|
In
December 1973, a dramatic World Cup
race was held for the first time on
the icy and treacherous Planai downhill
course in front of 25,000 spectators
- there were many spectacular crashes
and a young skier celebrated his first
success on the tour. A star was born
that day as Franz Klammer, wearing
bib number 16, beat the Swiss favorites
to win the first of his 25 competitions.
The 1976 Olympic champion took impressive
risks to achieve this performance
on his way to become Austria's greatest
ski hero of the 1970's and a new era
began for downhill racing that day.
Many other competitions were held
on this slope including some of the
1982 FIS World Championships' races,
but none was as remarkable as that
1973 downhill. After a long break,
Schladming is back on the calendar
with another exceptional event - a
night slalom set on the final steep
part of the downhill. It got an excellent
start in 1997 as Alberto Tomba himself
won it a few weeks before clinching
bronze at the FIS World Championships
at Sestriere. He won it again in 1998
but he had no luck at the Nagano Olympics
that year. In 1999, a young skier,
Benjamin Raich, who turned 21 in February,
won his first World Cup race after
clocking the 26th time in the first
run. The crowd went crazy and celebrated
as a their new star. So a tradition
goes on at Schladming, one of the
nicest ski resorts on the eastern
part of Austria, only one hour drive
south from Salzburg. The entire region
has great ski facilities and good
accommodations. Hans Knauss, the winner
from Kitzbuhel, lives in Schladming
as did Sepp Walcher, the 1978 Downhill
World Champion who died in a ski accident
in 1984.
|