Günther Mader

Günther Mader
 Alpine skier 
Disciplines Downhill, Super G,
Giant Slalom, Slalom,
Combined
Club SC Gries Am Brenner
Born (1964-06-24) 24 June 1964
Matrei am Brenner,
Tyrol, Austria
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 9 12 in)
World Cup debut 22 December 1982
(age 18)
Retired March 1998 (age 33)
Website guenthermader.at
Olympics
Teams 4 - (1988-98)
Medals 1 (0 gold)
World Championships
Teams 7 - (1985-97)
Medals 6 (0 gold)
World Cup
Seasons 16 - (1983-98)
Wins 14
Podiums 44
Overall titles 0 - (2nd in 1995 & 1996)
Discipline titles 2 - (1 GS, 1 K )

Günther Mader (born 24 June 1964) is a former alpine ski racer and Olympic medalist from Austria. Born in Matrei am Brenner, Tyrol, he is one of only five men to have won World Cup races in all five alpine disciplines (downhill, super G, giant slalom, slalom, and combined).

Mader made his World Cup debut at age 18 and competed for 16 seasons, including four Winter Olympics and seven world championships. He was the bronze medalist in the downhill at the 1992 Olympics and won a total of six medals in the world championships. By winning his first medal, the silver medal in the Slalom Race at Crans Montana in 1987, he was only eighth after the first leg. - Mader won two World Cup season titles, giant slalom in 1990 and combined in 1996, and placed second in the overall World Cup standings in 1995 and 1996, and third in 1990. Without his 14 wins, he did achieve another 27 places in World Cup races.

His only World Cup victory in downhill was the prestigious Hahnenkamm in Kitzbühel, Austria, in 1996 at age 31. Mader retired from competition after the 1998 season with 14 World Cup victories, 44 podiums, and 146 top ten finishes.[1]

Only 13 days after his retirement in March 1998, he suffered a cerebrovascular accident, the right side of the body was paralyzed and he lost 85 percent of his vocabulary. But he got well again to the greatest possible extent. After convalescence, he wrote a book titled »ÜberLeben«; he described his career, the stroke and his working as a director in the skiing racing sports (he did get that employee while his recovering, he is the head of Salomon ski factory racing sports to Austria). »ÜberLeben« is a double-barreled term, meaning "about life" but also "Survival".

World Cup victories

Season titles

SeasonDiscipline
1990Giant Slalom
1996Combined

Individual races

Season Date Location Race
198621 Feb 1986Wengen, SwitzerlandCombined
2 Mar 1986Geilo, NorwaySlalom
198820 Mar 1988Åre, SwedenCombined
19902 Dec 1989Mt. Ste. Anne, CanadaGiant Slalom
30 Jan 1990Les Menuires, FranceSuper-G
19916 Jan 1991Garmisch, GermanySuper-G
19928 Mar 1992Panorama, CanadaSuper-G
199328 Mar 1993Whistler, CanadaSuper-G
199427 Nov 1993Park City, USAGiant Slalom
12 Dec 1993Val-d'Isère, FranceSuper-G
199516 Jan 1995Kitzbühel, AustriaSuper-G
199613 Jan 1996Kitzbühel, Austriadownhill
14 Jan 1996Combined
199712 Jan 1997Chamonix, FranceCombined

References

  1. Ski-db.com - results - Günther Mader - accessed 2011-01-16
  • Günther Mader at the International Ski Federation
  • FIS-ski.com - World Cup season standings - Günther Mader - 1983-98
  • Ski-db.com - results - Günther Mader
  • Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill. "Günther Mader". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC.
  • guenthermader.at - personal site - (in German)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.