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Freeski Club of the Year

Freeski Club of the Year Past Recipients

Founder of U.S. Ski Team Bob Beattie Passes

By Tom Kelly
April, 2 2018
Bob Beattie
Bob Beattie, center, with Billy Kidd (left) and Jimmie Heuga at the 1964 Olympic Winter Games.

Bob BeattieAn icon of the sport of alpine ski racing and one of its most passionate pioneers, Bob Beattie passed away Sunday (April 1, 2018) with his family in Fruita, Colorado. Beattie, 85, was the founding coach of the U.S. Ski Team and one of the originators of the Alpine Ski World Cup. He was a driving force for ski racing his entire life and among sport leaders who built alpine ski racing into one of the pillar events at the Olympic Winter Games. Beattie, known often as 'Beats' or simply “Coach,” became well known as a commentator for ABC Sports and ESPN, working for ABC at four Olympic Winter Games.

Beattie, who moved to Aspen, Colo. in 1970 and lived for many years in nearby Woody Creek, was born in Manchester, N.H. January 24, 1933, later attending Middlebury College in Vermont where he was a multisport athlete. He was named acting ski coach for Middlebury after graduation in 1955, standing in for coach Bobo Sheehan who went on to coach the U.S. Ski Team for the 1956 Olympics. Beattie took his Middlebury team to the NCAA Championships at Winter Park, Colo. finishing third and attracting the attention of other college programs.

In 1957 he became the head ski coach at the University of Colorado, leading the Buffs to NCAA titles in 1959 and 1960. In 1961 the National Ski Association named Beattie as its first national team coach. He embraced that role, providing the formative direction to organize the first true national team with heavy promotion leading up to the 1964 Olympics at Innsbruck. The USA won an unprecedented four alpine medals including silver and bronze by the late Jean Saubert, as well as the first men's alpine medals in Olympic history for the USA with Billy Kidd taking silver in slalom and the late Jimmie Heuga bronze.

Beattie often credited NFL football coach Vince Lombardi as one of his most notable role models. "It was his strong will that made him successful - 'This is the way it is and the way it is going to be,'" said Beattie last summer while reminiscing about his own career. "He was sensational. He’s what made it work. I still feel strongly about that. I don’t know if I accomplished that, but I tried."

Among the heroes of the sport in that era was Steamboat Springs, Colo. native Buddy Werner, who became the first American to win the fabled Hahnenkamm downhill in Kitzbuehel, Austria in 1959. Recognizing not just his athletic prowess but also his leadership skills, Beattie recruited Werner to ski for him at Colorado and the two became close friends. Beattie accompanied Werner's body back to America after his tragic death in an avalanche in Switzerland just after the 1964 Olympics.

In his tenure leading up to the 1964 Olympics, Beattie often stirred controversy. But he also pioneered a new era of promotion and fundraising for the fledgling U.S. Ski Team. He partnered with the U.S. ski industry to raise funds and engaged with corporate America to support its national team at previously unheard of levels.

One of the sport's greatest promoters, Beattie partnered with journalist Serge Lang and French coach Honorė Bonnet in 1966 to align the leading ski races around the globe in the first Alpine Ski World Cup. The tour quickly earned the nickname of the White Circus as stars of the sport hopscotched the globe every weekend, quickly growing to become one of the most notable international sports tours. A half-century later, the tour continues to bring alpine ski racing to hundreds of millions of fans globally every year. Today, the World Cup tour concept is common among winter sports - all emanating from the Lang-Beattie-Bonnet concept.

After leaving his coaching career, Beattie started World Wide Ski Corp., pioneering the World Pro Ski Tour in 1970. Strong national television coverage prompted top international athletes to flock to America including triple Olympic gold medalist Jean-Claude Killy and American stars like Spider Sabich. The tour continued until 1982.

At the same time, Beattie also took over promotion of the relatively new NASTAR recreational racing program that had been started by SKI Magazine editor John Fry in 1969. NASTAR continues today, now under the leadership of the U.S. Ski Team, bringing the sport to thousands of new participants at resorts coast-to-coast.

Beattie made his debut as a television commentator in 1969 working for Roone Arledge at ABC. He was later paired with NFL football star Frank Gifford. Their call of Austrian Franz Klammer's gold medal downhill run became legendary. He went on to work Winter Olympics in 1976, 1980, 1984 and 1988, as well as the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. He was a frequent host on ABC's Wide World of Sports as well as on ESPN where he produced Bob Beattie's Ski World.

He is one of the most decorated officials in skiing. The then U.S. Ski Association awarded Beattie its highest honor, the Julius Blegen Award, in 1964 for his leadership in forming the U.S. Ski Team. He was awarded the AT&T Skiing Award in 1983 for his lifetime contributions to the sport. He was inducted into the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame in 1984 and the Colorado Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame in 1986. The U.S. Ski Team and International Ski Federation presented Beattie the FIS Journalist Award in 1997. He was honored with the U.S. Ski Association's Russell Wilder Award in 2000 for his contribution to youth through NASTAR.

In 2012, athletes from seven decades paid tribute to Beattie at an event organized by the World Pro Ski Tour Foundation at the Hotel Jerome in his adopted hometown of Aspen. During the Alpine Ski World Cup Finals at Aspen last March, he was the focal point of a 50 Years of Ski Racing tribute.

After retiring from his broadcast career, Beattie remained passionately engaged in the sport. He was ski racing's biggest, and its most outspoken critic. He continued to be an advocate for change. In recent years his passion led the U.S. Ski Team to create the Bob Beattie Athlete Travel fund, which is now funneling millions of dollars into an endowment to help national team athletes.

When Beattie reflected on what success meant, he always came back to focusing on the concept of team. "Winning was about discipline and physical conditioning," said Beattie. "It was about team, team, team - you have to have a team."

Looking back on the 1964 Olympics, Beattie said: "The pressure was severe. We had promised everything - rightfully or wrongfully - we had promised everyone the world. We loved each other. We were a team. They weren’t individuals. We were together as a team."  

In 1986 Beattie drove negotiations with the Aspen Skiing Co. to provide affordable skiing for kids in the Roaring Fork Valley. The result was the ASK program (Aspen Supports Kids), now called Base Camp. The program thrived and today serves 1,800 kids with affordable entry into the sport.

Beattie married four times. He had a son, Zeno Beattie, daughter Susan, six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

Among Beattie's credits are several books including My Ten Secrets of Skiing (Viking Press, 1968) and Bob Beattie's Learn to Ski (Bantam Books, 1967). He also had a cameo role as a German skier in the television series Combat with Vic Morrow in 1964 as well as in the 1987 Sylvester Stallone film Over the Top.

Details on a celebration of Bob Beattie's life are pending, but will likely be this fall in Aspen.
 

Club of the Year Awards

Past Recipients:

1998 - Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club

Ferreira Wins Overall World Cup Globe

By Courtney Harkins
March, 22 2018
Alex Ferreira - Tignes
Alex Ferreira kisses his crystal globe after winning the World Cup overall title. (Getty Images/AFP-Jean-Pierre Clatot)

Olympic silver medalist Alex Ferreira (Aspen, Colo.) took his fourth World Cup freeski halfpipe podium of the season in Tignes, France to snag the 2017-18 World Cup halfpipe title. The U.S. Freeski Team also took home the FIS Freestyle Nations Cup in halfpipe.

Olympic bronze medalist Brita Sigourney (Carmel, Calif.) landed on the podium in the final World Cup in third place, but it wasn’t quite enough to maintain her overall World Cup lead. Olympic gold medalist Cassie Sharpe of Canada continued her late-season dominance, taking the victory in Tignes and capturing the overall World Cup title. Sigourney finished second in the overall standings.

Carly Margulies (Mammoth Lakes, Calif.) and Maddie Bowman (South Lake Tahoe, Calif.) were just off the World Cup podium in fourth and fifth.

A stacked U.S. men’s team came into Thursday’s finals with Ferreira and two-time Olympic gold medalist David Wise (Reno, Nev.) duking it out for the overall World Cup title. But Wise wasn’t able to put down a clean run and Ferreira walked away with his first FIS crystal globe. Wise finished in second overall.

It was a #TeamNorthAmerica podium in the final World Cup with Noah Bowman of Canada taking the win and Simon D’Artois of Canada in third. Birk Irving (Winter Park, Colo.) was fourth and Taylor Seaton (Avon, Colo.) fifth.

The men and women of the U.S. Freeski Team also stepped on stage to collect the FIS Freestyle Nations Cup in halfpipe, awarded to the team with the most World Cup points after the season.

RESULTS
Men's halfpipe
Women's halfpipe

OVERALL STANDINGS
Men's and women's halfpipe standings

 

World Cup Finals Week

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
March, 13 2018
Are, Sweden
The FIS Ski World Cup Finals take place in Are, Sweden this week, which will also host the 2019 FIS Alpine Ski World Championships. (FIS)

Many U.S. Ski & Snowboard Team athletes will be competing in their final World Cups of the season this weekend, including Olympic champions Mikaela Shiffrin (Eagle/Vail, Colo.) and Jessie Diggins (Afton, Minn.). While Shiffrin has already locked in her second overall title and fifth slalom title, Diggins is in the hunt to finish in the top three in the overall and distance cross country standings. Lindsey Vonn is just 23 points off from winning the overall downhill title. Mogul skier Jaelin Kauf (Alta, Wyo.) is also still in the running for a top-three finish in the moguls standings while Red Gerard (Silverthorne, Colo.) leads the men’s slopestyle snowboarding standings. Read on to see where the action is this week and how to watch via NBCSN and the Olympic Channel - Home of Team USA.

FIS Ski World Cup Finals - Are, Sweden
The World Cup Finals take place this week (March 14-18) in Are, Sweden, site of the 2019 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships. Lindsey Vonn (Vail, Colo.) will be competing for the World Cup downhill title in Wednesday’s race. Olympic downhill champion Sofia Goggia of Italy holds the World Cup lead with 429 points, while Vonn is second with 406 points. Vonn is also scheduled to compete in the super-G Thursday. Having already wrapped up the overall and slalom World Cup titles last weekend in Germany, Shiffrin is scheduled to race in the slalom Saturday and giant slalom Sunday.

FIS Freeski World Cup - Megeve, France (Skicross World Cup Finals)
Tanya Prymak (Goshen, N.Y.) will look to close out her season on a high note at the skicross World Cup finals in Megeve, France on March 17.

FIS Freeski World Cup - Seiseralm, Switzerland (Slopestyle World Cup Finals)
Caroline Claire (Edina, Minn.), Julia Krass (Hanover, N.H.), Nick Goepper (Lawrenceburg, Ind.), McRae Williams (Park City, Utah) and newly crowned World Cup winner Alex Hall (Park City, Utah) headline the U.S. starters for slopestyle skiing World Cup finals in Seiseralm, Switzerland. Qualifying takes place on Wednesday, March 14 followed by finals on Friday, March 16.

FIS Freestyle World Cup - Megeve, France (Moguls World Cup Finals)
The moguls World Cup season concludes March 18 with a dual moguls competition in Megeve, France. Kauf is sitting 66 points behind current World Cup leader Perinne Laffont of France and, and with a good result this weekend could move up in the standings. The U.S. women’s moguls team currently has four athletes ranked in the top 10.

FIS Cross Country World Cup Finals - Falun, Sweden
The World Cup tour journeys to Sweden for the Finals in Falun March 16-18. The schedule is very U.S.-centric with an opening freestyle sprint on Friday, a 15k/10k classic mass start on Saturday and a 15k/10k freestyle pursuit Sunday to close the season. Diggins (Afton, Minn.) is third in the overall and distance World Cup standings, while Sophie Caldwell (Peru, Vt.) is third in the sprint standings.

FIS Men’s Ski Jumping World Cup - Lillehammer/Trondheim/Vikersund, Norway
Kevin Bickner (Wauconda, Ill.) and Michael Glasder (Cary, Ill.) will close out the Raw Air Tournament with four competitions March 13-18. Athletes will take to the HS140 hill in Lillehammer on March 13 followed by the HS138 hill in Trondheim. The weekend closes out with ski flying on the HS240 hill in Vikersund March 17-18.

FIS Nordic Combined World Cup - Trondheim, Norway; Klingenthal, Germany
Brothers Bryan and Taylor Fletcher (Steamboat Springs, Colo.), Jasper Good (Steamboat Springs, Colo.) and Ben Loomis (Eau Claire, Wisc.) kick off the week in Trondheim with two events on March 13 and 14. These events will be the final events of Bryan’s career. Stephen Schumann (Park City, Utah) joins Fletcher, Good and Loomis for another doubleheader in Klingenthal.

FIS Snowboard World Cup - Veysonnaz, Switzerland (Snowboardcross World Cup Finals)
The snowboardcross World Cup season concludes this weekend with individual and team events in Veysonnaz, Switzerland. The U.S. is coming off a successful weekend with a team podium and multiple top 10 individual finishes last weekend in Moscow and will be fielding a strong men’s team for World Cup finals.

FIS Snowboard World Cup - Seiseralm, Italy (Slopestyle World Cup Finals)
Seiseralm will also play host to the final slopestyle snowboarding event of the season this week with qualifications on Thursday, March 15 and finals on Saturday, March 17. Chris Corning (Silverthorne. Colo.), Ryan Stassel (Anchorage, Alaska), Chandler Hunt (Park City, Utah), Judd Henkes (La Jolla, Calif.), Lyon Farrell (Haiku, Hawaii) and Eric Willett (Breckenridge, Colo.) will represent the U.S. Olympic gold medalist Red Gerard (Silverthorne, Colo.) currently leads the World Cup standings, but will not be competing.

HOW TO WATCH
*All times EDT

ALPINE
Wednesday, March 14

5:30 a.m. - World Cup Finals men’s downhill, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
7:00 a.m. - World Cup Finals women’s downhill, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
12:00 p.m. - World Cup Finals men’s downhill, Are - NBCSN - Same Day Broadcast
1:00 p.m. - World Cup Finals women’s downhill, Are - NBCSN - Same Day Broadcast

Thursday, March, 15
5:30 a.m. - World Cup Finals women’s super-G, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
7:00 a.m. - World Cup Finals men’s super-G, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
12:00 p.m. - World Cup Finals women’s super-G, Are - NBCSN - Same Day Broadcast
1:00 p.m. - World Cup Finals men’s super-G, Are - NBCSN - Same Day Broadcast

Friday, March 16
11:00 a.m. - World Cup Finals team event, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
5:30 p.m. - World Cup Finals team event, Are - NBCSN - Same Day Broadcast

Saturday, March 17
4:45 a.m. - World Cup Finals men’s giant slalom run 1, Are - OlympicChannel.com
5:45 a.m. - World Cup Finals women’s slalom run 1, Are - OlympicChannel.com
7:30 a.m. - World Cup Finals men’s giant slalom, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
8:30 a.m. - World Cup Finals women’s slalom, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
6:30 p.m. - World Cup Finals men’s giant slalom, Are - NBCSN - Same Day Broadcast
7:30 p.m. - World Cup Finals women’s slalom, Are - NBCSN - Same Day Broadcast

Sunday, March 18
4:45 a.m. - World Cup Finals women’s giant slalom run 1, Are - OlympicChannel.com
5:45 a.m. - World Cup Finals men’s slalom run 1, Are - OlympicChannel.com
7:30 a.m. - World Cup Finals women’s giant slalom, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
8:30 a.m. - World Cup Finals men’s slalom, Are - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE
3:00 p.m. - World Cup Finals men’s slalom & women’s giant slalom, Are - NBCSN - Same Day Broadcast

FREESKI
March 16

6:30 a.m. - Slopestyle, Seiseralm - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE

March 17
8:30 a.m. - Skicross, Megeve - OlympicChannel.com
1:00 p.m. - Skicross, Megeve - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast

FREESTYLE
March 18

7:30 a.m. - Dual moguls, Megeve - OlympicChannel.com
3:00 p.m. - Dual moguls, Megeve - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast

CROSS COUNTRY
March 16

7:15 a.m. - Men and women’s sprint, Falun - OlympicChannel.com
2:00 p.m. - Men and women’s sprint, Falun - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast

March 17
6:30 a.m. - Women’s 10k mass start, Falun -  OlympicChannel.com
9:30 a.m. - Men’s 15k mass start, Falun -  OlympicChannel.com
4:00 p.m. - Women’s 10k mass start, Falun - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast

March 18
6:30 a.m. - Women’s 10k pursuit, Falun - OlympicChannel.com
9:15 a.m. - Men’s 15k pursuit, Falun - OlympicChannel.com
4:00 p.m. - Women’s 10k pursuit, Falun - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast

SKI JUMPING
March 14

12:30 p.m. - Men’s HS138 qualifying, Trondheim - OlympicChannel.com

March 15
12:00 p.m. - Men’s HS138, Trondheim - Olympic Channel TV - LIVE

March 16
12:30 p.m. - Men’s HS240 qualifying, Vikersund - OlympicChannel.com

March 17
11:15 a.m. - Men’s HS240 Team, Vikersund - OlympicChannel.com
7:30 a.m. - Men’s HS240 Team, Vikersund - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast

March 18
11:30 a.m. - Men’s HS240, Vikersund - OlympicChannel.com
6:00 p.m. - Men’s HS240, Vikersund - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast

NORDIC COMBINED
March 14

8:00 a.m. - Men’s HS 140, Trondheim - OlympicChannel.com
8:00 a.m. - Men’s individual, Trondheim - OlympicChannel.com

March 17
4:45 a.m. - Men’s HS 140, Klingenthal - OlympicChannel.com
8:45 a.m. - Men’s 4x5k, Klingenthal - OlympicChannel.com

March 18
7:30 a.m. - Men’s HS 130, Klingenthal - OlympicChannel.com
11:00 a.m. - Men’s 10k, Klingenthal - OlympicChannel.com

SNOWBOARDING
March 17

5:50 a.m. - Parallel giant slalom, Winterberg - OlympicChannel.com
6:30 a.m. - Snowboardcross, Veysonnaz - OlympicChannel.com
11:00 a.m. - Snowboardcross, Veysonnaz - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast
12:00 p.m. - Slopestyle, Seiseralm - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast

March 18
4:35 a.m. - Parallel giant slalom team, Winterberg - OlympicChannel.com
6:30 a.m. - Snowboardcross team, Veysonnaz  - OlympicChannel.com
11:00 a.m. - Snowboardcross team, Veysonnaz - Olympic Channel TV - Same Day Broadcast