Thomas Sykora
Personal information | |||||||||||||||
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Born | (1968-05-18) 18 May 1968 (age 56) Tulln, Austria | ||||||||||||||
Occupation | Alpine skier | ||||||||||||||
Skiing career | |||||||||||||||
Disciplines | Slalom | ||||||||||||||
World Cup debut | 30 November 1991 | ||||||||||||||
Olympics | |||||||||||||||
Teams | 1 | ||||||||||||||
Medals | 1 | ||||||||||||||
World Championships | |||||||||||||||
Teams | 3 | ||||||||||||||
World Cup | |||||||||||||||
Wins | 9 | ||||||||||||||
Podiums | 21 | ||||||||||||||
Discipline titles | 2 | ||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Thomas Sykora (born 18 May 1968) is a former alpine skier from Austria.
Biography
Thomas comes from a sporting family: his father Ernst Sykora was a ski instructor, and his aunts Liese Prokop and Maria Sykora were both successful athletes. He competed at the 1994 Winter Olympics and the 1998 Winter Olympics, winning a bronze medal at the latter.[1]
Sykora won the 1996/97 and 1997/98 Slalom World Cups. Before winning these 2 World Cups, he finished second of the competition in 1994 in Lech. After finishing first in the first round, he eventually was beaten by Alberto Tomba by 2 hundredths of a second after the second round. In total, Thomas won nine World Cup races. At the Olympic Games 1998 in Nagano, he won the bronze medal in slalom. In 1996 and 1999 he also became Austrian slalom champion.
After numerous knee injuries, Thomas Sykora was forced to quit his career and became an ORF commentator. He started commenting on women's races in 2000. Later, he served as commentator in important men's slaloms (Kitzbühel, Schladming). On most of the races he comments, Thomas wears a helmet with a camera to show the spectators the different routes of the slalom, and their difficulties.
After the end of his active career as an athlete, he decided to study mental coaching in Bregenz; he then graduated with an MBA.
World Cup victories
Overall results
Season | Discipline |
---|---|
1997 | Slalom[2] |
1998 | Slalom[3] |
Individual victories
Date | Location | Race |
---|---|---|
14 January 1996 | Kitzbühel | Slalom |
10 March 1996 | Hafjell | Slalom |
24 November 1996 | Park City | Slalom |
17 December 1996 | Madonna di Campiglio | Slalom |
6 January 1997 | Kranjska Gora | Slalom |
12 January 1997 | Chamonix | Slalom |
19 January 1997 | Wengen | Slalom |
4 January 1998 | Kranjska Gora | Slalom |
26 January 1998 | Kitzbühel | Slalom |
References
- ^ Evans, Hilary; Gjerde, Arild; Heijmans, Jeroen; Mallon, Bill; et al. "Thomas Sykora". Olympics at Sports-Reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on 17 April 2020. Retrieved 29 March 2018.
- ^ "1997 World Cup Ski Standings (Slalom)". FIS-SKI.com. Federation Internationale de Ski. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012.
- ^ "1998 World Cup Ski Standings (Slalom)". FIS-SKI.com. Federation Internationale de Ski. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012.
External links
- Thomas Sykora at FIS (alpine)
- Thomas Sykora at Olympics.com
- Thomas Sykora at Olympedia
- v
- t
- e
- 1967: Jean-Claude Killy
- 1968: Dumeng Giovanoli
- 1969: Patrick Russel
- 1970: Patrick Russel
Alfred Matt
Alain Penz
Jean-Noël Augert - 1971: Patrick Russel
Alain Penz - 1972: Jean-Noël Augert
- 1973: Gustav Thöni
- 1974: Gustav Thöni
- 1975: Ingemar Stenmark
- 1976: Ingemar Stenmark
- 1977: Ingemar Stenmark
- 1978: Ingemar Stenmark
- 1979: Ingemar Stenmark
- 1980: Ingemar Stenmark
- 1981: Ingemar Stenmark
- 1982: Phil Mahre
- 1983: Ingemar Stenmark
Stig Strand - 1984: Marc Girardelli
- 1985: Marc Girardelli
- 1986: Rok Petrović
- 1987: Bojan Križaj
- 1988: Alberto Tomba
- 1989: Armin Bittner
- 1990: Armin Bittner
- 1991: Marc Girardelli
- 1992: Alberto Tomba
- 1993: Thomas Fogdö
- 1994: Alberto Tomba
- 1995: Alberto Tomba
- 1996: Sébastien Amiez
- 1997: Thomas Sykora
- 1998: Thomas Sykora
- 1999: Thomas Stangassinger
- 2000: Kjetil André Aamodt
- 2001: Benjamin Raich
- 2002: Ivica Kostelić
- 2003: Kalle Palander
- 2004: Rainer Schönfelder
- 2005: Benjamin Raich
- 2006: Giorgio Rocca
- 2007: Benjamin Raich
- 2008: Manfred Mölgg
- 2009: Jean-Baptiste Grange
- 2010: Reinfried Herbst
- 2011: Ivica Kostelić
- 2012: André Myhrer
- 2013: Marcel Hirscher
- 2014: Marcel Hirscher
- 2015: Marcel Hirscher
- 2016: Henrik Kristoffersen
- 2017: Marcel Hirscher
- 2018: Marcel Hirscher
- 2019: Marcel Hirscher
- 2020: Henrik Kristoffersen
- 2021: Marco Schwarz
- 2022: Henrik Kristoffersen
- 2023: Lucas Braathen
- 2024: Manuel Feller