| Franz Klammer |
Article Index for Franz |
Website Links For Franz |
Information AboutFranz Klammer |
|
Franz Klammer (born December 3 , 1953 ) is an Austria n former Alpine Ski Racer who dominated the Downhill event throughout much of the mid to late 1970s . He won a gold medal at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck . BACKGROUND Franz Klammer was born in Mooswald , Carinthia , to a farming family. Like many alpine farm boys he grew up on skis, skiing to school each winter day. He had a tough struggle to make the Austrian National ski team, dominated as it was by the provinces of Tyrol and Salzburg . From his World Cup debut at age 19 to his retirement at age 30, he spent 12 seasons on the Alpine Skiing World Cup circuit (1972-1984). CAREER Klammer first showed signs of promise in the second half of the 1973 World Cup finishing second in the St. Anton downhill behind Bernhard Russi . He followed this up with a third at St. Moritz and a Giant Slalom third at Mont Sainte-Anne . The following season he finished second in the downhill standings behind Roland Collombin , his nemesis that season. After besting Collombin at Schladming under terrible conditions, Collombin in turn bested him at Garmisch, Avoriaz and Wengen. At Val d'Isere in December of '74 Collombin fell for a second time. He had fallen here the year before. This time he broke his back, ending his career. Klammer won that race and every other downhill that season, except Megeve, where his ski came off. At the 1976 Winter Olympics Klammer won the gold medal in the downhill by 0.33 seconds from defending champion Bernhard Russi , who had gone out before him and set a blistering pace. Klammer, starting 15th knew what he had to do. He took heavy risks, skiing on the edge of disaster on the treacherous course and won. Although the overall World Cup title remained elusive because the technical specialists had two events in which to earn points (Slalom and Giant Slalom) whereas a downhill specialist had only the one. At the end of the 1974/1975 , despite having won 8 out of 9 downhills he finished third for the overall World Cup title. The second speed event, the Super G , was not a World Cup event until December 1982 . Klammer won the Downhill races, including his first of three consecutive victories at the Hahnenkamm at Kitzbühel . After his fourth consecutive World Cup Downhill title (1977/78), he began a prolonged slump until the end of the 1980/81 season, probably affected by his brother's spinal cord injury in a downhill race as well as a change of ski supplier. Unable to make the strong Austrian team, Klammer could not defend his Olympic downhill title at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid. Rather than retire, he worked long and hard at a comeback. Finally in December 1981 he won Val d'Isere. The following season he regained the World Cup Downhill title, his fifth, followed by the 1984 Hahnenkamm. At the 1984 Games in Sarajevo , (then Yugoslavia , now Bosnia And Herzegovina ), Klammer finished a disappointing tenth, on a less than challenging course. At his peak (Wengen, 1976 to Wengen, 1977) he won ten consecutive downhills, including the spectacular, pressure-laden win at the 1976 Olympics. He won 8/9 during the 1974/75 season. He also won 19 of 23, 20 of 26 and 21 of 29 downhills. His career total is 26 downhill wins: 25 World Cup, 1 Olympic. These achievements mark him out in the eyes of many as arguably the greatest dowhill racer ever: for instance, Karl Schranz achieved 20 wins over a long career while Klammer won 19 over only two and a half seasons. In an interview with Austrian Television in 2006 , the 52-year-old Klammer was asked about his greatest achievement. He answered that although his gold medal at the Olympic Games in Innsbruck was generally regarded as his greatest career achievement, winning the Kitzbühel in 1984 meant something very special to him, considering he hadn't won there since 1977. Klammer was never an elegant downhill skier. In his descents he appeared at times to be dangerously off balance. In spite, or perhaps because of his unique style of skiing, he was able to dominate a field of gifted competitors. LEGACY Franz Klammer was a hero to Austrian ski racing fans and also to fans the world over. Known as the Kaiser and also as the "Klammer Express" he did a great deal to promote the popularity of alpine ski racing. WORLD CUP VICTORIES Overall Individual races EXTERNAL LINKS
|
|
|