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Beat Feuz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Swiss alpine skier
Beat Feuz
Feuz in 2012
Personal information
Born (1987-02-11)11 February 1987 (age 38)
OccupationAlpine skier
Height1.72 m (5 ft 8 in)
Sport
Skiing career
DisciplinesDownhill,super-G,combined
ClubSchangnau
World Cup debut10 December2006 (age 19)
Websitebeat-feuz.ch
Olympics
Teams3 – (2014,2018,2022)
Medals3 (1 gold)
World Championships
Teams5 – (2011,201521)
Medals3 (1 gold)
World Cup
Seasons14 – (2007,20102012,
         20142023)
Wins16 – (13DH, 3SG)
Podiums59 – (47 DH, 8 SG, 4AC)
Overall titles0 –(2nd in2012)
Discipline titles4 – (4DH:20182021)
Medal record
Men'salpine skiing
Representing Switzerland
International alpine ski competitions
Event1st2nd3rd
Olympic Games111
World Championships102
Total213
World Cup race podiums
Event1st2nd3rd
Super-G314
Downhill131816
Combined031
Total162221
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place2022 BeijingDownhill
Silver medal – second place2018 PyeongchangSuper-G
Bronze medal – third place2018 PyeongchangDownhill
World Championships
Gold medal – first place2017 St. MoritzDownhill
Bronze medal – third place2015 Beaver CreekDownhill
Bronze medal – third place2021 Cortina d’AmpezzoDownhill
Junior World Championships
Gold medal – first place2007 AltenmarktDownhill
Gold medal – first place2007 AltenmarktSuper-G
Gold medal – first place2007 AltenmarktCombined
Bronze medal – third place2005 BardonecchiaSlalom
Bronze medal – third place2007 AltenmarktSlalom

Beat Feuz (German pronunciation:[ˈbe.atˈfɔɪts]; born 11 February 1987) is a Swiss formerWorld Cupalpine ski racer, specializing in the speed events ofdownhill andsuper-G. He is 2017 World champion and 2022 Olympic champion in downhill. In2021, he won consecutive downhills on the famedStreif atKitzbühel.[1]

Racing career

[edit]

Born inSchangnau in the canton ofBern, Feuz made his World Cup debut at age 19 in December2006 but missed all of the2008 and2009 seasons due to torn ligaments in his left knee.[2] He secured his first two World Cup podia in March2011, both in downhills atKvitfjell,Norway. The first victory was backed up with a third-place finish the following day.

At his firstWorld Championships in2011 inGarmisch,Germany, Feuz finished ninth in thedownhill. In thesuper combined, he finished second in the downhill portion but missed a gate near the finish of the slalom course. He also competed in theteam event for Switzerland, which lost to Sweden in the quarterfinals.

2012

[edit]

Feuz carried this positive momentum into the start of the2012 season, with four podia by mid-December. InNorth America, he placed second in the first downhill of the season atLake Louise, 0.06 seconds behind Swiss teammateDidier Cuche. Feuz attained two podiums inBeaver Creek and then back in Europe, won his second World Cup event and his first in super-G atVal Gardena (Gröden),Italy.

Just miles from his hometown in January, he placed second in the super combined atWengen; he had an advantage of 2.96 seconds overIvica Kostelić after the downhill portion but lost it on bad slalom and finished 0.20 seconds behind Kostelić. Feuz won the classicLauberhorn downhill the next day.[3]

In February, he won the pre-Olympic downhill inRussia atRosa Khutor, the alpine racing venue for the2014 Winter Olympics. A breakout season for Feuz, he had 13 World Cup podiums with four victories; in the final standings, he was runner-up in the overall, downhill, and combined, and third in Super-G.

Out for 2013

[edit]

Feuz changed equipment fromSalomon toHead after the 2012 season,[4] but it was later revealed that he was suffering from inflammation and bleeding in his left knee and would miss the whole2013 season.[5][6] The knee was re-injured at the pre-Olympic races in Russia in February 2012, and was operated on after the season in March for bone fragments.[4][7] He re-aggravated it during training in Argentina in August and was sent home for evaluation.[8]

Return in 2014

[edit]

Feuz returned to the World Cup circuit for the2014 season and claimed sixth place in the downhill at Beaver Creek in his third race back. This was Feuz's best result of the season, as he still appeared to be struggling with his knee injury. Feuz no longer entered giant slalom races, and his ability in slalom was diminished so that he could no longer contend in the super combined races, not even entering the Kitzbühel combined competition, a race in which he had previously finished on the podium. Feuz was selected for theSwiss Olympic team and raced thedownhill,Super-G, andsuper combined, and his best result was a 13th in the downhill. His 2014 season indicated that he wasn't fully healed; he did not qualify for the season-ending World Cup finals.

Return to top positions in 2015

[edit]

Feuz started the2015 season brightly, taking sixth in the opening downhill in Canada at Lake Louise. The breakthrough result came in the next downhill as Feuz was runner-up in the Birds of Prey for the second time in his career. After the event, through an interpreter, Feuz said, "my knee will never be 100 percent again," and that for him, his comeback story was "almost bigger than I can imagine; it's almost too much."[9] The lasting effects of the knee injury were clear though, Feuz didn't manage better than 17th in the first four Super-G races of the season, and he still wasn't entering Giant slalom races as he had done previously. Feuz backed up his result in Beaver Creek with a second runner-up placing, this time at his home downhill in Wengen.

The podium results in downhill were enough to book Feuz a ticket to the2015 World Championships, held on the Birds of Prey hill on which he had twice been on the podium in his career. Feuz was left out of the Swiss squad for theSuper-G in favour ofMauro Caviezel, but in thedownhill, he led the race for much of the way. He finished third, behind teammatePatrick Küng and AmericanTravis Ganong, and gained his first major championship medal.[10] In thesuper combined the next day, Feuz produced another stellar downhill run, in second by a narrow margin. Feuz was forced to ski in warm conditions on a rutted course in the slalom run. This, together with the deterioration of Feuz's technical skiing after his knee injury, meant Feuz blew a lead of over 3 seconds on gold-medalistMarcel Hirscher. Feuz didn't finish the year particularly strongly, with his best results being two 9th places at the World Cup Finals inMéribel.

2016

[edit]

Once again, injury problems were to spoil things for Feuz, who sustained anAchilles injury straddling a gate during training inSouth America. He was expected to miss at least the first few races of the season.[11] Later however, it was revealed that Feuz was targeting a comeback in time for his home races in Wengen. Feuz skied the downhill leg of the Wengen combined and elected to start the downhill the next day, earning a respectable 11th place in his first race back. Moving on toKitzbühel, and still taking the training runs and races on a day-to-day basis, having earned another solid result of 16th in the Super-G, Feuz elected to race the downhill the next day; his best previous finish on theStreif downhill course was sixth. In only his third full race since his return, Feuz was the runner-up in a race full of high-profile crashes.[12] Feuz went on to claim two 3rd and two 5th places in the following four downhills, qualifying him comfortably for the World Cup finals to be held on theCorviglia piste inSt. Moritz, significant as this was the venue for the following year's World Championships. Feuz gave what was to turn out to be a sign of things to come, as he claimed victory in the downhill and the win in the Super-G the following day. The wins were his first in just over four years. The downhill victory meant he finished 5th in the downhill standings for 2016 and only 48 points off the winnerPeter Fill, despite missing 4 of the 11 races.

World Champion in 2017

[edit]

The2017 World Cup season would break off in February for the main event of the year – the2017 World Championships in his home country in St. Moritz. Feuz didn't produce amazing results to start the year, not helped by the cancellation of two of his favourite races at Beaver Creek and Wengen. Feuz only managed one top-10 result in his first six races of the year. In Kitzbühel, the signs became clear Feuz was coming into form for the World Championships. A 3rd place in the Super-G was followed the next day in the downhill by a fall on the Traverse, with Feuz having led eventual winnerDominik Paris by 0.72 seconds entering the section. Fortunately, Feuz escaped from the netting unharmed and claimed another podium atGarmisch in his final race before the World Championships.

Feuz entered the World Championships with high expectations from the Swiss ski fans thanks to his performance on the track at the World Cup finals the previous year, and this was only increased when Feuz won the only training run he started fairly comfortably, despite normally not pushing too hard in the training runs. Feuz came 12th in the Super-G but, like the rest of the athletes, was forced to wait an extra day for the downhill to take place thanks to the weather. On what was dubbed ″Downhill Super Sunday″ due to the fact both the men's and women's downhills would take place on the same day, the early runners in the men's race were hampered more than a little by fog on the upper section. Feuz had chosen bib 13, and the lead changed hands several times with the racers before him as the course appeared to be quickening up as the fog lifted. Although slightly behind on the top gliding section, Feuz was excellent on the jumps and turns in the middle part of the course, and although Feuz appeared to get slightly late on the critical Felsen section, he managed to carry the speed through it and went on to take the lead by 0.39 seconds at that point. A nervous wait followed as nearly every remaining top racer beat Feuz's time at the top of the course. The closest to Feuz on the day wasErik Guay, who was leading by 0.04 seconds at the penultimate split time but couldn't match Feuz through Felsen and dropped back to 0.42 behind. Nonetheless, the Canadian managed to make up 0.3 of a second from that intermediate to the finish. Feuz, therefore, claimed the gold medal by 0.12 seconds to live up to his tag as the favourite for the race and make it back-to-back World downhill golds for the Swiss men's team.[13] Feuz claimed one more podium finish in 2017 in the second downhill in Kvitfjell, helping him to finish 4th in the downhill standings for 2017.

2018

[edit]

Feuz began the Olympic year in the best possible way by claiming victory in the opening downhill in Lake Louise, his first win on the course and his first podium there since 2011. He won silver for Super-G and bronze for Downhill.

2021

[edit]

Feuz won theStreif two times in a row in the same year; there was an extra race on Friday, as well as the usual Saturday (which was moved to Sunday due to weather conditions), because of a cancelled race due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[1]

2022

[edit]

Feuz won a downhill gold medal at the Winter Olympics in Beijing after the race was delayed for a day due to strong winds at the Yanqing venue.

World Cup results

[edit]

Season titles

[edit]
SeasonDiscipline
2018Downhill
2019
2020
2021

Season standings

[edit]
SeasonAgeOverallSlalomGiant
Slalom
Super-GDownhillCombined
2007201185246
200821injured: out for two seasons
200922
20102373534118
2011242234714
201225234322
201326injured: out for season
20142750282728
2015281922723
20162913125
201730118443
201831591
2019326121
2020336111
2021349121
202235662
202336363314
Standings through 19 March 2023

Race victories

[edit]
TotalSlalomGiant slalomSuper-GDownhillCombinedParallel
Wins16313
Podiums588464
Season
DateLocationDiscipline
201111 March 2011NorwayKvitfjell, NorwayDownhill
201216 December 2011ItalyVal Gardena, ItalySuper-G
14 January 2012 Switzerland Wengen, SwitzerlandDownhill
11 February 2012RussiaRosa Khutor, RussiaDownhill
2 March 2012Norway  Kvitfjell, NorwaySuper-G
201616 March 2016 Switzerland St. Moritz, SwitzerlandDownhill
17 March 2016Super-G
201825 November 2017CanadaLake Louise, CanadaDownhill
13 January 2018 Switzerland  Wengen, SwitzerlandDownhill
27 January 2018GermanyGarmisch-Partenkirchen, GermanyDownhill
201930 December 2018United StatesBeaver Creek, USADownhill
20207 December 2019Downhill
18 January 2020 Switzerland  Wengen, SwitzerlandDownhill
202122 January 2021AustriaKitzbühel, AustriaDownhill
24 January 2021Downhill
202223 January 2022Downhill

World Championship results

[edit]
  Year   Age  Slalom  Giant 
 slalom 
Super-GDownhillCombined
2011249DNF2
201528314
201730121
201932184
202134103

Olympic results

[edit]
  Year   Age  Slalom  Giant 
 slalom 
Super-GDownhillCombined
201427271315
20183123
202235DNF1

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Beat Feuz doubles up with another downhill win at Kitzbühel". Olympics.com. January 24, 2021.
  2. ^"Switzerland's Beat Feuz back at the top". FIS Alpine.com. March 11, 2011. Archived fromthe original on 2011-03-14.
  3. ^"Feuz lays waste to Wengen field for DH win". Ski Racing.com. January 14, 2012.
  4. ^ab"Feuz signs with Head Skis". Ski Racing.com. March 23, 2012.
  5. ^"Swiss skier Beat Feuz out for season with injury". ESPN. Associated Press. November 21, 2012.
  6. ^"Beat Feuz lost for season to inflammation in knee". Ski Racing.com. November 21, 2012.
  7. ^"Post season surgery for Beat Feuz". Ski Racing.com. March 23, 2012.
  8. ^"Feuz injury not serious, but he missed a substantial amount of time". Ski Racing.com. August 27, 2012.
  9. ^"Kjetil Jansrud does it again, wins Beaver Creek downhill". CBC. Associated Press. December 5, 2014.
  10. ^"Travis Ganong takes Worlds downhill silver behind Swiss". NBCsports. February 7, 2014.
  11. ^"Swiss skier Beat Feuz to miss three months due to Achilles injury". ESPN. September 2, 2015.
  12. ^"Fill wins in Kitzbuhel, Svindal out for rest of season". Reuters. January 23, 2016. Archived fromthe original on January 29, 2016.
  13. ^Hiscott, Tom (February 12, 2017)."Feuz and Stuhec live up to favourite tags, claiming Downhill World Championship golds". Vavel.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toBeat Feuz.
FIS Alpine Ski World Cup – Men's downhill World Cup winners
International
National
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