Schinegger was born in Agsdorf,
Carinthia, and raised as a girl. Schinegger first attracted attention when he finished third in the downhill in Grindelwald on 14 January 1966 with start no. 24 and thus contributed to an ÖSV quadruple success (Christl Haas, Edith Zimmermann; fourth Traudl Hecher). He also won the downhill in St-Gervais on 29 January with a lead of 1.53 sec. over Nancy Greene and on 25 March 1966 the downhill in Sun Valley in the "Five Nations Competition" (again ahead of Greene). Schinegger's greatest success was winning the women's downhill world championship title at the
FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 1966 in
Portillo, Chile, a month after his eighteenth birthday. At the
Gold Key Race in
Schruns, Schinegger finished second on 18 January 1967, followed by his only victory in an
World Cup Race, a giant slalom, on 28 January 1967 in
Saint-Gervais. In February 1967, Schinegger won the
Austrian Championships in the giant slalom. Before the
1968 Winter Olympics in
Grenoble, a
medical examination revealed that Schinegger was genetically male. Schinegger, whose sex had not been correctly identified for years due to inward growing genitals, a so-called
pseudohermaphroditism, decided to have surgery and change his first name from Erika to Erik. Schinegger was not retroactively stripped of the
World Champion title of 1966, but the then runner-up
Marielle Goitschel was retroactively awarded the gold medal as well. In 1988 Schinegger himself presented his World Championship gold medal to Marielle Goitschel, however, she gave him back the medal. Schinegger married and became father of a daughter in 1978. In 1988 Erik Schinegger wrote together with Marco Schenz the book
Mein Sieg über mich. The man who became world champion, in which he came to terms with his life. This book was very successful, especially in the French translation. Schinegger's story was depicted in 2005 by
Kurt Mayer in the documentary film
ERIK(A) - Der Mann der Weltmeisterin wurde. At the 53rd
Trento Film Festival the film was awarded the "Silver Gentian" in the same year. In 2014, he took part in the
ORF show
Dancing Stars, but dropped out prematurely due to injury. In 2015, he served as
councilor in his home municipality of
Sankt Urban. In the 2018 feature film
Erik & Erika by
Reinhold Bilgeri, his life was again portrayed, with
Markus Freistätter in the leading role. Titled
One like Erika, the film was shown on
Ersten on 25 November 2020. == Awards ==