Kiwi skier Alice Robinson has posted a scorching second run to secure her third top 10 finish of the Alpine skiing World Cup Giant Slalom season.
The 18-year-old World junior champion had a poor opening run in Lienz in Austria, clocking the 18th fastest time, 2.27 seconds slower than American Mikaela Shiffrin, the overall World Cup champion.
However, Robinson went much better on the second run, featuring only the top 30 of the 63 starters, to improve nine places to finish ninth overall.
Robinson's combined time was 2.54 seconds slower than Shiffrin, who bounced back in style from a 17th place in the last race in Courchevel to claim her first World Cup Giant Slalom victory of the season.
Shiffrin was 1.36 seconds quicker than Italian Marta Bassino in second with Austrian Katharina Liensberger rounding out the podium.
Her coach Chris Knight was pleased with how she bounced back from a poor start.
"Yeah that was her normal skiing. She still had a mistake in her second run that cost her a few spots but overall a good performance. It's a really tough hill to turn up to having never skied it before," Knight old NZME.
After becoming the first New Zealander in more than two decades to win a World Cup ski race in the season opener in Solden in Austria, Robinson had a DNF - when short of preparation following a knee injury - in Killington in the US and then finished 10th earlier this month in Courchevel in France.
She remains 6th overall in the World Cup Giant Slalom standings while Shiffrin climbs two places to second behind Italian Federica Brignone, the winner of the last race in Courchevel.
However, Robinson is in the mix approaching the mid-point of the nine-race Giant Slalom calendar and is just ahead of reigning world champion, Slovakia's Petra Vlhova, who finished 5th in Lienz.
The next World Cup Giant Slalom is in Sestriere in Italy on the 18th of January.