Background
Geiger was born on 29 March 1988 in Australia, but lived in Austria until he was eight.
Geiger was born on 29 March 1988 in Australia, but lived in Austria until he was eight.
He was Jessica Gallagher"s guide skier at the 2014 Winter Paralympics in Sochi, winning a bronze medal. He represented Australia at the 2008 World Junior Alpine Championships and the 2009 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships, but his career was cut short when he was severely injured in a traffic collision in 2009. He became Jessica Gallagher"s sighted guide in 2013, and guided her to silver medals in women"s slalom and giant slalom at the 2013 IPC Alpine World Cup in Thredbo.
On 26 September 2009, he was involved in a car crash.
The vehicle he was travelling in as a passenger slammed into a tree just 30 metres (98 ft) from his family"s home in Bright, Victoria. He suffered severe injuries to his arm, spleen and liver as well as serious brain trauma.
As a result, he was in an induced coma for a week. lieutenant took months before he could walk, talk and eat independently again.
As of August 2011, he had ten operations, extensive physiotherapy and speech therapy.
Geiger began skiing at the age of two in Austria, and made the national team in 2006. This changed after his 2009 accident. "I tried to get back to able bodied but couldn"t quite get back to where I was, let alone where I wanted to go," he later explained, "so I had to hang it up."
In 2013, Australian Paralympic Alpine Head Coach Steve Graham asked Geiger to replace Eric Bickerton as Jessica Gallagher"s sighted guide.
In their first competition, the 2013 IPC Alpine World Cup in Thredbo, New South Wales, he guided Gallagher to silver medals in women"s slalom and giant slalom.
Gallagher gave an insight on taking on Geiger as a guide. She said:
Every run that we are spending together at the moment, Christian is learning new things about the way that I ski, about the things that I need to be told when I"m going down the hill in terms of the things that I"m not seeing and also the things that may throw me and really test me as an athlete because at the end of the day his role as a guide is to get me down to the bottom as fast as possible, but also as safe as possible.
lieutenant just happens with time really. They came seventh in the women"s slalom visually impaired.
In 2015, he was Head Coach of Australia’s Para-Alpine program