Skiing Cochrans


The Skiing Cochrans are a family of American alpine ski racers from Richmond, Vermont, a dominant force on the U.S. Ski Team in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and again in 2000s, 2010s and 2020s.
In 1961, parents Mickey and Ginny Cochran built a small ski area on their hillside property along the Winooski River in rural Vermont, the Cochrans' ski hill, where they trained their four children to be world-class ski racers. All four - Bob, Barbara Ann, Marilyn and Lindy - represented the U.S. in the Winter Olympics, with Barbara Ann winning the gold medal in slalom at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan. The next generation of Cochrans has continued the racing tradition, placing six family members on the U.S. Ski Team, while Cochran's Ski Area has grown into a local winter recreation area with three lifts and eight slopes attracting families from around Vermont.

Parents

  • Gordon T. "Mickey" Cochran - An athlete, a soldier, an engineer, and a teacher all rolled into one, Mickey's talents added up to genius on the ski slopes. He was a standout athlete in baseball and football at Chelmsford High School in Massachusetts. He pitched and played quarterback for the University of Vermont until his engineering studies were interrupted by the war. He served in the 84th Infantry Division in France and Germany in World War II. His unit was surrounded in the Battle of the Bulge. He saw significant action, including crossing the Rhine on a floating foot bridge under fire. His squad saw 300% casualties between October 1944 and the end of the war in Europe. His athletic skills helped him to survive with minor wounds. While in the army he pitched batting practice in Europe for Ted Williams. He also played semi-pro baseball in the US and the provincial leagues in Canada. He returned to the University of Vermont after the war and earned a BS in mechanical engineering and a master's degree in education. He loved skiing and applied engineering to developing his own highly successful technique, independently of what was popular. Under his tutelage - and while training on the backyard ski hill that he built himself - all four of his children became members of the U.S. Ski Team. Among his other accomplishments, Mickey was the Alpine Director of the U.S. Team during the 1973-74 ski season and coach of the University of Vermont Ski Team throughout the 1970s. With Mickey as alpine coach the UVM Ski Team won their first major winter carnivals, including Dartmouth in 1973, Middlebury and Williams, and began the longest regular season undefeated streak in NCAA history. Mickey died in March 1998 of congestive heart failure at the age of 74. The athletes he coached at UVM noted that he was all the man there is, and one of the greatest ski coaches ever. He was inducted into the UVM Athletic Hall of Fame in 1972.
  • Virginia Davis "Ginny" Cochran - Matriarch of "The Skiing Cochrans" and long-time co-owner of Cochran's Ski Area with her husband, Mickey. In 1961, when Cochran's first opened, Ginny started the first after-school learn-to-ski program at the area at the request of the Richmond PTO. Since that time, thousands of schoolchildren and older skiers have learned to "Ski the Cochran Way", a great many taught by Ginny herself. In addition to raising four children who competed in the Winter Olympics, Ginny managed the ski area until her death in 2005 at age 76. She was posthumously honored with a resolution by the state legislature.

Children

Grandchildren

Timeline

  • 1961 - Cochran's Ski Area founded; Ginny Cochran offers first after-school program at the request of the Richmond P.T.O.
  • 1965 - Adjacent parcel purchased for future ski area expansion
  • 1966 - New trails and rope tow installed on present Cochran's Ski Area site
  • 1967 - Marilyn & Barbara Ann Cochran named to the U.S. Ski Team
  • 1968 - Bobby Cochran named to the U.S. Ski Team
  • 1969 - Marilyn Cochran wins the World Cup season title in giant slalom
  • 1970 - Lindy Cochran joins her siblings on the U.S. Ski Team; Barbara Ann wins a silver medal in slalom and Marilyn wins a bronze medal in combined at the World Championships
  • 1972 - Barbara Ann Cochran wins the gold medal in slalom at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo, Japan
  • 1973 - Bob Cochran wins the combined event at the prestigious Hahnenkamm in Kitzbühel, Austria, and a giant slalom at Heavenly Valley
  • 1974 - Mickey Cochran serves as Alpine Director of the U.S. Ski Team; Cochran's Ski Club founded. Barbara Ann and Marilyn retire from international competition
  • 1975 - Bobby Cochran turns professional; Mitey Mite handle lift installed at Cochran's Ski Area
  • 1976 - Lindy Cochran is top American in both slalom and giant slalom at the Olympic Games in Innsbruck, Austria. Barbara inducted into the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame
  • 1978 - Marilyn inducted into the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame
  • 1979 - T-bar installed at Cochran's Ski Area
  • 1984 - New lodge built at Cochran's Ski Area
  • 1985 - Innovative "Ski-Tots Program" introduced at Cochran's by Lindy Kelley as the Cochran family continues to coach and teach the next generation of Cochran's skiers
  • 1998 - Mickey Cochran dies at the age of 74; Cochran's Ski Area turns non-profit
  • 1999 - Cochran's Ski Area was granted nonprofit, 501 tax status by the Internal Revenue Service. Mission statement: "To provide affordable skiing/snowboarding, lessons and race training for area youths and families and continue the tradition Mickey & Ginny have created."
  • 2002 - Lindy Cochran's daughter Jessica Kelley named to the U.S. Ski Team; Marilyn Cochran's son Roger Brown wins NCAA slalom title competing for Dartmouth College
  • 2003 - Bob Cochran's son Jimmy Cochran named to the U.S. Ski Team
  • 2004 - Jimmy Cochran wins U.S. National Championships in Slalom and giant slalom
  • 2005 - Ginny Cochran dies at age 76. Roger Brown named to the U.S. Ski Team
  • 2006 - Jimmy Cochran competes in the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy. Lindy Cochran's son Tim Kelley named to the U.S. Ski Team. Amy Cochran, racing for the University of Vermont, places second in the giant slalom and third in the slalom at the Eastern Intercollegiate Ski Association Championships.
  • 2007 - Jimmy Cochran, Jessica Kelley, and Tim Kelley all begin their 2007/2008 season together on the U.S. Ski Team
  • 2008 - Jimmy Cochran wins two more U.S. national titles in slalom and combined
  • 2010 - Jimmy Cochran competes in the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia. Bobby inducted into the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame
  • 2011 - Ryan Cochran-Siegle named to the U.S. Ski Team; Tim Kelley wins NCAA slalom title for the University of Vermont; Robby Kelley named to the U.S. Ski Team from the May Mammoth Mountain Training Camp.
  • 2012 - Ryan Cochran-Siegle wins gold in downhill and combined at the Alpine Junior World Ski Championships in Roccasoro, Italy; Robby Kelley wins the US National GS Title.
  • 2013 - Ryan Cochran-Siegle and Robby Kelley named to the 2013 World Championships Team.
  • 2015 - Tim Kelley named to the 2015 World Championships Team.
  • 2017 - Ryan Cochran-Siegle and Robby Kelley named to 2017 World Championships Team. Ryan Cochran-Siegle wins US National Super-G Title.
  • 2018 - Ryan Cochran-Siegle competes at the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea
  • 2020 - Ryan Cochran-Siegle wins his first world cup race in Bormio, Italy
  • 2022 - Ryan Cochran-Siegle wins the silver medal in the Super-G event at the Beijing Olympics

Cochran's

In 2006, snow making equipment was installed at the site. The ski area is mostly run with volunteers.
In 2010 the Ski Area installed lights for night skiing.

Video

  • - Vermont Makers - Barbara Cochran - 2013