Pirmin Zurbriggen

Pirmin Zurbriggen
 Alpine skier 
Zurbriggen in 2014
Disciplines Downhill, Super-G,
Giant slalom, Slalom,
Combined
Born (1963-02-04) 4 February 1963
Saas Almagell, Valais, Switzerland
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
World Cup debut 4 January 1981 (age 17)
Retired 17 March 1990 (age 27)
Website zurbriggen.ch
Olympics
Teams 2 (1984, 1988)
Medals 2 (1 gold)
World Championships
Teams 4 (1982, 1985, 1987, 1989)
Medals 9 (4 gold)
World Cup
Seasons 10 (19811990)
Wins 40
Podiums 83
Overall titles 4 (1984, 1987, 1988, 1990)
Discipline titles 12

Pirmin Zurbriggen (born 4 February 1963) is a former World Cup alpine ski racer from Switzerland. One of the most successful ski racers ever, he won the overall World Cup title four times, an Olympic gold medal in 1988 in Downhill, and nine World Championships medals (4 gold, 4 silver, 1 bronze).

Biography

Zurbriggen was born in Saas-Almagell in the canton of Valais, the son of Alois, an innkeeper, and Ida. His father competed as a ski racer in local competitions in the 1940s and 1950s, but quit the sport after his brother was killed in a training accident.[1] Zurbriggen made his World Cup debut in January 1981, a month before his 18th birthday. With his victory in the downhill at Kitzbühel in January 1985 at age 21, he became the first to win World Cup races in all five disciplines. (The fifth discipline, Super G, was added in December 1982.)[2] Incidentally Marc Girardelli, the second to enter this exclusive circle, won his first downhill race four years later at the same venue.

Zurbriggen retired from international competition after having won the 1990 World Cup overall title – his fourth, which was then the most overall titles won by a single racer, reached only once before by Gustav Thöni in 1975. Again it was Marc Girardelli who followed him in 1991 with a fourth overall title, and Girardelli added another in 1993 to become the only male racer with five overall titles in World Cup history.

Zurbriggen grew up in the remote village of Saas-Almagell, near Saas-Fee. With a total of 40 World Cup victories over nine years and five gold medals, he belongs to the "All-Time Greats" of alpine skiing, ranking fifth in all-time wins and having 169 Top Ten finishes.[3]

Zurbriggen left the World Cup tour as a hero to start a family; he was married the previous summer (30 June 1989) to Monika Julen (the sister of his best friend on the Swiss ski team, Max Julen),[4] with whom he has five children: Elia, Pirmin Jr., Maria, Alain and Leonie, who have all competed in ski racing.[5] He is the older brother of Heidi Zurbriggen, a winner of three World Cup downhill races, and a distant cousin of Silvan Zurbriggen.[6]

Zurbriggen now runs the "Wellness Hotel Pirmin Zurbriggen" with his parents in Saas-Almagell and another, "Apparthotel Zurbriggen," in Zermatt.[7] In addition, after his World Cup career had ended he partnered with Authier Ski company on a line of signature skis.[8]

World Cup results

Season standings

SeasonAgeOverallSlalomGiant
Slalom
Super GDownhillCombined
1981183117not
run
18
198219113367
1983206214not
awarded
(w/ GS)
263
1984211241102
198522214259
19862326102111
1987241211111
198825194114
1989262151143
1990271116131

Season titles

  • 13 titles (4 overall, 2 DH, 4 SG, 3 GS) plus unofficial 3 K
Season Discipline
1984Overall
Giant Slalom
1987Overall
Downhill
Super-G
Giant Slalom
1988Overall
Downhill
Super G
1989Super-G
Giant Slalom
1990Overall
Super-G

Race victories

  • 40 wins (10 DH, 10 SG, 7 GS, 11 SC, 2 SL)
  • 83 podiums (40 wins, 26 second place, 17 third place)

Downhill

Date Location
11-Jan-1985Austria Kitzbühel
12-Jan-1985Austria Kitzbühel
16-Aug-1986Argentina Las Leñas
05-Dec-1986France Val d'Isère
10-Jan-1987West Germany Garmisch
25-Jan-1987Austria Kitzbühel
07-Mar-1987United States Aspen, CO
09-Jan-1988France Val d'Isère
29-Jan-1988Austria Schladming
06-Dec-1989Italy Val Gardena

Giant slalom

Date Location
24-Mar-1982Italy San Sicario
11-Jan-1983 Switzerland  Adelboden
05-Mar-1984United States Aspen, CO
13-Jan-1987 Switzerland  Adelboden
20-Jan-1987 Switzerland  Adelboden
15-Feb-1987West Germany Todtnau
29-Nov-1988France Val Thorens

Slalom

Date Location
10-Dec-1984Italy Sestriere
23-Feb-1986Sweden Åre

Super-G

Date Location
19-Dec-1983Italy Val Gardena
20-Mar-1984Norway Oppdal
07-Dec-1984France Puy-Saint-Vincent
17-Mar-1985Canada Panorama, BC
28-Feb-1986Norway Hemsedal
08-Mar-1987United States Aspen, CO
27-Nov-1988Austria Schladming
12-Dec-1989Italy Sestriere
06-Feb-1990Italy Courmayeur
10-Mar-1990Norway Hemsedal

Combined

Date Location
24-Jan-1982 Switzerland  Wengen
22-Dec-1982Italy Campiglio
29-Jan-1984West Germany Garmisch
11-Jan-1985Austria Kitzbühel
19-Jan-1986Austria Kitzbühel
23-Feb-1986Sweden Åre
18-Jan-1987 Switzerland  Wengen
25-Jan-1987Austria Kitzbühel
22-Dec-1988Austria St. Anton
12-Jan-1990Austria Schladming
21-Jan-1990Austria Kitzbühel

World championship results

  Year   Age  Slalom  Giant 
 Slalom 
Super-GDownhillCombined
198522DNF2not run11
198724DNF1122
198926DNF32154

Olympic results

  Year   Age  Slalom  Giant 
 Slalom 
Super-GDownhillCombined
198421DNF1DNF1not run4not run
1988257351DNF SL2

See also

References

  1. Johnson, William Oscar (27 January 1988). "The Swiss Golden Boy". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  2. victories of Pirmin Zurbriggen on fis-ski.com, sorted by date, retrieved 2011-12-30
  3. Most Valuable Racers – Top 50, retrieved 2010-02-22
  4. Harvey, Randy (February 8, 1988). "PIRMIN ZURBRIGGEN: The Pride of the Swiss Mountain Country Is an Often Humble, Yet Daring Young Man Who Could Win Three Gold Medals in Skiing". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  5. Despont, Christian; Monnard, Bertrand (28 December 2014). "Les enfants Zurbriggen arrivent en force" [The children of Zurbriggen arrive in force]. Le Matin (Switzerland) (in French). Retrieved 4 March 2017.
  6. Lang, Patrick (18 December 2010). "Silvan Zurbriggen on Pirmin's footsteps". FIS-Ski.com. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  7. Zurbriggen Homepage, retrieved 2007-11-22
  8. California Ski Company (2003), The Authier Story, retrieved 2007-11-19
  • Pirmin Zurbriggen at the International Ski Federation
  • Pirmin Zurbriggen at Olympics at Sports-Reference.com
  • FIS-ski.com – World Cup season standings – Pirmin Zurbriggen
  • Ski-db.com – results – Pirmin Zurbriggen
  • Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill. "Pirmin Zurbriggen". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC.
Awards
Preceded by
Switzerland Étienne Dagon
Swiss Sportsman of the Year
1985
Succeeded by
Switzerland Werner Günthör
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