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...right to swing beneath a railway bridge and shot toward the finish line at better than 70 miles an hour. However their techniques varied, every team at St. Moritz had one thing more in common: they all rode sleds built by the defending bobsled champion, Switzerland's Fritz Feierabend...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Hoch, Hoch, Hoch! | 2/7/1955 | See Source »

Switzerland's Fritz Feierabend is a prideful man who, at 45, can look back on a notable record in bobsledding: four world titles (the first in 1939) and five Olympic medals. Last week at the World Bobsled championships on northern Italy's evergreen-banked Cortina run, Feierabend's pride was doubly injured. In the two-man events, the Italians had placed one-two with new sleds of their own design (featuring knee-action front runners). It was beginning to look as if the famed Feierabend firm, which has produced Europe's best bobsleds for decades...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Motives for Winning | 2/8/1954 | See Source »

...swaying) in unison to get the last watch-tick of speed from the razor-sharp sled runners, the sledders had knocked an impossible 4.6 seconds off the Cortina record: from 1:24.34 for the mile-long run down to 1:19.74. When the championship heats began, it was Feierabend's red sled, with the white Swiss cross on its cowling, that held the course record...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Motives for Winning | 2/8/1954 | See Source »

...Feierabend's sled was the next to last to start. Carefully, for luck, he touched each blade-then the Swiss were off. Using Feierabend's simple formula-"Hug the curves high and develop speed, like a dive bomber"-the Swiss sled was soon hitting 80 m.p.h. It spun through a series of labyrinth curves, down an ice-coated chute into famed Crystal Curve (where 24 sleds cracked up in 1950), then whipped across the finish line in a wild flurry of snow as the brakeman pulled to a stop. The announced time brought a roar from the crowd...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Motives for Winning | 2/8/1954 | See Source »

With something to shoot at, the other bobbers went after Feierabend with a vengeance in the second heat. The proud Swiss had an answer for them when his turn came: he broke the record again with a clocking of 1: 18.07, which left him a full three seconds ahead of the runner-up, German Hans Rosch. "It's all over," conceded one German official. "All he has to do is appear here tomorrow, coast along at a conservative 1: 20, and we toast the name of Feierabend again." Next day, running almost as fast...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Motives for Winning | 2/8/1954 | See Source »

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