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Silver medal for Anthony in final Olympic Qualifier

15/1/2022

 
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Jakara Anthony has wrapped up her Olympic qualification with a silver medal at the World Cup event in Deer Valley, USA, her eighth medal of the season.
 
Anthony made a great start to the day on the Champion ski run, winning the qualification round and then advancing to the super final in fourth place. In the super final, Anthony put down another great run to score 80.38 points to land on the podium in second place.
 
Taking the win was Japanese skier Anri Kawamura with a score of 80.89, with 2018 Olympic Champion Perrine Laffont of France rounding out the podium in third with 80.02 points.
 
Anthony is currently ranked third in the women’s moguls World Cup standings, and first in the overall mogul World Cup standings, which also includes results from the dual mogul discipline.
 
“I am really happy with how this event has gone, I really progressed in certain aspects of my skiing and jumping in my four days here and I couldn’t have asked for much more” said the 23-year-old from Barwon Heads in Victoria.
 
“It’s been a big month so far with four competition starts in two weeks, which is quite a lot for us, but you have to just keep focusing on what’s next and take it one day at a time.”
 
“The women’s mogul field is so exciting to watch this season, there are so many strong skiers and the women’s jumping has gone through the roof. I just love watching and I think it’s so exiting for the sport, and I can’t wait to see what everyone brings for the rest of the season.”
 
“We are now off to Ruka, Finland, for our pre-Olympic camp, so I will be looking to fine tune bits and pieces of my run there and getting everything dialled in.”
 
In the men’s event, Brodie Summers made it through to his first super-final of the season, finishing in sixth place.  
 
Also competing in the top-16 finals were Cooper Woods in 11th and Britt Cox in 12th.

Medal for Anthony and top-5 PB for Woods in Deer Valley

14/1/2022

 
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Australia has recorded two top-5 performances at the mogul skiing World Cup in Deer Valley, USA, with Jakara Anthony claiming her seventh podium of the season after taking home a bronze medal and Cooper Woods recording a personal best fifth place finish.
 
Anthony was in great form on the Champion ski run, winning the qualification round and then qualifying for the super final in first place. In the super final, Anthony lost some points with her top air ski out but recovered well to post a score of 79.84 points to win bronze.
 
Taking the win was 2018 Olympic Champion Perrine Laffont of France with 80.30, with Japanese skier Anri Kawamura in second with 80.03. Despite Anthony’s deductions on her ski out, her jumping points were the highest in the final.
 
“It’s always great to be back in Deer Valley and it’s so exciting that we have a double event here so we can come back and do it all again tomorrow” said the 23-year-old from Barwon Heads in Victoria.
 
“I am really happy with the changes I have made to my run here, and I was stoked to get some good runs down.”
 
In the men’s event, Woods improved on his personal best ninth place finish in Canada last weekend to advance to the first top-six super final of the 21-year-old’s career.
 
Woods scored 76.10 points in the super final to finish in a personal best fifth place. 2018 Olympic Champion Mikael Kingsbury of Canada won with a score of 83.28 points, with Ikuma Horishima of Japan in second with 81.98 and another Japanese skier Kosuke Sugimoto scoring 79.02 to finish third.
 
“It was my first super final, I was pretty excited if you want to know the truth”, said Woods, who resides in Pambula Beach, NSW. 
 
“I had to take some deep breaths, go over my goals with my coach, and just had to get down the run and put a nice one down”
 
Also in action for Australia was Brodie Summers in 19th, Sophie Ash 23rd, James Matheson 24th, Britt Cox 29th and Madii Himbury in 33rd.
 
A second World Cup event will take place in Deer Valley tomorrow, which be the final mogul skiing competition before the Beijing Olympic Winter Games.
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Unique training in Brisbane heat helps Matt Graham regain momentum for Beijing

13/1/2022

 
A month after snapping his collarbone in a training crash, Olympic moguls silver medallist Matt Graham has defied the odds, resuming practice just weeks away from the start of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics.

Matt underwent surgery straight after the fall at the Idre Fjall World Cup event in Sweden, but incredibly he's back practising jumps at the Geoff Henke Winter Olympic Training Centre in Brisbane, as he aims to compete in his third Olympic Games.

On a day where Genting Snow Park, which hosts the Olympic moguls competition, hit a low of minus 19 degrees, the 2021 overall moguls World Cup champion launched off the ramps into the pool in 30 degree Brisbane heat.

While training in summer on a water ramp just 22 days before the Winter Olympic Opening Ceremony is an enormous change to the skier's normal preparation, the 27-year-old from New South Wales' Central Coast is taking on the challenge.

"It's bizarre being here in an Australian summer only 22 days out from my Olympic competition, but exciting too," Matt said. "It's super important and beneficial to be able to use this facility and there is nowhere else in the world you can do this right now."

"I got surgery four days after the injury, it put a plate there with 13 screws, it's all bolted together, strong and sturdy which is good. It's all come really good in the past seven days and today was the first day giving it it's real test.

"Today I put the shoulder through the paces, getting in the air again to regain that confidence. I went through the skills I'll perform in Beijing – I haven't been off the snow for too long, so today it was good to get the feelings and sensations back.

"I've remained really positive throughout this period. Getting there is the first challenge, and once I'm there, I want to be fit and healthy and compete at 100%. Coming off the last Olympics, winning silver was a career highlight. I'd love to go one better, for me it's about focusing on my own performance, run by run.

"I have high expectations of myself and what I want to achieve in Beijing. Having this injury, it's not ideal but it works in my favour to have all of my experience from previous Games behind me."

Matt will fly to Ruka, Finland this weekend to rejoin the Australian moguls team, for final preparations on snow before the Games.

The facility, a $6.5 million collaboration between the Australian Government through the Australian Institute of Sport, Queensland Government, AOC and Olympic Winter Institute of Australia (OWIA), opened for testing in November 2020 ahead of its official Opening in May 2021 and has already seen Australia's aerials and moguls teams hone their skills in the leadup to Beijing 2022.

Chef de Mission for the Australian Olympic Team for Beijing, Geoff Lipshut, praised Graham's tenacity.

"Matt is a champion in every sense of the word," Mr Lipshut said. "He's attacking his recovery and disrupted preparation for Beijing with the same determination and courage as he shows skiing down the moguls courses on the world's biggest stage.

"This facility is already showing its incredible value. To allow for Olympians like Matt to use Brisbane as a home base just weeks before an Olympic campaign is something only Australian athletes now have at this time of the year.

"I look forward to seeing Matt continue his recovery and getting back on the slopes soon, with the help of the fantastic Geoff Henke Olympic Training Facility in Brisbane."
A month after snapping his collarbone in a training crash, Olympic moguls silver medallist Matt Graham has defied the odds, resuming practice just weeks away from the start of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics.

Matt underwent surgery straight after the fall at the Idre Fjall World Cup event in Sweden, but incredibly he's back practising jumps at the Geoff Henke Winter Olympic Training Centre in Brisbane, as he aims to compete in his third Olympic Games.

On a day where Genting Snow Park, which hosts the Olympic moguls competition, hit a low of minus 19 degrees, the 2021 overall moguls World Cup champion launched off the ramps into the pool in 30 degree Brisbane heat.

While training in summer on a water ramp just 22 days before the Winter Olympic Opening Ceremony is an enormous change to the skier's normal preparation, the 27-year-old from New South Wales' Central Coast is taking on the challenge.

"It's bizarre being here in an Australian summer only 22 days out from my Olympic competition, but exciting too," Matt said. "It's super important and beneficial to be able to use this facility and there is nowhere else in the world you can do this right now."

"I got surgery four days after the injury, it put a plate there with 13 screws, it's all bolted together, strong and sturdy which is good. It's all come really good in the past seven days and today was the first day giving it it's real test.

"Today I put the shoulder through the paces, getting in the air again to regain that confidence. I went through the skills I'll perform in Beijing – I haven't been off the snow for too long, so today it was good to get the feelings and sensations back.

"I've remained really positive throughout this period. Getting there is the first challenge, and once I'm there, I want to be fit and healthy and compete at 100%. Coming off the last Olympics, winning silver was a career highlight. I'd love to go one better, for me it's about focusing on my own performance, run by run.

"I have high expectations of myself and what I want to achieve in Beijing. Having this injury, it's not ideal but it works in my favour to have all of my experience from previous Games behind me."

Matt will fly to Ruka, Finland this weekend to rejoin the Australian moguls team, for final preparations on snow before the Games.

The facility, a $6.5 million collaboration between the Australian Government through the Australian Institute of Sport, Queensland Government, AOC and Olympic Winter Institute of Australia (OWIA), opened for testing in November 2020 ahead of its official Opening in May 2021 and has already seen Australia's aerials and moguls teams hone their skills in the leadup to Beijing 2022.

Chef de Mission for the Australian Olympic Team for Beijing, Geoff Lipshut, praised Graham's tenacity.

"Matt is a champion in every sense of the word," Mr Lipshut said. "He's attacking his recovery and disrupted preparation for Beijing with the same determination and courage as he shows skiing down the moguls courses on the world's biggest stage.

"This facility is already showing its incredible value. To allow for Olympians like Matt to use Brisbane as a home base just weeks before an Olympic campaign is something only Australian athletes now have at this time of the year.

"I look forward to seeing Matt continue his recovery and getting back on the slopes soon, with the help of the fantastic Geoff Henke Olympic Training Facility in Brisbane."
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Anthony claims her sixth World Cup medal of the season in Canada

9/1/2022

 
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Jakara Anthony has claimed her sixth podium of the season, with a silver medal performance at the World Cup mogul skiing event in Tremblant, Canada.

The Canadian resort hosted two days of World Cup competition, with all OWIA and NSWIS athletes achieving a finals performance.

On day one, Anthony was the highest placed Australian finishing in fifth, with Sophie Ash in 13th and Britt Cox 17th.

In the men's day one event, Cooper-Woods had a personal best World Cup finish in ninth place, with Brodie Summers (21st),  James Matheson (27th) missing out on finals.
 
Anthony came out strongly on day two, performing well in the qualification and first round of finals, to advance to the super final in fourth place.
 
In the super final Anthony had another great run scoring 79.02 points from the judges to finish 3.53 points behind 2018 Olympic Champion Perrine Laffont of France. Rounding out the podium in third place was Anri Kawamura of Japan with a score of 78.78.
 
“The course here in Tremblant was really fun today, it’s really developed over the four days we have been skiing on it, and very different to the previous course in Alpe d’Huez in France” said the 23-year-old from Barwon Heads in Victoria.
 
“It’s a busy few weeks for us with back-to-back double single mogul events in two different locations here in Tremblant and next week in Deer Valley, which everyone is excited for. It’s always a favourite event for the Australian team and the whole World Cup tour, so I look forward to getting back on the Champion run at Deer Valley.”

The podium performance sees Anthony ranked second on the World Cup standings with 365 points, just four behind Kawamura with 369 points, and 15 ahead of Laffont on 350 points. Brodie Summers is the highest ranked Australian male in tenth.
 
Joining Anthony in the women’s final on day two was Britt Cox in 13th with Brodie Summers and James Matheson reaching the men’s final, finishing in 13th and 16th place respectively. Cooper Woods finished in 26th place.
 
The mogul skiing athletes will now head to Deer Valley, USA, for the final World Cup events before the Beijing Olympic Winter Games.

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