Best Moments of Alpine Skiing in the Olympic Winter Games. Innsbruck 1976
- Raúl Revuelta

- Oct 8
- 5 min read
Updated: 2 days ago

The XII Olympic Winter Games were held in Innsbruck, Austria, from February 4 to 15, 1976, and attracted 1,123 participants (892 men and 231 women) from 37 countries (NOCs). The program consisted of six sports (37 separate events).
On 4 February, the President of Austria, Rudolf Kirschschläger, declared the 12th Olympic Winter Games open. The Olympic Oath was sworn by Werner Delle-Karth (bobsleigh). Christl Haas. The Official’s Oath was sworn by Willy Köstinger, who was to officiate in the Nordic combined event. Two cauldrons were lit as a symbol of the Winter Games being held twice in Innsbruck. The cauldron of 1964 was lit by Christl Haas (Alpine skiing), and the 1976 cauldron was ignited by Josef Feistmantl (luge).
As in 1964, the Alpine Skiing events at the Olympic Winter Games Innsbruck 1976 were held at Axamer Lizum, except for the Men's Downhill race, which took place at Patscherkofel.
The Hoadl funicular railway in Axamer Lizum was built for the 1976 Winter Olympics, significantly increasing transport capacity. The cost of the Axamer Lizum funicular was 125 million schillings (sponsored by Axamer Lizum Development Corporation; Federal Government, City, State).

During the 70th IOC Session in Amsterdam in 1970, the 12th Olympic Winter Games were initially awarded to Denver, which had beaten competition from Sion, Tampere, and Vancouver. However, on November 15, 1972, the city was forced to withdraw following a referendum that rejected the building of Olympic facilities for ecological reasons. Innsbruck offered to step in. The IOC accepted the capital of the Alps as the host city of these Games on 4 February 1973. The Austrian city had previously hosted the Winter Games 12 years earlier. Mayor Dr. Lugger became the only mayor in the world ever to have organized the Olympic Games twice in his town.
One of the major reasons behind the IOC’s decision was that Innsbruck had very successfully hosted the 1964 Games, and most of the necessary infrastructure was therefore already in place. Work got underway to modernize some of the city’s existing facilities, and new runs for the bobsleigh and luge events were built, as well as an ice rink. The Organising Committee wanted the Games to be open and accessible to as many people as possible, but also made security one of its key priorities, with the memories of the horrific events of Munich four years earlier still fresh in everyone’s minds.
The most memorable image of the Games was local hero Franz Klammer flying wildly down the Downhill course, barely in control, on his way to a gold medal. In Innsbruck 1976, he starred one of the Best Moments of Alpine Skiing in the Winter Games.
Klammer, popularly known as "The Kaiser" and the “Klammer Express”, is still internationally recognized as the best Downhill skier of all time and the epitome of ski racing.
There are two reasons to remain the king of the Downhill: the first one is that Franz Klammer holds the victory record for World Cup Downhill races. He won 25 World Cup Downhills, including four on the Hahnenkamm at Kitzbühel, a string of three consecutive victories (1975, 1976, 1977), and four in Wengen. He won a total of 5 World Cup Downhill crystal globes (1975-78, and 1983).

The second is the Olympic Downhill race on February 5, at Patscherkofel.
A huge crowd of more than 60,000 supporters had gathered along the edge of the piste and at the finish line for the star event at the Innsbruck Games. Millions of Austrians sat in front of their TV sets across the country.
The man to beat was Swiss Bernhard Russi, title-holder after his victory at the Sapporo Games in 1972. Setting off with bib 3, he performed a solid run and crossed the finish line with a time of 1:46.06, giving him the lead.
With bib number 15, a yellow suit, red boots, and a red helmet with a white stripe, Klammer was behind Russi the first time split, and still behind at the second.
Franz Klammer recalls, “By the time I walked into the starting gate, I knew 'I am going to win'. I was so convinced that I could do it. But I knew I had to risk everything. I was so focused, I was so concentrated, just on the run, and then halfway down, I was looking at the crowd, kind of now I'd better do something to win the race. So I changed the line completely. But I felt, you know, they were really pushing me”.
Passing the finish line, the time showed 1:45.73. Russi was beaten by 33 hundredths of a second. “Really, the whole mountain was shaking when Franz came down”, he recalls. “And I personally think there is somewhere that power from spectators can pull him down. I think that gave him the extra kick; there was something in the air, he could not lose that race, no way. Finally, he also skied a line in the final pitch, which I’m sure he never recognized. Nobody went there to see if it was possible or not. He just went down the straight line, which everybody normally said was just impossible; you can’t stand this. He just did it!”.
With the Super-G, as a second speed race, not existing at the time, Klammer's ski career was only in Downhill (apart from a world title in the combined event in 1974), which explains why despite his overwhelming domination, the Austrian skier, born on 3 December 1953 in Mooswald (Carinthia), was never able to compete for the large general classification globe in the World Cup in an era particularly characterized by the success of the Swede Ingemar Stenmark.
With Anne-Marie Moser-Proell having put her career on hold following her marriage, the women's alpine skiing events looked wide open. Rosi Mittermaier appeared as the big favorite, but the 25-year-old German's record said another thing. In her two previous Olympic Winter Games, her best result had been a sixth-place finish in the Downhill, in Sapporo in 1972.
Finally, Rosi Mittermaier lived up to expectations and became the Queen of the 1976 Innsbruck Olympic Winter Games. She won two of the three Alpine skiing events and came close to becoming the first woman to win all three. But in the final race, the Giant Slalom, Canada’s Kathy Kreiner beat her by 12 hundredths of a second.

Mittermaier won the Downhill by half a second to claim her first gold medal. Although Mittermaier was a Downhill veteran who had competed on the World Cup circuit for ten years, she had never won a Downhill race in the World Cup. Three days later, she won the Slalom event by a third of a second.
The Giant Slalom was contested two days later, but unfortunately, on the final run, Mittermaier made a mistake at one of the lower gates, which cost her valuable time. Even so, she still managed to come second and won her third medal in the Games.

PS: Almost three years ago, the world of skiing lost one of its greatest figures. On 4 January 2023, Rosi Mittermaier (1950–2023) lost her battle with cancer.
Known as "Gold-Rosi", she is primarily remembered for her success at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria. Aged just 25, she won gold in both the Slalom and Downhill events, as well as silver in the Giant Slalom. After winning the overall World Cup title that same winter, she retired from skiing at a young age to marry slalom skier Christian Neureuther, who had finished fifth in Innsbruck. Their son, Felix Neureuther, is a retired member of the German team.





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