2017–18 FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup | |||
---|---|---|---|
Discipline | Men | Women | |
Alpen Cup | Jean Tiberghien | Antonia Fräbel | |
Australia/New Zealand Cup | Phillip Bellingham | Barbara Jezeršek | |
Balkan Cup | Nikolay Vijaczev | Nancy Okoro | |
Eastern Europe Cup | Stanislav Volzhentsev | Polina Nekrasova | |
Far East Cup | Hiroyuki Miyazawa | Miki Kodama | |
Nor-Am Cup | Andy Shields | Caitlin Gregg | |
Scandinavian Cup | Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget | Tiril Udnes Weng | |
Slavic Cup | Peter Mlynár | Eliza Rucka | |
US SuperTour | David Norris | Kaitlynn Miller | |
Competition | |||
The 2017–18 FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup (COC) was a season of the FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup, a series of second-level cross-country skiing competitions arranged by the International Ski Federation (FIS).
The 2017–18 Continental Cup contained nine different series of geographically restricted competitions; five in Europe, two in North America and one each from Asia and Oceania.
The overall winners from the 2017–18 season's Continental Cups were rewarded a right to start in the first period in the following 2018–19 World Cup season. [1]
2017–18 FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup | |||
---|---|---|---|
Discipline | Men | Women | |
Alpen Cup | Jean Tiberghien | Antonia Fräbel | |
Australia/New Zealand Cup | Phillip Bellingham | Barbara Jezeršek | |
Balkan Cup | Nikolay Vijaczev | Nancy Okoro | |
Eastern Europe Cup | Stanislav Volzhentsev | Polina Nekrasova | |
Far East Cup | Hiroyuki Miyazawa | Miki Kodama | |
Nor-Am Cup | Andy Shields | Caitlin Gregg | |
Scandinavian Cup | Martin Løwstrøm Nyenget | Tiril Udnes Weng | |
Slavic Cup | Peter Mlynár | Eliza Rucka | |
US SuperTour | David Norris | Kaitlynn Miller | |
Competition | |||
The 2017–18 FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup (COC) was a season of the FIS Cross-Country Continental Cup, a series of second-level cross-country skiing competitions arranged by the International Ski Federation (FIS).
The 2017–18 Continental Cup contained nine different series of geographically restricted competitions; five in Europe, two in North America and one each from Asia and Oceania.
The overall winners from the 2017–18 season's Continental Cups were rewarded a right to start in the first period in the following 2018–19 World Cup season. [1]