The Swiss ski racer Beat Feuz managed the hat trick on the legendary Streif, the German speed team messed up the Olympic dress rehearsal.

In the second of the two downhill runs this weekend, Feuz celebrated his third victory in the Hahnenkamm races on Sunday – he had achieved a double success last year.

His compatriot Marco Odermatt, who is leading in the overall World Cup, finished second ahead of the Austrian Daniel Hemetsberger.

The Norwegian Aleksander Aamodt Kilde, who won the first downhill run in Tyrol on Friday, finished sixth.

The Germans disappointed again and clearly missed the top ten.

Baumann "simply not relaxed"

"I think I just wanted too much," said Romed Baumann, who finished 15th as the best of the German quintet.

"I've planned so much and then I just didn't ski easily," explained the 36-year-old on ARD.

The World Cup runner-up in the Super-G didn't want to use the increasingly difficult track and visibility conditions as an excuse.

But he wasn't too worried about his form two weeks before the Winter Olympics in China (February 4-20).

"The looseness will come again," said Baumann.

He now wanted "not to hang his head."

Baumann's teammates Josef Ferstl, Dominik Schwaiger and Simon Jocher finished 20th, 22nd and 33rd. Downhill Vice World Champion Andreas Sander is still at a low level and found "not much positive" about his ride in 30th place.

Unlike on Friday, when the route was slightly shortened in the upper section due to strong winds, this time the riders threw themselves down the slope from the original start.

Feuz, possibly inspired by the birth of his second daughter a few days ago, once again mastered the most feared slope in the world best.