Estelle Alphand

Estelle Alphand
Estelle Alphand in Ushuaia, Argentina in October 2011
Personal information
Full nameEstelle Erika Ainee Alphand
Born (1995-04-23) 23 April 1995 (age 30)
Briançon, France
OccupationAlpine skier
Height1.71 m (5 ft 7 in)
Family
Sport
Country Sweden (since 2017)
 France (2011-2017)
Skiing career
DisciplinesSlalom, giant slalom, super-G, downhill
ClubÅre SLK
World Cup debut9 March 2013 (age 17)
Olympics
Teams2 – (2018, 2026)
Medals0
World Championships
Teams4 – (20212025)
Medals2 (0 gold)
World Cup
Seasons14 – (20132026)
Podiums0 – (33rd in 2018)
Overall titles0 – (19th in GS, 2018 & 2025)

Estelle Erika Ainee Alphand (born 23 April 1995) is a French-born Swedish alpine skier, who competes in all events. She was born in Briançon, France, and is the daughter of former alpine skier and rally driver Luc Alphand. She has represented Sweden since the beginning of the 2018 season, having previously competed for France.

Biography

Alphand, whose mother Anna-Karin is Swedish, began competing in her first FIS races at the age of 15. In January 2011, she won her first competition at this level: an alpine combined in Tignes, France. A month later, she made her World Junior Championships debut. In February 2011, she entered the European Cup, concluding her first season by becoming the French junior slalom champion. At the first Youth Winter Olympic Games in February 2012 in Innsbruck, Alphand won three medals: gold in super-G and silver in both giant slalom and super combined.

During the following two winters, Alphand mostly competed in the European cup, where she first appeared on the podium after a super combined in Kvitfjell in December 2012. Her first appearance in the World Cup was in a giant slalom in Ofterschwang in March 2013. Her best result in the World Junior Championships was when she finished in 4th place in the downhill in Lillehammer in 2015. Alphand won her first World Cup points on 24 November 2015, finishing 21st in a giant slalom in Aspen.

During the 2016–2017 season Alphand reached World Cup points only once, after which she fell out of the French national team. She then asked the French federation to allow her to compete for Sweden instead. After short negotiations, she left France and has been a member of the Swedish team since the 2018 season.[1] Changing teams proved to be a good decision and Alphand soon advanced to starting positions at top-30 in both slalom and giant slalom. On 28 December 2017 she was 5th in the World Cup slalom of Lienz, and thereby reached her best World Cup finish.

While representing Sweden at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2021, she was part of the Swedish team that earned a silver medal in the combined men's and women's team competition.[2]

World Cup results

Season standings

Season
Age Overall Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-G Downhill Combined Parallel
2016 20 98 41 47 N/a
2017 21 114 46
2018 22 33 21 19
2019 23 102 45
2020 24 58 43 20 20
2021 25 100 53 47 N/a
2022 26 79 34 21
2023 27 68 25 N/a
2024 28 83 44 42
2025 29 47 34 19
2026 32 47 32 21
Standings through 31 January 2026

Top ten finishes

  • 0 podiums; 7 top tens
Season
Date Location Discipline Place
2018 28 December 2017 Austria Lienz, Austria Slalom 5th
6 January 2018 Slovenia Kranjska Gora, Slovenia Giant slalom 10th
7 January 2018 Slalom 8th
23 January 2018 Italy Kronplatz, Italy Giant slalom 7th
2020 15 December 2019 Switzerland St. Moritz, Switzerland Pararllel slalom 9th
2025 25 March 2025 United States Sun Valley, United States Giant slalom 9th
2026 6 December 2025 Canada Tremblant, Canada Giant slalom 7th

World Championship results

Season
Age Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-G Downhill Combined Team
combined
Parallel Team event
2021 25 24 31 DNF2 N/a 13 2
2023 27 26 16
2025 29 20 N/a N/a 3

Olympic results

Season
Age Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-G Downhill Combined Team
combined
2018 22 DNF2 16 N/a
2026 30 27 N/a

References

  1. ^ Laurent Davier (2 June 2017). "Estelle Alphand va skier pour la Suède" (in French). Ski Chrono. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
  2. ^ Thomas Lindblom, Therese Bosta (17 February 2021). "Den svenska silverglädjen" (in Swedish). SVT Sport. Retrieved 20 February 2021.