Tuesday, December 1, 2009

John Kucera's injury hurts ski team's medal hopes at Olympic Games



By Jim Morris (CP) – 16 hours ago
John Kucera's season-ending injury means one of Canada's best threats to win multiple medals won't be competing at the 2010 Winter Olympics.
Kucera's leg injury, suffered in the first super-giant slalom race of the World Cup season, will also make it more difficult for Alpine Canada to reach its goal of winning at least three medals at the Vancouver Games.
"It's a huge blow," Max Gartner, Alpine Canada's chief athletics officer, said Monday in a telephone interview from Lake Louise, Alta. "He's not only a threat in downhill, but also in super-G and giant slalom.
"As far as the Olympics go, there was a couple of shots he had and they are now gone."
Kucera, the reigning world downhill champion, underwent surgery Sunday night after fracturing the tibia and fibula in his left leg in a race at Lake Louise. Dr. Christopher Irving, Alpine Canada's medical director, said in a release that the 25-year-old from Calgary won't compete at the Olympics or ski this season.
Manuel Osborne-Paradis of North Vancouver, B.C., won Sunday's race, while Erik Guay of Mont-Tremblant, Que., placed fourth and Robbie Dixon of North Vancouver was fifth.
Gartner said the results show the depth of the Canadian program.
"We figure we have about 10 athletes that have medal potential," Gartner said. "We don't have too many with multiple events. These chances are less now. It means the people who are contenders have to convert to reach our goal.
Read on...google

Winter Olympics: Brits to watch





While the official team announcement is still to take place here are Sportsister’s predictions for who will be the ones to watch for Great Britain at the Vancouver Olympics. Will the nation have a new golden girl?

Skeleton
British women have a great record in Olympic skeleton racing. In this unique sport ‘sliders’ do a sprint start then literally hurl themselves down the shared bobsleigh/luge/skeleton track on a thin sled, head first, just inches from the ice using their bodyweight to steer.

It first appeared in the Games in Salt Lake City in 2002, where Alex Coomber took a bronze medal for Britain. In 2006 in Turin, Shelley Rudman went one better – winning silver.

In Vancouver next year it is likely that Shelley, along with Amy Williams (pictured right) who won a World Championship silver earlier this year, will be battling it out for a podium finish.

The track in Vancouver is the fastest in the world with top speeds touching 100mph. Every track is unique and the more you can practice on it the better. But Team GB may only have 20 practice runs before the competition in comparison to the hosts Canada, who will have up to 400 runs prior to the Games. It’s going to be tough, but the British sliders are definitely ones to watch in Vancouver.

Figure skating
Not since the most famous Brits to take to the ice, Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean, won Olympic gold in ’84 and bronze in ’94, has Britain found Olympic success in figure skating. But Scotland’s brother and sister duo Sinead and Jonn Kerr may change this.

Earlier this year they won Great Britain’s first major medal in 15 years with bronze at the European Ice Dance Championships in Helsinki, Finland. They are six time British Ice Dance Champions, finished tenth in Turin in 2006, eighth at the 2008 World Championships and are currently ranked seven in the world.

Britain’s number one figure skater Jenna McCorkell (pictured below right) is also one to watch on her Olympic debut. Jenna is the current six times British Senior Champion, finished 9th in last year’s European Championships and 20th at the World Championships.

Snowboarding
There are three snowboarding disciplines that women can compete in at the Winter Olympics – Giant Parallel Slalom, Half Pipe and Snowboard Cross (also known as Boardercross). Britain has never won an Olympic medal on the snow, but in Vancouver all eyes will be on Zoe Gillings. She came 15th in the Turin Olympics, is currently ranked 5th in the world and is optimistic of her medal hopes for next year.

Lesley Mckenna has competed in the half pipe event at the last two Olympics and is hoping to be in Vancouver. At the time of going to press she was well on her way to meeting the selection criteria. Kate Foster, also a Turin Olympian, looks set to be joining her.



Curling
Were you one of the 5.7 million British viewers that tuned in to see Rhona Martin, Deborah Knox, Fiona MacDonald, Janice Rankin and Margaret Morton win gold on the curling rink in Salt Lake City? It’s one of the most loved moments of Team GB at a Winter Olympics in recent times.

In 2010 look out for reigning and three time world junior champion Eve Muirhead who will be competing in her first Olympics. She will be joined by former World Champion Jackie Lockhart, who will be at her fourth Games, along with Kelly Wood, Lorna Vevers and Karen Addison. (Pictured above left).

Britain has qualified in seventh place for the Olympics. This team will also represent Scotland at the European Championships, which are staged in Aberdeen in early December. All the qualified European nations are sending their Olympic squads to this event, which will be a real marker of medal prospects in February.

Skiing
There are five disciplines in the Olympic alpine skiing schedule – Downhill, Combined, Slalom, Giant slalom and Super G. Chemmy Alcott is Britain’s only female to compete at World Cup level and will be the only one in Vancouver at this event.

It will be her third Olympics, having competed in both Salt Lake City and Turin in four of the five events (not slalom). Her best result was 11th in the Downhill in Turin. But with four more years experience, and despite a fractured ankle hampering last season’s preparations, she is back fit and ready to fulfill that childhood ambition of an Olympic medal.

Also look out for Ellie Koyander in the Mogul discipline of the Freestyle skiing. While the eighteen year olds target is a medal at Sochi 2014, she has made the qualifying grade for Vancouver. In the Olympics competitors race each other down a specially constructed slope with a multitude of bumps known as moguls. They jump off the bumps performing acrobatic maneuvers and are marked on their technique, speed and the quality of the two jumps required.
Read more...sportsister

Omega releases commemorative watches for Winter Olympics

FEATURES
SCREW-IN CROWN
UNIDIRECTIONAL ROTATING BEZEL
HELIUM ESCAPE VALVE
DATE
CHRONOMETER
LIMITED EDITION

As the clock counts down to the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics, Omega is releasing two commemorative watches. The Seamaster Diver 300m ‘Vancouver 2010’ is being produced in 41mm and 36.25mm versions, each in an edition limited to 2010 pieces.

The Vancouver watch has a distinctive white lacquered dial with red anodized aluminium bezel rings, recalling the maple leaf on the Canadian national flag. There is a further connection to the Games with the addition of the five Olympic rings on the counterweight of the red-tipped rhodium-plated second hand. All hands and indexes are coated with white Super-Luminova, creating a soft blue reflection in low light.

The ‘Vancouver 2010’ has its caseback embossed with the Winter Olympics Games logo, including a design based on the stone cairns erected by Canada’s First Nations peoples as a greeting to visitors in their territories. Called Ilanaak – the word means ‘friend’ in Inuktitut – it is the official symbol of the 2010 Vancouver Games.

Source