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Judy Nagel

Judy Nagel
— Alpine skier —
Disciplines Giant Slalom, Slalom,
Downhill, Combined
Club Crystal Mountain Alpine
Born (1951-08-27) August 27, 1951 (age 65)
Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Height 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m)
World Cup debut January 1968 (age 16)
Retired April 1970 (age 18)
Olympics
Teams 1 – (1968)
Medals 0
World Championships
Teams 2 – (1968, 1970)
Medals 0
World Cup
Seasons 3 – (196870)
Wins 3 – (2 SL, 1 GS
Podiums 12 – (8 SL, 4 GS
Overall titles 0 – (6th in 1970)
Discipline titles 0 – (4th: SL ('69), GS ('70))

Judy Ann Nagel (born August 27, 1951) is a former World Cup alpine ski racer from the United States.

Born in Seattle, Washington, Nagel was the younger of two daughters of an Olympic ski racer. She learned to ski and race at Stevens Pass when the family lived in Skykomish. When Crystal Mountain began operations in 1962, her father headed the new ski school and race program, and the family relocated to Enumclaw.

Her father, Jack Nagel (1926–2004), was a member of the U.S. alpine team at the 1952 Winter Olympics; he fell in the first run of the slalom and finished 29th in the giant slalom. Born in Port Townsend and raised in Skykomish, Jack was a third-generation logger when skiing was gaining popularity in the 1940s. He later ran the only gas station in Skykomish and was a ski instructor at Stevens Pass until 1962, when the new Crystal Mountain opened near Mount Rainier. His racing school was featured in Sports Illustrated in 1963, with older daughter Cathy, 14, on the cover.

Nagel competed in the 1968 Winter Olympics at age 16. Not originally on the World Cup or Olympic teams, Nagel and 18-year-old Kiki Cutter of Oregon were brought over to Europe a few weeks ahead of the Olympics to compete for berths on the U.S. Olympic team, which they both made. Nagel placed eighth and sixth in the two World Cup slaloms immediately preceding the Olympics, and led the Olympic slalom at Chamrousse by eight-hundredths of a second after the first run. U.S. racers seemingly held four of the first six spots after the first run, but the other three Americans were subsequently disqualified for missed gates. With the fastest run that qualified, Nagel was last out of the gate in the second run and missed an early gate. She climbed back up the hill to make the gate, then straddled another and had another spill to cross the finish line well back and was disqualified. Two days later, Nagel was the top U.S. finisher in the giant slalom at 12th place.


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