|
Anchorage Daily News (November 6, 2009)
By Mike Campbell, Anchorage Daily News, Alaska Nov. 6--Extreme skier Doug Coombs, founder of Valdez Heli-Ski Guides, was among eight pioneers of the sport inducted in the U.S. Ski Hall of Fame today. Coombs, an integral figure in popularizing adventure skiing, died three years ago after slipping and falling over a cliff in the French Alps. Authorities said he was trying to help a friend who plunged over the same precipice. A former ski racer from Montana State University, Coombs "may be the most recognizable skier in this year's class for his appearances in many ski films in the 1990s (and is) regarding by many as the most important skier of his generation in popularizing adventure skiing," a press release announcing his selection said. Coombs twice won the World Extreme Skiing Championships in Valdez and worked extensively for the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort in the 1990s. Coombs and his wife, Emily, started Alaska's first heli-skiing operation in the Chugach Mountains, naming many of the runs still in use today. He also led steep skiing camps in Switzerland, France and Greenland. In 2000, Coombs sold Valdez Heli-Ski Guides to Scott Raynor, its current owner. "Although his skills far surpassed those of most of the people he guided, he had a capacity to make every skier who came into contact with him believe they could try bigger challenges," according to the press release. Former Daily News outdoors editor and columnist Craig Medred once called Coombs, who died at age 48, "one of the kings of X-treme sport and possibly the best skier ever." On the day he died, Coombs was skiing the Couloir de Polichinelle near the resort of La Grave in southeast France with friends Chad VanderHam, a recently certified ski mountaineering guide; aspiring guide Matt Farmer; and Christina Bloomquist. The route they chose maintains an average steepness of 40-45 degrees through a series of three successive couloirs. After successfully descending the first two couloirs, VanderHam went first and disappeared from sight, around a corner to the right. Coombs went next and upon seeing that VanderHam had fallen, yelled to the other two skiers to bring a rope. Farmer traversed into the middle of the couloir, where he could see Coombs side-stepping down a rock rib to the right of the base of the couloir, attempting to get a view over the cliff to his right. Farmer then saw Coombs' skis slip on the rock, and Coombs fell out of view over the rib. By the time Farmer and Bloomquist reached the pair, more than 450 feet below them, Coombs was not breathing and was unresponsive. VanderHam was unconscious and breathing but could not be revived Long time ski writer Paul Robbins was among the other seven inductees for the Class of 2009, joining Jack Benedick, Chris Waddell, Sarah Will, Stu Campbell, Sepp Kober and Ansten Samuelstuen. VIDEO --Two-minute video memorializing Coombs www.broadbandsports.com/node/1241 ----- To see more of the Anchorage Daily News, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.adn.com. Copyright (c) 2009, Anchorage Daily News, Alaska Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA. A service of YellowBrix, Inc.
|