- Didier Cuche
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Didier Cuche Personal information Full name Didier Cuche Born August 16, 1974
Le Pâquier, Neuchâtel, SwitzerlandHeight 5 ft 8.5 in (1.74 m) Professional information Club Chasseral Dombresson Skis Head World Cup Seasons 1993 - present Wins 17 Additional podiums 43 Total podiums 60 Updated on 2011-03-13. Medal record Competitor for Switzerland Men's Alpine Skiing Olympic Games Silver 1998 Nagano Super-G World Championships Gold 2009 Val d'Isère Super-G Silver 2011 Garmisch Downhill Silver 2009 Val d'Isère Downhill Bronze 2007 Åre Giant Slalom Didier Cuche (born August 16, 1974, in Le Pâquier, Neuchâtel) is a Swiss alpine ski racer. He primarily competes in the speed disciplines of downhill and Super-G, along with the technical discipline of giant slalom. He is the reigning World Cup downhill and Super-G champion for the 2011 season and has won three previous downhill titles in 2010, 2008 and 2007, along with a giant slalom title in 2009. Through March 2011, Cuche has 17 World Cup race victories, along with 60 podiums (top three) and 170 top ten finishes.[1] He is also an Olympic silver medalist and has won a total of four World Championships medals (a gold, two silvers, and a bronze).
Contents
Career highlights
At the 1998 Winter Olympics in Nagano, Japan, Cuche was the silver medalist in the Super-G, where he had exactly the same time as Hans Knauss resulting in a rare sharing of the medal (no bronze medal was awarded).
Cuche switched from Atomic to Head skis following the 2006 season, joining Bode Miller and Hermann Maier.
During the 2007 season, Cuche was in top form, winning the downhill season title with a victory and four second place finishes. In the Bormio downhill on December 28, 2006, he finished second, 0.01 seconds behind winner Michael Walchhofer, the smallest measurable amount in ski racing.
Cuche repeated as the World Cup downhill season champion in 2008 with 584 points, five ahead of overall champion Bode Miller. Cuche finished third overall and nearly won the Super-G season title, finishing a single point behind champion Hannes Reichelt.[2]
At the 2009 World Championships in Val d'Isère, France, Cuche won the Super-G and was the silver medalist in the downhill.
A week after winning the Super-G and downhill at Kitzbühel in 2010, Cuche broke his right thumb in the giant slalom at Kranjska Gora, Slovenia on January 29, two weeks before the 2010 Winter Olympics.[3] The injury put Cuche's Olympic participation in doubt, and he was immediately flown to Switzerland. After successful thumb surgery, he was cleared to compete in the Olympics in Canada.[4] Cuche had a disappointing Olympics and did not medal, however he regained the title of World Cup downhill champion for the 2010 season at the first post-Olympic race. Cuche won the downhill on the challenging Olympiabakken course at Kvitfjell, Norway, on March 6 for his fifth World Cup victory of the season. Until 2010, Cuche had never won more than two World Cup events in a single season.
On January 22, 2011, Cuche became the oldest race winner in the history of the World Cup, winning the Hahnenkamm downhill in Kitzbühel at the age of 36 years, 159 days.[5] It was also his fourth downhill victory in Kitzbühel, which ties him with Franz Klammer for the record on the Hahnenkamm, which is generally considered the most difficult and dangerous of all downhill courses. He extended his age record a week later, with another downhill win in Chamonix at the age of 36 years, 166 days.
At the 2011 World Championships in February, he won the silver medal in the downhill. In March he won the downhill champion title for the 2011 season. This marked the fourth time he captured the title (2011, 2010, 2008, 2007), a record only surpassed by Franz Klammer who won the title five times. He ended the 2010-11 FIS World Cup season in first place ranking in Downhill and Super-G, finishing second in the Overall rankings to Ivica Kostelic.
World Cup victories
Season titles
6 season titles: 4 downhill, 1 Super-G, 1 giant slalom
Season Discipline 2007 Downhill 2008 Downhill 2009 Giant Slalom 2010 Downhill 2011 Downhill Super-G Race victories
17 race victories: (9 downhill, 5 super G, 3 giant slalom)
Season Date Location Race 1998 23 Jan 1998 Kitzbühel, Austria Downhill 2002 05 Jan 2002 Adelboden, Switzerland Giant Slalom 07 Mar 2002 Altenmarkt, Austria Super-G 2003 08 Dec 2002 Beaver Creek, USA Super-G 2004 30 Jan 2004 Garmisch, Germany Downhill 2007 10 Mar 2007 Kvitfjell, Norway Downhill 2008 14 Dec 2007 Val Gardena, Italy Super-G 19 Jan 2008 Kitzbühel, Austria Downhill 2009 21 Feb 2009 Sestriere, Italy Giant Slalom 2010 25 Oct 2009 Sölden, Austria Giant Slalom 28 Nov 2009 Lake Louise, Canada Downhill 22 Jan 2010 Kitzbühel, Austria Super-G 23 Jan 2010 Downhill 06 Mar 2010 Kvitfjell, Norway Downhill 2011 22 Jan 2011 Kitzbühel, Austria Downhill 29 Jan 2011 Chamonix, France Downhill 13 Mar 2011 Kvitfjell, Norway Super-G References
- ^ Ski-db.com - results - Didier Cuche - accessed 2011-03-17
- ^ afp.google.com
- ^ sportsillustrated.cnn.com - 2010-01-29
- ^ abcnews.go.com - 9710341
- ^ "Triumphant Didier Cuche sets age mark". ESPN.com. Associated Press (ESPN). 22 January 2011. http://sports.espn.go.com/oly/skiing/news/story?id=6047868. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
External links
- Didier Cuche at the International Ski Federation
- FIS-ski.com - World Cup season standings - 1996-2011
- Didier Cuche.ch - (French) - official site
1987: Pirmin Zurbriggen | 1989: Martin Hangl | 1991: Stephan Eberharter | 1993: unassigned | 1996: Atle Skårdal | 1997: Atle Skårdal | 1999: Lasse Kjus and Hermann Maier | 2001: Daron Rahlves | 2003: Stephan Eberharter | 2005: Bode Miller | 2007: Patrick Staudacher | 2009: Didier Cuche | 2011: Christof InnerhoferCategories:- 1974 births
- Living people
- People from Val-de-Ruz District
- Swiss alpine skiers
- Olympic silver medalists for Switzerland
- Olympic alpine skiers of Switzerland
- Alpine skiers at the 1998 Winter Olympics
- Alpine skiers at the 2002 Winter Olympics
- Alpine skiers at the 2006 Winter Olympics
- Alpine skiers at the 2010 Winter Olympics
- Olympic medalists in alpine skiing
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