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Thredbo's Top to Bottom is back

snow action team 25.07.2016

Thredbo’s Top to Bottom is one of the all time classic Aussie snow events, back on August 6 for the 26th consecutive season.
Snow Action caught up with the two all-time leading winners of the men’s open ski category, Scott Kneller and Manfred Wolsher, with 5 wins each. Scott Kneller is looking to make the outright record his with a 6th win this year.

Last year's Men's Open podium. Can Scott Kneller top it again? © Ben Stevens/Thredbo

Last year’s Men’s Open podium. Can Scott Kneller top it again? © Ben Stevens/Thredbo

Australia’s most successful Skier X racer ever, Scott Kneller, grew up in Jindabyne, with a local’s appreciation of Thredbo’s Top to Bottom’s importance in the overall scheme of things. He couldn’t wait for his first crack at it in 2007.
“I was 18 (the eligible age) when I first raced the Top to Bottom. My first event was terrifying, it was raining, conditions were challenging, and I was young and inexperienced. I got off to a slow start, got caught up with the crowd, and crashed in the first turn. The following year I was on a mission to prove myself and came away with the win.”
“You went on to race Skier X at the highest level, did two Olympics, plus be just the third Aussie male ever to win a World Cup ski race. How does the Top-to-Bottom stack up for degree of difficulty and sense of achievement vs your Skier X career?”
“Quite different events but I still get that same nervous energy lining up at the start, and I think that’s what keeps me coming back. It’s technically demanding, and I have noticed that more in recent times since my retirement from competitive racing. I’m certainly getting slower on the run! I think it goes without saying that representing Australia at an Olympic games trumps a Top to Bottom win, but it’s an event I’m certainly proud to have won. The event has a prestigious history of past winners and I enjoy coming back every year to give the young guns a run for their money.”
Still only 25, with three straight wins and 5 total, those young guns look like waiting a while longer.
“Planning to come back and defend the title in 2016?”
“Most definitely, it’s an event I look forward to every year. If nothing else it’s an excuse to pull out the long boards and go really fast.”
The record’s none too shabby already, competitors take note:
2007 – Crash; 2008 – 1st; 2009 – 2nd; 2010 – 1st;
2011 – Didn’t compete; 2012 – 4th; 2013 – 1st;
2014 – 1st; 2015 – 1st;
2016 – watch this space..

Manfred Wolsher on course for one of his 5 victories © Wolsher Family

Manfred Wolsher on course for one of his 5 victories © Wolsher Family


We covered Manfred Wolsher’s efforts in our 1999 issue, when he was recovering after nearly dying in the 1998 event, the result of a slow diagnosis of a collapsed lung, which was the worst of his injuries from his spectacular high speed exit on the last bend that year.
As a popular and committed race coach at Thredbo, he often found himself going up against his current and former pupils. He needed all the expertise acquired growing up in Austria’s super competitive racing system, where he reached Europa Cup level skiing with and against a generation of greats. Plus he had a little bonus help in the form of skis from his racing buddy, and then World Cup race star, Andreas Schifferer.
Through the 90s he was virtually unstoppable, winning an unprecedented 5 Top-to-Bottoms in a row from 1993 to 1997, plus several of the gnarly no-holds-barred Dash for Cash events at Perisher, the other biggie back in the day.
But even the best laid plans can go awry at the Top-to-Bottom, which is a serious test of fitness, skill, equipment, preparation and tactics. For openers, the starting uphill run in boots, carrying your skis or board, is a killer for most. Then it’s clip in and charge, while avoiding others in the often fairly marginal conditions that just get worse as the various categories of men’s and women’s open and over 35s boarders and skiers take their toll on the course.
Back in 1999 we asked him what went wrong.
“You were looking great going into the last bend, then blew out big time. What happened?”
“My problem was my ski was too fast! (laughs) No, honestly I think I had been working much too hard the week before, and I was just a bit exhausted.
There was a guy Shaun Turner, I used to be his coach, and his goal was just to beat me one time, so he was a hard competitor. It was only 50 metres to the finish line, I tried to overtake him, then went into a little dip, sat back, and just couldn’t turn. It was too late, I slid off the course.”
“What was the damage?”
“Two ribs broken, a punctured lung, and a broken vertebrae.”
The Dash for Cash was a Chinese Downhill style anything goes event designed for live TV viewers who might not know anything about skiing but could appreciate mayhem. It featured uphill run/skate sections, in a mad scramble to reach the girl holding the $5,000 wad of cash atop a mound of snow. Some years the cash grab was only decided in the melee to be first to scramble up the snow mound, some skiers acting in teams to spoil others’ leading contenders. But Manfred usually got so far in front he had no problems, racking up 3 Dash for Cash Wins.
We caught up with him recently for an update.
“Looking back which was the hardest to win, the Dash for Cash or the Top to Bottom?”
“Dash for Cash, however by saying that both were different events with lots of excitement, in particular the Top-to-Bottom as I thought I owned this event, until I crashed.”
“What was your secret to winning so many?”
“Self confidence. Fitness – I trained for it. Tactics.”
“In all the racing you did from junior days in Austria to the Europa Cup level, in an era of total legends, how does the Top-to-Bottom stack up on the relative difficulty and achievement scale?”
“Well it is yet again different in all aspects of my achievement as an athlete. Winning international – competing against Alberto Tomba, Edalini, Pramoton, Ingemar Stenmark, Armin Azinger, and to be part of the Euro Cup team was my biggest achievement for sure. However winning so many crazy events like Top-to-Bottom and Dash for Cash is certainly high up in my achievements and so I’m very proud of it.”
“You still getting much ski time in?”
“Not as much as I would like, but my contribution as a FIS Technical Delegate allows me to go to places and mingle with the skiing community. And we also go every second year as a family for 6 weeks to Austria, and we ski in Thredbo nearly every year as a family also.”
“Not tempted to go back and extend the record in the over-35s category?”
“No.”

The Top to Bottom is on mountain event highlight of a big week sponsored by G H Mumm in Thredbo, including the Aussie EDM duo Bag Raiders who are locked in to headline on the Friday and Saturday after the Top to Bottom race, bringing the après vibes to Poolside.

The famous Le Mans start sorts out the fit from the dusty © Ben Stevens/Thredbo

The famous Le Mans start sorts out the fit from the dusty © Ben Stevens/Thredbo