Austrian alpine skier
Josef "Sepp" Walcher
Walcher in December 1977
Born (1954-12-08 ) 8 December 1954Schladming , Styria , Austria Died 22 January 1984(1984-01-22) (aged 29)Schladming, Styria, Austria Occupation Alpine skier Height 178 cm (5 ft 10 in) Disciplines Downhill World Cup debut December 1972 (age 18) Retired March 1982 (age 27) Teams 2 – (1976 , 1980 ) Medals 0 Teams 3 – (1976 , 1978 , 1980 ) Medals 1 (1 gold) Seasons 10 – (1973 –1982 ) Wins 5 – (5 DH ) Podiums 13 – (13 DH) Overall titles 0 – (7th in 1978 ) Discipline titles 0 – (2nd DH : 1977 , 1978 )
Josef "Sepp" Walcher (December 8, 1954 – January 22, 1984) was an Austrian World Cup alpine ski racer . He specialized in the downhill event and won the gold medal at the World Championships in 1978 at Garmisch , West Germany .[ 1] [ 2]
Biography
Sepp Walcher in action in 1978 Wengen downhill.
Walcher memorial in Schladming
Born in Schladming , Styria , Walcher made his World Cup debut in December 1972 , two days after his 18th birthday. Two months later, he scored his first World Cup points (and podium) with a runner-up finish at St. Moritz , Switzerland . Walcher's first World Cup victory came in January 1977 at Morzine , France , his seventh podium.[ 3] [ 4] His best two seasons were 1977 and 1978 , finishing runner-up to compatriot Franz Klammer in the downhill standings both years. A week prior to his win at the world championships in 1978, Walcher won consecutive downhills at Kitzbühel , Austria.[ 5] [ 6]
Walcher retired after the 1982 season with five World Cup victories and thirteen podium finishes. Two years later, he was killed at age 29 in a skiing accident in a benefit race in 1984 at his hometown of Schladming, the race was a 8 km downhill where the skiers started only 30 second one from the each other.[ 7]
World Cup results
Season standings
Season
Age
Overall
Slalom
Giant Slalom
Super G
Downhill
Combined
1973
18
28
—
—
not run
11
not awarded
1974
19
29
—
—
11
1975
20
23
—
—
12
1976
21
30
—
—
13
—
1977
22
8
—
—
2
not awarded
1978
23
7
—
—
2
1979
24
39
—
—
13
1980
25
22
—
—
7
—
1981
26
41
—
—
14
—
1982
27
50
—
—
18
—
Race podiums
5 wins – (5 DH)
13 podiums – (13 DH)
Season
Date
Location
Discipline
Place
1973
11 Feb 1973
St. Moritz , Switzerland
Downhill
2nd
1974
18 Dec 1973
Zell am See , Austria
Downhill
3rd
1975
5 Jan 1975
Garmisch , West Germany
Downhill
3rd
1976
25 Jan 1976
Kitzbühel , Austria
Downhill
3rd
1977
18 Dec 1976
Val Gardena , Italy
Downhill
2nd
30 Jan 1977
Morzine , France
Downhill
2nd
31 Jan 1977
Downhill
1st
12 Mar 1977
Heavenly Valley , USA
Downhill
1st
1978
11 Dec 1977
Val d'Isère , France
Downhill
3rd
20 Jan 1978
Kitzbühel, Austria
Downhill
1st
21 Jan 1978
Downhill[ 8]
1st
1979
16 Dec 1978
Val Gardena, Italy
Downhill
1st
1980
18 Jan 1980
Wengen , Switzerland
Downhill
2nd
World championship results
Year
Age
Slalom
Giant Slalom
Super-G
Downhill
Combined
1976
21
—
—
not run
9
—
1978
23
—
27
1
—
1980
25
—
—
— ^
—
From 1948 through 1980 , the Winter Olympics were also the World Championships for alpine skiing.
Olympic results
Year
Age
Slalom
Giant Slalom
Super-G
Downhill
Combined
1976
21
—
—
not run
9
not run
1980
25
—
—
— ^
^ Walcher made the downhill team in 1980 but was dropped the day before the race, replaced by alternate Leonhard Stock , who won the gold medal. [ 9] [ 10] [ 11]
References
^ "Downhill gold for Walcher" . Reading Eagle . Associated Press. January 30, 1978. p. 21.
^ "Walcher winner" . Spokesman-Review . Associated Press. January 30, 1978. p. 15.
^ "Josef Walcher surprise winner" . Spokesman-Review . Associated Press. February 1, 1977. p. 17.
^ "Downhill star Klammer loses second race in row" . Montreal Gazette . Canadian Press. February 1, 1978. p. 15.
^ "Walcher triumphs" . The Hour . Norwalk, CT. UPI. January 20, 1978. p. 21.
^ "Klammer upset in downhill" . Montreal Gazette . Reuters. January 21, 1978. p. 13.
^ "Austrian ski star killed in accident" . New York Times . UPI. January 23, 1984. Retrieved April 4, 2014 .
^ Shared win with Josef Ferstl
^ "For Stock, it was an uphill battle" . St. Petersburg Independent . Associated Press. February 15, 1980. p. 5C.
^ Mizell, Hubert (February 15, 1980). "Unknown Austrian skier Stock suddenly is hero" . St. Petersburg Times . p. 1C.
^ Johnson, William Oscar (February 25, 1980). "Austria storms the hill" . Sports Illustrated . p. 22. Archived from the original on February 19, 2010.
External links