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Australian alpine skier
Leslie Ross Milne
(4 October 1944 ? 25 January 1964)
[1]
[2]
was an
alpine ski racer
from
Australia
.
Entered in the men's
downhill
at the
1964 Winter Olympics
in
Innsbruck
, Milne died of a head injury after he lost control during a training run at
Patscherkofel
and struck a tree at more than 60 miles per hour.
[1]
[3]
[4]
[5]
Milne's death was the second fatality at the 1964 Winter Games. Three days prior, British luge racer
Kazimierz Kay-Skrzypecki
died from injuries sustained in a training run.
[6]
An inquiry held by the organising committee said that he "caught an edge". Hugh Weir reported to the Australian Olympic Federation that
- Because Ross Milne was only seventeen years of age, the question was raised at the [Innsbruck] IOC meeting as to whether inexperienced people were being sent to compete in ... snow sports which contain an element of danger.
Dr Blaxland said that he was wrong about his age (Milne was nineteen),
[7]
and that the IOC was wrong to suggest he was inexperienced:
- In our view Ross Milne was an extremely competent skier. He had competed in Australian championships at least four years before, and we considered him to be an experienced skier. He had been in Europe before ... His fall was not due to lack of skill on his part
Manager John Wagner said that Milne had found the path 150 metres (500 ft) ahead of him obscured by contestants congregating because the top part of the downhill course was overcrowded, and tried to slow down "on a spot which was not prepared for stopping or swinging". He argued that the accident might have been prevented by stricter management of the downhill course, which had a hundred racers on it. He also said that "any of the top skiers would probably have been in difficulty in a similar situation."
Following Milne's death and a serious injury to Edmund Schaedler of
Liechtenstein
,
[3]
some minor safety improvements were made to the downhill course prior to the race on 30 January.
[8]
Milne had learned to ski at
Falls Creek
ski area in the
Australian Alps
and had spent the previous winter of 1963 racing in Europe. He was buried in his home town of
Myrtleford
in
Victoria
, where his family farmed
tobacco
.
[7]
[9]
Milne's younger brother
Malcolm
(b. 1948) competed on the
World Cup
circuit and in the
1968
and
1972 Winter Olympics
. The suggestion that racers from Australia and New Zealand should not compete on downhill courses gave him motivation to prove otherwise. He became the first non-European to win a men's World Cup downhill race in December
1969
, held at
Val-d'Isere
,
France
. It was also the first World Cup podium by an alpine racer from the
southern hemisphere
.
References
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External links
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