FLAP 'EM IF YOU GOT 'EM. Clarence "Coy" Hill demonstrates the style of the early '50's. |
BOB HENDRICKSON
Ishpeming Ski Club
Negaunee, MI
bobkie@hotmail.com
EDITOR'S NOTE-
Email from Bob that accompanied this story:
Digging through some old computer files I finally came across a write-up for Coy Hill that I put together for a tribute in a local newsletter shortly after he passed away.
Feel free to use it as seen fit. Edit what's needed. Lend credit to the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame, Ishpeming, Michigan
Merry Christmas & Happy New Year.
“Well, I always said that
others should talk of your feats or you should read about it.
But, you’re
asking me so I’ll tell you…”
-Clarence “Coy” Hill, 1984
interview with Ray Leverton, managing curator
Location: U.S. Ski &
Snowboard Hall of Fame, Ishpeming
Clarence “Coy” Hill, of
Ishpeming, passed away Sunday, May 13, 2012 at his home. He was 85. Coy was
inducted into the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame in 1974 for his ski
jumping accomplishments and was honored with a Lifetime Membership in the
Ishpeming Ski Club and the USSA Central Coaches Association.
He was born in Negaunee on
April 27, 1927. Coy started ski jumping at age four and began competing at age
10. He served in the Navy during World War II and worked as an iron worker when
he came home. His love of ski jumping never diminished and he excelled in ski
jumping competitions throughout the ‘50s and ‘60s.
In an interview with Ray
Leverton, managing curator at the time, at the U.S. Ski Hall of Fame in 1984,
Leverton asked, “So, you say you started skiing when you were four years old
Coy?”
Coy responded, “Yes, I
started flying through the air when I was four... not just as a skier. I was
not a skier. I was a ski jumper.”
Winning the U.S. National
Class A Championship in 1952, several other top national and regional titles,
along with successful showings at international ski flying tournaments in
Europe, Coy made his mark as a ski jumping athlete.
“Ski jumping was my life,” he
stated during an interview in the documentary Winter Wonderland: Michigan’s
Golden Age of Skiing. “To fly through the air on a pair of skis…, the sensation
cannot be put into words. It’s the next perfect thing to flying like a bird,
except the skis are your wings,” he explained.
One of his career highlights
came during a multi-day competition held at the Los Angeles County Fair in
September of 1952 in Pomona, California. “The longest recorded ski jump
tournament in the history of the world, seventeen days of competition,” Coy
stated during the 1984 interview with Leverton. An entire ski jump tower
along with a landing hill was constructed of scaffolding. Crushed ice was
packed on the in-run and landing prior to each day’s tournament. He competed
against several members of the U.S. Olympic ski jumping team and was crowned
the overall champion and also landed the longest jump of the event daily. Overall he took 10 firsts, three seconds, a
third and a fourth with two nights being exhibition.
Coy’s contributions went well
beyond his years spent flying through the air. As a ski sport builder he
dedicated his life to the sport of ski jumping by coaching the local youth and
building the jumps at Suicide Hill Ski Bowl. His leadership in the Ishpeming
Ski Club was a source of inspiration for all club members. He vigorously pressured the entire American
ski jumping institution to take up new international standards for ski jump
construction and landing hill profiles.
He was instrumental in the
construction of the current Suicide Hill jump scaffolding that was built with a
small army of volunteers, a hand winch and a gin pole. Upon completion and
dedication of the new jump on February 16, 1972, he was the first rider to take
flight.
Coy Hills’ gruff voice and
stern eyes will be missed at the ski jump hills. His sincere smile and nod of
approval will always be remembered by those who put the time and efforts to
keep the ski jumping culture alive at Suicide Hill Ski Bowl.
In the 1984 interview with
Leverton when talking about what it takes to be a ski jumper Coy said, “If it’s
our job, no matter what it is, to be good you sacrifice something. You spend
time at it. You want something you got to be hungry. You’ve got to have lust.
That doesn’t mean we have to be mean or anything else. Just have to be hungry.
You got to want it more than the other one if you’re going to win. You’ve got
to want something to win it.”
****
“Oh yes, I’m bragging. I was
strong. I loved it. I spent a lifetime at it. If I missed a day of practice I
thought it was a sin. If I didn’t ski I ran or went and worked on the hill. I
loved it. We didn’t have the programs we have today. You get on the U.S. Team
or something you get a sponsorship or stuff like that. We didn’t have that. It
was personal sacrifice.”
Coy
Hill in 1984 interview with Ray Leverton
EDITOR'S NOTE-
Coy was inducted into the US Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame in 1974. To see his USSHoF bio, CLICK HERE
DARE ME? Coy Hill in an undated photograph. |
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