Saturday, April 2, 2011

Jules

While this post was supposed to be about a trip to Virginia and West Virginia, I decided to write something about Julia Mancuso first. Yesterday, she won her third GS title in a row at the US National Championship. Julia is finishing a really fine season with some great skiing.

Last fall, I became a fan of Julia on facebook. She is great on facebook. She posts stuff all the time. She is a good writer and appears to be happy sharing her crazy life with all of us. She lives right in the moment.

While I have admired her for a long time, I became a huge fan of hers at the last Olympics. She showed me (and the rest of the world) that all her sacrifice and hard work to accomplish herself in skiing was, underneath it all, fun... just plain fun! What better message is there for any athlete in any sport at any level?

Over the years, I have coached some rather elite athletes and parents often wonder how far their child can go. I can never answer that question. There are US Ski Team athletes that were great when they were young and others that found their racing when they were teenagers. The best explanation I have heard about getting on the ski team, and one that parents can understand, is this: there is one child born in the United States each year that will make the US Ski Team...pretty long odds I'd say. Anyway, the point is; you don't make it to the level Julia has attained without being incredibly focused, incredibly focused, a great skier, and incredibly fit. Did I say incredibly focused? Julia has managed to be these things and remain interesting and fun. She gladly shares her interests beyond racing on skis with the whole world. She has managed to stay upbeat and find fun all winter and is happy when she skis well regardless of outcome.

Last week she posted on facebook to see if anyone was reading her travel blog (find also in my following list). It is the opposite of this blog; it is all about big mountain skiing all over the globe. I did not realize she was writing it until her post. It is a pretty fun read, check it out. Julia also writes a "Kiss My Tiara" blog on her website. I occasionally check that out too.

Congratulations Julia on a wonderful race season!

Skiing at home for mid-winter break

PSIA schedules no events for the presidents week vacation. Most ski schools are too busy to let any of their staff take time off to ski in a PSIA educational event. We run daytime training at Labrador for the race athletes. I took Wednesday off because the kids were pretty tired after the state championships.

Next week I was headed to Virginia and West Virginia for PSIA events. More on that latter. It was great to ski with the team at home and during the day. Night skiing is handy because it gets you on skis more often each week but it really gets old as the winter wears on. It is always a mad rush to get homework done before we head to the mountain. Dinner is usually a sandwich on the fly. Skiing at night always feels colder than it truly is. All that said, I have spent most of my life skiing 3 nights a week.

The pressure of states was off and we were just trying to have fun and get back to worrying mostly about fundamentally good skiing rather than preparing for the ensuing race. The 3 athletes that did not qualify for states could race in a New York race series called the Kandahar. It consists of a regional qualifier then a Kandahar championship. This race is open to 9 to 14 year olds that did not qualify for state championships but they all race by class (JV, JIV, JIII). New York Ski Racing Association (NYSSRA) uses this race to qualify athletes for the Piche Invitational at Gunstock NH. A trip to the Piche is not in my winter this year but is a well run and really fun weekend of racing. Anyway, Labrador was hosting the regional Kandahar for the center part of the state and I would be setting one of the courses. Of course we got almost 8 inches of small flake, dense noreaster snow Friday night making hill prep for the race and course maintenance a bear Saturday. It wen pretty well and again, I was happy to be home for 4 days. I would leave Sunday morning to travel to Virginia.