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Friday, January 30, 2009

Silver Belt: Reliving the historic race



Truckee’s Babette Haueisen, now 79, drinks champagne from the winner’s prize of the 1955 Silver Belt race alongside men’s winner Bill Beck. At 25, Haueisen was the oldest woman to win the giant slalom race, which ran from 1940 to 1975. About the bucket top Beck is wearing as a hat, "The lid got in the way, so I put it on his head," Haueisen says.
Truckee’s Babette Haueisen, now 79, drinks champagne from the winner’s prize of the 1955 Silver Belt race alongside men’s winner Bill Beck. At 25, Haueisen was the oldest woman to win the giant slalom race, which ran from 1940 to 1975. About the bucket top Beck is wearing as a hat, "The lid got in the way, so I put it on his head," Haueisen says.ENLARGE
Truckee’s Babette Haueisen, now 79, drinks champagne from the winner’s prize of the 1955 Silver Belt race alongside men’s winner Bill Beck. At 25, Haueisen was the oldest woman to win the giant slalom race, which ran from 1940 to 1975. About the bucket top Beck is wearing as a hat, "The lid got in the way, so I put it on his head," Haueisen says.
Courtesy of Sugar Bowl
Babette Haueisen, left, and Eddy Ancinas skied at Alpine Meadows recently for the naming of a run in Werner Schuster’s honor. The 79-year-old Haueisen, who won Sugar Bowl’s Silver Belt race in 1955, says she owns a season pass to Sugar Bowl and skis about twice a week when her back is not acting up.
Babette Haueisen, left, and Eddy Ancinas skied at Alpine Meadows recently for the naming of a run in Werner Schuster’s honor. The 79-year-old Haueisen, who won Sugar Bowl’s Silver Belt race in 1955, says she owns a season pass to Sugar Bowl and skis about twice a week when her back is not acting up.ENLARGE
Babette Haueisen, left, and Eddy Ancinas skied at Alpine Meadows recently for the naming of a run in Werner Schuster’s honor. The 79-year-old Haueisen, who won Sugar Bowl’s Silver Belt race in 1955, says she owns a season pass to Sugar Bowl and skis about twice a week when her back is not acting up.
Courtesy of Vicki Kahn

Peter Picard competes in the first Silver Belt race in 1940.
Peter Picard competes in the first Silver Belt race in 1940.ENLARGE
Peter Picard competes in the first Silver Belt race in 1940.
Courtesy of Sugar Bowl

Bill Klein, shown shooting off a cornice in this historic photo, used to set the Silver Belt course in the early days of the race.
Bill Klein, shown shooting off a cornice in this historic photo, used to set the Silver Belt course in the early days of the race.ENLARGE
Bill Klein, shown shooting off a cornice in this historic photo, used to set the Silver Belt course in the early days of the race.
Courtesy of Sugar Bowl

Skiers slice up fresh snow on Mount Lincoln, site of the Silver Belt race, in this historic photo.
Skiers slice up fresh snow on Mount Lincoln, site of the Silver Belt race, in this historic photo.ENLARGE
Skiers slice up fresh snow on Mount Lincoln, site of the Silver Belt race, in this historic photo.
Courtesy of Sugar Bowl

The original Lincoln double chair, installed in 1950, started where the current rental shop stands and dropped skiers off near the start of the Silver Belt race.
The original Lincoln double chair, installed in 1950, started where the current rental shop stands and dropped skiers off near the start of the Silver Belt race.ENLARGE
The original Lincoln double chair, installed in 1950, started where the current rental shop stands and dropped skiers off near the start of the Silver Belt race.
Courtesy of Sugar Bowl

Babette Haueisen has little patience for inaccuracies.

“The Silver Belt was a giant slalom, not a downhill,” the 79-year-old Truckee resident says with a dry and matter-of-fact tone, referring to a Jan. 3 article in the Sierra Sun previewing Sugar Bowl’s Silver Belt Banzai.

Curt, but accurate. The original Silver Belt race held from 1940 to 1975 was in fact a GS.

Besides her sharp memory from which she plucks old names and relives her racing heyday like yesterday, Haueisen’s collection of historic books, both written by local ski author Robert Frohlich, offer a priceless glimpse into a black-and-white past.

The books also confirm Haueisen’s claim as the woman sipping the “bubbly” from the 1955 winner’s trophy — a silver champagne bucket — in one of the two photos that ran with the article (above, left). The man in the photo tipping the bucket for her? That’s Bill Beck, “from Dartmouth,” Haueisen recalls.

The skier in the second photo, shown checking his speed on a steep section of the Silver Belt course, is Peter Picard, competing in the first-ever Silver Belt race in 1940 (left).

After establishing the facts — the article stated the race was a downhill, and the photos ran sans names — Haueisen relaxes her guard and lets the ski stories flow.

“The year that I won I couldn’t have been a longer shot,” she says, explaining how she had learned to ski just six years earlier while attending college — on 2,571-foot Mount Tamalpais north of the San Francisco Bay.

“But we didn’t stand up and ski; we sat on the skis and used them as a toboggan,” says Haueisen, who grew up in Wisconsin before moving to the Bay Area as a young teen. “Then the next month we went over to Mount Diablo, because those were the years of big winters. We decided we’d stand up on that one.”

Despite crashing in mud and rocks at the bottom of the hill — no one showed her how to turn or stop — Haueisen had discovered a sport that suited her. A year later she left college and joined the Berkeley Ski Club, then landed a job at Sugar Bowl.

“And that’s how it all started,” she says.
SILVER BELT RACE
The invite-only Silver Belt race helped put Sugar Bowl on the map in the early days of ski racing.

Sanctioned by the California Ski Association, which later became the Far West Ski Association, the Silver Belt race survived from 1940 until 1975 and featured some of the biggest names in skiing. Top skiers from Europe and the United States were put up at the resort and in private residences for the end-of-the-season race, usually held in April.

The giant slalom course started at the top of Mount Lincoln, sending competitors down 1,300 vertical feet of steep, gully-filled terrain. The course was rated the steepest race terrain in California and the fifth most difficult in North America.

After the start of World Cup competition in 1967, the Silver Belt lost luster on the upper-tier race circuit. A new amateur points system, revisions in scheduling and increasing costs eventually led to the end of the race.


Racing days

Athletic and competitive, and a quick learner, Haueisen was invited to compete in the Silver Belt for the first time in 1953. She went on to place second the following year and won in 1955, upsetting a strong field of international racers. She competed four times, racing to three podium finishes.

In those days Haueisen and company had to earn their runs, as racers were required to hike up Mount Lincoln the day before the race and sidestep down the mountain with their skis. They called it “grooming.”

“You’d start at the bottom and put the skis on your shoulders, and then you’d boot pack up the course as it was being set,” Haueisen says. “So you get to the top and the course setters go, ‘OK, put on your skis, we are now going to groom the course.’ So we groomed the course as we went down.”

It was a tiring exercise, but one that had to be done.

“Oh, sure it was. But you did it,” Haueisen says. “The Europeans always wanted to do a little slip-slip, but there were people on the course who would say, ‘Go back and put your edges into that slip-slip part you did, or you don’t race tomorrow.’”

On race day, the skiers rode up the Disney chairlift and then walked across the Palisades to the start gate — even though the first chairlift on Lincoln was installed in 1950.

“And then it was, ‘Racer ready. Three, two, one, go, and away we went. It was something else.”

Conditions varied from ice to spring slush and everything in between, says Haueisen. And there was nothing easy about the terrain, especially when coupled with a tightly set course.

According to Frohlich’s book “Skiing with Style, Sugar Bowl: 60 Years,” two-time Olympian Billy Kidd found out about the course’s challenges the hard way.

Former Sugar Bowl General Manager Don Schwartz is quoting telling the story:

“One year, ski school director Toni Marth set a pretty tight course. The steilhang, which is the last section of the course, is damn steep. Once the racer made the turn down it, there were two gates close together. It had a lot of racers worried. But Billy Kidd kept saying that it wasn’t a big deal and he was going to rip this course up. The next day he fell right at those two tight gates and knocked himself out. We carried him off on a stretcher, but only his pride was hurt.”

Haueisen says she became adept at popping back to her feet after a fall and still finishing among the race leaders. They skied on large, cumbersome wooden skis, after all.

Once the race was in the bag, the invited skiers loosened up with a friendly, and often goofy, game of baseball — played on skis.

“It was a way to relax after you’d been all tensed-up for the ski race. And then we’d go to the banquet to see who won. That was always fun,” Haueisen says.



— Sources: “Skiing with Style, Sugar Bowl: 60 Years,” “Mountain Dreamers: Visionaries of Sierra Nevada Skiing"
SILVER BELT WINNERS
1940
Friedl Pfeifer
Gretchen Fraser

1941
Chris Schwarzenbach
Clarita Heath

1942
Chris Schwarzenbach
Kaki Henck

1943-1945
Cancelled due to WWII

1946
Alf Engen
Rhoda Wurtele

1947
Kristofer Berg
Ann Volkmann

1948
George Macomber
Brynhild Graesmoen

1949
Yves Latreille
Dodie Post

1950
Guttorm Berge
Jannette Burr

1951
Guttorm Berge
Sally Neidlinger

1952
Yvan Tache
Mary Jane Griffith

1953
Christian Pravda
Janette Burr

1954
John Cress
Bamse Woronovsky

1955
Bill Beck
Babette Haueisen

1956
Christian Pravda
Sally Deaver

1957
Christian Pravda
Staff Walton

1958
Kenny Lloyd
Cathy Zimmermann

1959
Buddy Werner
Linda Meyers

1960
Tom Corcoran
Starr Walton

1961
Chuck Ferries
Linda Meyers

1962
Buddy Werner
Linda Meyers

1963
Willy Favre
Jean Saubert

1964
Leo Lacroix
Pia Riva

1965
Rod Hebron
Jean Saubert

1966
Philippe Mollard
Kathy Allen

1967
Scott Henderson
Lee Hall

1968
Rick Chaffee
Marilyn Cochran

1969
Eric Poulsen
Barbara Cochran

1970
Eric Poulsen
Marilyn Cochran

1971
Pat Simpson
Cheryl Bechdolt

1972-1974
No races

1975
Greg Jones
Cindy Nelson

— Information from “Mountain Dreamers, Visionaries of Sierra Nevada Skiing”


SILVER BELT BANZAI
In 2004 Sugar Bowl and Red Bull teammed up to hold the first Silver Belt Banzai on the historic Silver Belt race course. The race, which returns to Sugar Bowl on Feb. 14 and 15, features a skiercross format that pits six racers against each other. Qualifying and invited skiers will race for a piece of a $10,000 prize purse. Entry fee is $100 per qualifying racer and free for invited racers. To register go to www.sugarbowl.com/silverbelt-banzai.







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