Jumpin' Joe Cash
Jumpin' Joe Cash was one of the premier
three-event tournament skiers in his time until a jumping injury at the
apex of his colorful career restricted his competitive action to slalom
and tricks.
Joe was a record-breaker.
In fact, he was reputed in his day to
be the only skier in the history of the sport to set "records" in all
three disciplines, but that was in the days when record performances in
jumping were the only ones officially recognized.
However, before a leg
injury in the 1959 Nationals at Laconia, NH, where he was striving to
regain a place on the U.S. Team, ended his jumping career, Joe had
rewritten the book.
Beginning with a record tying
126-footer in the '57 San Diego Nationals, he leaped 129 feet at Delray
Beach, FL in 1958, a few weeks before raising the mark to 132 feet at
the Callaway Gardens Nationals.
He beat that by another 10 feet the
following year at Fort Myers, FL, just before his ill-fated try at
Laconia.
Along the way Joe had won the world slalom and
overall titles in the 1957 World Championships at Cypress Gardens; the
national jumping crown for the second year in succession in 1958; and
the Masters overall trophy in 1959.
Following his injury,
Joe's concentration on slalom and tricks made him better than ever in
those two events.
He took the Masters slalom titles in
1960 and 1962 and was second in tricks in the 1963 Masters, only 41
total points in three rounds behind Al Tyll, the acknowledged world's
best at the time in his specialty.
Born George Joseph Cash,
May 25, 1937, at Shelbyville, TN, Joe moved with his family to Sarasota,
FL in 1946.
Although water skiing was a popular
sport in the area, Joe didn't try it until he was almost 17.
He proved to be a "natural".
His parents, James and Clara Cash, gave
him a pair of skis for his 17th birthday, and he was off on a career
that would bring him worldwide acclaim.
His first job was with
the ski show at Sunshine Springs and Gardens near Sarasota.
He later became a star performer in the
Cypress Gardens show, all the while adding tournament trophies to his
growing collection.
Joe was one of those rare
sports champions who had the ability to impart his expertise to others.
Even before his own tournament career
began tailing off, he was coaching young skiers who were intent on
becoming champions themselves.
They came to his school in Sarasota
from all over - Italy, Germany, France, Great Britain, Canada, Mexico,
Australia, South Africa, Argentina, and, of course, the United States.
Three of the six members of the 1963
U.S. Team trained under Joe's guidance - Billy Spencer, Jeannette Brown,
and Dicksie Ann Hoyt.
Spencer and Brown came home from the
World Championships in Vichy, France with the Overall titles.
On July 13, 1967, Joe was
making last-minute preparations to leave for Callaway Gardens and the
Masters tournament, which he had never missed, either as a contestant or
spectator.
His car collided with a train in
Sarasota, ending his life.
His impact on the sport,
however, was far from over.
Bo Callaway immediately instituted a
perpetural slalom trophy in his memory to be awarded each year for the
best slalom performance in the Masters.
Joe's friend Guillermo Garcia, whose
son Joe had trained at their country place on Lake Tequesquitengo near
Mexico City, announced the Joe Cash Memorial Invitational Tournament,
which quickly became a popular midwinter competitive event at the
Mexican resort.
Joe and his wife Ida Mae had five children whose
ages at the time this was written for the 1987 Hall of Fame induction
ceremonies were Kevin-30, Katrina-27, Karin-26, Crystal-25, and
Kelly-24.
