Hannes Reichelt calls it a career, set to forerun Thursday’s super G

By Published On: March 17th, 2021Comments Off on Hannes Reichelt calls it a career, set to forerun Thursday’s super G

Austrian skier Hannes Reichelt kept winning races after returning from several severe knee and back injuries that hampered his career.

The former world champion’s latest setback, however, was one too many.

The 40-year-old Reichelt said Wednesday he will retire at this week’s World Cup finals in Lenzerheide, Switzerland.

The announcement came six years after the Austrian won the biggest prize of his two-decade-long career – super-G gold at the world championships in Beaver Creek, Colorado.

“I’ve got the feeling that after 20 years on the World Cup the time has come to leave,” Reichelt said.

He failed to get back to the top level after damaging his right knee in a downhill crash in December 2019 and didn’t make the Austrian team for the worlds in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, last month.

“In races I was struggling more and more to get to the limit. To me it was clear: I race to the fullest or not at all,” Reichelt said.

Reichelt did not qualify for this season’s World Cup finals but was planning to ski down the super-G course on a farewell run as one of the forerunners ahead of Thursday’s race.

Reichelt has won 13 World Cup races, including the classic downhill in Kitzbühel, and had 44 podium results.

The Austrian won his home race in January 2014 while suffering from back pains. He could barely stand straight after finishing and needed surgery for a herniated disk the following day, ruling him out for the Sochi Olympics.

Another of his wins came in a super-G in 2005, only nine months after tearing an ACL.

Reichelt is also known for earning one the most unlikely discipline title wins in the 54-year history of the World Cup.

In 2008, he arrived at the finals in Bormio, Italy, trailing leader Didier Cuche by 99 points in the super-G standings. Reichelt won the race to earn 100 points, and Cuche was ultimately bumped into 16th place by his Swiss teammate Daniel Albrecht – with only the top 15 earning World Cup points.

It would be the only crystal globe award for Reichelt, who also won super-G silver at the 2011 worlds.

“Fortunately, I had a lot of and very nice successes,” he said. “There are a few situations that keep buzzing through my mind and were just insane. For example, that I was on the podium right away at my second World Cup race in Val Gardena. Or that I was able to win the Super-G at Beaver Creek nine months after my cruciate ligament rupture in 2005, but also that I was able to share a podium with my childhood idol Stephan Eberharter, I remember fondly. Winning the ball with the heart-stopping final against Didier Cuche was of course something special, as was the 2014 win on the Streif. Of course, I will always have fond memories of super-G Gold in Beaver Creek. I look back on my career with great pride.”

“I always made up my mind to go to university after my career, that still plays a role in my considerations,” he added. “Of course I would like to stay in skiing in some form, but I don’t know exactly how yet. I’m also really looking forward to spending time with my family.”

Career highlights:

  • World Championship Gold Super G 2015 Vail / Beaver Creek
  • World Cup silver Super G 2011 Garmisch-Partenkirchen
  • Super G World Cup winner 2007/2008
  • 13 World Cup victories (6 Downhill, 6 Super-G, 1 RTL)
  • 46 World Cup podiums (1st 13x, 2nd 14x, 3rd 19x)

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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