Bob Beattie, World Cup Tour Co-Founder, Passes Away Aged 85

SnowBrains | | Post Tag for Industry NewsIndustry News
bob beattie
Bob Beattie, center, sadly passed away Sunday. Credit: Doug Haney / U.S. Ski & Snowboard

World Cup Co-Founder Bob Beattie died on Sunday evening at 85 years old, reports skiracing.com.

Beattie coached the University of Colorado Ski Team in the late 1950โ€™s before going on to coach the U.S. Ski Team through the 1960โ€™s. During that time, the U.S. took home its first Olympic medals in menโ€™s alpine skiing at the 1964 Games in Innsbruck, Austria.

He is, perhaps, best known for his role in co-founding the alpine skiing World Cup tour with French journalist Serge Lang and Honore Bonnet. The New Hampshire-native also helped start the World Pro Ski Tour in the 1970โ€™s and changed the face of NASTAR racing. Thereโ€™s hardly an aspect of ski racing, particularly in the U.S., that Beattie did not have a hand in.

โ€œHe was an innovator, a visionary, and he was persistent enough to take his ideas and make them into reality,โ€ said former national team member Billy Kidd toย The Aspen Times in 2003. โ€œHe went against the grain in a number of ways. He had people that disliked the way he did things and probably disliked him, but as you know, a lot of successful people make enemies along the way and itโ€™s easy to criticize. But go back and look at the ski team, he changed the sport in America dramatically.โ€

Beattie remained a prominent voice in the ski racing community until the very end, speaking critically of FIS, the World Cup tour, and U.S. Ski & Snowboard. His legacy will certainly live on for decades to come.


Related Articles

Got an opinion? Let us know...