Rudolf Nierlich
Rudi Nierlich | |||||||||||||||||||
Full name | Rudolf Nierlich | ||||||||||||||||||
nation | Austria | ||||||||||||||||||
birthday | February 20, 1966 | ||||||||||||||||||
place of birth | Bad Ischl , Austria | ||||||||||||||||||
date of death | May 18, 1991 | ||||||||||||||||||
Place of death | St. Wolfgang in the Salzkammergut | ||||||||||||||||||
Career | |||||||||||||||||||
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discipline | Giant slalom , slalom , combination | ||||||||||||||||||
society | WSV St. Wolfgang | ||||||||||||||||||
End of career | May 18, 1991 | ||||||||||||||||||
Medal table | |||||||||||||||||||
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Placements in the Alpine Ski World Cup | |||||||||||||||||||
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Rudolf "Rudi" Nierlich (born February 20, 1966 in Bad Ischl , † May 18, 1991 in St. Wolfgang in the Salzkammergut ) was an Austrian ski racer . The slalom and giant slalom specialist celebrated eight World Cup victories in his career and was world champion three times .
biography
Rudi Nierlich grew up in St. Wolfgang in the Salzkammergut and began an apprenticeship as a carpenter after completing his schooling before concentrating fully on ski racing. After initial successes in the youth field, including several medals at Austrian school championships, he was accepted into the squad of the Austrian Ski Association in the early 1980s . He celebrated his first international success at the 1984 Junior World Championships in Sugarloaf , where he won the gold medal in the giant slalom with a lead of over three seconds over his teammate Helmut Mayer . In the same year he was three times Austrian junior champion. In the European Cup he achieved two giant slalom victories and another two podium places in the 1984/85 season , with which he won the giant slalom classification and was second in the overall classification. The following winter he won a total of four slalom and giant slalom races in the European Cup, won the overall and giant slalom classification and came second in the slalom classification.
After his successes in the European Cup, Nierlich competed regularly in the World Cup from the 1986/87 season . He had already taken part in a few World Cup races before and in December 1984 as 15th in the combination of Madonna di Campiglio, he got his first World Cup point. With two fourth places in the races in Adelboden and Kitzbühel , he qualified for the 1987 World Championship in Crans-Montana , surprisingly finished seventh in the Super-G, but retired in his special disciplines of slalom and giant slalom in the first round. His risky, but technically advanced driving style (he was already showing signs of carving technique, although the skis were not so well fitted at the time) also brought him many failures in the World Cup, but at the end of the season on March 22, 1987, he reached the giant slalom in Sarajevo the podium for the first time. In the same winter he became Austrian champion in giant slalom.
The 1987/88 season began with two more podium places and on January 30, 1988 Nierlich celebrated his first World Cup victory in the giant slalom in Schladming . At the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary , he came fifth in the giant slalom, but in the slalom he fell out of the first run. In January 1989 Nierlich achieved his next two World Cup victories in the giant slalom in Kirchberg and in the slalom in Wengen . At the World Championships in Vail in 1989 , he was spared dropouts this time and celebrated two superior victories in slalom and giant slalom. With two more World Cup victories in the giant slalom of Furano and the slalom of Shigakōgen , he reached third place in the giant slalom ranking in the 1988/89 season and was sixth in the slalom and overall ranking. The double world champion, who also won the Austrian slalom championship that year, was named Austria's Sportsman of the Year in 1989.
In the winter of 1989/90 , Nierlich made it onto the podium four times, but only won the Kitzbühel slalom. At the 1991 World Championships in Saalbach-Hinterglemm , he successfully defended his title in giant slalom after a failure in slalom. This victory was officially confirmed by the International Ski Federation (FIS) only a few days after the race, as Nierlich had started the first run in a racing suit that lacked the required seal as proof of the FIS inspection. After the World Championships he celebrated his next World Cup victories in the slaloms of Oppdal and Aspen and achieved second place in the Giant Slalom World Cup and third place in the slalom and overall World Cup with a further seven podium places.
Nierlich was very popular with teammates because of his calm and humble demeanor; in interviews he was often very taciturn in his answers. His saying “Wonns laft, donn laft's!” (“If it works, then it works!”) Is quoted again and again by reporters and ski racers.
In the early hours of May 18, 1991, the 25-year-old's career came to a tragic end. In a car accident near St. Wolfgang, he drove his vehicle off the road in heavy rain, hit a house wall and suffered fatal injuries. He was buried in the cemetery of St. Wolfgang in the Salzkammergut .
24 years later, early in the morning on August 21, 2015, a 19-year-old firefighter was killed in the same way at the same location.
successes
winter Olympics
- Calgary 1988 : 5th giant slalom
World championships
- Crans-Montana 1987 : 7th Super-G
- Vail 1989 : 1st giant slalom, 1st slalom
- Saalbach-Hinterglemm 1991 : 1st giant slalom
World Cup ratings
season | total | Giant slalom | slalom | combination | ||||
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space | Points | space | Points | space | Points | space | Points | |
1984/85 | 110. | 1 | - | - | - | - | 41. | 1 |
1986/87 | 19th | 63 | 11. | 34 | 12. | 29 | - | - |
1987/88 | 17th | 67 | 7th | 47 | 18th | 20th | - | - |
1988/89 | 6th | 144 | 3. | 79 | 6th | 65 | - | - |
1989/90 | 10. | 110 | 8th. | 42 | 9. | 68 | - | - |
1990/91 | 3. | 201 | 2. | 101 | 3. | 100 | - | - |
World Cup victories
Nierlich achieved 23 podium places, of which 8 wins:
date | place | country | discipline |
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January 30, 1988 | Schladming | Austria | Giant slalom |
January 10, 1989 | Kirchberg | Austria | Giant slalom |
January 22, 1989 | Wengen | Switzerland | slalom |
March 3, 1989 | Furano | Japan | Giant slalom |
March 10, 1989 | Shigakogen | Japan | slalom |
January 21, 1990 | Kitzbühel | Austria | slalom |
February 26, 1991 | Oppdal | Norway | slalom |
March 10, 1991 | Aspen | United States | slalom |
European Cup
- 1984/85 season : 2nd overall ranking, 1st giant slalom ranking
- 1985/86 season : 1st overall ranking, 1st giant slalom ranking, 2nd slalom ranking
- A total of 6 wins, 1 × second, 1 × third
Junior World Championships
- Sugarloaf 1984 : 1st giant slalom
Austrian championships
- Two-time Austrian champion (giant slalom 1987 , slalom 1989 )
Awards
literature
- Austrian Ski (ed.): Austrian ski stars of A-Z . Innsbruck 2008, ISBN 978-3-9502285-7-1 , p. 296.
- Joachim Glaser: Salzburg athlete . Verlag Anton Pustet, Salzburg-Munich 2001, ISBN 3-7025-0426-5 , pp. 32-33.
Web links
- Rudolf Nierlich in the database of the International Ski Association (English)
- Rudolf Nierlich in the database of Ski-DB (English)
- Rudolf Nierlich in the database of Sports-Reference (English; archived from the original )
Individual evidence
- ↑ Rudolf Nierlich won medals at Austrian school championships. ÖSV winner board, accessed on November 24, 2011.
- ↑ Rudolf Nierlich won medals at the Austrian Junior Championships. ÖSV winner board, accessed on November 24, 2011.
- ↑ The car flew into the house from the "Nierlich curve"
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Of course, Rudolf |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Of course, Rudi |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Austrian ski racer |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 20, 1966 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Bad Ischl , Austria |
DATE OF DEATH | May 18, 1991 |
Place of death | St. Wolfgang in the Salzkammergut , Austria |