Ryan Cochran-Siegle competes in the men's giant slalom during the FIS Alpine Ski World Cup on Oct. 23, 2022 in Soelden, Austria.
Ryan Cochran-Siegle joined his mother Barbara Ann as an Olympic medalist with his inspiring super-G performance last winter at the Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022, a race in which he was just 0.04 of a second from gold.
Cochran-Siegle rekindled some of the glory that his mother experienced having won slalom gold fifty-years prior at the Olympic Winter Games Sapporo 1972. The 30-year-old Vermont ski racer continues to proudly contribute to the “Skiing Cochrans” family legacy. In the 1960s and 1970s, the nickname gained notoriety as Barbara Ann and her three siblings were ski racing at the highest level.
Ryan became the sixth Olympic alpine skier among his distinguished family, when he raced in four events at the Olympic Winter Games PyeongChang 2018.
Having finished 10th in both the downhill and super-G world cup standings last season, Cochran-Siegle is driven and optimistic for the next chapter of his racing career.
“Every year, I feel like I’ve had different successes that I’ve been able to build on – the year prior was winning the Bormio super-G, and last year obviously the Olympic medal was pretty insane, like a childhood dream come true,” Cochran-Siegle tells Team USA.
“I appreciate that moment, but if I want to get better as a ski racer, I can’t hold on to that and expect that it’s just who I am. I think I have to earn it every day.
“I’m trying to stay hungry and at the top of my game because I know there are a bunch of skiers who would love to be in my place. I have to protect where I am based upon my skiing.”
Cochran-Siegle’s medal-winning showing in China was all that much more impressive considering that he was mounting a comeback from a fractured neck, suffered in a scary crash in Kitzbuehel, Austria, just 13 months prior.
Perhaps surprisingly, Cochran-Siegle informs that his and his mother’s Olympic medals have yet to be on display together at the family’s Cochran’s Ski Area near home in Richmond, Vermont.
“Actually, I don’t think our medals have met yet – the week I came home (from Beijing) there were a lot of celebrations and I had it with me as much as possible, so young kids could experience what it’s like to hold an Olympic medal,” he says.
“I’m sure we’ll get a photo of us together (with the medals) at some point, but it hasn’t happened yet.”