Justin Murisier achieves his first World Cup victory in the downhill in Beaver Creek, Colorado. The premiere makes up for a lot.
In the second half of last season, downhill racing was primarily a duel between Odermatt and Cyprien Sarrazin. There was a duel this time too, albeit one within the team, which Murisier won against Odermatt by two tenths of a second.
"It's difficult to keep my emotions under control right now," said Murisier with tears in his eyes in the finish area of the Birds of Prey piste. "It's just beautiful, even more beautiful than I could have imagined." Odermatt would of course have loved to have lived up to his role as favorite. "But if I'm going to come second, then behind a colleague, someone like Justin, who more than deserves this success after his incredible story of suffering."
The thick medical file
Murisier's victory was won by someone who has had to get to know the darker side of his profession well enough, who has mostly moved in the shadow of others, whose medical record is much thicker than his record of sporting success, which includes one podium place in the World Cup to date. Four years ago, he came third in the giant slalom in Alta Badia.
His bad luck began in September thirteen years ago - with the first of three cruciate ligament ruptures in his right knee as the worst of many painful experiences. It happened while playing football during a get-together in Zermatt. The second low blow was not long in coming. Eleven months later, Murisier was out of action again with the same injury after an incident during preparation in Ushuaia in the south of Argentina. He was banned from the race tracks for two consecutive seasons as a result. And finally, six years ago, the injury witch struck again in the same place at the training camp in Ohau, New Zealand.
Murisier's right knee also kept him busy last June. The three cruciate ligament tears had caused bone outgrowths that required an arthroscopy. The operation in turn meant that the man from Valais was unable to gain the necessary momentum for the new season in Ushuaia and Portillo in Chile. Murisier said that he was unable to complete a single run without pain.
And even in the immediate run-up to Friday's downhill, Murisier had a scary moment. During the first training session, he dislocated his left shoulder, which fortunately straightened itself out. These problems are nothing new either, reported the long-suffering skier.
The well-deserved reward
And now this - this day, his day, which Murisier had wanted so much and which he had earned like no other. This victory is a reward for perseverance, a never-ending fighting spirit, a belief in his own abilities that never wanes even after setbacks - and the constant hope of a turnaround for the better.
Murisier has finally arrived where he would probably have made it long before without his many ailments. At the beginning of his career, it seemed only a matter of time before his breakthrough, his march to the top. At that age, the highly gifted skier was further along in his development than Marcel Hirscher or Alexis Pinturault, for example. The Frenchman once recalled how they would have looked up to the Valaisan back then.
On this special day in Beaver Creek, it wasn't just the Austrian, who is recovering from a cruciate ligament rupture, and Pinturault, who will probably only return to the slopes this weekend in the giant slalom after recovering from a torn cruciate ligament, who looked up to Murisier.
For the first time, the big stage belonged to him, who had to be almost 33 years old to finally be able to savor this feeling. It will not be the last time. Murisier seems ready - also for more duels with his buddy Odermatt.