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Jimmie Heuga

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Full name
  
James Frederic Heuga

Weight
  
72 kg

Height
  
1.68 m

Role
  
Olympic athlete

Name
  
Jimmie Heuga


Jimmie Heuga Pacific Rim Snow Sports Alliance

Born
  
September 22, 1943San Francisco, California, U.S. (
1943-09-22
)

Died
  
February 8, 2010, Boulder, Colorado, United States

Olympic medals
  
Alpine Skiing at the 1964 Winter Olympics - Men's Slalom

Jimmie Heuga Memorial Vintage Ski Fest Celebrity Race


James Frederic Heuga (September 22, 1943 – February 8, 2010) was an American alpine ski racer who became one of the first two members of the U.S. men's team to win an Olympic medal in his sport. After multiple sclerosis prematurely ended his athletic career, he became an advocate of exercise and activity to combat the disease.

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Jimmie Heuga 1057jpga1116200932383

Born in San Francisco, California, Heuga grew up in Squaw Valley, California, where his father Pascal (1909–2011), a Basque immigrant from southern France, opened a grocery store in 1945 in Lake Forest and later operated the resort's cable car (1968–1988).

Jimmie Heuga Jimmie Heuga Olympic men39s slalom great dies at 66 NY

Jimmie Heuga was on skis at age two and began to compete in the sport at age 5; he appeared in a Warren Miller ski film at age 9. Heuga was named to the U.S. Ski Team in 1958, becoming the youngest man ever to make the squad as a 15-year-old.

Jimmie Heuga Skiing star MS champion Jimmie Heuga dies Steamboat

He went to the University of Colorado in Boulder, where he met and was coached by Bob Beattie. A three-time letterman, Heuga won the 1963 NCAA championship in the slalom. With Beattie also leading the U.S. Ski Team, Heuga, along with fellow Buffaloes Buddy Werner and Bill Marolt (and future CU alumnus Billy Kidd), formed the squad's nucleus for the 1964 Winter Olympics. Both Kidd and Heuga became the first American men to win Olympic medals in Alpine skiing, respectively capturing silver and bronze in the slalom.

Jimmie Heuga wwwpacificrimallianceorgFPublicAffairsSkiHist

  • finished sixth in the slalom and fourth in the combined at the 1966 World Championships at Portillo, Chile
  • joined the pro racing tour following the 1968 Winter Olympics where he was 7th in the slalom and 10th in the giant slalom.
  • was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1970, which derailed his ski racing career at age 27.
  • founded Can Do Multiple Sclerosis, formerly The Heuga Center for Multiple Sclerosis.
  • the first NASTAR National Pacesetter (1968)

  • Jimmie Heuga Jimmie Heuga Memoriam Video YouTube

    Heuga died on February 8, 2010, at Boulder Community Hospital in Boulder, due to complications from multiple sclerosis, exactly 46 years after he won his Olympic medal. The gold medalist in that slalom race, Pepi Stiegler, was also diagnosed with MS in 1993, as was Egon Zimmerman, the gold medalist in the downhill.

    Jimmie Heuga Colorado Ski amp Snowboard Museum Hall of Fame

    Jimmie heuga memoriam video


    World Championship results

    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).

    References

    Jimmie Heuga Wikipedia