 Montafon
- Ski cross winners: 
 Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) 
 - Ski cross winners: 
 - December 20–22, 2016: SCWC #4 in 
 Innichen
- Ski cross winners: 
 Filip Flisar (m; 2 times) / 
 Heidi Zacher (f; 2 times) 
 - Ski cross winners: 
 - January 14 & 15: SCWC #5 in 
 Watles
- Ski cross #1 winners: 
 Armin Niederer (m) / 
 Sandra Näslund (f) - Ski cross #2 winners: 
 Alex Fiva (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) 
 - Ski cross #1 winners: 
 - February 3–5: SCWC #6 in 
 Feldberg
- Note: The second women's ski cross event here was cancelled.
 - Men's Ski cross winner: 
 Jean-Frédéric Chapuis (2 times) - Women's Ski cross winner: 
 Heidi Zacher 
 - February 9–12: SCWC #7 in 
 Idre
- Ski cross #1 winners: 
 Alex Fiva (m) / 
 Sandra Näslund (f) - Ski cross #2 winners: 
 Brady Leman (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) 
 - Ski cross #1 winners: 
 - February 24 & 25: SCWC #8 in 
 Sunny Valley (Miass)
- Ski cross winners: 
 Arnaud Bovolenta (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) 
 - Ski cross winners: 
 - March 5: SCWC #9 (final) in 
 Blue Mountain
- Ski cross winners: 
 Brady Leman (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) 
 - Ski cross winners: 
 
 - December 8–10, 2016: SCWC #1 in 
 
2016–17 Europa Cup
- November 26: FSEC #1 in 
 Stubai
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Antoine Adelisse (m) / 
 Coline Ballet Baz (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - November 26 & 27: FSEC #2 in 
 Pitztal
- Ski Cross winners: 
 Armin Niederer (m) / 
 Daniela Maier (f) 
 - Ski Cross winners: 
 - December 1 & 2: FSEC #3 in 
 Ruka
- Aerials #1 winners: 
 Maxim Burov (m) / 
 Danielle Scott (f) - Aerials #2 winners: 
 Maxim Burov (m) / 
 Danielle Scott (f) 
 - Aerials #1 winners: 
 - January 11 & 12: FSEC #4 in 
 Val Thorens
- Men's Ski Cross winners: 
 Bryan Zooler (#1) / 
 François Place (#2) - Women's Ski Cross winners: 
 Amelie Schneider (#1) / 
 Lisa Andersson (#2) 
 - Men's Ski Cross winners: 
 - January 20–22: FSEC #5 in 
 St Anton am Arlberg
- Big Air winners: 
 Lukas Müllauer (m) / 
 Laura Wallner (f) - Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 Joona Sipola (m) / 
 Laura Wallner (f) - Slopestyle #2 winners: 
 Carles Aguareles Loan (m) / 
 Jennie-Lee Burmansson (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - January 26 & 27: FSEC #6 in 
 Lenk im Simmental
- Men's Ski Cross winners: 
 Jamie Prebble (#1) / 
 Ryan Regez (#2) - Women's Ski Cross winners: 
 Lisa Andersson (2 times) 
 - Men's Ski Cross winners: 
 - January 28 & 29: FSEC #7 in 
 Albiez-Montrond
- Moguls winners: 
 Evgeniy Gedrovich (m) / 
 Kristine Gullachsen (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Gaël Gaiddon (m) / 
 Thea Wallberg (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - February 1–3: FSEC #8 in 
 Bardonecchia
- Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 François Place (m) / 
 Amelie Schneider (f) - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 François Place (m) / 
 Lisa Andersson (f) 
 - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 - February 9–12: FSEC #9 in 
 Minsk
- Aerials #1 winners: 
 Artsiom Bashlakou (m) / 
 Carol Bouvard (f) - Aerials #2 winners: 
 Artsiom Bashlakou (m) / 
 Carol Bouvard (f) - Team Aerials winners: 
 Belarus (Hanna Yauseyenka, Dzmitry Mazurkevich, Artsiom Bashlakou) 
 - Aerials #1 winners: 
 - February 11 & 12: FSEC #10 in 
 Gaißau
- Moguls #1 winners: 
 Oskar Elofsson (m) / 
 Ayaulum Amrenova (f) - Moguls #2 winners: 
 Loke Nilsson (m) / 
 Ayaulum Amrenova (f) 
 - Moguls #1 winners: 
 - February 11 & 12: FSEC #11 in 
 Grasgehren
- Cancelled
 
 - February 15–18: FSEC #12 in 
 Prato Leventina
- Moguls winners: 
 Andrey Uglovski (m) / 
 Ayaulum Amrenova (f) - Dual Moguls #1 winners: 
 Evgeniy Gedrovich (m) / 
 Léonie Gerken Schofield (f) - Dual Moguls #2 winners: 
 Albin Holmgren (m) / 
 Makayla Gerken-Schofield (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - February 18: FSEC #13 in 
 Bischofswiesen
- Big Air winners: 
 Vincent Veile (m) / 
 Kea Deike Kuehnel (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - February 18 & 19: FSEC #14 in 
 Ebingen
- Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 Robert Winkler (m) / 
 Alexandra Edebo (f) - Ski Cross #2 winners: 
 François Place (m) / 
 Alexandra Edebo (f) 
 - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 - March 8 & 9: FSEC #15 in 
 Saint-François-Longchamp
- Ski Cross winners: 
 Bastien Midol (m) / 
 Anna Wörner (f) 
 - Ski Cross winners: 
 - March 10 & 11: FSEC #16 in 
 Vogel
- Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 Rasmus Dalberg Jørgensen (m) / 
 Elisabeth Gram (f) - Slopestyle #2 winners: 
 Yuri Silvestri (m) / 
 Sophia Insam (f) 
 - Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 - March 11 & 12: FSEC #17 in 
 Kungsberget
- Moguls winners: 
 Loke Nilsson (m) / 
 Frida Lundblad (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Albin Holmgren (m) / 
 Frida Lundblad (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - March 17 & 18: FSEC #18 in 
 Pamporovo
- Note: The women's slopestyle events were cancelled.
 - Men's Slopestyle winner: 
 Brandon Davis (2 times) 
 - March 18 & 19: FSEC #19 in 
 Mora
- Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 Robert Winkler (m) / 
 Lisa Andersson - Ski Cross #2 winners: 
 Morgan Guipponi-Barfety (m) / 
 Lisa Andersson 
 - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 - March 19 & 20: FSEC #20 in 
 Jyväskylä
- Dual Moguls #1 winners: 
 Jussi Penttala (m) / 
 Frida Lundblad (f) - Dual Moguls #2 winners: 
 Jimi Salonen (m) / 
 Thea Wallberg (f) 
 - Dual Moguls #1 winners: 
 - March 24–27: FSEC #21 in 
 Airolo
- Aerials #1 winners: 
 Dimitri Isler (m) / 
 Zhanbota Aldabergenova (f) - Aerials #2 winners: 
 Noe Roth (m) / 
 Zhanbota Aldabergenova (f) - Aerials #3 winners: 
 Nicolas Gygax (m) / 
 Zhanbota Aldabergenova (f) 
 - Aerials #1 winners: 
 - March 25 & 26: FSEC #22 in 
 Pec pod Sněžkou
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Elias Syrjä (m) / 
 Natália Šlepecká (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - March 30 & 31: FSEC #23 in 
 Chiesa in Valmalenco
- Aerials #1 winners: 
 Maxim Burov (m) / 
 Liubov Nikitina (f) - Aerials #2 winners: 
 Dzmitry Mazurkevich (m) / 
 Liubov Nikitina (f) 
 - Aerials #1 winners: 
 - March 30 & 31: FSEC #24 (final) in 
 Livigno
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Colin Wili (m; 2 times) / 
 Elisa Nakab (f; 2 times) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 
2016–17 Nor-Am Cup
- December 14–18: NAC #1 in 
 Utah Olympic Park
- Aerials #1 winners: 
 Zachary Surdell (m) / 
 Winter Vinecki (f) - Aerials #2 winners: 
 Nik Seemann (m) / 
 Winter Vinecki (f) 
 - Aerials #1 winners: 
 - January 6–8: NAC #2 in 
 Sunridge Ski Area
- Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 Trent McCarthy (m) / 
 India Sherret (f) - Ski Cross #2 winners: 
 Trent McCarthy (m) / 
 Zoe Chore (f) 
 - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 - January 13 & 14: NAC #3 in 
 Tabor Mountain Ski Resort
- Men's Ski Cross winners: 
 Kevin MacDonald (2 times) - Women's Ski Cross winners: 
 India Sherret (#1) / 
 Leah Emaus (#2) 
 - Men's Ski Cross winners: 
 - January 20: NAC#4/Super Continental Cup in 
 Solitude Mountain Resort
- Ski Cross winners: 
 David Duncan (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) 
 - Ski Cross winners: 
 - February 11 & 12: NAC #5 in 
 Killington Ski Resort
- Moguls winners: 
 Emerson Smith (m) / 
 Valérie Gilbert (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Gabriel Dufresne (m) / 
 Lane Stoltzner (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - February 13–17: NAC #6 in 
 Sunday River Resort
- Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 Kevin MacDonald (m) / 
 Tiana Gairns (f) - Ski Cross #2 winners: 
 Reece Howden (m) / 
 Tiana Gairns (f) 
 - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 - February 14 & 15: NAC #7 in 
 Val Saint-Côme Ski Resort #1
- Aerials #1 winners: 
 Thomas Coe (m) / 
 Erica Stemler (f) - Aerials #2 winners: 
 Thomas Coe (m) / 
 Tyra Izor (f) 
 - Aerials #1 winners: 
 - February 16–18: NAC #8 in 
 Aspen/Buttermilk
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Ethan Swadburg (m) / 
 Elena Gaskell (f) - Big Air winners: 
 Mac Forehand (m) / 
 Grace Henderson (f) - Halfpipe winners: 
 Birk Irving (m) / 
 Abigale Hansen (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - February 18 & 19: NAC #9 in 
 Val Saint-Côme Ski Resort #2
- Moguls winners: 
 Elliot Vaillancourt (m) / 
 Berkley Brown (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Simon Lemieux (m) / 
 Valérie Gilbert (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - February 19 & 20: NAC #10 in 
 Lake Placid, New York
- Aerials #1 winners: 
 Patrick O'Flynn (m) / 
 Megan Nick (f) - Aerials #2 winners: 
 Nicholas Novak (m) / 
 Kira Tanghe (f) 
 - Aerials #1 winners: 
 - February 20–25: NAC #11 in 
 Ski Cooper
- Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 Kevin MacDonald (m) / 
 India Sherret (f) - Ski Cross #2 winners: 
 Reece Howden (m) / 
 India Sherret (f) 
 - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 - February 22–26: NAC #12 in 
 Northstar California Resort
- Moguls winners: 
 Emerson Smith (m) / 
 Lane Stoltzner (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Troy Tully (m) / 
 Avital Shimko (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - February 24–26: NAC #13 in 
 Canada Olympic Park
- Halfpipe winners: 
 Nick Goepper (m) / 
 Carly Margulies (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 Philippe Langevin (m) / 
 Sofia Tchernetsky (f) 
 - Halfpipe winners: 
 - February 27 – March 3: NAC #14 in 
 Utah Olympic Park
- Aerials #1 winners: 
 Nicholas Novak (m) / 
 Madison Varmette (f) - Aerials #2 winners: 
 Nicholas Novak (m) / 
 Madison Varmette (f) 
 - Aerials #1 winners: 
 - March 3 & 4: NAC #15 in 
 Mount St. Louis Moonstone
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Christian Stormgaard (m) / 
 Sofia Tchernetsky (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - March 4 & 5: NAC #16: in 
 Apex Mountain Resort
- Moguls winners: 
 Casey Andringa (m) / 
 Avital Shimko (f) - Dual Moguls winners: 
 Joel Hedrick (m) / 
 Berkley Brown (f) 
 - Moguls winners: 
 - March 7 & 8: NAC #17 in 
 Seven Springs Mountain Resort
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Philippe Langevin (m) / 
 Caroline Claire (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - March 7–9: NAC #18 (final) in 
 Blue Mountain
- Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 Brant Crossan (m) / 
 Marielle Thompson (f) - Ski Cross #2 winners: 
 Mathieu Leduc (m) / 
 Tania Prymak (f) 
 - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 
2016 FIS Freestyle Australia/New Zealand Cup
- August 2–5: ANC #1 in 
 Perisher Ski Resort #1
- This event was cancelled due to unseasonable warm temperatures and rainfall.
 
 - August 30 – September 2: ANC #2 in 
 Hotham Alpine Resort
- Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 Tyler Wallasch (m) / 
 Sami Kennedy-Sim (f) - Ski Cross #2 winners: 
 Anton Grimus (m) / 
 Sami Kennedy-Sim (f) 
 - Ski Cross #1 winners: 
 - September 3: ANC #3 in 
 Mount Buller Alpine Resort
- Dual Moguls winners: 
 Brodie Summers (m) / 
 Britteny Cox (f) 
 - Dual Moguls winners: 
 - September 12–16: ANC #4 (final) in 
 Cardrona Alpine Resort
- Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 James Woods (m) / 
 Kelly Sildaru (f) - Slopestyle #2 winners: 
 James Woods (m) / 
 Kelly Sildaru (f) - Halfpipe winners: 
 Taylor Seaton (m) / 
 Kelly Sildaru (f) 
 - Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 
2016 FIS Freestyle South American Cup
- August 4–6: SAC #1 in 
 La Parva
- Ski Cross winners #1: 
 Ned Ireland (m) / 
 Magdalena Casas-Cordero (f) - Ski Cross winners #2: 
 Ned Ireland (m) / 
 Magdalena Casas-Cordero (f) 
 - Ski Cross winners #1: 
 - August 17–20: SAC #2 in 
 Cerro Catedral #1
- Ski Cross winners #1: 
 Thomas Hayward (m) / 
 Karolina Riemen - Ski Cross winners #2: 
 Justin Wallisch (m) / 
 Karolina Riemen 
 - Ski Cross winners #1: 
 - August 26 & 27: SAC #3 in 
 El Colorado
- Big Air #1 winners: 
 Mateo Cremer (m) / 
 Zuzana Stromková (f) - Big Air #2 winners: 
 Mateo Cremer (m) / 
 Dominique Ohaco (f) 
 - Big Air #1 winners: 
 - September 12–14: SAC #4 (final) in 
 Cerro Catedral #2
- Slopestyle winners #1: 
 Mateo Cremer (m) - Slopestyle winners #2: 
 Andre Hamm (m) / 
 Elena Kostenko (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners #1: 
 
Nordic combined
World Championships (NC)
- January 30 – February 5: Part of the 2017 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in 
 Park City, Utah[17]
- Individual normal hill/10 km winner: 
 Arttu Mäkiaho - Individual normal hill/5 km winner: 
 Vinzenz Geiger - Team normal hill/4 × 5 km winners: 
 Austria (Samuel Mraz, Marc-Luis Rainer, Florian Dagn, & Mika Vermeulen) 
 - Individual normal hill/10 km winner: 
 - February 22 – March 5: Part of the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017 in 
 Lahti[18]
- Individual normal hill/10 km winner: 
 Johannes Rydzek - Individual large hill/10 km winner: 
 Johannes Rydzek - Team normal hill/4 × 5 km winners: 
 Germany (Björn Kircheisen, Eric Frenzel, Fabian Rießle, & Johannes Rydzek) - Team sprint large hill/2 × 7.5 km winners: 
 Germany (Eric Frenzel & Johannes Rydzek) 
 - Individual normal hill/10 km winner: 
 
2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup
- August 27, 2016 – March 19, 2017: 2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup Schedule[31]
- August 27 & 28, 2016: NCWC #1 in 
 Oberwiesenthal
- Men's individual winner: 
 Jarl Magnus Riiber - Men's team winners: 
 Germany (Björn Kircheisen & Eric Frenzel) 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 - August 31, 2016: NCWC #2 in 
 Villach
- Men's individual winner: 
 Mario Seidl 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 - September 2 & 3, 2016: NCWC #3 in 
 Oberstdorf
- Winners #1: 
 Jarl Magnus Riiber (m) / 
 Jenny Nowak (f) - Winners #2: 
 Jan Andersen (m) / 
 Timna Moser (f) - Winners #3: 
 Jarl Magnus Riiber (m) / 
 Jenny Nowak (f) - Winners #4: 
 Jan Andersen (m) / 
 Lisa Eder (f) - Men's individual winners: 
 Atte Kettunen (#1) / 
 Dmytro Mazurchuk (#2) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - November 26 & 27, 2016: NCWC #4 in 
 Ruka
- Men's individual winner: 
 Johannes Rydzek (2 times) 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 - December 2–4, 2016: NCWC #5 in 
 Lillehammer
- Men's individual winner: 
 Eric Frenzel (2 times) - Men's team winners: 
 Germany (Björn Kircheisen, Eric Frenzel, Fabian Rießle, Johannes Rydzek) 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 - December 17 & 18, 2016: NCWC #6 in 
 Ramsau
- Men's individual winners: 
 Johannes Rydzek (#1) / 
 Eric Frenzel (#2) 
 - Men's individual winners: 
 - January 7 & 8: NCWC #7 in 
 Lahti
- Men's individual winners: 
 Eric Frenzel (#1) / 
 Fabian Rießle (#2) 
 - Men's individual winners: 
 - January 13–15: NCWC #8 in 
 Fiemme Valley
- Men's individual winner: 
 Eric Frenzel (2 times) - Men's team winners: 
 Norway (Espen Andersen & Jørgen Graabak) 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 - January 21 & 22: NCWC #9 in 
 Chaux-Neuve
- Men's individual winners: 
 Johannes Rydzek (#1) / 
 Fabian Rießle (#2) 
 - Men's individual winners: 
 - January 27–29: NCWC #10 in 
 Seefeld
- Men's individual winners: 
 Johannes Rydzek (2 wins) / 
 Eric Frenzel (1 win) 
 - Men's individual winners: 
 - February 4 & 5: NCWC #11 in 
 Pyeongchang
- Men's individual winner: 
 Johannes Rydzek (2 times) 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 - February 10 & 11: NCWC #12 in 
 Sapporo
- Men's individual winners: 
 Björn Kircheisen (#1) / 
 Akito Watabe (#2) 
 - Men's individual winners: 
 - March 11: NCWC #13 in 
 Oslo
- Men's individual winner: 
 Akito Watabe 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 - March 15: NCWC #14 in 
 Trondheim
- Men's individual winner: 
 Eric Frenzel 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 - March 18 & 19: NCWC #15 (final) in 
 Schonach
- Men's individual winner: 
 Eric Frenzel (2 times) 
 - Men's individual winner: 
 
 - August 27 & 28, 2016: NCWC #1 in 
 
2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined Grand Prix
- August 27 & 28, 2016: NCGP #1 in 
 Oberwiesenthal
- Winner: 
 Jarl Magnus Riiber - Teams winners: 
 Germany 1 (Björn Kircheisen, Eric Frenzel) 
 - Winner: 
 - August 31, 2016: NCGP #2 in 
 Villach
- Winner: 
 Mario Seidl 
 - Winner: 
 - September 2 & 3, 2016: NCGP #3 (final) in 
 Oberstdorf
- Winner #1: 
 Jarl Magnus Riiber - Winner #2: 
 Jarl Magnus Riiber 
 - Winner #1: 
 
2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined Continental Cup
- December 15 & 18: COC #1 in 
 Klingenthal
- Winner #1: 
 Maximilian Pfordte - Winner #2: 
 Tobias Simon - Winner #3: 
 Go Yamamoto 
 - Winner #1: 
 - January 7 & 8: COC #2 in 
 Hoeydalsmo
- Winner #1: 
 Truls Soenstehagen Johansen - Winner #2: 
 Hugo Buffard 
 - Winner #1: 
 - January 14 & 15: COC #3 in 
 Rukatunturi
- Winner #1: 
 Lukas Greiderer - Winner #2: 
 Sindre Ure Søtvik 
 - Winner #1: 
 - January 21 & 22: COC #4 in 
 Otepää
- Winner #1: 
 Kristjan Ilves - Winner #2: 
 Martin Fritz 
 - Winner #1: 
 - February 11 & 12: COC #5 in 
 Eisenerz
- Winner #1: 
 Kristjan Ilves - Winner #2: 
 Kristjan Ilves 
 - Winner #1: 
 - February 18 & 19: COC #6 in 
 Planica
- Winner #1: 
 Lukas Klapfer - Winner #2: 
 Lukas Klapfer 
 - Winner #1: 
 - March 10–12: COC #7 (final) in 
 Nizhny Tagil
- Winner #1: 
 Harald Lemmerer - Winner #2: 
 Tobias Simon - Winner #3: 
 Tobias Simon 
 - Winner #1: 
 
2016–17 FIS Nordic Combined Alpen Cup
- August 8, 2016: NCAP #1 in 
 Klingenthal
- Winner: 
 Lisa Eder 
 - Winner: 
 - August 12, 2016: NCAP #2 in 
 Bischofsgrün
- Winner: 
 Lisa Eder 
 - Winner: 
 - September 17 & 18, 2016: NCAP #3 in 
 Winterberg
- Winner #1: 
 Justin Moczarski - Winner #2: 
 Justin Moczarski 
 - Winner #1: 
 - October 1 & 2, 2016: NCAP #4 in 
 Hinterzarten
- Winner #1: 
 Simon Hüttel - Winner #2: 
 Christian Deuschl 
 - Winner #1: 
 - December 17 & 18: NCAP #5 in 
 Seefeld in Tirol
- Winner #1: 
 Mika Vermeulen - Winner #2: 
 Vid Vrhovnik 
 - Winner #1: 
 - December 17 & 18: NCAP #6 in 
 Rastbuechl
- Winner: 
 Lisa Moreschini 
 - Winner: 
 - January 13–15: NCAP #7 in 
 Schonach im Schwarzwald
- Winner #1: 
 Mika Vermeulen - Winner #2: 
 Martin Hahn 
 - Winner #1: 
 - February 25–26: NCAP #8 in 
 Kranj
- Winner #1: 
 Mika Vermeulen - Winner #2: 
 Jonas Welde 
 - Winner #1: 
 - March 3–5: NCAP #9 in 
 Hinterzarten
- Winners #1: 
 Stefan Rettenegger (m) / 
 Jenny Nowak (f) - Winners #2: 
 Luis Lehnert (m) / 
 Alexandra Seifert (f) - Teams winners:
 
 - Winners #1: 
 - March 11 & 12: NCAP #10 (final) in 
 Chaux-Neuve
- Winners #1: 
 Luis Lehnert (m) / 
 Joséphine Pagnier (f) - Winners #2: 
 Aaron Kostner (m) / Women's is cancelled 
 - Winners #1: 
 
Nordic skiing
- January 30 – February 5: 2017 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in 
 Park City, Utah[17]
 Russia won both the gold and overall medal tallies.
 - February 10–19: 2017 World Para Nordic Skiing Championships in 
 Finsterau[32]
 Ukraine won both the gold and overall medal tallies.
 - February 22 – March 5: FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017 in 
 Lahti[18]
 Norway won both the gold and overall medal tallies.
 
Ski jumping
World Championships (SJ)
- January 30 – February 5: Part of the 2017 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in 
 Park City, Utah[17]
- Individual winners: 
 Viktor Polasek (m) / 
 Manuela Malsiner (f) - Men's team winners: 
 Slovenia (Žiga Jelar, Tilen Bartol, Aljaž Osterc, & Bor Pavlovčič) - Women's team winners: 
 Germany (Agnes Reisch, Luisa Görlich, Pauline Heßler, & Gianina Ernst) - Mixed team winners: 
 Slovenia (Nika Križnar, Tilen Bartol, Ema Klinec, & Žiga Jelar) 
 - Individual winners: 
 - February 22 – March 5: Part of the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017 in 
 Lahti[18]
- Individual normal hill winners: 
 Stefan Kraft (m) / 
 Carina Vogt (f) - Men's individual large hill winners: 
 Stefan Kraft - Men's team large hill winners: 
 Poland (Piotr Żyła, Dawid Kubacki, Maciej Kot, & Kamil Stoch) - Mixed team normal hill winners: 
 Germany (Carina Vogt, Markus Eisenbichler, Svenja Würth, & Andreas Wellinger) 
 - Individual normal hill winners: 
 
2016–17 Four Hills Tournament
- December 29 & 30, 2016: FHT #1 in 
 Oberstdorf #1
- Winner: 
 Stefan Kraft 
 - Winner: 
 - December 31, 2016 & January 1, 2017: FHT #2 in 
 Garmisch-Partenkirchen
- Winner: 
 Daniel-André Tande 
 - Winner: 
 - January 3 & 4: FHT #3 in 
 Innsbruck
- Winner: 
 Daniel-André Tande 
 - Winner: 
 - January 5 & 6: FHT #4 (final) in 
 Bischofshofen
- Winner: 
 Kamil Stoch 
 - Winner: 
 
2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup
- September 9–11, 2016: SJWC #1 in 
 Chaykovsky, Perm Krai
- Winners #1: 
 Robert Kranjec (m) / 
 Sara Takanashi (f) - Winners #2: 
 Anže Semenič (m) / 
 Sara Takanashi (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - September 16–18, 2016: SJWC #2 in 
 Almaty
- All events cancelled here.
 
 - September 30 – October 2, 2016: SJWC #3 in 
 Hinzenbach #1
- Men's Winner: 
 Maciej Kot (2 times) 
 - Men's Winner: 
 - November 24–26, 2016: SJWC #4 in 
 Ruka
- Men's Winners: 
 Domen Prevc (#1) / 
 Severin Freund (#2) 
 - Men's Winners: 
 - December 1–3, 2016: SJWC #5 in 
 Lillehammer #1
- Women's Winner: 
 Sara Takanashi (2 times) 
 - Women's Winner: 
 - December 2–4, 2016: SJWC #6 in 
 Klingenthal
- Men's Winner: 
 Domen Prevc - Team Winners: 
 Poland (Piotr Żyła, Kamil Stoch, Dawid Kubacki, Maciej Kot) 
 - Men's Winner: 
 - December 9–11, 2016: SJWC #7 in 
 Lillehammer #2
- Note: The men's events was supposed to be hosted in Nizhny Tagil, but was cancelled.[33]
 - Men's Winners: 
 Domen Prevc (#1) / 
 Kamil Stoch (#2) 
 - December 9–11, 2016: SJWC #8 in 
 Nizhny Tagil
- Women's Winners: 
 Maren Lundby (#1) / 
 Sara Takanashi (#2) 
 - Women's Winners: 
 - December 16–18, 2016: SJWC #9 in 
 Engelberg
- Men's Winners: 
 Michael Hayböck (#1) / 
 Domen Prevc (#2) 
 - Men's Winners: 
 - January 6–8: SJWC #10 in 
 Oberstdorf #2
- Women's Winner: 
 Sara Takanashi (2 times) 
 - Women's Winner: 
 - January 13–15: SJWC #11 in 
 Wisła
- Men's Winner: 
 Kamil Stoch (2 times) 
 - Men's Winner: 
 - January 13–15: SJWC #12 in 
 Sapporo #1
- Women's Winners: 
 Yuki Ito (#1) / 
 Maren Lundby (#2) 
 - Women's Winners: 
 - January 19–21: SJWC #13 in 
 Zaō, Miyagi
- Women's Winner: 
 Yuki Ito (2 times) 
 - Women's Winner: 
 - January 20–22: SJWC #14 in 
 Zakopane
- Men's Winner: 
 Kamil Stoch - Team Winners: 
 Germany (Markus Eisenbichler, Stephan Leyhe, Andreas Wellinger, Richard Freitag) 
 - Men's Winner: 
 - January 27–29: SJWC #15 in 
 Willingen
- Men's Winner: 
 Andreas Wellinger - Team Winners: 
 Poland (Piotr Żyła, Dawid Kubacki, Maciej Kot, Kamil Stoch) 
 - Men's Winner: 
 - January 27–29: SJWC #16 in 
 Râșnov
- Women's Winners: 
 Maren Lundby (#1) / 
 Sara Takanashi (#2) 
 - Women's Winners: 
 - February 3–5: SJWC #17 in 
 Oberstdorf #3
- Men's Winner: 
 Stefan Kraft (2 times) 
 - Men's Winner: 
 - February 3–5: SJWC #18 in 
 Hinzenbach #2
- Women's Winner: 
 Sara Takanashi (2 times) 
 - Women's Winner: 
 - February 10–12: SJWC #19 in 
 Sapporo #2
- Men's Winners: 
 Maciej Kot (#1) / 
 Kamil Stoch (#2) 
 - Men's Winners: 
 - February 11–12: SJWC #20 in 
 Ljubno
- Women's Winners: 
 Maren Lundby (#1) / 
 Katharina Althaus (#2) 
 - Women's Winners: 
 - February 14–16: SJWC #21 in 
 Pyeongchang
- Men's Winners: 
 Stefan Kraft (#1) / 
 Maciej Kot (#2) - Women's Winners: 
 Yuki Ito (#1) / 
 Sara Takanashi (#2) 
 - Men's Winners: 
 - March 10–19: Raw Air 2017 (debut event)
- March 10–12: SJWC #22 in 
 Oslo
- Winners: 
 Stefan Kraft (m) / 
 Yuki Ito (f) - Men's Team Winners: 
 Austria (Michael Hayböck, Manuel Fettner, Markus Schiffner, & Stefan Kraft) 
 - Winners: 
 - March 13 & 14: SJWC #23 in 
 Lillehammer #3
- Event cancelled.
 
 - March 15 & 16: SJWC #24 in 
 Trondheim
- Men's Winner: 
 Stefan Kraft 
 - Men's Winner: 
 - March 17–19: SJWC #25 (RA 2017 final) in 
 Vikersund
- One of the men's events here was cancelled.
 - Men's Winner: 
 Kamil Stoch - Team Winners: 
 Norway (Daniel-André Tande, Robert Johansson, Johann André Forfang, & Andreas Stjernen) 
 
 - March 10–12: SJWC #22 in 
 - March 23–26: SJWC #26 (final) in 
 Planica
- Men's Winner: 
 Stefan Kraft (2 times) - Team Winners: 
 Norway (Robert Johansson, Johann André Forfang, Anders Fannemel, & Andreas Stjernen) 
 - Men's Winner: 
 
2016 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix
- July 15 & 16: SJGP #1 in 
 Courchevel
- Winners: 
 Maciej Kot (m) / 
 Sara Takanashi (f) 
 - Winners: 
 - July 21–23: SJGP #2 in 
 Wisła
- Individual winner: 
 Maciej Kot - Teams winner: 
 Norway (Johann André Forfang, Tom Hilde, Joachim Hauer, Anders Fannemel) 
 - Individual winner: 
 - July 29 & 30: SJGP #3 in 
 Hinterzarten
- Winner: 
 Andreas Wellinger 
 - Winner: 
 - August 5 & 6: SJGP #4 in 
 Einsiedeln
- Winner: 
 Maciej Kot 
 - Winner: 
 - August 26–28: SJGP #5 in 
 Hakuba
- Winner #1: 
 Anders Fannemel - Winner #2: 
 Taku Takeuchi 
 - Winner #1: 
 - September 9–11: SJGP #6 in 
 Chaykovsky
- Winners #1: 
 Robert Kranjec (m) / 
 Sara Takanashi (f) - Winners #2: 
 Anže Semenič (m) / 
 Sara Takanashi (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - September 16–18: SJGP #7 in 
 Almaty
- Event cancelled, due to preparations for the 2017 Winter Universiade.
 
 - September 30 & October 1: SJGP #8 in 
 Hinzenbach
- Winner: 
 Maciej Kot (m; 2 times) 
 - Winner: 
 - October 2: SJGP #9 (final) in 
 Klingenthal
- Winner: 
 Maciej Kot (m; 2 times) 
 - Winner: 
 
2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup
- Summer
 
- July 1 & 2, 2016: CC #1 in 
 Kranj
- Winner #1: 
 Peter Prevc - Winner #2: 
 Peter Prevc 
 - Winner #1: 
 - August 18–21, 2016: CC #2 in 
 Kuopio
- Winner #1: 
 Jarkko Määttä - Winner #2: 
 Jarl Magnus Riiber 
 - Winner #1: 
 - August 26 & 27, 2016: CC #3 in 
 Frenštát pod Radhoštěm
- Winner #1: 
 Lukáš Hlava - Winner #2: 
 Aleksander Zniszczoł 
 - Winner #1: 
 - August 26–28, 2016: CC #4 in 
 Oberwiesenthal
- Winner: 
 Lucile Morat (2 times) 
 - Winner: 
 - September 10 & 11, 2016: CC #5 in 
 Lillehammer
- Winners #1: 
 Joacim Ødegård Bjøreng (m) / 
 Thea Sofie Kleven (f) - Winners #2: 
 Markus Eisenbichler (m) / The women's event was cancelled. 
 - Winners #1: 
 - September 17 & 18, 2016: CC #6 in 
 Stams
- Winner #1: 
 Markus Eisenbichler (2 times) 
 - Winner #1: 
 - September 24 & 25, 2016: CC #7 in 
 Wisła
- Winner #1: 
 Davide Bresadola - Winner #2: 
 Markus Eisenbichler 
 - Winner #1: 
 - September 30 & October 1, 2016: CC #8 in 
 Klingenthal
- Winner #1: 
 Markus Eisenbichler - Winner #2: 
 Jurij Tepeš 
 - Winner #1: 
 
- Winter
 
- December 9–11, 2016: CC #9 in 
 Vikersundbakken 
- Winner #1: 
 Cene Prevc - Winner #2: 
 Cene Prevc - Winner #3: 
 Anže Semenič 
 - Winner #1: 
 - December 15–17, 2016 CC #10 in 
 Notodden
- Women's winners: 
 Josephine Pagnier (2 times) 
 - Women's winners: 
 - December 17 & 18, 2016: CC #11 in 
 Rukatunturi
- Winner #1: 
 Ulrich Wohlgenannt - Winner #2: 
 Elias Tollinger 
 - Winner #1: 
 - December 27 & 28, 2016: CC #12 in 
 Engelberg
- Winner #1: 
 Halvor Egner Granerud - Winner #2: 
 Daniel Huber 
 - Winner #1: 
 - January 7 & 8: CC #13 in 
 Titisee-Neustadt
- Winner #1: 
 Johann André Forfang - Winner #2: 
 Viktor Polášek 
 - Winner #1: 
 - January 14 & 15: CC #14 in 
 Garmisch-Partenkirchen
- Winner #1: 
 Anže Lanišek - Winner #2: 
 Miran Zupančič 
 - Winner #1: 
 - January 20–22: CC #15 in 
 Sapporo
- Winner #1: 
 Miran Zupančič - Winner #2: 
 Clemens Aigner - Winner #3: 
 Andreas Wank 
 - Winner #1: 
 - January 28 & 29: CC #16 in 
 Bischofshofen
- Winner #1: 
 Clemens Aigner - Winner #2: 
 Tomáš Vančura 
 - Winner #1: 
 - February 4 & 5: CC #17 in 
 Erzurum
- Winner #1: 
 Nejc Dežman - Winner #2: 
 Nejc Dežman 
 - Winner #1: 
 - February 11 & 12: CC #18 in 
 Brotterode
- Winner #1: 
 Nejc Dežman - Winner #2: 
 Felix Hoffmann 
 - Winner #1: 
 - February 18 & 19, 2017: CC #19 in 
 Planica
- Winner #1: 
 Bor Pavlovčič - Winner #2: 
 Tilen Bartol 
 - Winner #1: 
 - February 25 & 26: CC #20 in 
 Iron Mountain, Michigan
- Winner #1: 
 Stefan Huber - Winner #2: 
 Halvor Egner Granerud 
 - Winner #1: 
 - March 4 & 5: CC #21 in 
 Rena
- Winners: 
 Clemens Aigner (2 times) 
 - Winners: 
 - March 11 & 12: CC #22 in 
 Zakopane
- Winners: 
 Clemens Aigner (2 times) 
 - Winners: 
 - March 18 & 19: CC #23 in 
 Chaykovsky (final)
- Winner #1: 
 Constantin Schmid - Winner #2: 
 Clemens Aigner 
 - Winner #1: 
 
2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping Alpen Cup
- August 7 & 8, 2016: OPA #1 in 
 Klingenthal
- Winner #1: 
 Virág Vörös (2 times) 
 - Winner #1: 
 - August 10 & 11, 2016: OPA #2 in 
 Pöhla
- Winner #1: 
 Virág Vörös - Winner #2: 
 Lisa Eder 
 - Winner #1: 
 - August 12 & 13, 2016: OPA #3 in 
 Bischofsgrün
- Winner #1: 
 Lisa Eder - Winner #2: 
 Virág Vörös 
 - Winner #1: 
 - September 10 & 11, 2016: OPA #4 in 
 Einsiedeln
- Winners #1: 
 Felix Hoffmann (m) / 
 Kaja Urbanija Čož (f) - Winners #2: 
 Aljaž Osterc (m) / 
 Jerneja Brecl (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - September 30 & October 1, 2016: OPA #5 in 
 Hinterzarten
- Winner #1: 
 Bor Pavlovčič - Winner #2: 
 Maximilian Schmalnauer 
 - Winner #1: 
 - December 16 & 17, 2016: OPA #6 in 
 Rastbuechl
- Winner #1: 
 Katra Komar - Winner #2: 
 Jerneja Brecl 
 - Winner #1: 
 - December 17 & 18, 2016: OPA #6 in 
 Seefeld in Tirol
- Winners: 
 Aljaž Osterc (2 times) 
 - Winners: 
 - January 13 & 14: OPA #7 in 
 Schonach im Schwarzwald
- Winners #1: 
 Rok Tarman (m) / 
 Joséphine Pagnier (f) - Winners #2: 
 Žiga Jelar (m) / 
 Jerneja Brecl (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - January 21 & 22, 2017: OPA #7 in 
 Žiri
- Winners: 
 Katra Komar (2 times) 
 - Winners: 
 - February 25 & 26, 2017: OPA #8 in 
 Kranj
- Winner #1: 
 Tilen Bartol - Winner #2: 
 Blaž Pavlič 
 - Winner #1: 
 - March 4 & 5: OPA #9 in 
 Hinterzarten
- Winners #1: 
 David Haagen (m) / 
 Joséphine Pagnier (f) - Winners #2: 
 Timi Zajc (m) / 
 Marita Kramer (f) - Teams winners:
 
 - Winners #1: 
 - March 11 & 12: OPA #10 (final) in 
 Chaux-Neuve
- Winners #1: 
 Žiga Jelar (m) / 
 Katra Komar (f) - Winners #2: 
 Moritz Baer (m) / 
 Selina Freitag (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 
2016–17 FIS Ski Jumping Cup
- July 2 & 3: FC #1 in 
 Villach
- Winners #1: 
 Yuken Iwasa (m) / 
 Eva Logar (f) - Winners #2: 
 Sebastian Colloredo (m) / 
 Eva Logar (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - July 9 & 10: FC #2 in 
 Szczyrk
- Winners #1: 
 Davide Bresadola (m) / 
 Kinga Rajda (f) - Winners #2: 
 Davide Bresadola (m) / 
 Kinga Rajda (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - August 18–21: FC #3 in 
 Kuopio
- Men's winners: 
 Jan Ziobro (2 times) 
 - Men's winners: 
 - September 3 & 4: FC #4 in 
 Einsiedeln
- Winners #1: 
 Aljaž Osterc (m) / 
 Selina Freitag (f) - Winners #2: 
 Aljaž Osterc (m) / 
 Daniela Haralambie (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - September 17 & 18: FC #5 in 
 Hinterzarten
- Winners #1: 
 Aljaž Osterc (m) / 
 Carina Vogt (f) - Winners #2: 
 Yūken Iwasa / 
 Anna Rupprecht (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - September 30 & October 1: FC #6 in 
 Râșnov
- Winners #1: 
 Stefan Huber (m) / 
 Daniela Haralambie (f) - Winners #2: 
 Paweł Wąsek (m) / 
 Daniela Haralambie (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - December 15 & 16: FC #7 in 
 Notodden
- Winners: 
 Maximilian Steiner (m) / 
 Luisa Görlich (f) - Men's winner: 
 Maximilian Steiner 
 - Winners: 
 - January 7 & 8: FC #8 in 
 Zakopane
- Men's winners: 
 Ulrich Wohlgenannt (2 times) 
 - Men's winners: 
 - January 27 & 28: FC #9 in 
 Eau Claire, Wisconsin
- Winners #1: 
 Moritz Baer (m) / 
 Fumika Segawa (f) - Winners #2: 
 Eetu Nousiainen (m) / 
 Rio Seto (f) 
 - Winners #1: 
 - March 3–5: FC #10 (final) in 
 Sapporo
- Winner #1: 
 Yūken Iwasa - Winner #2: 
 Pius Paschke 
 - Winner #1: 
 
Snowboarding
World Championships (SB)
- February 1–8: 2017 World Para Snowboard Championships in 
 Big White[34]
- The 
 Netherlands won the gold medal tally. The 
 United States won the overall medal tally.[35] 
 - The 
 - February 18–21: FIS Snowboarding Junior World Championships 2017 (SBX and AS events) in 
 Klínovec[36]
- Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Kalle Koblet (m) / 
 Kristina Paul (f) - Team Snowboard Cross winners: The 
 United States (Jake Vedder & Senna Leith) (m) / 
 France (Manon Petit & Julia Pereira) (f) - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Dmitry Sarsembaev (m) / 
 Milena Bykova (f) - Parallel slalom winners: 
 Ilia Vitugov (m) / 
 Jemima Juritz (f) 
 - Snowboard Cross winners: 
 - March 7–19: FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2017 in 
 Sierra Nevada[21]
- Big Air winners: 
 Ståle Sandbech (m) / 
 Anna Gasser (f) - Half-pipe winners: 
 Scott James (m) / 
 Cai Xuetong (f) - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Andreas Prommegger (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) - Parallel slalom winners: 
 Andreas Prommegger (m) / 
 Daniela Ulbing (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 Seppe Smits (m) / 
 Laurie Blouin (f) - Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Pierre Vaultier (m) / 
 Lindsey Jacobellis (f) - Team Snowboard Cross winners: 
 United States (Hagen Kearney & Nick Baumgartner) (m) / 
 France (Nelly Moenne Loccoz & Chloé Trespeuch) (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - March 30 – April 1: FIS Snowboarding Junior World Championships 2017 (FS events only) in 
 Špindlerův Mlýn
- Men's winners: 
 Yuri Okubo (Big Air) / 
 Chris Corning (Slopestyle) - Women's Big Air and Slopestyle winner: 
 Tess Coady 
 - Men's winners: 
 
Alpine snowboarding
- December 15, 2016: ASWC #1 in 
 Carezza
- Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Benjamin Karl (m) / 
 Ina Meschik (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - December 17, 2016: ASWC #2 in 
 Cortina d'Ampezzo
- Parallel slalom winners: 
 Andrey Sobolev (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) 
 - Parallel slalom winners: 
 - January 10 & 11: ASWC #3 in 
 Bad Gastein
- Parallel slalom winners: 
 Christoph Mick (m) / 
 Daniela Ulbing (f) - Team Parallel slalom winners: 
 Austria (Daniela Ulbing & Benjamin Karl) 
 - Parallel slalom winners: 
 - January 28: ASWC #4 in 
 Rogla Ski Resort
- Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Nevin Galmarini (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - February 3 & 5: ASWC #5 in 
 Bansko
- Parallel giant slalom #1 winners: 
 Radoslav Yankov (m) / 
 Patrizia Kummer (f) - Parallel giant slalom #2 winners: 
 Sylvain Dufour (m) / 
 Alena Zavarzina (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom #1 winners: 
 - February 12: ASWC #6 in 
 Bokwang
- Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Andreas Prommegger (m) / 
 Alena Zavarzina (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - February 25: ASWC #7 in 
 Moscow-Shukolovo
 - March 5: ASWC #8 in 
 Kayseri
- Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Andreas Prommegger (m) / 
 Ester Ledecká (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - March 17–19: ASWC #9 (final) in 
 Winterberg
- Parallel slalom winners: 
 Stefan Baumeister (m) / 
 Sabine Schoeffmann (f) - Team Parallel slalom winners: 
 Italy (Nadya Ochner & Aaron March) 
 - Parallel slalom winners: 
 
Snowboard cross
- December 15–18, 2016: SBXWC #1 in 
 Montafon
- Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Hagen Kearney (m) / 
 Belle Brockhoff (f) - Team Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Spain (Regino Hernández & Lucas Eguibar) (m) / 
 France (Nelly Moenne Loccoz & Chloé Trespeuch) (f) 
 - Snowboard Cross winners: 
 - January 19–22: SBXWC #2 in 
 Solitude Mountain Resort
- Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Alessandro Hämmerle (m) / 
 Eva Samková (f) - Team Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Italy (Luca Matteotti & Emanuel Perathoner) (m) / 
 United States (Lindsey Jacobellis & Rosina Mancari) (f) 
 - Snowboard Cross winners: 
 - February 2 & 4: SBXWC #3 in 
 Bansko
- Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Alessandro Hämmerle (m) / 
 Belle Brockhoff (f) 
 - Snowboard Cross winners: 
 - February 10–12: SBXWC #4 in 
 Feldberg
- Snowboard Cross #1 winners: 
 Pierre Vaultier (m) / 
 Michela Moioli (f) - Snowboard Cross #2 winners: 
 Alex Pullin (m) / 
 Eva Samková (f) 
 - Snowboard Cross #1 winners: 
 - February 24 & 26: SBXWC #5 in 
 Kazan
- Event cancelled, due to alleged financial reasons.[37]
 
 - March 4 & 5: SBXWC #6 in 
 La Molina
- Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Pierre Vaultier (m) / 
 Michela Moioli (f) 
 - Snowboard Cross winners: 
 - March 24–26: SBXWC #7 (final) in 
 Veysonnaz
- Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Pierre Vaultier (m) / 
 Charlotte Bankes (f) - Team Snowboard Cross winners: 
 Austria (Markus Schairer & Alessandro Hämmerle) (m) / 
 Italy (Raffaella Brutto & Michela Moioli) (f) 
 - Snowboard Cross winners: 
 
Freestyle snowboarding
- November 12, 2016: FSWC #1 in 
 Milan
- Big Air winners: 
 Marcus Kleveland (m) / 
 Anna Gasser (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - November 25 & 26, 2016: FSWC #2 in 
 Alpensia Resort
- Big Air winners: 
 Mark McMorris (m) / 
 Anna Gasser (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - December 3, 2016: FSWC #3 in 
 Mönchengladbach
- Big Air winners: 
 Roope Tonteri (m) / 
 Anna Gasser (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - December 14–17, 2016: FSWC #4 in 
 Copper Mountain
- Big Air winners: 
 Maxence Parrot (m) / 
 Jamie Anderson (f) - Half-pipe winners: 
 Patrick Burgener (m) / 
 Chloe Kim (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - January 7: FSWC #5 in 
 Moscow
- Big Air winners: 
 Vlad Khadarin (m) / 
 Katie Ormerod (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - January 13 & 14: FSWC #6 in 
 Kreischberg
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Mons Røisland (m) / 
 Anna Gasser (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - January 16–21: FSWC #7 in 
 Laax
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Maxence Parrot (m) / 
 Enni Rukajärvi (f) - Half-pipe winners: 
 Josey Chase (m) / 
 Chloe Kim (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - January 25 & 27: FSWC #8 in 
 Seiser Alm
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Seppe Smits (m) / 
 Enni Rukajärvi (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - February 1–5: FSWC #9 in 
 Mammoth Mountain Ski Area
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Redmond Gerard (m) / 
 Jamie Anderson (f) - Half-pipe winners: 
 Shaun White (m) / 
 Kelly Clark (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - February 9–12: FSWC #10 in 
 Quebec City
- Big Air winners: 
 Mark McMorris (m) / 
 Anna Gasser (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 Sebastien Toutant (m) / 
 Julia Marino (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - February 17 & 19: FSWC #11 in 
 Bokwang
- Half-pipe winners: 
 Scott James (m) / 
 Kelly Clark (f) 
 - Half-pipe winners: 
 - March 24 & 25: FSWC #12 (final) in 
 Špindlerův Mlýn
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Chris Corning (m) / 
 Zoi Sadowski Synnott (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 
2016–17 Europa Cup
- November 3 & 4, 2016: EC #1 in 
 Landgraaf
- Parallel slalom #1 winners: 
 Maurizio Bormolini (m) / 
 Michelle Dekker (f) - Parallel slalom #2 winners: 
 Maurizio Bormolini (m) / 
 Carolin Langenhorst (f) 
 - Parallel slalom #1 winners: 
 - November 9 & 10, 2016: EC #2 in 
 Landgraaf
- Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 Erik Bastiaansen (m) / 
 Babs Barnhoorn (f) - Slopestyle #2 winners: 
 Max de Vries (m) / 
 Babs Barnhoorn (f) 
 - Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 - November 26 & 27, 2016: EC #3 in 
 Kaunertal
- Big Air winners: 
 Davide Boggio (m) / 
 Elena Kostenko (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 Lyon Farrell (m) / 
 Katerina Vojackova (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - November 30 & December 1, 2016: EC #4 in 
 Pitztal
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Lucas Eguibar (m) / 
 Belle Brockhoff (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Lucas Eguibar (m) / 
 Belle Brockhoff (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - December 10 & 11, 2016: EC #5 in 
 Hochfügen
- Parallel giant slalom #1 winners: 
 Sylvain Dufour (m) / 
 Elizaveta Salikhova (f) - Parallel giant slalom #2 winners: 
 Sylvain Dufour (m) / 
 Ekaterina Khatomchenkova (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom #1 winners: 
 - December 15 & 16, 2016: EC #6 in 
 Val Thorens
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Adam Lambert (m) / 
 Gaia Tarasco (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Adam Lambert (m) / 
 Sofia Belingheri (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - January 7 & 8: EC #7 in 
 Gerlitzen
- Parallel giant slalom #1 winners: 
 Jure Hafner (m) / 
 Weronika Biela (f) - Parallel giant slalom #2 winners: 
 Bo-Gun Choi (m) / 
 Nicole Baumgartner 
 - Parallel giant slalom #1 winners: 
 - January 20 & 21: EC #8 in 
 Pila
- Cancelled
 
 - January 20 & 21: EC #9 in 
 Livigno
- Men's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Maurizio Bormolini (#1) / 
 Kim Sang-kyum (#2) - Women's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Nadya Ochner (#1) / 
 Selina Jörg (#2) 
 - Men's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - January 24 & 25: EC #10 in 
 Vars
- Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 Bendik Gjerdalen (m) / 
 Carola Niemelä (f) - Slopestyle #2 winners: 
 Takeru Otsuka (m) / 
 Emmi Parkkisenniemi (f) 
 - Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 - January 28 & 29: EC #11 in 
 Grasgehren
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Adam Lambert (m) / 
 Julia Pereira (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Glenn de Blois (m) / 
 Gaia Tarasco (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - January 28 & 29: EC #12 in 
 Font-Romeu-Odeillo-Via
- Big Air #1 winners: 
 Enzo Valax (m) / 
 Elena Kostenko (f) - Big Air #2 winners: 
 Enzo Valax (m) / 
 Elena Kostenko (f) 
 - Big Air #1 winners: 
 - January 31 & February 1: EC #13 in 
 Maribor
- Cancelled
 
 - February 3 & 4: EC #13 in 
 Puy-Saint-Vincent
- Men's Snowboardcross winners: 
 Nick Watter (#1) / #2 is cancelled - Women's Snowboardcross winners: 
 Francesca Gallina (#1) / #2 is cancelled 
 - Men's Snowboardcross winners: 
 - February 11 & 12: EC #14 in 
 Sarajevo
- Big Air winners: 
 Nicola Liviero (m) / 
 Maryia Masla (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - February 17: EC #15 in 
 Bischofswiesen/Goetschen
- Big Air winners: 
 Stef Vandeweyer (m) / 
 Louise Nordström (f) 
 - Big Air winners: 
 - February 23–26: EC #16 in 
 Colere
- Men's Snowboardcross winners: 
 Paul Berg (#1) / 
 Ken Vuagnoux (#2) - Women's Snowboardcross winners: 
 Sofia Belingheri (#1) / 
 Francesca Gallina (#2) 
 - Men's Snowboardcross winners: 
 - February 24 & 25: EC #17 in 
 Davos
- Halfpipe winners: 
 CHO Hyeon-Min (m) / 
 Carla Somaini (f) - Big Air winners: 
 Moritz Boll (m) / 
 Antonia Yañez (f) 
 - Halfpipe winners: 
 - February 25 & 26: EC #18 in 
 Lenzerheide
- Men's Parallel slalom winners: 
 Dario Caviezel (#1) / 
 Sebastian Kislinger (#2) - Women's Parallel slalom winners: 
 Sabine Schöffmann (2 times) 
 - Men's Parallel slalom winners: 
 - February 25 & 26: EC #19 in 
 Erzurum
- Cancelled
 
 - March 4 & 5: EC #20 in 
 Kopaonik
- Big Air #1 winners: 
 Nicola Liviero (m) / 
 Lea Jugovac (f) - Big Air #2 winners: 
 Nikita Tiuterev (m) / 
 Elena Kostenko (f) 
 - Big Air #1 winners: 
 - March 13 & 14: EC #21 in 
 Pamporovo
- Women's Slopestyle winners:
 
 - March 16 & 17: EC #22 in 
 Rogla
- Cancelled
 
 - March 16–19: EC #23 in 
 Laax
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Simon Gschaider (m) / 
 Elli Pikkujämsä (f) - Halfpipe winners: 
 Patrick Burgener (m) / 
 Verena Rohrer (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - March 17 & 18: EC #24 in 
 Radstadt
- Parallel slalom #1 winners: 
 Johann Stefaner (m) / 
 Milena Bykova (f) - Parallel slalom #2 winners: 
 Johann Stefaner (m) / 
 Elisa Profanter (f) 
 - Parallel slalom #1 winners: 
 - March 17 & 18: EC #25 in 
 Lenk
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Hanno Douschan (m) / 
 Julia Pereira (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - March 24–26: EC #26 in 
 Kühtai
- Note: The women's Big Air event was cancelled.
 - Big Air winner: 
 Moritz Amsuess - Halfpipe winners: 
 Toby Miller (m) / 
 Leilani Ettel (f) 
 - March 25 & 26: EC #27 in 
 Ratschings
- Parallel slalom #1 winners: 
 Lukas Mathies (m) / 
 Ladina Jenny (f) - Parallel slalom #2 winners: 
 Stefan Baumeister (m) / 
 Jemima Juritz (f) 
 - Parallel slalom #1 winners: 
 - March 28 & 29: EC #28 in 
 Rogla
- Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Sebastian Kislinger (m) / 
 Milena Bykova (f) - Parallel slalom winners: 
 Benjamin Karl (m) / 
 Sabine Schöffmann (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - April 1 & 2: EC #29 in 
 Jasná
- Event cancelled.
 
 - April 1 & 2: EC #30 in 
 Scuol
- Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Nevin Galmarini (m) / 
 Ladina Jenny (f) - Parallel slalom winners: 
 Maurizio Bormolini (m) / 
 Karolina Sztokfisz (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - April 8 & 9: EC #31 in 
 Pec pod Sněžkou
- Event cancelled.
 
 - April 18–22: EC #32 (final) in 
 Silvaplana
- Note: The half-pipe events here was cancelled.
 - Big Air winners: 
 Jonas Boesiger (m) / 
 Emmi Parkkisenniemi (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 Dario Burch (m) / 
 Elena Koenz (f) 
 
2016–17 Nor-Am Cup
- November 29 & 30, 2016: NAC #1 in 
 Snow King Mountain Resort
- Cancelled
 
 - December 16–18, 2016: NAC #2 in 
 Buck Hill
- Parallel slalom #1 winners: 
 Richard Evanoff (m) / 
 Maggie Carrigan (f) - Parallel slalom #2 winners: 
 Arnaud Gaudet (m) / 
 Maggie Carrigan (f) - Parallel slalom #3 winners: 
 Robert Burns (m) / 
 Maggie Carrigan (f) 
 - Parallel slalom #1 winners: 
 - January 4–7: NAC #3 in 
 Le Relais
- Men's Parallel slalom winners: 
 Mike Trapp (#1) / 
 Sébastien Beaulieu (#2) - Women's Parallel slalom winners: 
 Megan Farrell (2 times) 
 - Men's Parallel slalom winners: 
 - January 14 & 15: NAC #4 in 
 Steamboat Springs
- Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Mike Trapp (m) / 
 Megan Farrell (f) - Men's Parallel slalom winner: 
 Richard Evanoff (m) / 
 Megan Farrell (f) 
 - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - February 1–3: NAC #5 in 
 Mont-Tremblant, Quebec
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Senna Leith (m) / 
 Katie Wilson (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Senna Leith (m) / 
 Audrey McManiman (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - February 8–10: NAC #6 in 
 Craigleith Ski Club
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Senna Leith (m) / 
 Audrey McManiman (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Senna Leith (m) / 
 Audrey McManiman (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - February 9 & 10: NAC #7 in 
 Holiday Valley
- Men's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Justin Reiter (2 times) - Women's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Rebecca Letourneau-Duynstee (#1) / 
 Maggie Carrigan (#2) 
 - Men's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - February 10–12: NAC #8 in 
 Canada Olympic Park
- Halfpipe winners: 
 Trevor Niblett (m) / 
 Calynn Irwin (f) - Slopestyle winners: 
 Joshua Reeves (m) / 
 Marguerite Sweeney (f) 
 - Halfpipe winners: 
 - February 13–16: NAC #9 in 
 Toronto Ski Club/Toronto
- Men's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Robert Burns (#1) / 
 Michael Trapp (#2) - Women's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Marianne Laurin-Lalonde (#1) / 
 Maggie Carrigan (#2) 
 - Men's Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 - February 13–17: NAC #10 in 
 Sunday River
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Michael Perle (m) / 
 Colleen Healey (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Cole Johnson (m) / 
 Katie Anderson (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - February 15 & 16: NAC #11 in 
 Sun Peaks Resort
- Men's Slopestyle winners: 
 Carter Jarvis (m) / 
 Baily Mcdonald (f) - Women's Slopestyle winners: 
 Kix Kamp (m) / 
 Marguerite Sweeney (f) 
 - Men's Slopestyle winners: 
 - February 20–25: NAC #12 in 
 Ski Cooper
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Robert Minghini (m) / 
 Katie Anderson (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Danny Bourgeois (m) / 
 Anna Miller (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - March 5–12: #13 in 
 Mount St. Louis Moonstone
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Carter Jarvis (m) / 
 Baily Mcdonald (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 - March 8–10: #14 in 
 Big White Ski Resort
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Robert Minghini (m) / 
 Colleen Healey (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Adam Dickson (m) / 
 Katie Anderson (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - March 31 – April 4: #15 in 
 Copper Mountain
- Snowboardcross winners: 
 Jake Vedder (m) / 
 Colleen Healey (f) - Parallel giant slalom winners: 
 Darren Gardner (m) / 
 Ina Meschik (f) - Parallel slalom winners: 
 Aaron Muss (m) / 
 Ina Meschik (f) 
 - Snowboardcross winners: 
 - April 4–9: #16 (final) in 
 Mont-Tremblant
- Snowboardcross winners: 
 Christopher Robanske (m) / 
 Audrey McManiman (f) - Parallel slalom winners: 
 Robert Burns (m) / 
 SHIN Da-hae (f) 
 - Snowboardcross winners: 
 
2016 FIS Snowboard Australia/New Zealand Cup
- August 4–7: SBANC #1 in 
 Mount Hotham #1
- Men's Snowboardcross winner: 
 Alex Pullin - Women's Snowboardcross winner: 
 Belle Brockhoff 
 - Men's Snowboardcross winner: 
 - August 15–18: SBANC #2 in 
 Thredbo
- Cancelled due to insufficient snow at the snow control.
 
 - August 30 – September 2: SBANC #3 in 
 Mount Hotham #2
- Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 Josh Miller (m) / 
 Belle Brockhoff (f) - Snowboardcross #2 winners: 
 Alex Pullin (m) / 
 Belle Brockhoff (f) 
 - Snowboardcross #1 winners: 
 - September 13–16: SBANC #4 (final) in 
 Cardrona
- Slopestyle winners: 
 Sebastien Toutant (m) / 
 Zoi Sadowski-Synnott (f) - Halfpipe winners: 
 Ando Naito (m) / 
 Kurumi Imai (f) 
 - Slopestyle winners: 
 
2016 FIS Snowboard South American Cup
- August 17–21: SBSAC #1 in 
 Cerro Catedral #1
- Snowboardcross winners 1: 
 Steven Williams (m) / 
 Colleen Healey (f) - Snowboardcross winners 2: 
 Simon White (m) / 
 Colleen Healey (f) 
 - Snowboardcross winners 1: 
 - August 26 & 27: SBSAC #2 in 
 El Colorado
- Big Air #1 winners: 
 Federico Chiaradio (m) / 
 Antonia Yáñez (f) - Big Air #2 winners: 
 Iñaki Odriozola (m) / 
 Elena Kostenko (f) 
 - Big Air #1 winners: 
 - September 9–11: SBSAC #3 in 
 Cerro Catedral #2
- Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 Grant Giller (m) / 
 Elena Kostenko (f) - Slopestyle #2 winners: 
 Martín Jaureguialzo (m) / 
 Elena Kostenko (f) 
 - Slopestyle #1 winners: 
 - September 22–26: SBSAC #4 (final) in 
 Corralco
- Snowboardcross winners 1: 
 Steven Williams (m) / 
 Isabel Clark Ribeiro - Snowboardcross winners 2: 
 Steven Williams (m) / 
 Isabel Clark Ribeiro 
 - Snowboardcross winners 1: 
 
Telemark skiing
Telemark skiing world events
2016–17 FIS Telemark World Cup
- November 24–27, 2016: TSWC #1 in 
 Tux
- Sprint #1 winners: 
 Philippe Lau (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Sprint #2 winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Parallel Sprint winners: 
 Jonas Schmid (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) 
 - Sprint #1 winners: 
 - January 19 & 20: TSWC #2 in 
 La Thuile
- Sprint winners: 
 Philippe Lau (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Classic winners: 
 Bastien Dayer (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) 
 - Sprint winners: 
 - January 21 & 22: TSWC #3 in 
 Méribel
- Sprint winners: 
 Philippe Lau (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Parallel Sprint winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) 
 - Sprint winners: 
 - January 28–30: TSWC #4 in 
 Krvavec Ski Resort
- Sprint winners: 
 Nicolas Michel (m) 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Parallel Sprint winners: 
 Stefan Matter (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Mixed Team Parallel Sprint winners: 
  Switzerland 
 - Sprint winners: 
 - February 4 & 5: TSWC #5 in 
 Bad Hindelang/Oberjoch
- Parallel Sprint #1 winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Parallel Sprint #2 winners: 
 Jonas Schmid (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) 
 - Parallel Sprint #1 winners: 
 - February 24–26: TSWC #6 in 
 Hurdal
- Classic winners: 
 Trym Nygaard Løken (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Parallel Sprint winners: 
 Trym Nygaard Løken (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) 
 - Classic winners: 
 - March 1–3: TSWC #7 in 
 Rjukan (part of FIS Telemark Junior World Championships)
- Classic winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Parallel Sprint winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) 
 - Classic winners: 
 - March 9–11: TSWC #8 in 
 Thyon
- Classic winners: 
 Bastien Dayer (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Parallel Sprint winners: 
 Trym Nygaard Løken (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) 
 - Classic winners: 
 - March 15–19: TSWC #9 (final) in 
 La Plagne/Montchavin-les-Coches (part of 2017 FIS World Telemark Skiing Championships)
- Team Parallel Sprint winners: 
  Switzerland - Parallel Sprint winners: 
 Philippe Lau (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Classic winners: 
 Stefan Matter (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) - Sprint winners: 
 Tobias Mueller (m) / 
 Amélie Reymond (f) 
 - Team Parallel Sprint winners: 
 
References
- ↑ IPC's 2017 World Para Alpine Skiing Championships Page
 - ↑ "FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2017 Website". Archived from the original on February 13, 2016. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
 - ↑ FIS' 2017 World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships Results Page
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Alpine Skiing World Cup Page
 - ↑ "Alberta ski resorts urged to diversify after World Cup event cancelled due to lack of snow". CBC News. November 17, 2016. Archived from the original on January 2, 2023.
 - ↑ FIS World Cup races in Beaver Creek rescheduled for Val d'Isère
 - ↑ FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup in Beaver Creek cancelled due to lack of snow and warm weather
 - ↑ FIS Alpine World Cup in Courchevel cancelled due to strong winds
 - ↑ Semmering to host cancelled FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup giant slalom from Courchevel
 - ↑ "FIS Alpine Europa Cup Hafjell". Archived from the original on January 28, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
 - ↑ 2016–17 IBU Calendar of Events Page
 - ↑ "IBU's 2017 Open European Championships Page". Archived from the original on March 16, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
 - ↑ "Biathlon World Championships 2017 Website". Archived from the original on February 10, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
 - ↑ Biathlon and speed skating events taken away from Russia over doping scandal
 - ↑ Kontiolahti in Finland replaces Tyumen in Russia as host of IBU World Cup event
 - ↑ IBU Press Release: Extraordinary IBU Executive Board Meeting (December 22, 2016.)
 - 1 2 3 4 2017 FIS Nordic Junior World Ski Championships Website
 - 1 2 3 4 "FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2017 Website". Archived from the original on February 16, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Cross-Country Skiing World Cup Page
 - ↑ Québec City to replace Tyumen as host of FIS Cross-Country World Cup Finals
 - 1 2 Sierra Nevada 2017 Freestyle and Snowboard World Championships Website
 - 1 2 FIS Junior Freestyle Ski World Championships 2017 Page
 - ↑ "FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup Page". Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Moguls Calendar
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Dual Moguls Calendar
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Aerials Calendar
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Half-pipe Calendar
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Big Air Calendar
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Slopestyle Calendar
 - ↑ FIS 2016–17 Ski Cross Calendar
 - ↑ FIS' 2016–17 Nordic Combined World Cup Schedule Page
 - ↑ IPC's 2017 World Para Nordic Skiing Championships Page
 - ↑ FIS move ski jumping World Cups from Nizhny Tagil to Lillehammer
 - ↑ IPC's 2017 World Para Snowboard Championships Page
 - ↑ 2017 World Para Snowboard Championships Medal Standings
 - ↑ FIS' Snowboarding Junior World Championships 2017 Page
 - 1 2 FIS Snowboard World Cup events in Kazan cancelled for "financial reasons"
 
External links
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.