Andreas Däscher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Andreas Däscher is a ski jumping athlete from Switzerland, who is best known for developing the Daescher technique in the 1950's, which was the standard technique until the V-style was developed by Jan Boklöv in 1985. The Dasecher technique superseded the Kongsberger technique developed by Jacob Tullin Thams and Sigmund Ruud (both from Norway) after World War I in Kongsberg.

Erich Windisch, a German Olympic ski jumper, who developed in 1949 a jumping technique in which the jumper’s arms are slightly arched and pointing downward, is also credited along with Däscher of devopling the revamped aerodynamic jumping style that was used in elite competition for over 30 years.

Daescher's best Olympic finish was 6th in the Large Hill at the 1956 Winter Olympics in Cortina d'Ampezzo.

[edit] References

This biographical article related to winter sports is a stub. You can help by expanding it.