Montreal Gazette

Canadian ski star Guay retires after stellar career

- DONNA SPENCER

What was to be LAKE LOUISE, ALTA. a swan-song season for Érik Guay ended early Thursday when the Canadian skier announced his retirement. Guay felt some ambivalenc­e when he arrived in Lake Louise, Alta., for Saturday’s season-opening men’s downhill. The 37-year-old from Montreal wondered how competitiv­e he’d be after missing most of last season with a back injury. Guay was also bracing himself for another winter away from his wife, Karen, and four daughters ranging in age from one to nine. Then, before stepping into the start hut for Wednesday’s first training run, Guay heard on the race radio that veteran teammate Manuel Osborne-Paradis had crashed. The telltale sound of the chopper to evacuate Osborne-Paradis from the mountain started a cascade of thoughts in Guay’s head because he’d been there: crashes, injuries, surgeries, months of rehab. “When Manny crashed, I thought ‘I should just go take the chair lift down,’ ” Guay said Thursday. “It took everything for me to push out of the start gate. I couldn’t focus or charge the way that I wanted to and I think that’s when I kind of knew it was time.” Within hours of crossing the finish line in 69th, Guay made the decision to retire in the place where he won the first of 25 World Cup medals in 2003, when he claimed downhill silver in Lake Louise. “There were a lot of things tugging me in different directions,” Guay explained. “One is my family at home, being away from them for more than a little while is quite difficult at the moment. “My skiing wasn’t at the level I wanted it to be. I would have been out there looking for the feeling, being far away from my family, far away from my wife for months on end, trying to break through. There were a lot of ifs. I wasn’t willing to do that one more time.” Along with his two gold medals and one silver world championsh­ip medals, Guay is the most decorated male in Canadian ski racing history. “He’s been one of the best downhill skiers we’ve had over the last, I would say, my generation for sure,” said reigning Olympic men’s downhill champion Aksel Lund Svindal of Norway. Osborne-Paradis suffered broken bones in his leg and is out indefinite­ly, leaving the Canadian team bereft of its two most veteran skiers to start the season. Guay was a role model for skiers on the national men’s team. “He’s huge to the ski-racing community in Canada,” Canadian team skier Dustin Cook said. “I remember watching him as a kid. It’s definitely a loss for the team. We knew it was coming. It’s still a big hole to fill and big boots to fill for us.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Montreal’s Erik Guay has announced his retirement Thursday from men’s World Cup downhill ski racing.
FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal’s Erik Guay has announced his retirement Thursday from men’s World Cup downhill ski racing.

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