THE RACE FOR GOLD STARTS IN COLORADO
Colorado Resorts to Host Olympic Qualifiers, Athlete Training
Events
DENVER, Colo - October 21, 2009 - Come February, all eyes will
be on the Olympic Games. But in the months leading up to the Games,
Colorado Ski Country USA resorts will be a sight to see as Olympic
contenders including Colorado based athletes such as Lindsey Vonn,
Todd Lodwick and Gretchen Bleiler, put it all on the line and look
to achieve qualification for the 2010 US Olympic team.
These influential qualifying events are in Colorado for the same
reasons snow enthusiasts from around the globe come to Colorado,
for the unsurpassed snow conditions, unprecedented guest service,
and uncomplicated access. "An increasing number of Olympic and
professional winter athletes choose to ski, ride, and live in
Colorado," explains Melanie Mills, president and CEO of Colorado
Ski Country USA. "It's because of the top-notch events our resorts
put on and the quality conditions Colorado delivers that these
qualifiers are happening in Ski Country."
Member resorts of Colorado Ski Country USA are proud to host the
following pre-Olympic events this season.
Official Olympic Qualifying Events Happening In Colorado
November 28-29, 2009 Women's US World Cup at
Aspen/Snowmass
On November 28 and 29, Aspen/Snowmass will host the Women's US
World Cup for the sixth consecutive year as the Aspen
Winternational takes place Thanksgiving weekend. It will be the
only U.S. World Cup stop for two-time World Cup overall champion
Lindsey Vonn (Vail, CO), reigning Olympic giant slalom gold
medalist Julia Mancuso (Olympic Valley, CA) and the U.S. Ski Team
prior to the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver.
"For the past six years we've hosted the Aspen Winternational which
happens on both Thanksgiving and opening weekend," said Jeff Hanle,
Aspen Skiing Company communications director. "It's a big
undertaking to put on the event so early in the season, but thanks
to the consistent snow conditions in Colorado, Aspen/Snowmass rises
to the event standards worthy of Olympic athletes."
World Cup racing begins October 24 with the annual giant slalom in
Soelden, Austria followed by a slalom race in Levi, Finland before
swinging to North America with the Aspen Winternational. Ski racing
action opens on Saturday, November 28 with giant slalom followed by
slalom on Sunday, November 29, but festivities will be planned
throughout the week beginning on Thanksgiving Day.
December 11-12, 2009 US Snowboarding Grand Prix at Copper
Mountain
Copper Mountain will play host to the first stop of the US
Snowboarding Grand Prix on December 11-12, 2009. The Grand Prix at
Copper will feature a 22-foot halfpipe that will be used to narrow
down the competition for Olympic spots.
Copper Mountain is known for traditionally having the first
superpipe open in the U.S. and carries the Colorado tradition of
continually providing top quality competition conditions for
riders. Because Copper's superpipe is located just steps away from
the Village at Copper and Burning Stones Plaza, it will provide a
very entertaining and intimate experience for spectators. Look for
the action in Copper to continue when the sun goes down as the
mountain hosts a Paul Mitchell Progression Session under the
lights.
This will be the second consecutive year that Copper has hosted the
Grand Prix. "Having an Olympic quality pipe ready in early December
shows the commitment Copper has to delivering a quality event,"
explains Copper spokesperson David Roth. "And with Colorado's dry
air and high elevation, the quality snow here adds to the Olympic
value of the venue."
The competition will heat up as Olympic gold medalists Kelly Clark
(Snow Mountain, VT), Hannah Teter (Belmont, VT), and Shaun White
(Carlsbad, CA), along with fellow Olympic medalists Gretchen
Bleiler (Aspen, CO), JJ Thomas (Golden, CO) and Danny Kass
(Portland, OR) all look for another shot at Olympic glory. Joining
them in the hunt will be Grand Prix overall champions Steve Fisher
(Breckenridge, CO) and Louie Vito (Sandy, UT) as well as Grand Prix
podium performers Ellery Hollingsworth (Stratton, VT), Clair Bidez
(Minturn, CO) Greg Bretz (Mammoth Lakes, CA) and Olympian Elena
Hight (South Lake Tahoe, CA).
December 17-20, 2009 US Snowboardcross Cup at
Telluride
Colorado's Telluride Resort will be the new home of international
snowboarding competition in the U.S. as the 2010 Visa U.S.
Snowboardcross Cup comes to the Rocky Mountains December 17-20,
2009. Telluride will be the sole U.S. stop of the LG FIS Snowboard
World Cup and will feature an SBX and PGS competition during what
will be the second in a series of five Olympic qualification events
for the two sports.
The event showcases heats of four athletes as they race through
rollers, jumps and bank turns and vie to be the last athlete
standing. "We're thrilled to bring the World Cup to Colorado and
Telluride," said Telluride Ski & Golf CEO Dave Riley. "Colorado
is top choice for many athletes to train and we had great success
last season with the U.S. team training. Now we're ready to have
the national and international snowboard communities focused on
Telluride and Colorado in the run-up to the Olympics."
The pressure will be on the U.S. Snowboarding's men's SBX roster as
Olympic champion Seth Wescott (Sugarloaf, ME), five-time X Games
gold medalist Nate Holland (Squaw Valley, CA), World Championship
bronze medalist Nick Baumgartner (Iron River, MI),World Cup
winner Graham Watanabe (Sun Valley, ID), World Cup podium performer
Jonathan Cheever (Saugus, MA) Olympic halfpipe gold medalist Ross
Powers (Londonderry, VT), snowboarding legend Shaun Palmer (South
Lake Tahoe, CA) and the rest of the domestic riders battle it out
to solidify their spot in the up to four spots open on the men's
Olympic team.
Olympic silver medalist Lindsey Jacobellis (Stratton Mountain, VT)
will also be on hand looking to dominate the women's field.
Parallel giant slalom athletes will also be in the hunt for their
Olympic team nominations. Michelle Gorgone (Boston), who took to
the podium of two World Cups last season, will be aiming to take
the stand again in the U.S.
On the men's side Tyler Jewell (Steamboat Springs, CO) will be back
in the race after an injury kept him from competition last season.
Joining him will be Adam Smith (Bend, OR) who finished second in a
World Cup last season.
Capping things off in Telluride will be a team SBX exhibition
competition. Team SBX pairs two riders from the same country on a
team. One races the course against three to five other competitors
and when that competitor crosses the finish line, the gate at the
start triggers for the next teammate to begin racing.
The Visa U.S. Snowboardcross Cup Schedule will kick off on
Thursday, December 17 with PGS qualifications and finals. Friday,
December 18 will be SBX qualifications and Saturday, December 19
the SBX finals. Sunday, December 20 will showcase Team SBX.
December 23-24, 2009 Freestyle & Nordic Combined Team Trials
at Steamboat and Howelsen Hill
Shortly after the US Snowboard Cup, Ski Town, USA ®, home of
Steamboat Ski Resort and Howelsen Hill, will host the US Olympic
Team Trials in moguls, aerials and nordic combined on December
23-24, 2009.
The Trials are essentially a wild card opportunity for five
athletes to make the Olympic Team and earn a spot to compete at the
2010 Olympics in Vancouver. Two winners (male and female) from
each freestyle discipline (aerials and moguls) will be named to the
2010 US Olympic Freestyle Team, as well as a winner in nordic
combined, being added for the first time this year. The US Olympic
Team Trials will include moguls on the Voo Doo trail at the
Steamboat Ski Resort and aerials under the lights at historic
Howelsen Hill in downtown Steamboat.
Nordic Combined is a competition combining cross country skiing and
ski jumping. Churning out athletes that compete in this unique
winter sport is nothing new to Steamboat, where natives Todd
Lodwick (Steamboat, CO) and Johnny Spillane (Steamboat, CO) are
expected to be named to the 2010 team, along with Billy Demong
(Vermontville, NY) who called Steamboat home for a while. These
World Champions spent their youth training on the historic Howelsen
Hill, which will serve as the competition site for the Olympic
Trials.
Unofficial Olympic Related Events Happening in
Colorado
Loveland Ski Area is currently hosting the women's US Development
Team for early season training thanks to an early season opening
and quality snow conditions. "We're thrilled to be hosting athletes
from the U.S. Ski Team at Loveland so early in the season," said
Loveland Ski Area Marketing Director John Sellers. "We're proud of
our team here for working hard to make early season training
conditions possible." Both the U.S. men's and women's Technical
Teams will utilize Loveland for training prior to the U.S. stops of
the Audi FIS Alpine World Cup.
Many top athletes frequent Loveland Ski Area and Arapahoe Basin
throughout the season, especially in the early and late winter
season. With a reputation for solid fall and spring ski snow
conditions, athletes visit these two resorts for early season
training.
Another Colorado resort that attracts early season athletes is Wolf
Creek. Wolf Creek's unique location in the San Juan Mountains
provides a cache for early season snowstorms. The US Olympic
Freestyle team schedules practices at Wolf Creek during the early
season to train on the pitch of Alberta Face.
In early February, the US Snowboard team will take advantage of the
post X-Game 22-foot halfpipe for training purposes. On January
28-31, Aspen/Snowmass will host the 14th X-Games at Buttermilk.
Immediately following the X-Games, the US Snowboard Team will have
a week-long pipe training session on the same pipe.
Woodward at Copper is the training mecca for pros of all levels
looking to qualify for the Olympics. Pros can come in for a
couple hour training session with either the One Hit Wonder and
Drop-In Sessions or can spend an entire day in the 20,000 sq ft
Barn during a Summer/Fall Camp Day or even train in the Barn and in
Copper's nationally recognized terrain parks and pipes during a
Winter Camp Day (Winter Camp Days start when Copper opens the
mountain for the winter season on Nov. 6, 2009).
The best way to train like an Olympian is to train with an
Olympian. In Steamboat there are numerous opportunities for guests
to ski and snowboard the same slopes that churn out Olympians and
world-class athletes year after year, and plenty of chances to ski
those slopes with the athlete themselves.
At the top of Steamboat's gondola is a sign announcing to guests
whether or not skiing legend, former Olympian and director of
skiing at Steamboat, Billy Kidd is skiing that day. If he is,
guests are invited to join him on his run. Billy guides guests down
his favorite runs and provides helpful hints and tips. Another
Olympian guests can take a run with is 1992 Olympic Bronze
Medalist Nelson Carmichael on the trail named after him.
Nelson offers free mogul clinics during the winter season on
Nelson's Run at 1pm on select Sundays.
Billy Kidd founded the Steamboat Performance Center in 1981 to
apply the principles and skiing techniques that produce world and
Olympic Champions to a skiing improvement program for skiers of all
ages. The Billy Kidd Race Camps combine top coaching from
former Olympians, World Champions and team coaches, extensive
video, small groups and on-mountain multi-day format
instruction.
The 1984 Olympic Gold medalist, Deb Armstrong, hosts Steamboat's
Women's Camps, now in their 26th year. Under the direction of
Armstrong, all certified female coaches lead this program
specifically designed for women, with an emphasis on camaraderie
and skill improvement.