Austria has officially named its alpine ski teams for the 2026–27 season, and the picture looks familiar. The ÖSV once again brings one of the deepest systems in the sport, with 94 athletes—52 men and 42 women—spread across four levels.

There’s no shortage of talent here. There never is.

The real question is what Austria does with it—especially in speed, where the gap to Switzerland, Italy and also German women has become harder to ignore.

Women’s Team: Scheib Leads, but Returns Could Shape the Season

Austria’s women’s national team (8 athletes) features:

Katharina Huber

Cornelia Hütter

Katharina Liensberger

Nina Ortlieb

Mirjam Puchner

Ariane Rädler

Julia Scheib

Katharina Truppe

Julia Scheib comes into the season as the focal point after winning the giant slalom crystal globe. More importantly, she backed it up week after week. That kind of consistency is what Austria has been looking for in the technical disciplines.

But this group might be defined just as much by who comes back as who leads it.

Liensberger never really had a clean run at last season. When she’s right, she has the timing and strength to challenge anyone. Ortlieb sits in a similar position on the speed side—if she’s healthy, she brings the kind of power and commitment needed to push at the limit on the toughest tracks.

Put those pieces together, and Austria suddenly has options again.

A-Squad (13 athletes)

Nina Astner

Stephanie Brunner

Magdalena Egger (promoted from B-squad)

Nathalie Falch (promoted from B-squad)

Nadine Fest

Katharina Gallhuber (promoted from B-squad)

Lisa Grill

Ricarda Haaser

Lisa Hörhager (promoted from B-squad)

Victoria Olivier

Anna Schilcher (new)

Emily Schöpf

Carmen Spielberger

B-Squad (8 athletes)

Viktoria Bürgler

Nicole Eibl

Elena Grumer (promoted from C-squad)

Pia Hauzenberger (promoted from C-squad)

Leonie Raich

Valentina Rings-Wanner

Maja Waroschitz

Leonie Zegg

C-Squad (13 athletes)

Elisa Eisner

Hannah Embacher (new)

Hannah Fedrizzi (new)

Emilia Herzgsell

Sarah Huber

Sarah Korak (new)

Elisabeth Kucera

Julia Pechhacker

Johanna Pedrolini (new)

Elena Riederer (relegated from B-squad)

Eva Schachner

Romy Sykora (new)

Stella Tschach

There’s a clear pattern here. Athletes move up when they earn it, and just as quickly, they can move down. The pipeline isn’t theoretical—it’s active.

That’s where Austria separates itself. There’s always someone coming.

Men’s Team: Plenty of Talent, but Speed Still Has to Prove It

Austria’s men’s national team (9 athletes) includes:

Stefan Babinsky

Stefan Brennsteiner

Manuel Feller

Fabio Gstrein

Raphael Haaser

Daniel Hemetsberger

Vincent Kriechmayr

Michael Matt (promoted from A-squad)

Marco Schwarz

On paper, it’s all there. Kriechmayr is still one of the most reliable speed skiers in the world. Feller and Schwarz can compete with anyone in slalom and giant slalom. Haaser keeps showing he belongs in the mix.

But paper isn’t the issue.

Austria’s speed group hasn’t been able to match what Switzerland and Italy are doing right now. Those teams aren’t just winning—they’re putting multiple athletes in position to win, over and over again.

Austria hasn’t had that same presence.

Too often, it comes back to Kriechmayr carrying the load, with others showing flashes but not enough consistency.

A-Squad (8 athletes)

Stefan Eichberger

Lukas Feurstein (relegated from national team)

Patrick Feurstein (relegated from national team)

Felix Hacker

Dominik Raschner

Johannes Strolz

Joshua Sturm (promoted from B-squad)

Manuel Traninger (promoted from B-squad)

B-Squad (21 athletes)

Fabian Bachler

Armin Dornauer

Jakob Eisner

Felix Endstrasser

Matthias Fernsebner

Jakob Greber

Matteo Haas

Oscar Heine

Stephan Koch (promoted from C-squad)

Christoph Krenn

Florian Neumayer

Lukas Passrugger

Kilian Pramstaller

Ralph Seidler

Florian Strauss

Asaja Sturm

Luis Tritscher

Adrian Tschach

Vincent Wieser (relegated from A-squad)

Moritz Zudrell

Noel Zwischenbrugger

C-Squad (14 athletes)

Luca Aschbacher (new)

Niklas Gstrein (new)

Leon Hafner

David Knoflach (new)

Christopher Lisch (new)

Lukas Maier (new)

Johannes Partel (new)

Valentin Pöll (new)

Tim Ranner

Julian Sapl (new)

Justin Wieser

Severin Wieser (new)

Theo Wurzer (new)

Rafael Zangerl

There’s no shortage of numbers—52 athletes across the men’s program is more than enough to build results.

The real challenge is what happens next.

How many of these skiers can actually make the jump? How many can handle racing at the limit, where small mistakes cost races—or worse?

That’s the step Austria needs to take again.

A System That Keeps Moving

Every year, the ÖSV system turns over. This season is no different.

Among those no longer in the squads:

Daniel Danklmaier

Otmar Striedinger

Max Franz

Adrian Pertl

Andreas Ploier

Simon Rueland

Clemens Rettenwander (retired)

Hannes Endstrasser (retired)

Stefan Schaidraiter (retired)

Some of those names step away. Others simply get passed.

That’s how it works here. Spots aren’t held—they’re taken.

The Question That Matters

Austria doesn’t need to prove it has depth. That part is obvious.

What matters now is whether that depth turns into wins again—especially in speed, where the standard has moved.

Because in this system, being deep isn’t the goal.

Being the fastest is.