Picture
Picture
Picture
  • Home
  • Aerials
    • Aerial Skiing About
    • Aerial Skiing News
    • Gabi Ash
    • Abbey Willcox
    • Laura Peel
    • Danielle Scott
  • Moguls
    • Moguls Skiing About
    • Mogul Skiing News
    • Jakara Anthony
    • Matt Graham
    • Cooper Woods
  • Park & Pipe
    • Park & Pipe About
    • Park & Pipe News
    • Tess Coady
    • Matt Cox
    • Scotty James
    • Valentino Guseli
  • Snowboard Cross
    • Snowboard Cross About
    • Snowboard Cross News
    • Josie Baff
    • Cameron Bolton
    • Belle Brockhoff
    • Jarryd Hughes
    • Adam Lambert
  • Individual Athletes
    • Individual Athletes About
    • Individual Athletes News
    • Madison Hoffman
    • Harry Laidlaw
    • Louis Muhlen-Schulte
    • Greta Small
    • Bree Walker
    • Jackie Narracott
    • Tahli Gill
    • Dean Hewitt
    • Alex Ferlazzo
    • Brendan Corey
    • Doug Crawford
  • About
    • OWIA News
    • Sport Integrity
    • Media
    • OWIA About
    • OWIA History
    • Executive & Staff
    • OWIA Policies & Documents
    • OWIA Calendar
    • Sponsors & Partners
    • Australian Sports Foundation
    • Newsletter
    • Privacy
    • National Redress Scheme
    • Contact

Brodie's boost

20/1/2014

 
PictureBrodie Summers with a back X in Deer Valley
Australian Institute of Sport/NSW Institute of Sport mogul skier Brodie Summers finished 12th today in the last event before the Sochi Olympic Winter Games qualification cut-off date, enhancing his chances of being selected in Australia’s team.

The result in Val St Come, Canada, created a new World Cup personal best for the Australian, improving his previous highest finish by six places.

The event was a Canadian first and second for Alex Bilodeau and Mikael Kingsbury with American Bradley Wilson third.

The 12th place lifts Summers’ world ranking to 28, seven places higher than before the Canadian event.

Summers progressed to his first final of the season, for the top 16 athletes from the qualification session, before delivering a run in the first final that was solid across turns, jumps and speed, but was not strong enough to put him in the six man super-final.

Summers, along with two other Australians who competed in Val St Come – Sam Hall, an AIS/NSWIS scholarship holder and Taylah O’Neill, an NSWIS athlete - will immediately rejoin other AIS/NSWIS squad members Matt Graham, Dale Begg-Smith, Nicole Parks and Britt Cox, at a training camp in the United States to fine tune their preparation for Sochi, which starts February 7.

While O’Neill was unable to qualify for the women’s final, she was 21st today, and Hall was 38th.

The women’s event was a one-two for Canadian sisters Chloe Dufour-Lapointe and Justine Dufour-Lapointe while Japan’s Junko Hoshino was the bronze medallist.


Cox ninth in Lake Placid

16/1/2014

 
PictureBritt Cox flying down the Lake Placid moguls © Julien Heon Photography
Australian Institute of Sport/NSW Institute of Sport mogul skier Britt Cox advanced to the final with the fourth highest qualification score and ended the World Cup in Lake Placid, USA, today in ninth place.

Making today’s 16-woman final means that Cox, 19, has appeared in a final at each World Cup this season.

However, Cox’s score in the first final was 74.26, which was unfortunately not high enough to make the second final, which decided medals.

The event was won by American Hannah Kearney, second was Yulia Galysheva from Kazakhstan with third going to Canadian Justine Dufour-Lapointe.

Brodie Summers, another AIS/NSWIS athlete, was Australia’s best male, finishing 18th, an equal best for the season, but unfortunately he missed the cut for the final.

Canadian Alex Bilodeau took out the event ahead of Americans Patrick Deneen in second and Bradley Wilson in third.

In other results with AIS/NSWIS skiers, Matt Graham was 22nd, Sam Hall was 35th, Nicole Parks was 19th while Dale Begg-Smith was rested. NSWIS athlete Taylah-Paige O’Neill was 28th.


Second super-final for Cox

12/1/2014

0 Comments

 
PictureBritt Cox after her finals run in Deer Valley
Nineteen-year-old mogul skier Britt Cox achieved her second World Cup super-final appearance from four starts this season when she delivered a strong performance to finish sixth in front of 10,000 spectators attending the second World Cup event in Deer Valley, UT, USA.

Competing under lights, the Australian Institute of Sport / NSW Institute of Sport athlete was pressing for a medal in the final round against the day’s other top five athletes when Cox was unable to land her second jump cleanly on the famous Deer Valley Champion Run, which limited her scoring ability.

American Hannah Kearney gave the huge and vocal crowd something to cheer for by taking top honours ahead of Kazakhstan’s Yulia Galysheva in second, while Canadian Maxime Dufour-Lapointe was third.

With her parents and brother among the crowd, Cox was impressive all day, with eighth place in the qualification session and a fifth place in the first final, which qualified her for one of the six super-final positions up for grabs.

While Cox led the Australian charge, fellow squad member Nicole Parks also experienced a day to be proud of when she ended the event in 11th, an equal personal best in World Cup competition.

In men’s results, AIS / NSWIS scholarship holder Matt Graham was the best Australian, finishing in eighth, with his AIS team-mate Dale Begg-Smith in twelfth.

AIS mogul skiing program head coach Steve Desovich said that the squad is experiencing a “tight and intense period” as they begin their preparation for their third event in six days.

“It is challenging and the guys have to be prepared for it,” Desovich said.

“They have to be able to adapt and respond although the whole field has to also so it’s no different for us.”

As well as Cox’s solid result, Desovich added that he was very impressed with Graham’s performance.

“I was very pleased that Matt was able to bump it up a notch compared with the day before, in what I believe was a very nice run.”

In other results with Australians competing at Deer Valley, Sam Hall was 27th, James Matheson was 38th and Brodie Summers was 47th, while Taylah O’Neill was 19th.


0 Comments

Top-10 for Begg-Smith

10/1/2014

0 Comments

 
PictureAIS Mogul Skier Dale Begg-Smith with OWIA Physio Peter Hogg
AIS Mogul skier Dale Begg-Smith posted his second top-10 World Cup finish from three starts this season with another finals appearance in Deer Valley, USA.

After more than three years away from competition before starting his comeback in December, Begg-Smith was Australia’s best performer among the seven-member mogul ski squad with a ninth place.

Begg-Smith was unlucky not to reach the six-man super-final, after putting down what appeared to be the highest quality turns of the field in the first final.

In the women’s competition, AIS / NSWIS athlete Britt Cox also added to her consistent season with a 12th place after advancing to the final with the ninth best score in the qualification session.

In other Australian results, Taylah O’Neill was 28th, Nicole Parks 34th, Matt Graham 20th, Brodie Summers 49th, James Matheson 61st and Sam Hall did not finish his qualification run.

0 Comments

Four athletes in Calgary mogul final

5/1/2014

 
Picture
Australia’s mogul skiing squad had a solid day at the Calgary World Cup in Canada, with four athletes qualifying for finals.

The leading performance came from AIS / NSWIS athlete Britt Cox, who placed seventh, narrowly missing the top six super final.

Her seventh place result means that Cox maintains her world ranking of four.

Fellow AIS / NSWIS athlete Nicole Parks had the best day of her career, recording a personal best 11th place finish and has lifted her ranking from 30 after the first World Cup of the season to currently sit in 20th spot.

In the men's event, AIS / NSWIS athlete Dale Begg-Smith was the best placed of the Australians finishing 12th, with Matt Graham, another AIS / NSWIS scholarship holder, was 13th. The two had exactly the same score, but were separated on a countback.

The women's World Cup was won by Canadian Justine Dufour-Lapointe, with American Hannah Kearney second and another Canadian Chloe Dufour-Lapointe in third.

Canadian Mikael Kingsbury took the win from compatriot Alex Bilodeau and American Patrick Deneen in third.

Other Australian results in the 1988 Olympic Winter Games host city, held in minus 18 degrees Celsius, saw NSWIS skier Taylah-Paige O’Neill finish 22nd and AIS / NSWIS athletes Brodie Summers 29th and Sam Hall 40th.

AIS mogul skiing program head coach Steve Desovich was impressed by the speed down the steep challenging course by Cox.

Cox is benefitting from working tirelessly on strength and conditioning during the off season and in the event she was the second fastest woman on the course.

“It was a slightly above average day but we’ll definitely have to build on it,” Desovich said.

“Britt had a very good run in the first final and actually I was pretty impressed with the run.

“Her speed was very encouraging.”


Mogul squad to maintain the intensity

3/1/2014

 
Australia’s seven member mogul skiing squad will compete in a World Cup in Calgary, Canada, on Sunday (Australian time).

Teenage Australian Institute of Sport / NSW Institute of Sport athletes Britt Cox and Matt Graham go into the event after finishing fourth in the first event of the season in Ruka, Finland, in December.

However, Cox and Graham will not be the only points of interest in the Aussie squad.

Australia’s most successful winter Olympian, Dale Begg-Smith, is competing for only the second time since 2010.

Begg-Smith demonstrated his enormous talent in Ruka by finishing in fifth, which was highly impressive given his lengthy absence from competition.

Fellow AIS / NSWIS athletes Nicole Parks, Brodie Summers, Sam Hall and NSWIS skier Taylah O’Neill are all approaching the busy competition schedule, five World Cup events in 16 days, with a high level of confidence.

The squad has been training at the Colorado resort of Steamboat in the United States since competing in Finland.

Tough start to the season

12/12/2013

 
PictureBritt Cox, Dale Begg-Smith and Matt Graham in Ruka (PHOTO - Peter Caine)
Australia’s mogul ski squad has had close to a best ever start to a World Cup season with three athletes narrowly missing a podium finish in Ruka, Finland, today.

Australian Institute of Sport / NSW Institute of Sport teenagers Britt Cox and Matt Graham both finished in fourth place, while Australia’s most successful Olympian Dale Begg-Smith made an excellent return to international competition after a three year break with a fifth place.

Nineteen-year-old Cox was fantastic from the first run of the day when, for the first time in her World Cup career, she won the qualification round by outpointing American Olympic Champion Hannah Kearney with a performance highlighted by the equal top score for turns and the fastest time down the challenging Ruka course.

Cox continued her strong showing in the first final, for the top 16 qualifiers, by finishing the round in second place, just 0.44 points behind Japanese veteran Aiko Uemura, to advance to the six women final.

Despite another impressive run in the final she was outpointed by Kearney, the eventual winner, with Canada’s Justine Dufour Lapointe in second place and Uemura in the bronze medal place.

Graham, who finished behind the winning Canadian Mikael Kingsbury, second placed Canadian Alex Bilodeau and Japan’s Sho Endo, fought hard from 10th place in the qualification session to sit in fourth after the first final, a position he held on to in the medal round.

Cox said that her achievements today were not a surprise and believes hard work, which included 15 weeks of strength and conditioning work with the AIS together with John Marsden and Jamie Youngson, has brought about the result.

“I’m not too surprised because it has definitely been a goal of mine to be skiing like I am at the moment,” Cox said.

“I’m not surprised but happy things are starting to come together and building the skills which I’m working on each week.

“This is definitely a confidence booster given that this is the first World Cup of an Olympic season.
“The quality of skiing is going to be really high. We noticed today that all the girls are bringing their A-game.

“Being fourth is so close to the podium and there is a little of the feeling that it was right there within my reach but finishing fourth is something that will make me more determined and to build upon.

“Having a great result in qualifying and finishing fourth has shown me what I’m capable of.”

Another thought which is adding to Cox’s positive outlook is the prospect of heading to Steamboat, in the United States, along with other squad members, for further training.

Cox will pay particular attention to her jumps, which she believes was the difference between third and fourth today, and to enjoy Christmas with her family, the first time she has had that opportunity since she was 13-years-old.



Read More

Mogul Skiing international season preparation update

9/10/2013

 
The AIS Mogul Skiing program undertook a wide range of activities during July to October covering strength and conditioning, water jumping, on snow training and altitude camps.

Matt Graham, Sam Hall, Brodie Summers and Britt Cox took part in water ramp camps in Park City, UT, USA, with AIS Mogul Aerial Coach Jerry Grossi. The camps were very successful with noticeable gains for many of the athletes in their degree of difficulty and jump execution.

After the Park City camp, training took place on the world class Toppa’s Dream mogul course at Perisher.

The National Mogul Championships took place at Perisher and saw Matt Graham successfully defend his title with two wins in two days of competition. AIS/NSWIS Scholarship holder Sam Hall finished second overall with a sixth and a third through day one and two of competition. In the women’s event Nicole Parks and Britt Cox placed third and fourth respectively, over the two days. In a very promising sign for the future, NSWIS scholarship holder Taylah O’Neill was the best placed Australian finishing second overall.

In a further sign of depth within the Australian team, Olympic hopefuls and AIS/NSWIS scholarship athletes Brodie Summers and Nicole Parks won the James Boag’s ABOM Mogul Challenge at Mt Buller. It was the second ABOM victory of Nicole’s career and the first for Brodie.

An altitude camp was held at the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra in September to prepare the athletes for an on snow training camp in Zermatt, Switzerland. The altitude camp at the AIS has proven to be very beneficial, with the athlete’s performing well in training on the Zermatt glacier.

After the Zermatt camp, athletes will take part in another camp at the AIS in Canberra and a water ramp camp during November at the SSA facility in Melbourne. This will be the final training activity in Australia before the team heads to Ruka, Finland, to commence their northern hemisphere winter campaign.

Summers and Parks win ABOM

31/8/2013

 
Picture
Winter Olympic Games hopefuls Brodie Summers and Nicole Parks scored upset victories in the James Boag’s ABOM Mogul Challenge, the last event of the Suzuki National Snowsport Championships, at Victoria’s Mt Buller today.

Summers and Parks, both Australian Institute of Sport / NSW Institute of Sport athletes, turned the tables on the two pre-event favourites, fellow AIS / NSWIS skiers Matt Graham and Britt Cox.

Graham, who has won the last four ABOM events, was chasing a record equalling fifth victory but had to be content with second place ahead of NSWIS athlete Rohan Chapman-Davies in third.

Parks added a second ABOM trophy to a previous win in this event in 2009 with a narrow 13-12 win over second placed NSWIS athlete Madii Himbury.

While in many ways it was a surprise that Cox, with two World Cup podium finishes to her name, did not win her fourth consecutive ABOM, it was an even bigger shock that Cox failed to win through to the final.

Cox lost a tight semi-final dual with Himbury, with Cox relegated to third after winning the consolation final.

Summers, who signalled his strong potential with a seventh place in the mogul World Championships earlier this year, said that the win is a direct result of the support provided to him through the Olympic Winter Institute program.

“After I qualified for the national team to work with our coach Steve Desovich, Jerry Grossi and everybody else in the support team, it’s been massive. They have invested a lot into me this year and I have been trying to capitalise on it as much as I can,” Summers said.

“Since I had my best results of seventh in the single moguls and ninth in the duals at the World Championships in Norway, I’ve been training as hard as I can although the job is not done until the Olympics are over.”

Summers admitted that it was difficult lining up against Graham, who is a close friend as well as a fellow AIS / NSWIS athlete sharing the same goals.

“It sucks when you beat your best mate sometimes but you do what you have to do and that is what sport is sometimes,” he said.
Summers admitted that he felt a little more disappointment for Graham given that his mate was trying to win the ABOM for a fifth consecutive year.

“I think that made it a little tougher. I actually apologised to him when we shook hands at the bottom. I felt bad for taking away his record but we all wanted it really bad out here today.

“Winning today is a real confidence boost in the lead up to the Olympics, especially when the win was against somebody like Matt Graham. His turns are in a class of the best in the world.”



Read More

Hall PB, sixth at World Championships – 3 in top 10

9/3/2013

 
Australian Institute of Sport / NSW Institute of Sport athlete Sam Hall took another step towards fulfilling his Olympic dream when he finished with a personal best sixth place in the World Freestyle Ski Championships dual moguls event in Voss, Norway.

The 24-year-old Hall won his first dual against Sweden’s Ludvig Fjallstroim, after qualifying in eighth, and advanced to the quarter finals.

Unfortunately for the Australian, he was then drawn against the eventual winner Alex Bilodeau, who brought Hall’s day to an end.

Canadian Mikael Kingsbury, was second and American Patrick Deneen took third place.

However, as the best finishing Australian, coupled with strong performances in the last two weeks, Hall can be highly pleased with the result.

Given that Hall missed last season with a knee injury, he has made significant progress towards living up to the promise he showed several years ago.

It was only a little more than 10 days ago that Hall achieved a then World Cup personal best, an eighth place in Japan, which has now been improved in a field boasting every current top class moguls skier in the world.

Hall was one of four Australian squad members who progressed to the finals.

NSWIS skier Brodie Summers extended his “purple patch” by making the finals with a very strong fourth place, but unlike Hall, he was unable to win his quarter final dual against Fin Jimi Salonen and ended the day in a very impressive ninth place.

In the women’s draw, teenager Britt Cox and fellow AIS / NSWIS scholarship holder Nicole Parks both made the finals to finish in eighth and 16th. Cox won her first dual but went down to the eventual silver medallist Miki Ito in a quarter final.

The women’s event was won by Canadian Chloe Dufour-Lapointe, with American Hannah Kearney in third.

The only member of the Australian squad not to make finals was Matt Graham.

Following an outstanding fourth place in the first of the two moguls events in Voss, Graham made an uncharacteristic mistake going into a jump during the qualification session for finals. The error ended his chances of recording another top finish.

AIS moguls skiing program head coach Steve Desovich labeled the day as “a very solid result and we’d always take a day like today.”

“Sam has worked very hard to get back from injury but I would also like to acknowledge the great work by OWIA/NSWIS sport scientist John Marsden and Coach Peter Topalovic from NSWIS who have worked closely with Sam and have played a huge part in his return.”

With Hall and Summers continuing their northern hemisphere campaign in Sweden and Spain after the World Championships while the other squad members return to Australia to begin their year of preparation for the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympic Games in Russia, Desovich is able to reflect very positively on the season.

“This season can be described as very good,” Desovich said.

“The highlights were Britt Cox’s third place in Lake Placid and her fourth in Kreischberg, Austria, along with her 10th place here in the World Championships, and if you combine all of those, that’s a solid performance.

“Also Matt Graham’s seventh place in Sochi and the fourth place here, they’re simply fantastic results as very often the youngest finalist in the men’s competition.”

Graham fourth in World Championships

3/3/2013

 
Eighteen-year-old Australian Matt Graham has achieved the first major milestone in a burgeoning career which has significantly improved since finishing secondary school last year to become a full time skier when he finished fourth with a P.B in the mogul skiing event at the World Freestyle Ski Championships in Voss, Norway.

The Australian Institute of Sport / NSW Institute of Sport scholarship holder delivered the run of his career, prompting high praise from AIS moguls ski program head coach Steve Desovich, who described Graham’s result as a “landmark performance.”

Graham, one of three Australian men in the top 11 places, and the youngest of the top 18 athletes in the finals, has always believed that with time he can challenge the world’s best and showed why he has held that self-belief.

While Graham held the limelight on a bright day for Australian moguls skiing, 20-year-old NSWIS athlete Brodie Summers, who has competed in only three World Cup events, surprised many by finishing seventh on the world’s second biggest stage.

Summers’ brilliant result eclipsed his best World Cup result of 32nd, which was recorded in January 2011.

AIS / NSWIS skier Sam Hall finished in 11th, after qualifying in sixth place, to become the third Australian man to record an impressive result.

In the women’s draw teenager Britt Cox lived up to expectations with a top 10 place, a career best at World Championships, while fellow AIS / NSW athlete Nicole Parks was 18th, having made the cut in qualifying and in to the finals.

The men’s title was won by Canadian Mikael Kingsbury, who captured his first World Championships crown, ahead of Alex Bilodeau while American Patrick Deneen was third.

American Hannah Kearney won the women’s title, with Japan’s Miki Ito second and Canadian Justine Dufour-Lapointe third.

After posting results of 27th, 38th and 25th in the first three events of the season, Graham and Desovich devised a simple plan that has blossomed into the teenager’s proudest moment, in the year’s biggest event, which is surpassed in prestige only by the Winter Olympic Games.

Competing in his first full northern hemisphere winter since finishing secondary school last year, Graham realised that an old sporting cliché, of taking it one day at a time, was the key to living up to his potential and kick-starting his promising career.

Desovich said that he is thrilled by Graham’s result and congratulated him on his work ethic and the way he has relentlessly adopted their plan.

“In December he had to dig himself out by the bootstraps,” Desovich said.

“At that point we said to him ‘all you can do is go out and ski the next day and take it one day at a time, one run at a time, one gym session at a time’.

“He was able to claw his way back. He had a 25th, which doesn’t sound like much, but it was a good run. In Calgary he gets a 19th, so he takes another little step. Then in Deer Valley he gets that 10th, in Sochi he gets a 7th and it led all the way to this point.

“He’s slowly gotten himself into a good groove. “

Graham showed right from the start that these Championships would provide the result he was looking for when he recorded a top 10 qualification score, before finishing in sixth place in the first final, largely because of a strong turns score, which was the second best in the high quality field.

Graham’s first final score enabled him to progress to the six-man super final, a career first, guaranteeing him his best ever result even before this stage of the competition started.

He moved to fourth on the final run, a brilliant result for the teenager.

Graham and Cox both top ten

1/2/2013

 
Talented Australian teenagers Matt Graham and Britt Cox both recorded top 10 finishes in World Cup mogul skiing at Deer Valley, in the United States.

It was a World Cup personal best for Graham, who is competing in his first full season in the northern hemisphere series, as well as the first time this year that Australia was represented in the men’s and women’s finals at a World Cup level.

Graham’s 10th place in the massive field of 73 competitor saw the Australian Institute of Sport / NSW Institute of Sport athlete’s world ranking jump 13 places to 23.

Cox also finished in 10th, her third top 10 after five rounds of competition.

Cox and Graham have the opportunity to back up these results and further build their seasons when they compete in dual moguls at Deer Valley in two days.

Graham finished behind Canadian duo Mikael Kingsbury and Alex Bilodeau in first and second, with American Patrick Deneen taking the other podium placing.

The women’s event was an all American podium finish, with Hannah Kearney, Heather McPhie and Eliza Outrim finishing in first, second and third places.

Cox, ranked 8th in the world, said that her impressive results this season are directly linked to becoming a more consistent skier.

“Today I had a really clean run but I have more in the tank for Saturday and I’m looking for another top 10,” Cox said.

“My skiing across the board is a lot more consistent so I have been able to improve each element of my skiing which has meant that I have been able to get into a few more finals and a few more top 10 finishes.

“This season is going well for me.”

Graham said that finishing 10th has reinforced his belief that he can challenge the world’s best mogul skiers.

“I am really happy with my result today,” he said.

“To achieve better results each week has been one of my main goals this season.

“I’ve been trying to improve all my tricks and I think today’s result showed that.”

“I have thought for a while that I can compete with these guys and today showed it.”

Other Australian results included Nicole Parks, 23rd, Sam Hall 31st, Rohan Chapman-Davies 32nd, James Matheson 34th and Brodie Summers 52nd.

Graham and Cox win the ABOM again

2/9/2012

 
Australian teenagers Matt Graham and Britt Cox continued their domination of the James Boag’s ABOM Mogul Challenge by winning at Victoria’s Mt Buller today.

Graham finished ahead of Korea’s Jae-Woo Choi and Australia’s Brodie Summers while Cox was joined on the podium by fellow Australian Institute of Sport / NSW Institute of Sport skier Nicole Parks and NSWIS athlete Taylah O’Neill.

Graham, the winner of the last three ABOMs and Cox, who won the last two years, went into today’s dual mogul competition, the 24th year of the event, as red-hot favourites and more than lived up to expectation.

By winning her third ABOM, Cox joins another Australian, Maria Despas, as the only women to have won the nation’s longest running mogul ski event on three occasions.

With win number four, only one other male athlete has won the event more times than Graham – Australian Nick Cleaver, who amassed five victories between 1991 and 1995.

The event has become an annual tradition for the 18-year-old AIS / NSWIS athletes who both first entered the ABOM event as 10-year-olds.

Their emerging careers have both followed similar paths since – both were awarded AIS/NSWIS scholarships for the first time in 2010, they made their World Cup debuts in the same year and this season has seen them balancing HSC school studies with continuing their quest to represent Australia at the 2014 Sochi Olympic Winter Games.

The win shows that Graham and Cox are maturing as mentally tough athletes, given that they were competing against impressive fields and went into today’s event with significantly less on-snow training this winter.

Both have cut back the amount of on snow training during the Australian winter to spend more time on school studies.

Graham admitted that he has spent about 50 percent less time on snow this winter, compared with previous years, so winning his fourth ABOM has provided additional satisfaction.

“I felt a little bit of pressure today but I made sure that my approach was the same as usual,” Graham said.

“It involves making sure I remain mentally calm, putting down a solid run and don’t overdo it.

”Winning today was very satisfying as the ABOM is a special event for everybody who competes in it.”

Cox, a World Cup medalist in the USA last February, said that the win was the perfect way to bounce back from a fourth and sixth place at last month’s National Championships in Perisher.

“I’m so excited and really pleased to win today,” Cox said.

She added that the win shows the specific training direction Cox has taken this winter is paying dividends, particularly with newly found speed, resulting from a great deal of strength work in the gym and a more aggressive approach to competition.

NSWIS mogul athletes impress in Nor-Am's

20/2/2012

 
New South Wales Institute of Sport mogul athletes have posted strong results in two days of competition at the Nor-Am event at Apex Mountain in BC, Canada.

The highlight for the team came on day two’s dual mogul event, with Rohan Chapman-Davies qualifying in second place, Brodie Summers third place, Taylah O’Neill in fourth and Emma Chapman-Davies in 13th.

In the duals Rohan Chapman-Davies was unfortunately eliminated in the first round to finish ninth, Brodie Summers won his first dual but was eliminated in the second round to finish in fifth.

Taylah O’Neil and team-mate Emma Chapman-Davies were matched up in the women’s first round, with Taylah emerging victorious. Taylah then won her next dual before going down to eventual winner Andi Naude of Canada in the semi-finals and ended up in fourth place.Emma Chapman-Davies finished the event ranked 13th.

The results by Taylah and Brodie were personal best Nor-Am finishes.

On day one, three athletes made finals, with Taylah O’Neill in11th place, Emma Chapman-Davies 12th and Brodie Summers in 14th. Rohan Chapman-Davies missed qualifying for finals by one place, finishing in 17th.

Val St. Come Nor-Am
After the Apex event, the NSWIS team headed east to Quebec, Canada, for a Nor-Am competition in Val St.Come.

On a challenging course, the leading Australian performance again came from female athletes Emma Chapman-Davies, Taylah O'Neill and Madii Himbury who all recorded finals performances over the two days of competition in 10th, 12th and 14th place respectively.

The male athletes in the team struggled with the tough conditions, with David Graham recording his best performance of the Nor-Am tour, finishing in 20th place in the Dual Moguls.

The NSWIS program now heads to Killington, Vermont, USA, for the final Nor-Am mogul event of the international season.

NSWIS & Sub-Development Mogul Teams compete in Telluride Nor-Am

11/2/2012

 
The New South Wales Institute of Sport and SSA Sub Development mogul teams have competed in the opening Nor-Am event of the northern winter in Telluride, CO, USA.

The highlights included three different athletes recording a finals performance, achieved by NSWIS scholarship holders Brodie Summers, Rohan Chapman-Davies and Taylah O’Neill.

On day one of competition, Brodie Summers had an outstanding performance for the first run qualifying in first place for the final. Unfortunately Brodie was carrying too much speed in the final and had to pull out of the line before the bottom jump, finishing in 15th place.

Rohan Chapman-Davies and Taylah O’Neill finished up the highest ranked Australians, both finishing in 8th place. Other athlete performances on day one were Maddi Himbury in 19th, David Graham 23rd, Emma Chapman-Davies 26th, Kate Blamey 37th, Campbell Cooke 41st, Jake Ashton 42nd, Josh Himbury 46th and James Campbell in 52nd.

On day two of competition Brodie Summers and Rohan Champan-Davies again qualified for finals, with Rohan again finishing the highest ranked Australian in ninth place and Brodie in 16th.

Other Australian performance on day two were Maddi Himbury in 23rd, Emma Chapman-Davies 25th, David Graham 26th, Jake Ashton 29th, Kate Blamey 33rd, Campbell Cooke 34th, Taylah O'Neill 38th, Josh Himbury 46th and James Campbell 50th.

Both teams now head to Apex, BC, Canada, for two more days of Nor-Am competition.

Pair secures two in a row

31/7/2011

 
Teen sensations Britt Cox and Matt Graham defended their junior national mogul championship titles at Mt Buller over the weekend.

Cox, who finished 12th in this year's World Championships at Deer Valley in the USA in February, delivered a solid victory over NSWIS scholarship skiers, second place getter Taylah O'Neill, and 2009 Junior Champion Nicole Parks, in third spot.

The 16-year-old AIS/NSWIS athlete blasted down the 170-metre Chamois run, 1.23 points ahead of her O'Neill, with Parks a further 0.3 points down the results list.

Graham, also 16-years-old, had to fight much harder in his event to fend off another pair of NSWIS skiers Brodie Summers and James Matheson, who achieved his best ever finish in the junior titles by finishing in third place.

Australian Institute of Sport Head Moguls Coach, Steve Desovich, was impressed by a number of athletes competing today but paid special tribute to Cox and Graham, stating that both have achieved noticeable improvements with specific goals.

Cox, one of the hardest working athletes in Australia's AIS scholarship program, showed during last season's World Cup season that she needed to work on speed and jumping height to take the next step in her blossoming career.

Much to Desovich's admiration, Cox has made significant improvement, particularly with her speed, but hastens to add that the real extent of her development will not be known until she competes against international competitors, at Perisher on August 19.

Desovich uses a distance per second formula to quantify speed on a mogul course. During the last northern hemisphere season, Cox was eight seconds over the formula's "par" figure but today she was just 2.2 seconds slower than the ideal speed.

Much of the improvement has come from an arduous weights program and in-depth analysis of her technique.

Desovich praised the NSW Institute of Sport sports scientist John Marsden who has worked tirelessly with Cox to enhance her leg absorption technique through moguls.

Desovich was impressed by Graham's fighting spirit today, given that he still won after making several errors during the middle section of his run.

Desovich said he thought Graham secured today's title from his strength in the air, particularly in the final, but has challenged the Perisher skier to achieve further improvement with his turns.

"We are particularly happy to invest a lot of time and energy in Britt and Matt and we are very pleased with what we're seeing," Desovich said.

He admits that it is still too early to predict how the recent improvements made by Cox and Graham will stand up in World Cup competition but added that at just 16-years of age they hold a great deal of hope.

And the pressure that both athletes were under today, going into the event as white hot favourites to win, was another challenge Cox and Graham conquered.

The boys' Youth title was won by local club skier Max Bernard from Team Buller Riders followed by Peter Miliken from the Perisher Winter Sports Club in second and third place going to Matt Anthony also from Team Buller Riders.

The girls' event was won convincingly by Jakara Anthony, ahead of Eliza Honan both from Team Buller Riders and Krystal Yin form Perisher in third.

Cox and Graham along with a field of 100 of Australia's best junior mogul skiers were disappointed when the dual mogul event was cancelled due to poor visibility on Sunday morning.

Cox, Parks dominate US Selection events

22/12/2010

 
The NSWIS/SSA Mogul Team has made an impressive start to their international season, taking out three medals at the US Selection events in Steamboat, Colorado.

Leading the way was teenage athletes Britt Cox and Nicole Parks, who both recorded victories, with Cox also winning a bronze medal.

NSWIS Head Coach Peter "Toppa" Topalovic was extremely happy with the girl's performance.

"The team has had a great training camp in Apex, Canada, which gave them a strong lead-in to the US Selection events".

"The result will give both girls confidence for the season and best of all they both are capable of further improvement in their competition runs and can lift their performance even further".

Brodie Summers was the leading male skier for Australia in 23rd place, with NSWIS team-mates Sam Hall and David Graham in 27th and 30th place respectively.

The US Selection events are very competitive, with America's best skiers battling it out for a chance to compete on the World Cup tour for the strong US team.

Two more events will take place in Steamboat, with a singles and dual mogul event scheduled for later this week.

Promising duo take out Junior Nationals

2/8/2010

 
Young guns Matthew Graham and Britteny Cox have reaffirmed their status as two of the most outstanding junior mogul skiing prospects in the world, taking out the 2010 Junior National Mogul Championships at Mt Buller under snowy skies. A strong field featuring more than 100 athletes from across Australia took part in the event on a great early season course given the limited natural snowfalls leading into the event. The large field size showcased the popularity of mogul skiing in Australia, but in the end the story of the day was the two 15-year-olds, Cox and Graham, who impressed the most.

For Cox, the event marked a return to competition after the Vancouver 2010 Olympics. She was sitting in second place behind New South Wales Institute of Sport team-mate Nicole Parks after qualifying, but stepped it up in the final to take home the gold. Graham was the dominant male athlete over the weekend, leading the event in qualifying and improving his score in the final to record a comfortable victory margin of two points.

Mt Buller skiers had great success in the youth (13 and under) event, taking out four of the six medals available.

The next mogul event at Mt Buller will be the Victorian Interschools followed by the 22nd running of the ABOM Mogul Challenge.

Results

Junior Men
1st - Matt Graham (Perisher/NSWIS)
2nd - Rohan Chapman-Davies (Perisher/NSWIS)
3rd - Brodie Summers (Mt Buller/NSWIS)

Junior Women
1st - Britteny Cox (Falls Creek/NSWIS)
2nd - Nicole Parks (Perisher/NSWIS)
3rd -Roanna Chapman-Davies (Perisher/NSWIS)

Youth Men
1st - Charlie Comben (Mt Buller/Full Attack)
2nd -Jackson Comben (Mt Buller/TBR)
3rd -Peter Miliken (Perisher)

Youth Women
1st -Eliza Honan (Mt Buller/Full Attack)
2nd - Claudia Gueli (Mt Buller/TBR)
3rd - Juliana Nix (Perisher)

Forward>>

    ARCHIVES

    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    September 2022
    June 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    October 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    September 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    October 2013
    August 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    September 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    August 2010
    March 2010
    February 2010
    January 2010
    December 2009

    RSS Feed

    NEWS
    ​CATEGORIES

    All
    Britt Cox
    Brodie Summers
    Claudia Gueli
    Cooper Woods
    Dale Begg Smith
    Dale Begg-Smith
    George Murphy
    Jackson HArvey
    Jakara Anthony
    James Matheson
    Krystle Yin
    Madii Himbury
    Matt Graham
    Matt Graham
    Nicole Parks
    Nicole Parks
    Ramone Cooper
    Rohan Chapman Davies
    Rohan Chapman-Davies
    Sam Hall
    Sam Hall
    Sophie Ash
    Taylah O'Neill

Picture
OLYMPIC WINTER INSTITUTE OF AUSTRALIA
​

CONTACT
​
O'Brien Icehouse
Level 2
105 Pearl River Road
Docklands, VIC 3008
Australia

P
hone: +61 3 9686 2977

ABOUT                 
OWIA History
Executive & Staff
Policies & Documents 
Sponsors & Partners
OWIA Calendar

Australian Sports Foundation
North American Medical
Media Center


SPORT INTEGRITY
​
​SITE MAP

AERIAL SKIING
News
ALPINE SKIING
News
​
MOGUL SKIING
News
PARK & PIPE
News
SNOWBOARD CROSS
News

INDIVIDUAL ATHLETES
News


Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture

​Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy  |  2022 © Olympic Winter Institute of Australia  All rights reserved