James RIDDELL

Grande-Bretagne
Grande-Bretagne
Ski AlpinSki Alpin
Participations1
Première participationGarmisch-Partenkirchen 1936
Année de naissance1909

Biographie

Educated at Harrow School and Cambridge University, James Riddell excelled at both cricket and athletics. His international skiing career began in the very first international downhill race; Riddell finished eighth at Zakopane, Poland in 1929 and won the Meurren Inferno the same year. British downhill champion in 1935, he crashed badly into a tree during the downhill section of the Combined event at the 1936 Winter Games, was catapulted into a river and suffered a back injury. Clocked at 127.96km over the Flying Kilometre at St. Moritz, Riddell was also a competent ski-jumper. Off the slopes he led a varied life, the thirties were spent divided between wildlife photography in Africa and writing children’s books whilst the war years saw him teach mountain survival techniques for the armed forces at the Middle East Ski and Mountaineering School in Lebanon. A six-month monoplane flight to Australia, co-piloting with the novelist Neville Shute, provided the inspiration for his travel book, "Flight of Fancy", which was followed by a series of books on skiing. He married another skier, 1933 World Championship medallist Jeanette Kessler and they co-authored the guidebook “Ski Holidays in the Alps”. At various times president of Ski Club of Great Britain, the Kandahar Club and the Alpine Ski Club, he continued to ski into his seventies.

Résultats olympiques

Athlete Olympic Results Content

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