Dominik Paris of Italy leads the men's downhill standings on the Alpine Ski World Cup circuit ©Getty Images

Kitzbühel in Austria is set to host a men's Alpine Ski World Cup triple-header from tomorrow, with two events in the downhill discipline and one in the slalom due to be held over three days.

Downhill World Cups are scheduled for tomorrow and Sunday (January 23), with Italy's Dominik Paris returning to the top of the discipline standings with a third-place finish in the most recent event in Wengen.

Paris has 316 points for the season, with two athletes just 11 points behind him.

Norway's Aleksander Aamodt Kilde won the first downhill World Cup in Wengen, while Beat Feuz of Switzerland finished on the podium twice on home ice.

Matthias Mayer of Austria is just three points shy of the podium on 302, with his compatriot Vincent Kriechmayr moving into contention on 285 after a first victory of the season in the first downhill competition in Wengen, Switzerland.

Overall World Cup leader Marco Odermatt of Switzerland has 276 downhill points.

Marco Odermatt of Switzerland holds a comfortable overall lead on the men's Alpine Ski World Cup circuit ©Getty Images
Marco Odermatt of Switzerland holds a comfortable overall lead on the men's Alpine Ski World Cup circuit ©Getty Images

For the slalom World Cup, Sebastian Foss-Solevåg tops the standings with 180 points, 18 clear of Switzerland's Daniel Yule, who closed the gap with a second-place finish in Wengen on Sunday (January 16).

Lucas Braathen of Norway's surprise victory at the weekend propelled him onto the slalom podium with 155 points for the season, one more than Italy's Giuliano Razzoli, who rolled back the years to place third in the Swiss resort.

Odermatt holds a comfortable lead in the overall standings with 1,075 points.

Kilde is his nearest challenger on 685, with Mayer third on 592 and Kriechmayr fourth with 524.

A slalom event in Schladming on Tuesday (January 25) is set to be the final World Cup in Alpine skiing before the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics.