In the Ski Women’s, all starters still had a chance at the overall title. However, for all besides the overall leader before the Xtreme, Verbier rider Sybille Blanjean, that meant a victory at the Bec was the day’s order. That’s not an easy feat, especially for a rookie at this legendary face and that applied to four out of six athletes. Three of them, Wynter McBride, Agostina Vietti and Zoé Delzoppo, all had strong runs, but none of them exhibited the amount of determination that is usually needed to win a Freeride World Tour event. The first rider to really go for the win then was Justine Dufour-Lapointe, the defending FWT champion from Canada. Counting on her experience and strength, she started with pace and linked two cliffs right out of the start, added another sizable drop and finished her line with an absolutely huge cliff drop that didn’t have the steepest landing. Thanks to her outstanding athletic ability and a perfectly balanced landing, Justine managed to get out of the massive impact seemingly unfazed, albeit she lost both poles in the process. This probably cost her some points but she still took the lead.
Second to last starter, Lou Barin of France, then set out to seize her chance by employing her freestyle prowess. The former Olympian in Slopestyle started with a 360 while traversing into a steep section of the venue and followed up with a 360 drop over a cliff. Capping things off with another clean cliff drop, she skied into the finish without any problems in her whole run despite her mid-face trickery, something that has been uncommon for women skiers on the Bec so far. 95 points might have been a bit over the top by the judges, but clearly a well-deserved lead for the skier out of Val Thorens. That left the final starter, Sybille Blanjean with the task to finish at least second if she wanted to keep the overall lead. The Verbier local, who had won the Xtreme in 2022, quickly made it clear that she wanted to live up to the task. She started with a cliff drop similar as Justine, skied fast and then added a big cliff with full pace. Unfortunately, Sybille also lost a pole despite a clean landing, and this was way further up the face compared to Justine. Sybille kept skiing with pace and determination, she added another big cliff—the same that Justine also had skied—but then opted for a less ambitious bottom part, refraining from Justine’s huge bottom cliff but also from other features that still would have been possible. At the end, the judges set Sybille less than one point behind Justine in third place for the day which meant that Lou Barin surpassed her in the overall ranking by a few points. Justine Dufour-Lapointe improved into third place overall thanks to her second place finish at the Xtreme. So at the end of the day, the same three women entered the podium both for the Xtreme and the FWT Overall titles, with Lou Barin both times occupying the middle while Sybille Blanjean and Justine Dufour-Lapointe switched sides.