I flew into Houghton, Michigan from Anchorage where I met up
with the team on Friday. We are here racing at the US Senior National
Championship, which is the biggest and one of the most important races on the
domestic circuit. On the line here are senior national titles, as opposed to
college nationals or junior nationals which a lot of people are more familiar
with. This is the only time that all of the best professional racers in the
country as well as some of the top college racers will be competing together.
We are staying at a cool little vacation rental a ways out of town. It is right on the beach of Lake Superior and has a sauna.
Friday and Saturday were just training days, giving us that
time to prepare for the races yesterday and today. During this time we ski
pretty slow, and we ski the courses so we know exactly what to expect before
the day of the race. We also like to throw in some quick pick-ups, which is
when you ski really hard for 10 seconds or so. This gets your body working a
little bit so that the warm up is easier the next day and you can hit the
ground running when the gun goes off.
In December the race organizers were worried they would have
to take drastic measures to keep the race in Houghton. Houghton is known for
its heavy snowfall so it is normally a safe venue for ski races, but this year
had very little snow until recently. In the last couple weeks the town got
several feet of snow, and the trails are in great shape. Temperatures for the
week are forecasted to stay in the 20s, so it should be great conditions for
racing.
On the schedule for Sunday was a classic interval start,
15km for the men and 10km for the women. Both races were on a two lap course,
which is nice because these big races often happen on really short loops so the
athletes ski lots of laps. I think it allows for better racing when there are
fewer laps, so I appreciated the longer course.
Unfortunately our schedule last year ended up with us
lacking a lot of USSA scored races, so as a team we all have pretty bad points
right now. In every race that USSA sanctions all the athletes in the race are
scored. Points are determined by how far back you are from the winner plus a
value based on strength of field. An average of an athletes points from their
best scored races yields their current points. When you don’t have a lot of
scored races in the last year your points tend to be bad. The idea behind USSA points
is that it is a way to rank all the skiers in the country against each other,
so that at races like US Nationals there have some basis for seeding. It’s not
a perfect system but it works pretty well. But because our points at the UW
team are bad we end up getting seeded lower than we ought to be, so for the
individual start on Sunday we all were seeded in the back. The top guys went
out towards the front.
My race on Sunday went alright. While I was in the start pen
I was seeing the higher seeded guys going around on their laps and they were
going pretty slow. They looked tired. Seeing that I planned to take the first
lap pretty slow so I could be feeling good for the second lap. When I went out
I had this in mind. But I changed my plan pretty quick when a guy I used to
race with in high school (he was the state champion three years in a row)
caught up to me. He was on his second lap and I figured I would be skiing
really well if I kept up with him. He was with a skier from the University of
Vermont, a really strong school. The course starts off with a kilometer and a
half of flat and a big downhill, then the longest climb of the day. I lost
connection on the down because I had sticky skis, but this meant that on the
climb I went right by the group. I was feeling it right then and I knew there
was I big down after so I hammered up the climb, and I was able to drop the
group. They caught back up on the downhill. Throughout most of the lap over the
undulating terrain I skied with this group, but I kept losing them on the
downhills. They were getting really icy so I was taking them a little
conservatively, so I probably would have benefited from taking the downhills
more aggressively. The group dropped me towards the end of my first lap.
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| Day 1. Photo from xmatic.com |
The skier who started 15 seconds behind me caught up to me
early in the first lap, and we skied together for a bit. At one point he pulled
a little ahead of me. On the second lap though I left him behind and ended up
skiing a lot of it by myself. I was able to pass a couple guys who started in
front of me, so I knew I was doing ok. The second half of the lap is definitely
harder than the first, despite the large climb featured early on. The latter
half has these steep rolling hills for a lot of it, then finishes with some
more gradual but still long and difficult climbs. The start/finish area is the highest part of
the course. I was suffering pretty hard at a couple k to go but I was able to
raise my pace a little bit for the last k and I think I finished pretty strong.
For the team, it wasn’t our greatest showing. I came in 133rd
in the field of 195, and Ben was .4 seconds behind in 134th.
Mason was 168, Taylor 184, and Sam, who missed his asthma medication before the
race, was 188. It wasn’t a terrible race for us by any means but I’m sure we
can do better.
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| Taylor and Mason in the 15k. Photo from xmatic.com |
Today we had the skate sprint. It isn’t always fun when you
travel hundreds of miles, prepare days in advance, and warm up hours prior just
to race for four minutes and go home. But that’s what happened today. When the
men’s field is 200 strong and only 30 qualify for the heats it’s pretty
difficult.
The course today was a full 1.5km, which is about as long as
sprints get. It also featured two decent climbs, a little rolling terrain, and
an uphill finish. This was a tough sprint course. There was some soft loose
snow on top of a hard and icy track. The temperature was in the low twenties.
There isn’t a whole lot to write about for a sprint
qualifier. We start at 15 second intervals and in a race this short you don’t
often catch the guy in front of you even if you are going way faster. A common
sentiment among the team was tired legs today, and I was certainly feeling that,
especially on the hills. But the hardest part about the course wasn’t the
hills, it’s the length. We have kind of grown accustomed to sprint courses in
the 1.1-1.3 range, and I really felt the additional distance today. I
definitely faded at the end, and I think I did a poor job planning my race
before I skied. Tactics are super important in sprinting, and in my warmup when
I skied the course I didn’t put enough thought into which lines I would take
and how I would hit each hill. I think I could have had a bit of a faster time
had I been more attentive.
That being said I raced okay this morning. I finished in 128th,
a slight improvement over yesterday which is surprising because I am a stronger
distance skier. However, my sprinting has been improving so I am happy with my
current trajectory and hope to be competitive in the sprint come USCSA
Nationals in March. The team has seen better results than today, with Ben at
152, Mason at 166, Taylor at 167, and Sam at 175, but it is early and we don’t
have many races under our belts this year.
Ben and I hung around to watch the heats. It’s a lot of fun
for us and it’s a great opportunity to pick up some tactical knowledge. Reese
Hanneman of APU dominated all day and in the men’s final he beat Dakota
Blackhorse-Von Jess of the Bend Endurance Academy by a bootlength on the line. In
the women’s race Jennie Bender won all of her heats and won the final by an
easy margin. These guys are fighting not only for national titles but also for world cup starts and potentially
the US Ski Team, so there is a lot at stake for them.
Our next race is on Thursday, which is a mass start skate,
30km for the men and 20km for the women. All of us are really looking forward
to that one, and are hoping to improve on our results from this week. Following
that, we race a classic sprint on Saturday and then will be driving back to
Laramie.
Results from both days can be found here.



always good to hear how things are going...try to follow closely...from afar. Great job team!! Keep up that awesome work!!! Gerise Vignaroli
ReplyDeleteNice write up Will, and good job Wyoming!
ReplyDeleteLet's go Wyo!! Your pals at Whitman are rooting for you.
ReplyDelete