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LAMY-CHAPPUIS Jason
LAMY-CHAPPUIS Jason

Jason LAMY CHAPPUIS

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The prince of Nordic combined

Since being crowned Olympic 10km/normal hill champion at Vancouver 2010, Jason Lamy-Chappuis has topped the Nordic combined world rankings and was chosen to carry France’s flag at the Opening Ceremony of the 2014 Winter Games.

Prodigious beginnings

Jason Lamy-Chappuis was born to an American mother and French father in Montana (USA) in 1986. “I was just five weeks old when I flew between Montana and France for the first time,” he explained. “Maybe that’s where my passion for aviation and desire to become an airline pilot comes from.” 

In 1991, when the dual national was four, his family moved to France, settling in Bois d’Amont, a village situated within the Rousses ski resort in the Jura region. He took a liking to cross country skiing and tried his hand at ski jumping, winning his first competition in the discipline as a seven-year-old on 15 January 1994. In 1999, he decided to marry both of his interests by focusing on the Nordic combined.

Turin surprise

Lamy-Chappuis claimed his first major international triumph at the 2003 European Youth Olympic Festival in Bled (SLO). “It was then that I realised what elite-level skiing was all about,” said the French competitor. At the age of 19, he made his Olympic debut at Turin 2006, raising a few eyebrows by finishing fourth in the sprint event.

Already equipped with excellent jumping skills, he admitted after Turin that further effort was required in the cross country portion to enable him to compete with the leading lights of Nordic combined.

Rise to the summit

Building on his high-quality jumps and gradually improving his cross country technique, strategy and endurance, Lamy-Chappuis picked up his first FIS Nordic Combined World Cup win in a sprint in Sapporo (JPN), a month after the Turin Games. He continued to make progress over the ensuing seasons, racking up several victories and top-three finishes, as well as two bronze medals at the 2009 FIS World Championships in Liberec (CZE).

Vancouver zenith

On 14 February 2010 at Whistler Olympic Park, Lamy-Chappuis got his Vancouver Games campaign off to a solid start by placing fifth in the ski jumping part of the men’s individual normal hill/10km competition. In the staggered 10km cross-country race, he swiftly caught up with the leaders, but demonstrated tactical nous by holding back until the dying moments.

As the group of four leading skiers rounded the final bend, Lamy-Chappuis surged past Johnny Spillane (USA) to become only the second Frenchman to secure an Olympic gold medal in Nordic combined, after Fabrice Guy at Albertville 1992.

In the subsequent large hill/10km contest a few days later, strong winds put paid to his dreams of a remarkable double, and he eventually finished in 18th position. In the team event, meanwhile, France’s quartet, featuring Lamy-Chappuis, Maxime Laheurte, François Braud and Sébastien Lacroix, finished just outside the medals in fourth.

On top of the world

Following his Olympic triumph, the man nicknamed “Flying Jason” promptly soared to the top of the world rankings. A series of positive results followed, including three overall FIS World Cup wins (in 2010, 2011 and 2012) and four FIS World Championship titles, in 2011 (on the mythical large hill in Holmenkollen, Oslo), and 2013 (in the team sprint, team normal hill and individual 10km/normal hill competitions in Val di Flemme, Italy).

“I had to live up to my Olympic title. I had to remain at the top of the rankings and stay completely focused. It was a really enjoyable time,” he recalled. On 7 February 2014, he was France’s flagbearer at the Opening Ceremony of the Sochi Games, but once the competition started he struggled to emulate his feats of four years earlier. Despite that setback, he has since continued to excel at the highest level, extending his total number of podium appearances to 60, including 26 victories.

“We live for those moments,” said Lamy-Chappuis, who still harbours dreams of further Olympic success. “It’s the joys and disappointments that spice up our careers. That’s what makes sport so wonderful.”

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