Franz Heinzer

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Born (1962-04-11) April 11, 1962 (age 63)
OccupationAlpine skier
Height181 cm (5 ft 11 in)
Franz Heinzer
Personal information
Born (1962-04-11) April 11, 1962 (age 63)
OccupationAlpine skier
Height181 cm (5 ft 11 in)
Sport
Skiing career
DisciplinesDownhill, Super G,
Combined
World Cup debut1981 – (age 18)
RetiredMarch 1994 – (age 31)
Olympics
Teams3 – (198894)
Medals0
World Championships
Teams6 – (198293)
Medals1 (1 gold)
World Cup
Seasons14 – (198194)
Wins17 – (15 DH, 2 K)
Podiums45
Overall titles0
Discipline titles4 – (3 DH, 1 SG)
Medal record
Men's alpine skiing
Representing  Switzerland
World Cup race podiums
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
Downhill 15 10 9
Super-G 0 4 2
Combined 2 2 1
Total 17 16 12
World Championships
Gold medal – first place1991 SaalbachDownhill

Franz Heinzer (born 11 April 1962 in Rickenbach, Schwyz, Switzerland) is a former alpine ski racer, who specialized in downhill. He was World Cup champion in downhill three consecutive seasons (1991, 1992, 1993), second only to Franz Klammer (4 consecutive). He won a total of 15 World Cup downhill races, fourth behind Klammer (25), Peter Müller (19) and Stephan Eberharter (18). Together with Franz Klammer, Toni Sailer, Jean Claude Killy, Karl Schranz and Stephan Eberharter, he is considered among the best downhill racers of all time. He also won the season title in Super-G in 1991.

Heinzer won at the world's most famous downhill venues: Kitzbühel (3x), Wengen, Val Gardena (2x), Garmisch, Val-d'Isère, Aspen, Lake Louise, and St. Anton. His victory in the downhill event at the 1991 World Championships came after three fourth places at previous championships (Schladming (1982), Bormio (1985) and Crans-Montana (1987). He didn't compete in the downhill at Vail in 1989. At the 1994 Winter Olympics in Norway, his right binding released at the starting gate, putting him out of the downhill race.[1]

A month later, Heinzer retired from international competition at age 31 with 17 World Cup victories and 45 podiums. He now runs his own sports products company in Altdorf, and since the winter of 2004, also works as the assistant coach of Swiss national downhill team.[2]

The Franz Heinzer Piste in the Swiss ski resort of Stoos, a FIS-approved downhill run on the Klingenstock, is named in his honour.[3]

World Cup results

References

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