Olympics: Australia launches 'game-changing' year-round winter training
centre
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[May 05, 2021]
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Australia
launched a year-round Winter Olympic training centre in sub-tropical
Brisbane on Wednesday which it hopes will give a leading edge to its
athletes ahead of the 2022 Beijing Games.
The country's top freestyle skiers put the A$6.5 million ($5
million) Geoff Henke Centre to the test on a drizzly day in the
Queensland state capital, sliding down its ramps to practise tricks
before plunging into a pool at the bottom.
Australian athletes have previously had to hone their skills
overseas, using a water ramp facility in Utah and logging more than
3,600 days of training abroad from 2013-2017.
But the Brisbane centre, the first of its kind in the southern
hemisphere, will mean they can stay close to home while avoiding
logistical problems of travelling during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"For a lot of sports, but especially for aerials, this is going to
be a massive game-changer," Australian freestyle skier and aerials
world champion Laura Peel said at the launch.
"We have to spend so much time on the road, nine to 10 months of the
year and sacrifice a lot of things like school and university.
"Usually (you) can't start the sport until after you've finished
high school ... We see young Americans, Canadians and Russians and
the rest of the world out there jumping at 15 years old.
"So for us, it's going to help a lot."
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Australia has a short skiing season on
its southern alps and little snow compared to Winter Olympic powers
in the northern hemisphere but the country has racked up 15 medals
since the 1994 Games in Lillehammer.
Australia won two snowboarding medals and a freestyle skiing silver
at the 2018 Games in Pyeongchang.
"It's just a dream come true, really, to be able to train on home
soil," said aerials world silver medallist Danielle Scott.
"This facility's great all year round ... The future of winter
sports in Australia is looking pretty bright with this facility.
"I'm excited to see the generation coming up."
($1 = 1.2963 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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