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Gustav Thöni

Gustav Thöni (Italian pronunciation: [ˈɡustav ˈtøːni; ˈteːni]; sometimes listed as Gustavo Thoeni;[2] born 28 February 1951) is an Italian retired alpine ski racer.

Gustav Thöni
Alpine skier
Thöni in 1972
DisciplinesGiant slalom, slalom, downhill, combined
ClubFiamme Gialle[1]
Born (1951-02-28) 28 February 1951 (age 71)
Trafoi, South Tyrol, Italy
Height173 cm (5 ft 8 in)
World Cup debut11 December 1969 (age 18)
RetiredMarch 1980 (age 29)
Olympics
Teams3 (1972, 1976, 1980)
Medals3 (1 gold)
World Championships
Teams6 (197080)
(includes three Olympics)
Medals7 (5 gold)
World Cup
Seasons11 (197080)
Wins24
Podiums69
Overall titles4 (197173, '75)
Discipline titles5 (3 GS, 2 SL)
Medal record
World Cup race podiums
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
Slalom 8 15 9
Giant 11 7 8
Downhill 0 1 1
Combined 4 2 2
Parallel 1 0 0
Total 24 25 20
International alpine ski competitions
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
Olympic Games 1 2 0
World Championships 5 2 0
Total 6 4 0
Olympic Games
1972 Sapporo Giant slalom
1972 Sapporo Slalom
1976 Innsbruck Slalom
World Championships
1972 Sapporo Combined
1972 Sapporo Giant Slalom
1972 Sapporo Slalom
1974 St. Moritz Giant slalom
1974 St. Moritz Slalom
1976 Innsbruck Combined
1976 Innsbruck Slalom

Career

Thöni was born in the German-speaking province of South Tyrol, in the hamlet of Trafoi of the Stilfs municipality, which is situated on the northern ramp of the Stelvio Pass. He currently operates a hotel there.[3]

Ranked among the greatest Italian skiers ever, Thöni won three Olympic medals and a total of four overall World Cup titles in five years in the early 1970s. The four titles are an achievement he shares with Pirmin Zurbriggen and Hermann Maier, exceeded by Marcel Hirscher's eight and Marc Girardelli's five.

Thöni was the dominant skier in the technical events (slalom and giant slalom) in the early 1970s. At Val d'Isère, on December 12, 1968, was his World Cup debut. The 17-year-old placed 40th in the giant slalom (bib 110). His first victory came in the first race of the next season, a giant slalom at Val d'Isère, France, in December 1969. Still a teenager, he had a very successful rookie year during that 1970 season with four victories and nine podiums. He finished third in the overall standings, just eight points behind winner Karl Schranz of Austria. Thöni won the overall title the next three seasons of 197173, and again in 1975. He was succeeded as the dominant technical skier by Ingemar Stenmark of Sweden, then by Alberto Tomba.

The year that Thöni did not win (1974), he was a close second to his fellow countryman and friend Piero Gros.[4] He did win two world titles that year, in giant slalom and slalom,[5][6] at the 1974 World Championships,[7] but those results were not included in the World Cup standings.

Although he concentrated on the technical events, he did occasionally compete in the only speed event of the era, the downhill (the Super-G was not run on the World Cup circuit until December 1982). His best finish in a downhill was a second place on the Hahnenkamm, Kitzbühel, Austria, in January 1975. After more than two minutes on the classic Streif course, he lost to the up-and-coming Austrian legend Franz Klammer by just one-hundredth of a second, a distance of about 25 cm (10 in) at 130 km/h (80 mph). This event inspired the 1981 movie Un centesimo di secondo by Duccio Tessari, which featured Thöni himself.[3]

Thöni also won a number of combined events (downhill & slalom) during his career, including the non-medal titles in the combined at the Olympics in 1972 and 1976 (but counted as world championship titles).

Thöni's final victory in a slalom came in March 1975 at Sun Valley. He won the final race of the season, a parallel slalom ("pro-style" heats) the following week in Val Gardena, Italy, against his challenger Stenmark to secure the overall title. His last win in giant slalom was in January 1976, and his final World Cup victory was in the combined at Kitzbühel in January 1977. His last podium finish was a third place in the slalom at Åre, Sweden, in February 1979.[8]

He finished eighth in the slalom at the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid. As the torch had been passed on to the two top finishers, Stenmark and American Phil Mahre, Thöni retired from World Cup competition a month later in March 1980 at the age of 29. Later, he was a personal coach to Alberto Tomba (1989–1996). In parallel, he was technical director of the men's national team, and then, until 1999, general manager of both male and female national teams.[9]

Thöni was the Italian flag bearer at the opening ceremonies of the 1976 and 1980 Olympics and at the closing of the 2006 Winter Games in Torino. In 1973 and 1974 he was named "Skieur d’Or" by international ski journalists. He is mentioned in the song "Nuntereggae più" by Rino Gaetano. His cousin Roland Thöni was also a World Cup alpine ski racer in the 1970s. Roland took bronze in the slalom at the 1972 Olympics, while Gustav took the silver.[3]

World Cup results

 
Thöni in 1970
 
Thöni at age 18 in the slalom
at the 1970 World Championships

Season titles

  • 8 titles (4 overall, 2 giant slalom, 2 slalom)
Season Discipline
1970 Giant slalom
1971 Overall
1972 Overall
Giant slalom
1973 Overall
Slalom
1974 Slalom
1975 Overall

Season standings

Season Age  Overall   Slalom  Giant
 Slalom 
Super G Downhill Combined
1970 19 3 4 1 not
run
awarded
only
in 1976
& 1980
1971 20 1 2 2 13
1972 21 1 4 1 17
1973 22 1 1 4
1974 23 2 1 3
1975 24 1 3 4 9
1976 25 3 3 2 2
1977 26 6 5 10
1978 27 26 22 10 23
1979 28 9 9 20
1980 29 51 18

Race victories

  • 24 wins (11 GS, 8 SL, 4K, 1 PR)
    • 69 podiums (2 DH, 26 GS, 32 SL, 8 K, 1 PR)
      • 25 second places
      • 20 third places
  • World Cup races (over 300 starts)
Season Date Location Discipline
1970 11 Dec 1969   Val d'Isère, France Giant slalom
4 Jan 1970   Bad Hindelang, West Germany Slalom
29 Jan 1970   Madonna di Campiglio, Italy Giant slalom
30 Jan 1970 Giant slalom
1971 10 Jan 1971   Madonna di Campiglio, Italy Slalom
21 Feb 1971   Sugarloaf, ME, USA Giant slalom
25 Feb 1971   Heavenly Valley, CA, USA Slalom
27 Feb 1971 Giant slalom
1972 2 Mar 1972   Heavenly Valley, CA, USA Giant slalom
1973 15 Jan 1973     Adelboden, Switzerland Giant slalom
4 Feb 1973   St. Anton, Austria Slalom
4 Mar 1973   Mont Ste. Anne, QC, Canada Slalom
1974 20 Jan 1974     Adelboden, Switzerland Giant slalom
2 Mar 1974   Voss, Norway Giant slalom
10 Mar 1974   Vysoke Tatry, Czechoslovakia Slalom
1975 12 Jan 1975     Wengen, Switzerland Combined
19 Jan 1975   Kitzbühel, Austria Combined
30 Jan 1975   Chamonix, France Slalom
1 Feb 1975   Megève, France Combined
15 Mar 1975   Sun Valley, ID, USA Slalom
23 Mar 1975   Val Gardena, Italy Parallel
1976 5 Dec 1975   Val d'Isère, France  Giant slalom 
12 Jan 1976     Adelboden, Switzerland Giant slalom
1977 16 Jan 1977     Wengen, Switzerland Combined

World championship results

  Year    Age   Slalom  Giant
 Slalom 
Super-G Downhill Combined
1970 18 4 DNF not
run
1972 20 2 1 13 1
1974 22 1 1
1976 24 2 4 26 1
1978 26 DNF1 24 12
1980 28 8

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).

Olympic results

  Year    Age   Slalom  Giant
 Slalom 
Super-G Downhill Combined
1972 20 2 1 not
run
13 not
run
1976 24 2 4 26
1980 28 8

See also

Video

  • Video – montage – Gustav Thöni on YouTube
  • Video – 1972 Winter Olympics – Gustav Thöni on YouTube
  • Video – Val Gardena, Italy – parallel slalom – Gustav Thöni & Ingemar Stenmark – 1975-03-23 on YouTube

References

  1. ^ "Sport invernali statistiche Olimpiadi" (in Italian). fiammegialle.org. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  2. ^ "(cover)". Skiing. February 1976.
  3. ^ a b c Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. . Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020.
  4. ^ Waha, Eric (11 March 1974). "Thoeni wins ski battles, loses title". Schenectady Gazette. New York. Associated Press. p. 33.
  5. ^ "Thoeni seen 'True champ' after world GS triumph". Montreal Gazette. Associated Press. 6 February 1974. p. 38.
  6. ^ "Thoeni adds second skiing gold". Montreal Gazette. UPI. 11 February 1974. p. 17.
  7. ^ Johnson, William (18 February 1974). "Along came the little people". Sports Illustrated: 24.
  8. ^ "COMPETITORS HAVING MORE THAN ONE PODIUM". fis-ski.com. Retrieved 8 February 2018.
  9. ^ "COMPETITORS HAVING MORE THAN ONE TOP 10 POSITION". fis-ski.com. Retrieved 8 February 2018.

External links

  • Gustav Thöni at FIS (alpine) 
  • Gustav Thöni at Olympedia 
  • Gustav Thöni at the Italian National Olympic Committee (in Italian) 
  • Gustav Thöni at Ski-DB Alpine Ski Database  
  • Gustav Thöni at Bella-Vista.it

gustav, thöni, italian, pronunciation, ˈɡustav, ˈtøːni, ˈteːni, sometimes, listed, gustavo, thoeni, born, february, 1951, italian, retired, alpine, racer, alpine, skierthöni, 1972disciplinesgiant, slalom, slalom, downhill, combinedclubfiamme, gialle, born, 195. Gustav Thoni Italian pronunciation ˈɡustav ˈtoːni ˈteːni sometimes listed as Gustavo Thoeni 2 born 28 February 1951 is an Italian retired alpine ski racer Gustav ThoniAlpine skierThoni in 1972DisciplinesGiant slalom slalom downhill combinedClubFiamme Gialle 1 Born 1951 02 28 28 February 1951 age 71 Trafoi South Tyrol ItalyHeight173 cm 5 ft 8 in World Cup debut11 December 1969 age 18 RetiredMarch 1980 age 29 OlympicsTeams3 1972 1976 1980 Medals3 1 gold World ChampionshipsTeams6 1970 80 includes three Olympics Medals7 5 gold World CupSeasons11 1970 80 Wins24Podiums69Overall titles4 1971 73 75 Discipline titles5 3 GS 2 SL Medal record World Cup race podiumsEvent 1st 2nd 3rdSlalom 8 15 9Giant 11 7 8Downhill 0 1 1Combined 4 2 2Parallel 1 0 0Total 24 25 20International alpine ski competitionsEvent 1st 2nd 3rdOlympic Games 1 2 0World Championships 5 2 0Total 6 4 0Olympic Games1972 Sapporo Giant slalom1972 Sapporo Slalom1976 Innsbruck SlalomWorld Championships1972 Sapporo Combined1972 Sapporo Giant Slalom1972 Sapporo Slalom1974 St Moritz Giant slalom1974 St Moritz Slalom1976 Innsbruck Combined1976 Innsbruck Slalom Contents 1 Career 2 World Cup results 2 1 Season titles 2 2 Season standings 2 3 Race victories 3 World championship results 4 Olympic results 5 See also 6 Video 7 References 8 External linksCareer EditThoni was born in the German speaking province of South Tyrol in the hamlet of Trafoi of the Stilfs municipality which is situated on the northern ramp of the Stelvio Pass He currently operates a hotel there 3 Ranked among the greatest Italian skiers ever Thoni won three Olympic medals and a total of four overall World Cup titles in five years in the early 1970s The four titles are an achievement he shares with Pirmin Zurbriggen and Hermann Maier exceeded by Marcel Hirscher s eight and Marc Girardelli s five Thoni was the dominant skier in the technical events slalom and giant slalom in the early 1970s At Val d Isere on December 12 1968 was his World Cup debut The 17 year old placed 40th in the giant slalom bib 110 His first victory came in the first race of the next season a giant slalom at Val d Isere France in December 1969 Still a teenager he had a very successful rookie year during that 1970 season with four victories and nine podiums He finished third in the overall standings just eight points behind winner Karl Schranz of Austria Thoni won the overall title the next three seasons of 1971 73 and again in 1975 He was succeeded as the dominant technical skier by Ingemar Stenmark of Sweden then by Alberto Tomba The year that Thoni did not win 1974 he was a close second to his fellow countryman and friend Piero Gros 4 He did win two world titles that year in giant slalom and slalom 5 6 at the 1974 World Championships 7 but those results were not included in the World Cup standings Although he concentrated on the technical events he did occasionally compete in the only speed event of the era the downhill the Super G was not run on the World Cup circuit until December 1982 His best finish in a downhill was a second place on the Hahnenkamm Kitzbuhel Austria in January 1975 After more than two minutes on the classic Streif course he lost to the up and coming Austrian legend Franz Klammer by just one hundredth of a second a distance of about 25 cm 10 in at 130 km h 80 mph This event inspired the 1981 movie Un centesimo di secondo by Duccio Tessari which featured Thoni himself 3 Thoni also won a number of combined events downhill amp slalom during his career including the non medal titles in the combined at the Olympics in 1972 and 1976 but counted as world championship titles Thoni s final victory in a slalom came in March 1975 at Sun Valley He won the final race of the season a parallel slalom pro style heats the following week in Val Gardena Italy against his challenger Stenmark to secure the overall title His last win in giant slalom was in January 1976 and his final World Cup victory was in the combined at Kitzbuhel in January 1977 His last podium finish was a third place in the slalom at Are Sweden in February 1979 8 He finished eighth in the slalom at the 1980 Winter Olympics at Lake Placid As the torch had been passed on to the two top finishers Stenmark and American Phil Mahre Thoni retired from World Cup competition a month later in March 1980 at the age of 29 Later he was a personal coach to Alberto Tomba 1989 1996 In parallel he was technical director of the men s national team and then until 1999 general manager of both male and female national teams 9 Thoni was the Italian flag bearer at the opening ceremonies of the 1976 and 1980 Olympics and at the closing of the 2006 Winter Games in Torino In 1973 and 1974 he was named Skieur d Or by international ski journalists He is mentioned in the song Nuntereggae piu by Rino Gaetano His cousin Roland Thoni was also a World Cup alpine ski racer in the 1970s Roland took bronze in the slalom at the 1972 Olympics while Gustav took the silver 3 World Cup results Edit Thoni in 1970 Thoni at age 18 in the slalomat the 1970 World Championships Season titles Edit 8 titles 4 overall 2 giant slalom 2 slalom Season Discipline1970 Giant slalom1971 Overall1972 OverallGiant slalom1973 OverallSlalom1974 Slalom1975 OverallSeason standings Edit Season Age Overall Slalom Giant Slalom Super G Downhill Combined1970 19 3 4 1 notrun awardedonlyin 1976 amp 19801971 20 1 2 2 131972 21 1 4 1 171973 22 1 1 4 1974 23 2 1 3 1975 24 1 3 4 91976 25 3 3 2 21977 26 6 5 10 1978 27 26 22 10 231979 28 9 9 20 1980 29 51 18 Race victories Edit 24 wins 11 GS 8 SL 4K 1 PR 69 podiums 2 DH 26 GS 32 SL 8 K 1 PR 25 second places 20 third places World Cup races over 300 starts Season Date Location Discipline1970 11 Dec 1969 Val d Isere France Giant slalom4 Jan 1970 Bad Hindelang West Germany Slalom29 Jan 1970 Madonna di Campiglio Italy Giant slalom30 Jan 1970 Giant slalom1971 10 Jan 1971 Madonna di Campiglio Italy Slalom21 Feb 1971 Sugarloaf ME USA Giant slalom25 Feb 1971 Heavenly Valley CA USA Slalom27 Feb 1971 Giant slalom1972 2 Mar 1972 Heavenly Valley CA USA Giant slalom1973 15 Jan 1973 Adelboden Switzerland Giant slalom4 Feb 1973 St Anton Austria Slalom4 Mar 1973 Mont Ste Anne QC Canada Slalom1974 20 Jan 1974 Adelboden Switzerland Giant slalom2 Mar 1974 Voss Norway Giant slalom10 Mar 1974 Vysoke Tatry Czechoslovakia Slalom1975 12 Jan 1975 Wengen Switzerland Combined19 Jan 1975 Kitzbuhel Austria Combined30 Jan 1975 Chamonix France Slalom1 Feb 1975 Megeve France Combined15 Mar 1975 Sun Valley ID USA Slalom23 Mar 1975 Val Gardena Italy Parallel1976 5 Dec 1975 Val d Isere France Giant slalom 12 Jan 1976 Adelboden Switzerland Giant slalom1977 16 Jan 1977 Wengen Switzerland CombinedWorld championship results Edit Year Age Slalom Giant Slalom Super G Downhill Combined1970 18 4 DNF notrun 1972 20 2 1 13 11974 22 1 1 1976 24 2 4 26 11978 26 DNF1 24 12 1980 28 8 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 Olympic results Edit Year Age Slalom Giant Slalom Super G Downhill Combined1972 20 2 1 notrun 13 notrun1976 24 2 4 261980 28 8 See also EditItalian men gold medalist at the Olympics and World Championships Italy national alpine ski at the World championships Italian skiers most successful race winnerVideo EditVideo montage Gustav Thoni on YouTube Video 1972 Winter Olympics Gustav Thoni on YouTube Video Val Gardena Italy parallel slalom Gustav Thoni amp Ingemar Stenmark 1975 03 23 on YouTubeReferences Edit Sport invernali statistiche Olimpiadi in Italian fiammegialle org Retrieved 18 May 2020 cover Skiing February 1976 a b c Evans Hilary Gjerde Arild Heijmans Jeroen Mallon Bill et al Gustav Thoni Olympics at Sports Reference com Sports Reference LLC Archived from the original on 17 April 2020 Waha Eric 11 March 1974 Thoeni wins ski battles loses title Schenectady Gazette New York Associated Press p 33 Thoeni seen True champ after world GS triumph Montreal Gazette Associated Press 6 February 1974 p 38 Thoeni adds second skiing gold Montreal Gazette UPI 11 February 1974 p 17 Johnson William 18 February 1974 Along came the little people Sports Illustrated 24 COMPETITORS HAVING MORE THAN ONE PODIUM fis ski com Retrieved 8 February 2018 COMPETITORS HAVING MORE THAN ONE TOP 10 POSITION fis ski com Retrieved 8 February 2018 External links EditGustav Thoni at FIS alpine Gustav Thoni at Olympedia Gustav Thoni at the Italian National Olympic Committee in Italian Gustav Thoni at Ski DB Alpine Ski Database Gustav Thoni at Bella Vista it Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gustav Thoni amp oldid 1133348372, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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