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Hermann
Maier (AUT)
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07.12.1972
Flachau
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07.12.1972
Flachau
180cm / 90kg |
| Web
Site > |
World
Cup Ranking
General
1996/106th, 1997/21st, 1998/1st. 1999/3rd.
2000/1st, 2001/1st, 2002/-, 2003/45th,
2004/1st,
Special
1998 GS/1st, SG/1st, DH/2nd, K/2nd.
1999 SG/1st, GS/3rd, DH/6th.
2000 DH/1st, SG/1st, GS/1st,
2001 SG/1st, DH/ 1st, GS/1st,
2003 DH/25th, SG/19th.
2004 SG/1st, DH/3rd, GS/17th, K/10th
.
World
Championships
1999 Vail DH/1st, SG/1st.
2001 St.Anton SG/3rd, DH/2nd, GS/4th.
2003 St.Moritz SG/2nd, DH/8th.
Bormio 2005 GS1st, SG4th
Olympic Games
1998 Nagano SG/1st, GS/1st.
World Cup - 47 W. (13 DH, 20 SG, 13
GS, 1 K) |
| 1. |
DH: |
Bormio
98-I, Wengen 98-I, Bormio 99,
Beaver Creek 00, Chamonix 00,
Garmisch 00, Beaver Creek 01,
Val d'Isere 01-I, Kitzbuhel 01,
Kvitfjell 01-I,
Are 01, Beaver Creek 04-II, St.Anton
04, |
| SG: |
Garmisch
97,98, Vail 98, Schladming 98-I+II,
Val d'Isere 99, Innsbruck 99,
Schladming 99, Kvitfjell 99, Beaver
Creek 00, Lake Louise 00, Kitzbuhel
00,
Bormio 00, Lake Louise 01,Kitzbuhel
01, Kvitfjell 01, Kitzbuhel 03,
Lake Louise 04, Garmisch 04, Sestriere
04, |
| GS: |
Park
City 98, Saalbach 98, Adelboden
98, 99, Soelden 99. Tignes 00,
Beaver Creek 00, Todtnau 00, Soelden
01, Val d'Isere 01-I, Adelboden
01,
Shigakogen 01, Are 01, |
| K: |
Wengen/Veysonnaz
98, |
| 2: |
DH: |
Vail
98 II, Lake Louise 2000, Bormio
2000, |
| SG: |
Garmisch
97 I, Aspen 99, Kvitfjell 2000,
Garmisch 01, Beaver Creek 04,
Val Gardena 04, Kitzbuhel 04,
|
| GS: |
Kranjska
Gora 98, Alta Badia 2000, Saalbach
2000, Park City 01, |
| K: |
Chamonix
2000, |
| 3. |
DH: |
Wengen
09 II, Garmisch 98, Val Gardena
99 I, 2000 II, Kvitfjell 2000,
|
| SG: |
St.Anton
00-II, Val Gardena 04, Kvitfjell
04, |
| GS: |
Tignes
98, Alta Badia 98, Yong Pyong
98, Crans Montana 98, Flachau
99,
Hinterstoder 2000, |
| K: |
Wengen
99, Kitzbuhel 2000, |
| P: |
Tignes
98, |
| 4. |
DH: |
Bormio
98-II, Val Gardena 99-II, Wengen
99, Kitzbuhel 99, Kvitfjell 00-II,
Kitzbuhel 04-I, |
| SG: |
Kvitfjell
97, |
| GS: |
Alta
Badia 99, Ofterschwang 99, |
| 5. |
DH |
Kvitfjell
01, Beaver Creek 04-I, Val Gardena
04, Garmisch 04-I+II, |
| GS: |
Vail
97, |
| 6. |
DH: |
Val
Gardena 00-I, Kitzbuhel 03, |
| SG: |
Vail
01, |
| GS: |
Park
City 97 |
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Hermann
Maier
Within a few seasons , Hermann Maier
has simply established himself as
one of the most dominant champions
in the history of Alpine Ski Racing.
The Austrian has picked up the mantles
left by the greatest stars such as
Switzerland's Pirmin Zurbriggen, Marc
Girardelli from Luxembourg or Italy's
superstar Alberto Tomba and moves
now at the level of Sweden's Ingemar
Stenmark, the "land mark"
in the modern era of the white sport.
Maier won four gold medals at the
Nagano Olympics and at the Vail FIS
World Championships. He also picked
up the Overall World Cup title twice
in 1998 and 2000, establishing a new
record of 2000 points during the Finals
at Bormio- his own way to mark to
new Millennium. He has won a total
of 28 events in four disciplines since
February 1997 - quite an unprecedented
and impressive achievement.
He the first skier since Zurbriggen
in 1987 to have clinched four out
of five World Cup titles in the same
winter.
This is no surprise for those who
know him. Hermann is a fighter both
on the ski slopes and in his life
and only one sport really attracts
him - the highest march on the podiums.
Like a wild bull he raged through
an amazing 1997/98 season with ten
wins in four different events and
seven more top-3 finishes.
His eight victories during the 1998/99
winter were not enough for another
Overall World Cup, but he reached
his main goal in Vail/Beaver Creek
in winning the World downhill after
an incredible run down the "Birds
of Prey" course. Even his famous
countryman, actor Arnold Schwarzenegger
was impressed by his determination.
But in the evening after the race,
"The Terminator" showed
him who is really the strongest of
them in a spectacular arm wrestling
contest.
This "tough guy" approach
by Maier comes from a hard life as
a teenager before breaking through
on the highest international level
of racing. A promising junior, he
had to give up intensive ski racing
within the Austrian program because
he was physically not strong enough.
When he was 15, the doctors had to
ask him to give up the competition
because of his bad knees.
Then Hermann decided to help his parents
run two ski schools in the resort
of Flachau, one hour drive south from
Salzburg, working there as a ski instructor
along his mother. His father also
worked at the Atomic factory in nearby
Altenmark. His brother Alexander focused
more on snowboard and he competes
too on the International level.
In the summer, young Hermann also
worked as a bricklayer, working 12
to 14 hours a day - this helped him
become stronger and to be totally
in charge of himself.
In the winter, his activity as an
instructor brought him to ski by all
kinds of weather, visibility and snow-conditions.
He especially enjoyed powder skiing.
It gave him a strong technical base
and a great instinct which helped
him to develop a very efficient personal
technique. At 20, he competed again
in some local races, never giving
up the dream to become once a "World
Cup racer".
He was ready to work hard to reach
this goal - and he did it. Training
sometimes eight hours a day, he built
himself up to become a perfect racing
machine. It took him some time to
prove it!
In 1995, Maier was banned for several
months by his Federation for skiing
in a pro race at Schladming. Later
on, he took chance in the national
championships. Despite a high start-number
(141) he was able to finish 18th in
GS. Yet even that achievement didn't
open him the doors to the Austrian
ski team because of his age.
In January 1996, he finally qualified
for Europa Cup events after clocking
excellent unofficial times as a forerunner
in a World Cup GS held on his home-run
at Flachau. Using the blue Spider
dress he received from a US snowboarder,
he finally attracted the attention
of the Austrian head coaches.
He won the Overall Europacup standings
and went to the World Cup finals in
Lillehammer in March. He came in 11th
in Super-G.
Finally, after a long struggle, he
was qualified for the national ski
team - his long search for national
recognition has succeeded. He only
needed a short time to also gain respect
and admiration from the rest of the
ski world.
Maier's dedication and talent propelled
him rapidly to the top: in November
1996 he scored his first top-10 finish
in GS at Park City. Later that season
at Garmisch-Partenkirchen, he fulfilled
his first dream of winning a World
Cup event -- the Super-G.
A month earlier, he broke a hand in
crashing in his first ever World Cup
downhill held at Chamonix which forced
him to rest for several weeks.
Only a year later Maier became the
first Austrian man to win the Overall
World Cup since Karl Schranz's in
1970. He became a world famous hero
at the Olympics at Nagano in winning
two gold medals after surviving a
horrible crash in the downhill. These
achievements also promoted his nickname
"The Herminator" given to
him by his teammates because of his
aggressive, no-prisoner-of-war attitude
on course.
Yet during the last season, Hermann
learned to better control his aggressiveness
and his manners on and off the courses
which helped him to win some races
without taking 100% risks as in the
"old days". With the support
of the Austrian staff lead by Toni
Giger, Maier set himself a long-term
plan in order to better handle the
risks of accidents. He also handles
better the pressure of the press and
he enjoys his stardom among the crowds.
Hermann, who turns 28 in December,
aims to compete until the Olympics
at Salt Lake City in 2002. He has
more records to set and more gold
medals to win at the St Anton's Worlds
in 2001 and in Utah. To win the Olympic
downhill at Snowbasin would be a fantastic
way to leave the white scene after
the 2002 Finals at Flachau - eventually
to start a career as an actor in the
US.
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| Patrick
Lang |
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