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Karl Schranz
Alpine skier

Karl Schranz

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Alpine skier
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Sankt Anton am Arlberg
Age
85 years
Karl Schranz
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Karl Schranz (born 18 November 1938) is a former champion alpine ski racer from Austria, one of the best of the 1960s and early 1970s.
Born and raised in St. Anton, Tyrol, Schranz had a lengthy ski career, from 1957 to 1972. He won twenty major downhills, many major giant slalom races and several major slaloms. Late in his career he was the successor to Jean-Claude Killy as the World Cup overall champion; Schranz won the title at age 30 in the third World Cup season of 1969, and repeated in 1970. He was also the downhill champion for those two seasons and was the giant slalom season champion in 1969. Schranz won the both the "classic downhills" four times each: the Hahnenkamm at Kitzbühel, Austria, (1966,1969, 1972,1972), and the Lauberhorn at Wengen, Switzerland, (1959, 1963, 1966, 1969). He also excelled at the legendary Arlberg-Kandahar events, winning nine times, from 1957 (Chamonix) to 1970 (Garmisch-Partenkirchen).

Early years

Schranz' father was a tunnel worker in St. Anton, which led to an early death from tuberculosis; his widow was left to raise five children. In addition to the hardship their house burned down. At age 12, Schranz became an apprentice ski maker, worked in a sawmill, and later became a ski tester. Schranz began skiing before age five on salvaged broken skis, left by tourists and reworked by his father.

While just age 18, he won the first of three consecutive Arlberg-Kandahar downhill and combined titles at Chamonix in March 1957. Schranz won again the following year, rotated back to his hometown at St. Anton, and also in 1959 at Garmisch, West Germany. He missed the 1958 World Championships in Bad Gastein due to illness.

Olympics

The Olympics were unfortunately Schranz's nemesis. His disqualification from his fourth Olympics in 1972 for acknowledging that he, like all other top racers, was not a pure amateur caused a furor and subsequent reform of the IOC. In his first Olympics at age 21, Schranz was injured in 1960, but started anyway and finished seventh in both the downhill and giant slalom. He won a silver medal in giant slalom in 1964 at Innsbruck, despite being ill with the flu.

In 1968 at Grenoble, France, Schranz competed in all three alpine events, held at Chamrousse. He finished fifth in the downhill and sixth in the giant slalom, both won by rival Jean-Claude Killy of the host country. In his first run in the slalom, Schranz time was only 0.32 behind. His second run was run in a very dense fog, which hampered his visibility, and Schranz was impeded by a race official which affected his race. He was given another chance to run the second run and took the lead, but was later informed that his first attempt at run two should have been counted as he missed a gate before encountering the race official, and Schranz was disqualified. A jury upheld the decision and Killy was declared the winner for a third Olympic gold medal in the same games. There was a great deal of controversy over the suspicion that partisan French officials were attempting unfairly to prevent Schranz from winning so that Killy would sweep all three races, duplicating Toni Sailer's 1956 sweep.

Schranz had better success at the world championships of non-Olympic years: gold in the downhill and combined in 1962 and gold in the giant slalom in 1970. (From 1948 through 1980, the Winter Olympics were also the world championships for alpine skiing.)

Classified as a professional by the International Olympic Committee, Schranz was banned from the 1972 Winter Olympics and retired from the World Cup circuit in mid-February at age 33. In July 1973, he joined the pro ski racing circuit.

Had the World Cup begun a decade earlier, Schranz's outstanding achievements during his prime would be far better known. He would for instance rank behind only Klammer as the second best downhiller ever and would have been the overall world cup champion three (1966, 1969, 1970) or more times.

Schranz later became a hotel owner in his hometown of St. Anton and played a key role in organizing the 2001 World Championships.

World Cup results

Season titles

  • 5 titles - (2 overall, 2 DH, 1 GS)
SeasonDiscipline
1969Overall
Downhill
Giant Slalom
1970Overall
Downhill

Season standings

SeasonAgeOverall Slalom Giant
 Slalom 
Super GDownhillCombined
196728778not
run
13not
awarded
196829820113
1969301911
19703111341
19713211128
19723382

Results from the 1968 Winter Olympics and 1970 Word Championships were included the World Cup standings.

Individual races

  • 12 wins - (8 DH, 4 GS)
  • 23 podiums - (12 DH, 9 GS, 2 SL)
Schranz winning at Wengen in 1966,
prior to the first World Cup season
SeasonDateLocationDiscipline
196912 December 1968France Val-d'Isère, FranceGiant Slalom
11 January 1969 Switzerland  Wengen, SwitzerlandDownhill
18 January 1969Austria Kitzbühel, AustriaDownhill
1 February 1969Austria St. Anton, AustriaDownhill
15 March 1969Canada Mont St. Anne, CanadaGiant Slalom
19705 January 1970 Switzerland  Adelboden, SwitzerlandGiant Slalom
23 January 1970France Megève, FranceDownhill
1 February 1970West Germany Garmisch, West GermanyDownhill
10 February 1970Italy Val Gardena, ItalyGiant Slalom
197212 December 1971France Val-d'Isère, FranceDownhill
14 January 1972Austria Kitzbühel, AustriaDownhill
15 January 1972Downhill

World Championship results

  Year   Age  Slalom Giant
 Slalom 
Super-GDownhillCombined
195819not run
19602177
1962234211
196425242116
196627DNF139
196829DSQ265
197031DNF214
197233

From 1948 through 1980, the Winter Olympics were also the World Championships for alpine skiing.
At the World Championships from 1954 through 1980, the combined was a "paper race" using the results of the three events (DH, GS, SL).

1958: illness
1972: banned by IOC

Olympic results

  Year   Age  Slalom Giant
 Slalom 
Super-GDownhillCombined
1960217not run7not run
19642524211
196829DSQ265
197233

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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