30.07.10

San Fransisco Chronicle: Mancuso off to the Worlds on a High

Mancuso off to Worlds on a high Dan Giesin, Chronicle Staff Writer Thursday, January 25, 2007 Click to View The Alpine World Ski Championships are a little more than a week away, and Julia Mancuso is already getting excited. “I’m going to the Worlds to have some fun,” she said in a media teleconference on Tuesday. “Both on and off the hill. … I’m so excited.” And with good reason — the Squaw Valley native is on an unprecedented roll for an American female ski racer. With a second-place finish in Sunday’s giant slalom at Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, Mancuso stood on a World Cup podium for the fifth straight event, breaking the U.S. mark of four set by fellow Squaw Valley resident Tamara McKinney in 1983. The streak includes two victories (a super combined at Altenmarkt, Austria, on Jan. 14 and a super-G at Cortina on Friday), two seconds (she also was runner-up in a downhill at Cortina on Saturday), and a third (in a downhill at Altenmarkt on Jan. 13). Throw in a downhill win in a Val d’Isere, France, last month, and Mancuso has accrued enough points (794) on the World Cup circuit to put her in contention for the overall title. She is in third place in the standings, 87 points behind Austria’s Marlies Schild and 34 behind Nicole Hosp, another Austrian. “What Julia’s doing right now is unbelievable,” U.S. women’s team head coach Patrick Riml said. “The last two weekends, she’s had five podiums, won two races … in four different events. It’s impressive; she’s … skiing unbelievably well, no matter what event. … Julia’s not only doing it, she’s doing it at such a high level.” Added teammate Resi Stiegler of Jackson Hole, Wyo., who has come up through the ranks with Mancuso: “I think she is the strongest skier I have ever seen. … She’s in a good position right now in her mind and in her body. When she’s not having fun (racing), she doesn’t do well; right now, she’s loving it.” Mancuso, who won an Olympic gold medal in the giant slalom at the Turin Olympics in February, is definitely in a zone, and her streak is all the more impressive when you consider she had hip surgery in April and didn’t get back on track until mid-autumn. “It was tough earlier in the season, but the hip is definitely feeling better and better,” Mancuso said from San Sicario, Italy, where she will participate in a couple of World Cup super-Gs and a downhill over the weekend. “Everything is working out right. … When you’re winning, you don’t feel the pain.” The surgery benefited Mancuso in another way: Because she didn’t know how the procedure would affect her or how her body would respond, she came into the season without a lot of presuppositions about her prospects. “After the surgery, I re-evaluated my expectations,” she said. “I had no idea what it would be like. … I went into the season with no expectations. I learned a lot.” Topping the list was patience. “I’m taking the season one race at a time,” she said. That doesn’t mean she doesn’t look forward to certain things, and the Alpine World Ski Championships that will be conducted Feb. 3-18 at Are, Sweden, is certainly an event Mancuso, who won a couple of bronze medals at the last Worlds in 2005, is anticipating greatly. “I’m definitely excited about going to the Worlds,” she said. “At an event like the Olympics or the World Championships, you feed off everyone else’s excitement, and the energy of ski racing is brought to another level. I want to feel that energy again.” Whether that energy fuels to her greater glory is not something on which Mancuso dwells. Jules, as she is known among her teammates, just wants to have fun. “Expectations are external; they’re coming from other people,” she said. “It’s just exciting to ski fast. When I’m in the starting gate, I’m just going to go back to the beginning and have fun.” E-mail Dan Giesin at dgiesin@sfchronicle.com.

 

USA Today: Mancuso is skiing's rebel with a cause

Mancuso is skiing’s rebel with a cause

Updated 1/23/2007 11:28 PM ET
Julia Mancuso was happy after taking third in the World Cup downhill in Altenmarkt, Austria, this month.
By Armando Trovati, AP
Julia Mancuso was happy after taking third in the World Cup downhill in Altenmarkt, Austria, this month.

 MANCUSO’S SEASON
Date Site Discipline Finish
Dec. 19 Val d’Isere, France Downhill 1st
Dec. 20 Val d’Isere, France Downhill 2nd
Dec. 28 Semmering, Austria Giant slalom 4th
Dec. 29 Semmering, Austria Slalom DNF
Jan. 4 Zagreb-Sljeme, Croatia Slalom 8th
Jan. 6 Kranjska Gora, Slovakia Giant slalom DNF
Jan. 7 Kranjska Gora, Slovakia Slalom 18th
Jan. 13 Altenmarkt, Austria Downhill 3rd
Jan. 14 Altenmarkt, Austria Super combined 1st
Jan. 19 Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy Super-G 1st
Jan. 20 Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy Downhill 2nd
Jan. 21 Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy Giant slalom 2nd

DNF: Did not finish Source: International Ski Federation

Alpine skiing sensation Julia Mancuso has always been something of a non-conformist.

She was the first U.S. female skier to travel around the Alps in her own RV on the World Cup circuit.

She has sometimes raced with a plastic tiara on her head.

“You can be feminine and fast,” she says.

And now, a year after she burst to stardom with a gold medal in the Torino Olympics, she’s interested in getting into the beauty or fashion industry.

Lipstick? Eye shadow? Skiwear?

“I think underwear,” she says, “is my calling.”

Mancuso’s agent for non-skiing endorsements, Lowell Taub, can see Mancuso becoming a breakout personality, transcending her sport, he says, like Serena Williams in tennis or Michelle Wie in golf.

“She’s 22; she’s gorgeous; she’s fit; she’s successful; she’s clean in terms of image,” Taub says. “And she’s very comfortable being in the spotlight.”

When or whether Mancuso’s line of underwear comes out, expect it to be racy, because Mancuso, a 5-6, 140-pounder who goes by the nickname “Super Jules,” is fast, lately the fastest female skier in the world.

In Europe’s warmest winter in years, Mancuso has emerged as the hottest U.S. female skier ever.

Mancuso, who grew up barreling through powder in the mountains around Lake Tahoe, is currently riding a U.S. women’s record streak of five consecutive podium (top-three) finishes in World Cup races.

She won the combined and was third in the downhill in Altenmarkt, Austria, two weekends ago. Last weekend in Cortina, Italy, she won the super-G and was second in the downhill and the giant slalom, the event in which she won her Olympic title last year.

The streak surpassed the streak of four podiums (three wins) by Tamara McKinney in 1983. McKinney went on to win the World Cup overall title, something no American woman has done since.

Mancuso is within striking distance of this year’s title, third in the standings behind Austria’s Marlies Schild and Nicole Hosp.

Mancuso will enter two super-Gs and a downhill this week in San Sicario, Italy, and then head to Are, Sweden, for the Feb. 3-18 Alpine world championships.

The world championship races don’t count in the World Cup standings, but, outside of the Olympics, they are the biggest events in the Alpine ski world. Mancuso had never won a World Cup race before this season, but she has always had a knack for performing well on skiing’s biggest stages.

Starting in 2002, when she won three golds in the junior world championships, she has won medals at major events every season.

Delivering when it counts

Two years ago she was a surprise double bronze medalist in the world championships in Bormio, Italy. And last year, after some disappointing early races in the Olympics, she won the giant slalom.

“My seasons tend to get better and better in January and February,” she says. “I just sort of peak at the right time. Maybe it’s because I really look at the big events as an opportunity rather than someone putting expectations on me. I’ve just been able to shine with everyone watching.”

The clutch performances have paid off because much of the income of a World Cup skier comes from bonuses tied to results in major events.

After the Olympic victory, she signed an extension of an endorsement contract with Visa through 2010, when the Olympics will be held in Vancouver, British Columbia. Her ski equipment deal with Rossignol was extended for two years with the most lucrative terms ever for a U.S. female skier. [Read More...]

 

New York Times on Skiing

Skiing Roundup

Mancuso Places Second, Ending Two-Race Win Streak

Julia Mancuso’s two-race winning streak ended yesterday in Cortina D’Ampezzo, Italy. But her run of top-three finishes is still alive, as is her quest to become the first American woman to win the World Cup overall title in 24 years. Mancuso placed second behind Renate Götschl in a downhill yesterday for her fourth consecutive finish among the top three. Marlies Schild, the overall World Cup leader, has 881 points, and her fellow Austrian Nicole Hosp is second with 828. Mancuso has 714 points. No American woman has won the overall title since Tamara McKinney in 1983. “It’s kind of like sky miles, when you’re flying — collecting points for free trips,” Mancuso said. “I just get excited about collecting the points. I don’t really think about the over all or beating anyone else. It’s cool just to be adding them up and getting more.” Götschl skied the 1.6-mile Olympia delle Tofane course in 1 minute 31.14 seconds — 0.17 faster than Mancuso. Marie Marchand-Arvier of France finished a career-best third, 0.60 behind. Götschl now has five downhill and five super-G victories for a record 10 wins at Cortina. “I like everything here — the hill is interesting, start to finish, and the atmosphere is really special,” Goetschl said. “Everyone was expecting me to win a 10th time. It was a lot of pressure for me.” Götschl leads the downhill standings with 425 points, followed by Mancuso with 346 and Lindsey Kildow with 340. Kildow fell twice during her run but was not injured. SUCCESS AFTER 12 YEARS Pierre-Emmanuel Dalcin ended a 12-year winless streak for French skiers in their nation’s most famous downhill, and Bode Miller misjudged a turn yesterday and fell in the World Cup race at Val D’Isere. Canada’s Erik Guay and Manuel Osborne-Paradis were second and third. The top American was the 19th-place Scott Macartney. Dalcin captured his first World Cup victory by finishing the Oreiller-Killy course in 1 minute 56.37 seconds. Guay was 0.26 slower, and Osborne-Paradis was 0.06 behind. Miller went inside on his skis on a turn on the top section of the course and toppled over. He refused to talk about his fall, but he could be heard complaining “it wasn’t even a hard turn” in discussions with United States team officials. Aksel Lund Svindal of Norway leads the World Cup overall standings with 725 points. Didier Cuche of Switzerland is second with 677, and Miller is third with 640. Cuche leads the downhill standings with 436, followed by Marco Buechel of Liechtenstein (329) and Peter Fill of Italy (318).

 

A Monkey Off Putzer's Back! How Great!

 Putzer posts surprise giant slalom victory Updated 1/21/2007 2:53 PM ET

CORTINA D’AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — Karen Putzer of Italy was the surprise winner in a World Cup giant slalom on Sunday.

Skiing through heavy fog, Putzer led both runs and compiled a two-run time of 2 minutes, 46.93 seconds on the Olympia delle Tofane course.

It was Putzer’s first win since a GS in Lillehammer three years ago, the same year she finished second in the overall standings.

Putzer struggled with a bad hip the past three seasons before having surgery in May.

"After the first run, I said to myself ‘Who knows what will happen?’," Putzer said. "It seems unreal."

Olympic giant slalom champion Julia Mancuso finished second, 0.04 seconds behind, for her fifth straight podium finish.

Putzer was operated on by the same New York surgeon who repaired Mancuso’s hip a month earlier.

Mancuso gained points on the two women ahead of her in the overall standings — Marlies Schild and Nicole Hosp — who both failed to finish.

Schild leads the standings with 881 points, Hosp has 828 and Mancuso now has 794.

Denise Karbon of Italy was third, 0.28 behind, for her best result in three seasons.

Several skiers struggled with the thick fog hanging over the course.

Schild skied off course midway through her second run and Hosp bloodied her chin when she fell in the opening leg.

"I got on the inside ski and I fell down. I’m happy that I’m well," Hosp said.

Hosp still leads the GS standings with 230 points. Tanja Poutiainen, who finished fifth, moved into second with 214 points. Kathrin Zettel finished a distant 25th and dropped down to third in the standings with 206 points. Mancuso is fourth with 166 points.

Anja Paerson missed a gate midway through the first run. The two-time overall World Cup champion has struggled this season following knee surgery. She hasn’t won since the final downhill last season in Are, the Swedish resort that will host the World Championships Feb. 3-18.

"I had some new skis and I was really aggressive and I couldn’t really be comfortable," Paerson said. "You don’t see anything. That’s why it’s a lot of crashes. It’s really hard to find the timing with the gates."

Paerson planned to fly home to Sweden later Sunday to prepare for the worlds, meaning she will skip three races in San Sicario next weekend.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.