Christopher Spring

Christopher "Chris" Spring (born 6 March 1984) is a Canadian bobsledder who has competed since 2008. At the 2010 Winter Olympics, he competed for his country of birth, Australia and finished 22nd in the two-man event.

Christopher Spring
Personal information
NationalityCanadian
Born (1984-03-06) 6 March 1984
Darwin, Northern Territory,  Australia
ResidenceCalgary, Alberta,  Canada
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Weight101 kg (223 lb)
Sport
Country Canada
SportBobsleigh

Career

Spring competed for Australia and finished 29th in the two-man event at the FIBT World Championships 2009 in Lake Placid.

Since switching to represent Canada in 2010, Spring has finished first on several occasions in both the two-man and four-man events on the Americas Cup Circuit.

Spring debuted on the World Cup tour for Canada in 2011 finishing 17th in the two-man event in Cesana, Italy. He finished 19th in the two-man event with brakeman Timothy Randall and 14th in the four-man event with teammates Timothy Randall, Derek Plug & Graeme Rinholm at the FIBT World Championships 2011 in Königssee, Germany.

He was involved in a catastrophic crash in January 2012 during the 2011-12 Bobsleigh World Cup in Altenberg, Germany which put him in hospital for eight days.[1] After having his skin shredded and a piece of wood the size of a kitchen knife embedded in his back, Spring considered retiring but later returned to the track in April 2012.[1] He said of his fear of lost skills on his return that "I was really afraid I'd get back in the driver's seat and not know what to do. Or I would get halfway down the track and start freaking out." Yet he said that he felt few ill effects.[1]

gollark: My phone could before its (nonreplaceable) battery degraded over a few years.
gollark: Apple goes for "ah yes let us make very thin phones and ruin battery life", like most companies.
gollark: They should be thicker and include several days of battery time, in my opinion.
gollark: Most phones do, annoyingly.
gollark: All they should actually need is an asymmetric crypto keypair and mobile network ID.

References

  1. Steve Zemek (8 May 2012). "Spring relives crash horror". Gladstone Observer. Retrieved 18 August 2012.


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