Rosi Mittermaier


Rosa Anna Katharina Mittermaier-Neureuther was a German alpine skier. She was the overall World Cup champion in 1976 and a double gold medalist at the [Alpine skiing at the Alpine skiing at the 1976 Winter Olympics|1976 Winter Olympics|1976 Winter Olympics].
Mittermaier competed in alpine skiing from 1967 to 1976, retiring after a highly successful season in which she finished with two Olympic gold medals and ranked first in the World Cup. She remained popular, advertising for sports and as a non-fiction writer. She was known as Gold-Rosi, and she was inducted into Germany's Sports Hall of Fame in April 2006 when it was initiated.

Life and career

Mittermaier was born in Munich and grew up in Reit im Winkl on the. Her father had run there the Passauer Hütte. A certified skiing instructor, he also owned a skiing school from 1966, and was the first to train his daughters.

Racing career

Mittermaier made her World Cup debut in the inaugural season of 1967, and won her first World Cup race two seasons later.
She won two gold medals and one silver at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck. Her victory in the Olympic downhill was the only downhill win in her international career. Mittermaier was the most successful athlete at those games, along with cross-country skier Raisa Smetanina of the Soviet Union, earning her the nickname of Gold-Rosi within Germany.
In addition to the overall World Cup title, she also won the season title in slalom and combined in 1976. After winning both races at Copper Mountain in Colorado to wrap up the overall and slalom titles, the four-year-old resort immediately named the race course run after her. In addition to her success in international competition, she also won 16 German national titles during her career.
On 31 May 1976, she retired from international competition at age 25, following the very successful 1976 season.

After racing

After her career in sports, Mittermaier joined Mark McCormack's International Management Group as the only German alongside Jean-Claude Killy, Jackie Stewart, and Björn Borg. During her three-year contract, she designed a collection of winter sports clothing and made international appearances for various skiing products. She wrote non-fiction books, often together with her husband. She worked for several charities and occasionally as a commentator for German television for major sporting events. She established a charitable foundation to aid children with rheumatism in 2000.

Personal life and death

Mittermaier was born with a twin sister who died at birth. Her younger sister Evi Mittermaier also competed as an alpine skier and previously lived in a hotel. Rosi and Evi also recorded two albums of Bavarian folk songs together.
In 1980 she married Christian Neureuther, winner of six World Cup slalom races. They are the parents of Felix Neureuther, a World Cup ski racer for Germany, and a daughter Ameli who works as a fashion designer.
Mittermaier died because of cancer in Garmisch-Partenkirchen on 4 January 2023, at the age of 72 years. Her mortal remains were cremated and the urn was buried at the cemetery of Garmisch. Next to her gravestone - a rock, which bears the inscription "Rosi Mittermaier-Neureuther" and resembles a mountain - is a similar one without inscription, which is obviously reserved for her husband.

Awards

She was an honorary citizen's of Garmisch-Partenkirchen and Reit im Winkl.

World Cup results

Season standings

Source:
SeasonAgeOverallSlalomGiant
slalom
Super GDownhillCombined
1967162719not
run
not
awarded
19681712118not
run
not
awarded
1969187411not
run
5not
awarded
19701911810not
run
12not
awarded
19712014139not
run
15not
awarded
197221647not
run
10not
awarded
197322428not
run
9not
awarded
1974237213not
run
11not
awarded
197524377not
run
6not
awarded
197625113not
run
91

Points were only awarded for top ten finishes.

Race victories

  • 10 wins –
  • 41 podiums –
SeasonDateLocationDiscipline
196916 January 1969

World championship results

Source:
Year Age Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-GDownhillCombined
196817DNF220not run25
197019157not run205
1972211712not run67
1974236DNFnot runDNF
19762512not run11

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.

Olympic results

Source:
Year Age Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-GDownhillCombined
196817DNF220not run25not run
1972211712not run6not run
19762512not run1not run

Publications

Many of her books were written with her husband Christian Neureuther:
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Biographies

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Obituaries

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