Ski
jumping-'Flying Finn' Nykanen dies at 55
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[February 04, 2019]
HELSINKI, Feb 4 (Reuters) -
Matti Nykanen, the Finnish ski jumping great who soared to
unprecedented Olympic glory but struggled with alcohol addiction and
personal chaos, died on Monday at the age of 55.
"Matti died last night," his wife Pia Nykanen told Finnish weekly
magazine Seiska, without revealing the cause of death.
The 'Flying Finn' won four Olympic gold medals, three of them at the
1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Canada, when he became the first
ski jumper to triumph on both the normal and large hill.
His victory on the large hill at the 1984 Sarajevo Games was by a
record margin.
The Finn also won five world championship gold medals -- the first
as an 18-year-old -- between 1982 to 1989 in a career that made him
a sporting superstar and put his personal life on the front pages of
newspapers.
Back in 2008, Nykanen's long-term coach Matti Pulli said he
considered Nykanen, who claimed 46 World Cup wins, as the best ski
jumper ever.
"His structure was excellent, he had very good thrust and he was
persistent," Pulli said. "He was child-like, almost like a cherub
and that charmed people."
The exterior may have appeared angelic, but the inner demons became
increasingly evident as he struggled to cope with his fame.
Sometimes referred to as the Diego Maradona of ski jumping, an icon
in a sport that commands bravery, nerves and athleticism, Nykanen
knew what he wanted to do as soon as he started jumping.
His dominance was down to more than just distance, Nykanen standing
out for the way he took off and defied gravity by riding the wind,
but his genius was also a flawed one.
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A year before the Calgary Games he was sent home from the Four Hills
tournament because of bad behaviour and "excessive alcohol use".
After retirement in 1991, when he finished 50th at that year's world
championships, Nykanen struggled to find a new path for his life.
He tried his luck as a singer, and even as a stripper for a short
period of time, while financial problems mounted.
The local media highlighted his personal relationships including
several marriages, violent behaviour, and alcohol-related incidents.
"I don't have a private life, but I do indeed have a bad image," he
wrote in the introduction to his biography.
Nykanen was sentenced to prison on two different occasions -- a
26-month stint for a drunken stabbing in 2004 and 16 months for
attacking his then-wife Mervi with a knife on Christmas Day 2009.
He was diagnosed with diabetes last year.
In addition to this remarkable sports career, Finns remember Nykanen
for the one-liners that have become widely adopted in every day use.
"The odds are fifty-sixty," Finns often quote him to describe a
situation when things could take a turn either way. (Reporting by
Anne Kauranen/Alan Baldwin Editing by Amlan Chakraborty and Pritha
Sarkar)
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