Farewell to a skiing legend
Former CU-Boulder skier and Olympic bronze medalistJimmie Heuga(ʴDZ’73)passed away Feb. 8, 46 years to the day he won one of the first two medals in United States men’s Olympic ski team history. He was 66.
Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1970, he courageously fought the disease for almost four decades.
During the1964 Winter Olympics at Innsbruck, Austria, he won the bronze medal in slalom. The U.S. team coach wasBob Beattie, also head coach of the CU ski team, and Heuga was one of four CU skiers on the U.S. squad, along withBilly Kidd(Econ’69) who won the silver in the slalom,Buddy Werner(A&S’64) andBill Marolt(Bus’67). This group is largely credited with elevating U.S. skiing in the international community.
Kidd notes that Heuga passed away in Boulder shortly after 1 p.m., which was ironic because the slalom on Feb. 8, 1964, commenced at 1 p.m. At the start, Heuga was in the 24th position.
“I’ll always remember that day, the excitement when we found out we finished 2-3 behind [Josef] Stiegler [of Austria],” Kidd recalls. “Only our parents and Bob Beattie thought we had a chance to win a medal.”
Born Sept. 22, 1943, in Tahoe City, Calif., Heuga took to skis right away. He appeared in a Warren Miller ski film when he was nine. In 1958, at 15, he was named to the U.S. Ski Team. He remains the youngest man ever on its roster.
At age 17 he performed well at the 1959 U.S. Olympic Trials but was not selected for lack of experience. Undeterred, he traveled with the team to Europe for pre-Olympic training and gained valuable experience racing against Europe’s best.
A three-time CU letterman, Heuga was the 1963 NCAA champion in slalom. He also was on two championship U.S. Ski Teams (1962, 1966).
Heuga skied in the 1968 Winter Olympics at Grenoble, France, before retiring to coach. He was inducted into the U.S. National Ski Hall of Fame in 1976, the Colorado Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame in 1987, the CU Athletic Hall of Fame in 2000 and the World Sports Humanitarian Hall of Fame in 2008.
In 1983 he founded the Jimmie Heuga Center for Multiple Sclerosis in Edwards, Colo., offering physical conditioning and consulting services for people with disabilities and personal challenges. Today it is called Can Do Multiple Sclerosis and has had a profound effect on many people’s lives.
Later in Heuga’s life, CU ski coach Richard Rokos became his personal coach and Heuga did laps around CU’s track on a specially crafted three-wheeler that cyclist and friendTyler Hamilton(Econ ex’95) helped acquire.
Despite his MS affliction, Heuga said he “skied aggressively” until he was 63 and attended two or three CU football games every season.
Marolt, who met Heuga when they were 13, remembers him as a tough guy who impacted everyone around him.
“He was this little guy who was full of energy and buzzing around all the time,” he says, “whether it was the slalom, dancing the twist at the Tul [Tulagi, a famous Boulder student hangout] or simply life in general.”