Thursday, February 28, 2013

World Champs 15km Skate



Yesterday was another great opportunity. It's really exciting putting my toe to the line knowing I'm in better shape and skiing faster then ever. My goal this week was to watch and learn from the best in the World. I try to be realistic and not be to hard on myself when I don't see my name near the top of the results sheet. Yesterdays race was a 15 kilometer skate, I went out at a hot pace thinking that was my best shot at posting a fast time. When I went through the stadium onto my second lap my legs started getting heavy and really tired. I then struggled a little bit on the second lap but was still able to make good movements and was trying to really hammer the fast flat sections. By the last couple kilometers of the race my body was starting to come around again and I was able to leave the rest of my energy out there on the last couple climbs and into the finish. The course was tougher then most courses I see in the U.S., it felt like if I wasn't climbing up a steep hill I was hauling down one.  Overall I was pretty happy with my race and I now know how much work I need to do to be the best in the world. It has been a lot of fun racing at these championships and seeing all my teammates kick butt. I'm now looking forward to racing the 50k classic on Sunday and cheering on the mens 4x10km relay tomorrow! 

I want to thank all of my friends, family, teammates, and supporters for helping me get here. This has been an eye opening trip.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

World Champs Team Sprint

Today I raced the team sprint with Andrew Newell. I was planning on racing the pursuit yesterday but when I got to the venue to warm up I was told Simi Hamilton, who was scheduled to team up with Andy, was not feeling good so I could race the team sprint if I wanted. I was in for sure! I decided to skip the pursuit to conserve as much energy as I could for today. If someone would have told me a year ago that I was going to be in the team sprint at the World Champs with Andy Newell I would have said no way. It was an awesome opportunity. Todays game plan was to ski in the front pack and conserve as much energy as I could. As usual things did not go exactly as planned. I had a good start and was skiing around 5th in the first lap when someone stepped on my pole from behind and it broke, forcing me to ski about a half lap with one pole. Luckily the pace was not to high at that point so I was able to keep position. The second lap went smoothly and I kept my spot in the lead pack. Then on the third lap when I was really starting to hurt someone in the front made a burst at the top of the first hill and everyone scrambled to hold on. A French guy, a Finish dude, and myself tangled. I might have been the only guy to go down but I was actually the first guy out of the little cluster f*c#, but by that point we were out of contact with the top four. We ended up finishing 7th in our heat and about 10 seconds out of moving on to the finals. I think we would have had a good shot of moving on if I wouldn't have gone down. Oh well, it was still a TON of fun and a great opportunity. I hope I get to do more team sprints with Newell in the future. That dude is fast and just an all around great guy!
 The U.S. women had a pretty amazing day! Here they are on the podium.
 1st! Making history..
The guys top three teams.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

World Champs Sprint Update

(Fasterskier Photo)
It's so awesome to be here competing at the World Championships. Today I had some really good feelings when I was on the race course. It felt like the muscles were really snappy but I still had good glide. After spending the first half of the season at high altitude I find myself struggling with finding the right pace at this low altitude sprinting, I know it is something I can improve. I've defiantly taken some mental notes that I think will help me the rest of the week. The conditions were really tricky so finding the right wax was difficult, I struggled with deciding whether I wanted to go for the good kick or the good glide, I may have made the wrong decision and I think that showed in my finishing result. When I saw I ended in 51st I was a little disappointed and surprised. This is my first time at the  World Championships so I didn't know what to expect, I guess it shouldn't be surprising that people are skiing FAST, I just wanted to be a little closer to the top 30. Three more chances! :) This is such a cool experience. The crowd is louder and bigger then I have ever seen for a ski race.


This is a picture from Swiss nationals a couple weeks ago. 

Thursday, February 7, 2013

3x8

I don't get a lot of video footage of me skiing so I think this is a good chance to show some clips of me in yesterdays workout. The video is of Tad Elliott, Torin Koos, and I skiing on the same trail we will be doing a World Cup on in just over a week from now. I did 3 times 8 minutes at a pace that is slightly slower then race pace. Thanks coach Jason Cork for the video.
I'm wearing black pants with yellow patches by the knees and a black shirt.

Here is one more picture from Davos, there has been a couple of absolutely beautiful days. If you didn't get a chance to read my update from the last month you can still read it at this link

Monday, February 4, 2013

Euro Update

I'm three and a half weeks into my European trip and time has been blowing by; it seems like just yesterday we were finishing up Nationals. The trip has been really fun so far with some great new experiences. The first two and a half weeks I spent in Liberec, Czech Republic. I raced a World Cup and the Under 23 World Championships there. The U23 race series was at the end of my time in Liberec, which was really nice because I was able to get comfortable and familiar with the area before the big Championships. The World Cup races were two days after I arrived so I had both ends of the spectrum. This was a new area of Europe I had not yet been to. South of Czech Republic is Austria and Slovenia and Germany is to the west; all three countries I have spent time in. Czech Republic reminded me a lot of Slovenia. The population of Liberec is somewhere around 100,000, quite large compared to what I'm use to. I enjoyed being in the city for the first half of the trip as I don't spend much time in areas like that. It was interesting and exciting to have a huge town to explore on my afternoon walks and runs. By the end of the trip I was definitely ready to move on. I would say about 5% of the people could speak English, so it was really hard to talk to any of the locals. I like to try to meet people and learn a little bit about the area, culture, and just to get a sense of the environment.  It was gray and overcast most of my time there, which didn't help with the city vibe.
 View from my hotel room.
 Sophaloaf skiing on the race track.
 My german friend, Lucia Anger stops for a picture on our afternoon run.
 Night running....
always exciting!

The World Cup went pretty good considering I had just raced four times in the U.S. and then hopped on a plane across the pond (with one day to adjust) and then boom, RACE day. I finished 47th in the individual sprint, my third world cup sprint. Then the second day my good friend, Skyler and I teamed up and we got 27th place. It was awesome to get another couple starts against the fastest dudes in the World.



World Cup classic sprint.

The Under 23 World Championships were great. When I sat down this past summer with Erik Flora, my coach, I decided these were the races I wanted to peak for; they were the races I placed a lot of my goals for the year. Guys and gals under the age of 23 from all around the World have to go through a qualification criteria in order to represent their country at World Championships and I've had the privilege to race at the junior and U23 Champs for the last 5 years. Every year I feel like I have learned something from the race experience and every year I feel like I'm getting closer to reaching my goal of being competitive with the best skiers. This year I finished 10th, 15th, and 16th. While this might sound unsatisfactory in domestic races, internationally I felt I raced well and solid. Every race, it was a new personal best for me and in every race I got to ski with the leaders and see what type of pace they were skiing. It was fast, but for the first time I didn't feel like they were in a different league then myself. This year it was a Russian guy that seemed to be the strongest U23 out there. His technique was good and he is obviously really fit, but I think I can catch up to him. I wrote some goals down after I left Liberec that I will look back at this summer. I plan on training hard this next summer and there are somethings I'm definitely going to try and improve on. Next year when I go back to U23 World Championships, it will be my last year that I can qualify for this age group and I REALLY want to win a medal!

 Photo credit: Logan Haneman
  Photo credit: Logan Haneman
 Photo credit: Logan Haneman
Sophie and I had a fun day of racing!

After my last race at U23's I was feeling really tired and that night I had to take a flight to Zurich in order to meet up with the World Cup crew on their way to Russia. I knew this was going to be a really hectic schedule, but I wanted to race the pursuit at U23's and I wanted to race the World Cup in Russia so this was the only way I was going to make it work. I got a shuttle late Saturday night to Prague and then got on the plane to fly to Zurich. For some reason I just couldn't sleep on the plane even though I was super tired. Near the end of the flight I started feeling really awful. I was sitting in my seat wondering if I was just super tired or if I was feeling sick. I decided to pull out the puke bag in the seat pocket in front of me, wondering to myself who ever uses these things anyway. If I really feel like puking, I'm going to just get up and go to the bathroom. All the sudden I got really nauseous and what do you know that bag came in really handy (no time to get to the bathroom). When I landed I took a shuttle to the hotel in Zurich where the World Cup team was and by that time it was morning and the team was just starting to wake up. I talked to coach Matt Whitcomb and told him I threw up on the plane.  Since the flu was going around and many of my teammates at U23's had gotten sick, we decided it was best for the World Cup team and myself that I skip the Sochi World Cup, just in case I started feeling worse. Tad Elliott, US Ski team member, had just gotten the flu so his plans were to skip Sochi and head to Davos, Switzerland. I was having a really hard time with the decision when all the sudden I started getting nauseous again and yes, more vomiting. That sealed the deal and I said adios to the team and Tad and I started our travel to Davos. The next part of the trip was one of the worst experiences of my life. It involved lots of throwing up mixed with trying to haul around all my luggage while we hopped from one train, to another, to another on our way to Davos. My body couldn't hold in any fluids and it wanted everything out of my stomach. Lets just say there was some not so pretty sites on the train station platforms and in the train bathrooms. Luckily my buddy Tad Elliott had my back the whole way there so I survived.


This past week here in Davos, Switzerland has been really nice. I spent the first couple days in bed getting healthy and then it was out to explore the winter wonderland. What a treat this place has been. It makes me feel like I'm in heaven. The people here are unbelievably nice, everybody from the hotel workers to the nice old lady I met on the bus.  Tad and I have been on some amazing skis and have been trying to take it easy. I had a serious block of racing in January, so the order from coach was to find some distractions and train long and easy.

Nice morning view to look at while having breakfast.


No coffee for this guy, I always go for some of that delicious hot chocolate.

Tad and I found some pretty nice trails.

Tad Elliott


Check out that view!
Waiting for the bus, notice the World Cup banners up top. The public bus system here is so nice, it seems like everyone uses it. There are busses that go through the valley every 15 minutes so if you miss one its not to long of wait. Tad and I don't have a vehicle this week but thats no problem.

The Swiss miss has been cooking us some amazing meals!

Skiing with some friends. Jason from the Swiss team (left). PK from the Australian team(middle). Tad(right)

Tad and I have been hitting up the sauna and a little snow bath between. I like to do contrast baths for recovery but don't exactly have access to one right now, thats alright we have been making this work .
 Me and my friend Mr. Snowman.

Next weekend I'm going to race the Switzerland Championships. These races should be a fairly small field but really strong competition. I've made friends with a lot of the Swiss team members so it should be a blast racing with these guys. Unlike the U.S. national championships where the field is over a 150 racers, the Swiss championships will probably have less then 30 but the competition will be a lot tougher. I'm just really excited to get the bib back on. Then after that it is back to World Cup racing, starting here in Davos and then I will be going to Val Di Fiemme, Italy for WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS!!!  I am so honored to be a part of the team and I can't wait.  I know that in the future, I can be one of the best in the World and this is just just another step of some fun and hard work ahead. There are some good things happening in the US and we all hope you are following us. Olympics are just a year away!  Keep watching as it means a lot and we need you to keep us revved up!

Until next time- I hope YOU are all staying healthy and happy! Thanks for your support!!