Personal information | |
---|---|
Born | Montreal, Quebec, Canada | 20 September 1950
Occupation | Alpine skier ♂ |
Skiing career | |
Disciplines | Moguls, aerials, ballet |
Michel Daigle (born September 20, 1950) is a pioneer of freestyle skiing. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] During his career, Daigle reached the winners podium 34 times. He is considered one of the founders of freestyle skiing, alongside Darryl Bowie and John Johnston [8] [9] [10] and has been credited with the growth of freestyle skiing in the mid 1970s. Daigle competed in ski ballet, moguls and aerials.
Daigle also launched the first freestyle ski camps in Canada and built the first water ski ramps in the country. His camps and water ramps were instrumental in helping train a number of moguls, ballet and aerials skiers who went on to become world champions, in turn helping position Canada as a country that has dominated freestyle skiing since the early 1970's.
He is the inventor of the Daigle Banger, starred in Warren Miller's 1972 film, Winter People and co-authored Free Style Skiing in 1974. [9] [11] [12] [13] [14] Daigle was inducted in the Laurentian Ski Hall of Fame in 1999 [15] and the Canadian Ski Hall of Fame in 2014. [16] [17] [18]
Daigle started skiing at the age of 13 and began racing at 19 with the Division Laurentienne de Ski (DLS). [19] He raced for 3 years in Québec, Ontario and the Eastern United States [20] and finished 2nd overall in the DLS championship in 1971.
That same year, at the end of the ski season, Daigle moved to Whistler in British Columbia. There, he worked with the ski patrol and avalanche rescue team for the Garibaldi Lift Company, the company that operated the ski lifts on Whistler Mountain. In April 1971, in preparation for the Whistler Mountain Gelandesprung, an aerials skiing competition, Daigle worked on the construction of the ski jumps for the event. Having tested the jumps, he was urged by colleagues to enter the competition. [11] [14] [19] Daigle entered and went on to win his first professional title, taking first place and a cash prize of $500 [11] [19] [21] [22] [23]
In the following years, Michel Daigle went on to compete in a number of Canadian, American and European events organized by the emerging freestyle organisations, including the Canadian Freestyle Skiers Association (CFSA) [24] and its American counterpart, the Professional Freestyle Association (PFA). [23] Daigle competed in the three main freestyle events: moguls, aerials and ballet. Daigle won the Canadian National Freestyle Championship in 1974 and 1975.
In 1972, Daigle was featured in Warren Miller's film Winter People in which he appeared during a segment on Mike Wiegele Helicopter Skiing.
Daigle was head of Team Olin and was sponsored by Olin Skis (acquired by K2 Sports in 1999) from 1974 to 1976. [25]
Daigle hosted his first freestyle skiing camp on Whistler Mountain in April 1974. [26] [27] In July of the following year, he hosted the first "Michel Daigle Summer Camp" with John Eaves on Lac des Sables in Sainte-Agathe des Monts, Quebec, Canada. [28] [29] [30] [31]
The camp was the first summer skiing training facility in North America to offer aerials training on water ramps. Over 6 day sessions, campers trained for aerials on the ramps - a 25 foot and a 40 foot high ramp - and on trampolines, and practiced ski ballet on a mechanical moving carpet. [14] Close to 50 campers took part in the first session of the camp in July 1975. [4] In July 1976, Michel Daigle hosted a second freestyle summer camp in Quebec, during which were held the first World Summer Aerials Championships. [14]
A number of coaches who worked at the Michel Daigle Summer Camp were or went on to become freestyle champions. Coaches included John Eaves, Michael Abson, André Derome, Pierre Poulin, Greg Athans, Larry Thouin, Tony De Joseph, and renowned dancer and choreographer Margie Gillis, who trained ballet skiers. [14]
Notable campers include multiple freestyle world champion Marie-Claude Asselin, [32] Canadian, British and world champion Mike Nemesvary, Yves Laroche, Dominique Laroche and Philippe LaRoche, [30] who went on to win 18 World Cup titles, an Olympic gold medal at the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville and a silver medal at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer. Laroche was a founding member of the "Quebec Air Force".
Bob Salerno, a fellow Team Olin freestyler, went on to build the first water ramp training facility in the US at Nordic Valley in 1978.
Daigle invented the Daigle Banger, [22] a ski ballet manoeuvre that involves a front flip and rotation during which the skier's uphill hand or arm comes into contact with the snow, and pushes off once the front flip has been landed. The Daigle Banger became a widely used ski ballet manoeuvre during competition in the 1980s and 1990s. [33] [34]
Following his professional skiing career, Michel Daigle held a number of positions in the sports industry, including ski and windsurfing equipment marketing and sales. [19] Today, Daigle works as a workforce productivity consultant and leadership coach. [44] He has coached executives from a number of Canadian and international organizations. Among other types of workshops he organises, he leads corporate groups on outdoor activities, including skiing workshops.
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