Nancy Greene Raine: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Nancy at Sun Peaks in 2000.jpg|220px|thumb|Nancy Green in 2000.]] |
[[Image:Nancy at Sun Peaks in 2000.jpg|220px|thumb|Nancy Green in 2000.]] |
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[[Image:Nancy Greene 1969.jpg|220px|right|thumb|On [[Whistler Mountain]], [[1969]].]] |
[[Image:Nancy Greene 1969.jpg|220px|right|thumb|On [[Whistler Mountain]], [[1969]].]] |
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'''Nancy Catherine Greene''', born [[May 11]], [[1943]] in [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]], [[Canada]], is a champion [[Alpine skiing|Alpine skier]] voted as [[Canada's Athletes of the 20th Century|Canada's Female Athlete of the 20th Century]]. |
'''Nancy Catherine Greene''', born [[May 11]], [[1943]] in [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]], [[Canada]], is a champion [[Alpine skiing|Alpine skier]] voted as [[Canada's Athletes of the 20th Century|Canada's Female Athlete of the 20th Century]]. |
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Revision as of 03:05, 30 October 2006
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Women’s Alpine Skiing | ||
1968 Grenoble | Giant Slalom | |
1968 Grenoble | Slalom |
Nancy Catherine Greene, born May 11, 1943 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, is a champion Alpine skier voted as Canada's Female Athlete of the 20th Century.
At the age of three, Nancy Greene's family moved to Rossland, British Columbia, a mountainous area and the site of the first ski competition ever held in Canada in 1897. The child of avid skiers, Greene began at a young age and while in high school she competed in the Canadian Junior Championships. She would go on to become Canada's most decorated ski racer in history with the most World Cup victories, male or female.
Nicknamed "Tiger" because of her go for it attitude and her aggressive style of skiing, she won the Canadian ski championship six times and the United States championship, three times. In 1967, Nancy Greene broke the European domination of the sport, becoming the first North American skier to win the World Cup. That year she won seven of 16 events, taking the over-all title with four giant slalom victories, plus two in slalom and one in downhill. Her accomplishment earned her Canadian "Athlete of the Year" honours.
In 1968 she won the World Cup title again plus at the Winter Olympic Games in Grenoble, France, she captured a gold medal in the giant slalom by one of largest margins in Olympic History and a silver medal in the slalom. For the second time, she was named Canada's "Athlete of the Year."
Following her retirement from competition, she served as Canadian national ski team coach until 1973 and made a major contribution to Canadian sport by accepting an appointment to the federal Government's "Task Force on Sport For Canadians." Married with twin boys, Nancy Greene and her husband Al Raine were instrumental in the early development of the Whistler-Blackcomb Resort in Whistler, British Columbia, and then later to the development and promotion of skiing at Sun Peaks Resort, just north of Kamloops, British Columbia. Nancy is Director of Skiing at Sun Peaks Resort and skis almost every day. Nancy and Al built and operate Nancy Greene's Cahilty Lodge where they make their home. Dedicated to the promotion of her sport, for more than 30 years the Nancy Greene Ski League has been an important entry-level race program for young children.
Over the years, Nancy Greene has been the recipient of numerous awards including her country's highest civilian honour, the Order of Canada. She has been honoured with the naming of "Nancy Greene Provincial Park" and "Nancy Greene Lake" in the Monashee Mountains of British Columbia's Kootenay region. In 1999 her name was engraved in Canada's Walk of Fame and she was voted Canada's female athlete of the century in a survey of newspaper editors and broadcasters conducted by The Canadian Press and Broadcast News.
In April 2005, Ms Greene Raine was named Chancellor of Thompson Rivers University.
Major Awards
- National ski team member, 1959 to 1968
- Six-time Canadian champion
- Three-time United States champion
- Word championship team member, 1962, 1966
- World Cup women's champion 1967, 1968
- Olympic team member, 1960, 1964, 1968
- 1968 Winter Olympics gold medal (giant slalom) and silver medal (slalom)
- Coach of the Canadian ski team, 1968 to 1973
- Officer of the Order of Canada (Canada’s highest civilian honor)
- Order of the Dogwood (British Columbia's highest civilian award)
- Lou Marsh Trophy as Canada's Outstanding Athlete of the Year, 1967, 1968
- B'nai B'rith woman of 1968
- British Columbia Sports Hall of Fame
- Canadian Sports Hall of Fame
- United States Sports Hall of Fame
- Canada's Walk of Fame
- Canada's Female Athlete of the 20th Century
External links
- 1943 births
- Living people
- Canada's Walk of Fame
- Canadian alpine skiers
- Olympic competitors for Canada
- Olympic gold medalists for Canada
- Officers of the Order of Canada
- Canada's Sports Hall of Fame
- People from British Columbia
- Canadian university and college chancellors
- British Columbia sportspeople
- People from Rossland, British Columbia
- Ontario sportspeople
- People from Ottawa