Alpine skiing: Cold will favor U.S. skiers, men's coach says
Send a link to a friend
[February 06, 2018]
By Mark Trevelyan
PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (Reuters) -
Sub-zero temperatures on the South Korean slopes will favor U.S.
skiers at this month's Winter Olympics because they are accustomed
to brutal conditions at home, men's head coach Sasha Rearick said on
Tuesday.
Two days ahead of the first downhill training run, the temperature
in Pyeongchang was minus 7 degrees Celsius (19 Fahrenheit), actually
somewhat milder than in recent weeks, with both athletes and
spectators braced for a chilly Games.
"First of all, I see it as an awesome opportunity for us," Rearick
told reporters when asked how the weather would affect the team at
the Feb. 9-25 Games.
"Most of these guys grew up skiing Lake Louise when they were kids,
the east coast boys all had to ski Sugarloaf (Maine) and Lake Placid
-- very cold places, brutal humidity. I know my boys are tougher, so
I'm just going, like, 'I hope it's cold'."
Double Olympic champion Ted Ligety told a news conference: "It's
fine skiing when it's cold, it's just you gotta keep your boots warm
I guess... You've got to tape your face in the speed events, I
think, probably."
Canada's Alpine skiers also said they have no concerns about the
weather.
"It's nothing even close to out of the ordinary so it doesn't really
affect it that much," skier Dustin Cook told a media conference.
"It definitely is colder than what we're used to at the World Cup
circuit. I mean, minus five in Europe seems to be pretty cold but I
think for us as Canadians - and it sounds pretty stereotypical - but
it really isn't that crazy for us.
The Canadians were, in fact, glad to be finally getting some cold
weather to test their winter gear.
[to top of second column] |
"It is the Winter Olympics and a lot of the time the clothing we get
has been very wintery and it has not been winter in the last couple
of Olympics," ski racer Maneul Osborne-Paradis said.
"It's really nice that we're wearing stuff and we're not just
sweating all day, so I'm happy that we're clothed appropriately and
it's fine."
American hopes in the Alpine skiing events are riding mainly on
Ligety for the men, and Lindsey Vonn and Mikaela Shiffrin for the
women.
Rearick said the team was taking no chances with health and hygiene
in the run-up to competition after organizers moved to combat a
norovirus outbreak among private security staff.
"We're disinfecting rooms, hand sanitizer everywhere, making sure
hydration's taken care of, and as soon as someone's sick, isolate
them and quarantine them, basically," he said.
"Here at the Games we don't stay in the (athletes') village, we stay
in our own compound where we have our own chefs and our own food.
"One part of that is to try to keep the home feeling. We cook
American food that the guys like, that's also healthy -- and then
controlling the environment, where we try to minimize our exposure
(to illness)."
(Reporting by Mark Trevelyan and Philip O'Connor; Editing by John
O'Brien and Sudipto Ganguly)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |