WENGEN, Switzerland (Reuters) - Winning an Alpine skiing race can involve a long, agonizing wait in front of the cameras to see if any rivals can better the racer’s time.

Alpine Skiing - FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup - Men's Slalom - Wengen, Switzerland - January 14, 2018 - Henrik Kristoffersen of Norway in action. Picture taken January 14, 2018. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

Most skiers react with an expression of mild disappointment if their time is beaten, happily shaking hands with the new leader as they are displaced from the podium.

Norway’s Henrik Kristoffersen, on the other hand, sometimes livens up proceedings by throwing a tantrum.

The 23-year-old, slalom bronze medalist in Sochi four years ago, is something of an exception in a sport which may have become too polite for its own good.

At last season’s world championships in St Moritz, he stormed off the piste, swearing and refusing to talk to reporters, after a poor performance in the slalom. He later returned for interviews and apologized.

His frustration has grown this season after a series of defeats to his rival Marcel Hirscher.

After seeing his time beaten in the Zagreb slalom, Kristoffersen threw his sticks to the ground and kicked an advertising hoarding in disgust, earning criticism from fellow skier Felix Neureuther.

“He jumped around like Rumpelstiltskin and I simply don’t understand it,” the German said in a radio interview. “He must learn to accept that someone else is better... and improve himself.”

Kristoffersen, however, said he was simply being himself.

“I’m not afraid to show my disappointment,” he said. “I am ambitious and I blame myself for not having won races.”

Kristoffersen was also involved in a dispute with the Norwegian federation two years ago over whether he could display a personal sponsor on his hat, at one point missing a race in Levi, Finland.

DOMINANT HIRSCHER

Yet it is no wonder that Kristoffersen gets frustrated.

Two seasons ago, he appeared to be threatening Hirscher’s dominance, which has seen the Austrian win six successive overall World Cup titles.

Aged 21, he became the first skier to win the classic slalom races at Adelboden, Wengen and Kitzbuehel in the same season and was crowned World Cup slalom champion, pipping Hirscher.

Only Hirscher’s greater pedigree in the giant slalom prevented Kristoffersen offering a real challenge in the overall title race.

Remarkably, Kristoffersen nearly repeated his hat-trick last season, missing out only at Kitzbuehel.

This season, however, he has endured seven second-placed finishes in World Cup races, with Hirscher the winner in five of those, and so far failed to add to his tally of 15 wins.

“It’s not really about beating Marcel, it’s about trying to win races and ski as well as possible,” he said.

After losing again in Wengen, he vowed to keep on plugging away.

“At the moment, he’s just better, that’s the way it is,” said Kristoffersen. “I try hard but at the moment, it’s not enough but I’ll never give up that’s for sure.

“I’ll keep fighting and I’ll train as much as I have to and do as many races as I have to so that one day I can be on the top step on the podium again.”

Perhaps his luck will finally change in Pyeongchang.