Andy Mill
Andy Mill (born 1953) is an American former alpine ski racer, two-time Winter Olympian, sports broadcaster, author, and fly fishing champion, renowned for his sixth-place finish in the downhill event at the 1976 Olympics despite a severe injury and for winning a record five Gold Cup tarpon tournaments.[1][2][3] Born in Fort Collins, Colorado, Mill relocated to Laramie, Wyoming, as a child before moving to Aspen in 1960, where he honed his downhill skiing skills in the local mountains.[1][2] He joined the U.S. Ski Team in 1969 as a junior racer and remained a member until 1981, establishing himself as America's top downhill competitor from 1971 to 1978 with consistent top-10 finishes on the World Cup circuit, including a fourth-place result in Val Gardena in 1980.[2][4] At the 1974 World Championships in St. Moritz, Switzerland, he finished 28th in downhill, marking his international debut.[1] Mill competed in two World Championships overall and earned the nickname "Downhill Jesus" for his aggressive style.[2] His Olympic highlight came at the 1976 Innsbruck Games, where a severe right ankle sprain just before the downhill race forced him to compete in pain; he still achieved sixth place, the best U.S. finish in the event in 24 years and narrowly missing a medal by four-tenths of a second.[2][5] For this resilient performance, Mill received the U.S. Olympic Spirit Award in 1988.[2] He returned for the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics, placing 16th in downhill.[5][6] Mill's skiing career earned him inductions into the Colorado Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame in 1994 and the Aspen Valley Ski Club Hall of Fame in 2005.[2][5] After retiring from racing, Mill transitioned to broadcasting, covering two Olympics and producing the instructional series Ski with Andy Mill for ESPN during the 1980s and 1990s.[2] In the early 1990s, he discovered fly fishing, particularly for tarpon in the Florida Keys, and quickly excelled, winning 12 tournaments overall, including the prestigious Gold Cup five times—more than any other angler—and achieving the Triple Crown by also securing the Hawley and Golden Fly titles.[3][7] He hosted 91 episodes of the fishing program Sportsman's Journal on the Versus Network (now NBCSN), which aired internationally.[3] Mill chronicled his angling expertise in the 2010 book A Passion for Tarpon, a technical guide that emphasizes conservation and has become a standard reference for the sport.[8] His contributions to fly fishing led to the 2023 Heritage Award from the American Museum of Fly Fishing and induction into the International Game Fish Association's Hall of Fame in 2025.[3][5] Today, Mill continues to promote outdoor pursuits through his podcast Mill House, featuring interviews with angling pioneers.[9]Early life
Upbringing
Andy Mill was born on February 11, 1953, in Fort Collins, Colorado.[10] His family, rooted in Colorado, soon relocated to Laramie, Wyoming, shortly after his birth, where his father, Dick Mill, managed a lumber yard as part of the family's involvement in local business.[1][2] In the early 1960s, when Mill was eight years old, the family moved again to Aspen, Colorado, along with Mill and his two sisters and younger brother.[11] This relocation immersed the family in Aspen's burgeoning outdoor-oriented community, coming from humble beginnings that emphasized an active lifestyle.[2] The move to Aspen profoundly shaped Mill's formative years, exposing him to the town's vibrant skiing culture that would later influence his path, though his early childhood focused on family adjustment and exploration in the Rocky Mountain environment.[2]Entry into skiing
Following his family's relocation to Aspen, Colorado, in the early 1960s when he was eight years old, Andy Mill joined the Aspen Ski Club and began alpine skiing as a young boy.[11][2] Mill rapidly progressed as a junior racer in the late 1960s, competing successfully in local and regional events under the Aspen Ski Club's coaching system, which emphasized rigorous training and had a legacy of developing elite talent from the 1950 World Championships era.[1][2] He often practiced slalom gates after school, honing his technical skills on Aspen's challenging terrain.[11] His strong performances in junior national events established him as one of the top racers in Colorado and the United States, culminating in his joining the U.S. Ski Team as a junior racer in 1969 at age 16.[11][3] This aggressive junior style, marked by a bold and fearless approach, originated his early nickname "Wilde Hund" (wild dog) among European observers.[1]Skiing career
U.S. Ski Team debut
Andy Mill joined the senior U.S. Ski Team in 1971 at the age of 18, transitioning directly from junior racing with the Aspen Ski Club to senior-level competition.[1][2] His selection came after strong performances in junior events, marking him as one of the promising young talents in American alpine skiing during a period when the team was rebuilding its international presence.[12] Mill specialized in downhill events, with additional focus on the combined discipline, which incorporated downhill and slalom components.[10] In his early senior years, he competed in national races and qualifiers, including a victory in the prestigious Roch Cup downhill at Aspen in 1972, a key event that helped solidify his position on the team.[1] These competitions served as crucial stepping stones, testing his speed and technical skills against established American racers. During the early 1970s, Mill's training regimen emphasized high-speed downhill preparation, often involving rigorous physical conditioning and course-specific drills under coaches like Hank Tauber, amid challenging conditions such as extreme cold that tested endurance.[1] Team dynamics were marked by internal business and political tensions within the U.S. Ski Association, yet Mill stood out for his free-spirited approach, sporting long hair and a distinctive eagle-painted helmet that earned him the nickname "Wilde Hund" from European competitors.[1] His first major international exposure came at the 1974 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in St. Moritz, Switzerland, where he finished 24th in the downhill event, representing a solid debut for the young American racer on the global stage.[1][2][13] This performance highlighted his potential amid a field dominated by European downhill specialists.World Cup results
Andy Mill debuted on the FIS Alpine Ski World Cup circuit in 1974, marking the start of his seven-season career as a specialist in the downhill and combined disciplines. He competed consistently until his retirement in January 1981, after sustaining a leg injury during a downhill race at St. Moritz, Switzerland.[1][11] Over the course of his World Cup tenure, Mill recorded seven top-10 finishes, all in either downhill or combined events, establishing him as the leading American male downhiller of his era. He accumulated 267 World Cup points across his career, with the majority earned in the downhill discipline where he made 31 starts. His performances highlighted technical proficiency on challenging European courses, though he never secured a podium.[14][15][16] Mill's best World Cup result was a 4th-place finish in the downhill at Val Gardena, Italy, on December 15, 1980—a performance that represented the strongest showing by an American man in the discipline in 12 years. Earlier breakthroughs came in the 1974–75 season, when he entered the top 10 for the first time with strong runs on classic downhill tracks. In combined events, Mill demonstrated versatility, posting consistent results in races that blended downhill and slalom components.[11][17] The following table summarizes Mill's verified top-10 World Cup finishes:| Date | Location | Event | Finish |
|---|---|---|---|
| January 5, 1975 | Garmisch-Partenkirchen, West Germany | Downhill | 8th |
| January 26, 1975 | Innsbruck, Austria | Downhill | 5th |
| January 25, 1976 | Kitzbühel, Austria | Combined | 9th |
| December 8, 1979 | Val d'Isère, France | Combined | 10th |
| December 16, 1979 | Val Gardena, Italy | Combined | 10th |
| January 12, 1980 | Kitzbühel, Austria | Combined | 9th |
| December 15, 1980 | Val Gardena, Italy | Downhill | 4th |
Olympic results
Andy Mill competed in two Winter Olympics as a downhill specialist for the United States, showcasing his resilience and skill on the international stage.[14] At the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria, Mill entered as one of the top American contenders following a fifth-place finish in the World Cup downhill in Innsbruck in January 1975, which raised expectations for a strong performance from the U.S. team.[1] During training on the Patscherkofel course, he suffered a severe crash into the trees on the first downhill run, resulting in a painful shin injury and a badly bruised lower right leg that left him unable to stand without significant discomfort the day before the race.[20] Despite the injury, Mill raced on February 5, 1976, under clear but challenging conditions on the technical 3.5-kilometer course, finishing sixth with a time of 1:47.06, 1.33 seconds behind gold medalist Franz Klammer of Austria (1:45.73).[21][22] Mill later reflected on the result as "incredible" given his compromised physical state, marking the best Olympic downhill finish by an American man at that time. Following the Olympics, Mill won the downhill at the 1976 U.S. Alpine Championships.[11] Mill returned for the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York, where he was the leading U.S. downhill racer heading into the Games, buoyed by consistent top-15 World Cup finishes in the prior season.[4] The Whiteface Mountain course presented notoriously demanding conditions, with variable weather including fog and soft snow in training runs, contributing to a fast but treacherous 3.1-kilometer descent averaging over 100 km/h for top finishers. On February 14, 1980, Mill completed the race in 1:49.07, securing 16th place, 3.57 seconds behind gold medalist Leonhard Stock of Austria.[23] Although not matching his 1976 achievement, the performance underscored his experience on home snow, though Mill noted post-race frustrations with persistent knee issues from prior injuries affecting his speed.[24]World Championship results
Andy Mill represented the United States in the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships four times between 1974 and 1980, primarily competing in the downhill event, where he served as a consistent performer for the U.S. team without securing any medals.[2] At the 1974 Championships in St. Moritz, Switzerland, Mill finished 24th in the men's downhill with a time of 2:01.47, which was 4.49 seconds behind gold medalist David Zwilling of Austria.[13] In 1976, the World Championships were held concurrently with the Winter Olympics in Innsbruck, Austria, where Mill achieved his best result by placing 6th in the downhill, clocking 1:47.06, just 0.37 seconds off the podium and marking the strongest U.S. performance in the event in over two decades.[21] Mill returned for the 1978 Championships in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, West Germany, participating in the downhill and tying for 21st place with a time of 2:08.01, 3.89 seconds behind winner Josef Walcher of Austria; he also entered the combined event but did not finish in the top positions.[25][26] His final World Championships appearance came in 1980 at Lake Placid, New York, USA—again combined with the Olympics—where he placed 16th in the downhill with a time of 1:49.07.[4]| Year | Location | Event | Placement |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1974 | St. Moritz, Switzerland | Downhill | 24th |
| 1976 | Innsbruck, Austria | Downhill | 6th |
| 1978 | Garmisch-Partenkirchen, West Germany | Downhill | 21st (tied) |
| 1978 | Garmisch-Partenkirchen, West Germany | Combined | Did not finish in top positions |
| 1980 | Lake Placid, New York, USA | Downhill | 16th |