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Skier Dave Ryding: ‘Now I just have to put on the video and say: watch that’

Dave Ryding says he has done his job now. By achieving his country’s first victory in an Alpine World Cup event, he has brought British skiing in from the cold. “I’ve always said to the younger generation that it’s possible, just work hard,” he says, “but I don’t have to say that any more. I don’t have to say it’s doable having never done it. Now I just have to put on the video and say: watch that.”

Ryding’s feat in thrashing through the classic slalom at Kitzbühel last weekend, on perhaps the most difficult course in the sport, was the best ever by a Briton. It drew worldwide attention – “Ein Brite? Ein Brite!” was the headline in Germany’s Süddeutsche Zeitung – and came one hundred years and a day after Sir Arnold Lunn invented the sport of slalom racing itself on the slopes of Mürren in Switzerland. There was one more milestone, too, however: at the age of 35, Ryding became the oldest winner of a World Cup slalom in history.

“Sitting here right now I have not one part of my body that is aching. I don’t know if that’s a miracle or not,” says Ryding, speaking in the brief window before his next challenge, a flight to Beijing and a fourth Winter Olympics. “Touch wood, I’ve never had a big injury. I feel healthy. I follow, not a strict diet, but a good diet and I don’t know if this helped, but I didn’t ski much when I was growing, so I didn’t smash my body when it was maturing. Maybe when I stop then the niggles will show more, when the muscles aren’t holding everything together.”

Ryding lives in the borough where he was born, Chorley in Lancashire, though he also runs a coffee shop, the Boskins Cafe, in Preston. He says his parents – Shirley, a hairdresser, and Carl, a gas engineer – raised a family that had a smile on

Read more on theguardian.com