One night last year, Klara Sykora went to dinner at the Aigners’ home and brought her boyfriend, Fleischmann, who was also a ski racer. Petra noticed how well Fleischmann got along with Johannes and asked him to serve as her son’s guide.
The guide role is critical in vision-impaired skiing and requires immaculate teamwork and an almost sacred trust. Guides descend the course ahead of the racer — not too far ahead, or they won’t be heard, but not so close to slow the racer or cause a crash. They call out the turns and bumps as they go. It is a unique bond, which explains why Sykora and Fleischmann are honorary Aigners.
“We feel very honored to be part of this family,” Klara Sykora said.
Soon after the group arrived in China for the Paralympics, the athletes’ village in Yanqing was dotted with Aigners everywhere, especially when the parents, who stayed in a hotel, joined them.
The last few days of racing, in particular, felt like a celebration of Aigner dominance on the slopes. There was Veronika and Elisabeth soaring down, almost as if tethered by string, followed on the medal podium by Barbara Aigner and Klara Sykora, while Johannes Aigner and Fleischmann racked up medals of their own.
In his first run on the giant slalom Friday, Johannes Aigner and Fleischmann were in second place, strong enough to virtually ensure a medal, as long as Johannes did not wipe out in his second run.