San Vigilio di Marebbe, Italy • Diaper bags and baby backpacks are in just as much demand as skis, boots and poles on the U.S. Alpine team this season.

So is a good night's sleep.

Four members of the men's squad — two skiers and two coaches — welcomed newborns into their families in the offseason. Add in Andrew Weibrecht's daughter, Adalina, who was born two years ago, and it often makes the team hotel resemble a day care center.

"The team life is shifting gears," said Steven Nyman, the captain of the downhill squad.

Nyman's girlfriend, Charlotte Moats, gave birth to the couple's first daughter, Nell, in June. Also that month, Ted Ligety's wife, Mia, had a son named Jax.

Giacomo, the third child of head coach Sasha Rearick, and Trudi Anne, the daughter of tech coach Forest Carey, were also born recently.

All four babies were born within about a month.

"It was funny last winter, all of the ladies were on tour and none of them were partying," Rearick said. "Nobody kind of knew and then near the end of the season everybody knew."

Now, it's like team parenting.

"That makes it easier actually in a sense that everyone is going through the same thing and you can share the stories and talk about how each other's babies are sleeping and all that stuff," Ligety said.

The biggest challenge for skiers bringing their families along to World Cup races in Europe is keeping them fresh amid all of the crying and midnight feedings.

"It's tough," Rearick said. "You do your work, you do your job and you come home when you want to support your wife, you want to take care of your child, but it's also the time where you have to really rest.

"In order to compete with the best you have to be super fresh in the mind and physically fit, and sleepness nights or even just a few hours in the afternoon where you would just lay low, it's easy to get distracted," the coach added.

At races, separate rooms are recommended for athletes and their families. Family members also will not be able to stay with the team during the Pyeongchang Olympics.

But the advantages of taking family members on the road far outweigh the disadvantages — especially for a team that competes so far from home for most of the season.

Nyman's daughter played a significant role during his recovery from left knee surgery entering this season.

"It's been awesome. Just watching her grow, watching her learn, being there with me. Helping me kind of throttle back down after I train," Nyman said. "I probably would have overtrained and pushed too much and wouldn't have been as far ahead now with my knee. So she's been a good regulator for me."

Not that there haven't been complications.

Like when Nyman's girlfriend and 6-month-old daughter had a connection canceled in Amsterdam following a trans-Atlantic flight and had to take a train to Munich instead.

"The travel was an extra 10 hours, which was too much," Nyman said. "But the kid actually stayed awake, which helped adapt with the time change."

At races, mothers observe the competition from the finish area with their babies in backpacks clothed in thick snowsuits — with plenty of equipment in tow.

"Just having a bag full of any-scenarios tools," Nyman said. "Got to be prepared and think ahead."

Hospitality tents can quickly turn into changing stations.

"Three wins deserves a screaming baby in the VIP tent," Nyman said in Val Gardena.

The Americans are not the only downhillers with babies or children.

Erik Guay of Canada, who won gold in super-G and silver in downhill at last season's world championships, has four daughters.

Peter Fill of Italy, the World Cup downhill champion the last two seasons, has boys named Leon and Noah.