про Элис немного инфо:
Alice was born in Sydney, Australia, the second of three children of Sarah and David Alice. Her parents moved to Queenstown permanently when Alice was aged four.
She started her ski racing career at Coronet Peak with the Queenstown Alpine Ski Team and later also trained with the Sugar Bowl Ski Team and Academy based in Tahoe, California during the northern hemisphere winter.
From 2016 Alice has been coached predominately by former New Zealand Olympian Tim Cafe. She currently attends Wakatipu High School in Queenstown.
Alice won the Under-14 and Under-16 New Zealand titles before beginning her international career.
In April 2015 she won the ladies’ U14 Giant Slalom and Parallel Slalom at the Whistler Cup (which is one of the largest and most important junior ski races on the international calendar) held in Canada.
In 2017 she won the U16 Giant Slalom and finished second in Slalom at Pokal Loka in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia.
She also won the USSA U16 National Championship Giant Slalom held at Snowbird, Utah and took second place in the Super G.
2018 season
In her debut FIS race on 30 July 2017 at Cardrona, she finished 3rd. The next day at the same venue she won the giant slalom race.
On 10 August 2017, Alice at the age of 15, won the New Zealand Alpine National Championships for slalom and giant slalom at Coronet Peak. On 16 December 2017, she won her first North America Cup (NorAm) Giant Slalom race in Panorama, Canada.
Her 8.70 FIS point result is the best any New Zealand skier has achieved in their first year of senior competition.
Alice made her World Cup debut on 6 January 2018, in a giant slalom at Kranjska Gora in Slovenia finishing in 42nd place, and missing the cut to qualify for a second run by just 0.97s.
Three days later Alice won a FIS giant slalom race in Gaal, Austria in which she scored 11.90 FIS points, ranking her inside the top 70 in the world at the time.
On 28 January 2018, Alice was selected for New Zealand team for the PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games alongside fellow alpine skiers Adam Barwood and Willis Feasey.
She is New Zealand's youngest ever Winter Olympian, being 16 years and 70 days when the games began.
Alice finished 35th out of 81 skiers in the giant slalom
2019 season
On 27 August 2018, Alice won the Audi Quattro Winter Games NZ FIS Australia New Zealand Cup (ANC) Giant Slalom.
On 5 September 2018 she won the New Zealand Alpine National Championships for Super-G as well as two Australia New Zealand Cup Super G races held at Mt Hutt.
On 2 February 2019, at the World Cup giant slalom in Maribor, Slovenia Alice finished in 25th place on the first run, becoming the first New Zealander to qualify for the second run (in World Cup racing only the top 30 racers qualify for a second run). She failed to finish the second run.
On 9 February, at aged 17, she won the European Cup Giant Slalom in Berchtesgaden, Germany, becoming the first New Zealand athlete to do so since Claudia Riegler in 2001.
At the 2019 World Championships at Åre in Sweden in February, at age 17, she won the U21 category and finished 17th in the ladies' giant slalom, having the fastest time in the second run.
Less than a week later, at the Junior World Championships in Val di Fassa, Italy, Alice won the giant slalom by more than a second, becoming the first New Zealander to win a gold medal in the 38-year history of the Junior World Championships.
On 8 March 2019, at the World Cup giant slalom in Spindleruv Mlyn, Czech Republic Alice finished 16th in a 70 strong field earning 15 World Cup points, the first in her career.
On 12 March 2019, at the European Cup Finals Super G in Sella Nevea, Italy Alice finished second place, 0.12 s behind the winner.
On 17 March 2019, Alice competed at the World Cup Final Giant Slalom held in Grandvalira Soldeu, Andorra.
She earned the right to compete in the Finals by virtue of winning the Junior World Championships Giant Slalom the month prior.
At aged 17 she finished on the podium at the World Cup for the first time in her career, finishing 0.30 s behind Mikaela Shiffrin.
This silver medal was the first podium at a FIS Alpine World Cup for a New Zealand athlete since Claudia Riegler in Slalom in 2002.
Alice was named the Otago Junior Sportswoman of Year at the 2019 Otago Sports Awards.