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Penultimate test for boardercross boys in Bulgaria

30/1/2018

 
PictureFIS Snowboard World Cup - Bansko BUL - SBX - PULLIN Alex AUS in Red, CHEEVER Jonathan USA in Blue, DE BLOIS Glenn NED in Yellow, NOERL Martin GER in White, KEARNEY Hagen USA in Green, KUBICIK Jan CZE in Black © Miha Matavz/FIS
Australia's quartet of 2018 Olympic male snowboard cross athletes have had their second last dress rehearsal before PyeongChang 2018, taking on the final pre-Games World Cup in Bankso, Bulgaria. 

Dual Olympian Alex 'Chumpy' Pullin was the top finisher of the Australians with a 5th place in the final, just weeks before the 30-year-old is set to compete at his third Olympic Games. 

Sochi 2014 Olympian and 2018 Team member, Cameron Bolton qualifed through to the small final where a 3rd place finish saw the 27-year-old record a 9th place finish. The result was a season best for Bolton and his top finish since December 2015. 

"I was happy with the race overall. I was having some trouble in the start section and I was pleased to make the necessary adjustments and lead both the small final and semi final," Bolton said. 

"The race was a step in the right direction and i'm looking to keep building momentum at the next two world cups, leading into the Olympics.

"Bansko put on a great event and Bulgaria is my favourite stop on tour. It's an amazing place."

Despite being the 14th fastest qualifier, Olympic debutant Adam Lambert was disappointed with his Bulgaria World Cup, with the 20-year-old finishing 6th in his 1/8 heat and not advancing to the next round. Lambert ended the competition with a 41st place finish. 

Fellow Australian rider Matthew Thomas finished in 22nd. 

Sochi 2014 Olympian, Jarryd Hughes recorded the fastest qualification time in his second run heading into the finals but a crash in the initial time trial forced him to withdrawn from the event to be on the safe side. 

"I messed up a jump in a time trial and ended up landing 30m further down the course than I intended and had nothing to land on," Hughes said.

"I suffered a bit of bone bruising in the process and decided it was best not to compete this close to the Olympics."
This week's World Cup sees the Australians all sit in the top 20 on the world rankings heading into the Olympic Games with Pullin in 2nd, Lambert in 7th, Hughes in 12th and Bolton in 18th. 

Men's snowboard cross will be held on Day 7 (February 15) at the 2018 Olympics, with the top 40 competitiors in the world all vying for a top spot on the podium.

Ashleigh Knight
olympics.com.au


Aussie boardercross athletes set for PyeongChang 2018

25/1/2018

 
Picture
SNOWBOARD CROSS: Five Australian athletes will hope to be the fastest down the mountain in the snowboard cross events at the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympic Games, as four men and one women are selected to don the green and gold.
In the men’s event, dual World Champion Alex ‘Chumpy’ Pullin is set to make his third Olympic appearance, joined by Sochi 2014 duo Jarryd Hughes and Cameron Bolton. Olympic debutant Adam Lambert will round out the full Australian men’s contingent in his first Games appearance.


In the women’s event, Belle Brockhoff will hope to fly the Australian flag, pending medical clearance, after a turbulent 12 months of injury proved to be a tough path to her second Olympic campaign.

The veteran of the sport, Chumpy Pullin will embark on his third Olympic campaign after representing Australia at the Vancouver 2010 and Sochi 2014 Games.

"I'm really happy to be headed to my 3rd Olympics. I have had a really fun season on the World Cup tour so far and happy to be coming into the games feeling good," Pullin said. 

Pullin won Australia’s first snowboard cross World Championship title in 2011 and went on to create more history by defending his title in 2013. The 30-year-old is Australia’s most successful boardercross athlete on the World Cup circuit with 20 podium finishes, nine of those in the top spot from 73 races, but Pullin still marks the Olympics as the most important date on his competition calendar. 

"Every year I get to compete against the best in our sport, in places all around the world, which really is what I do it for. But when the opportunity of the Olympics comes around, its certainly one I want to be sure im in my best form to make the most of it.

"All the same guys I race all year, but theres an atmosphere at the games like no other event. Not to mention a lot of people who get to watch on free to air at home in Aus. It just ads to the excitement of competing and I'm happy to go experience that again."

Pullin said at the past two Olympic Games in his career have been vastly different and he is looking forward to what the South Korean city has to offer.

"It will be fun to see how South Korea is and how the track rides. When it comes time, I aim to be ready and have a good time doing what I love in front of the biggest crowd we see in our careers."

22-year-old Jarryd Hughes said he was excited to be selected in his second Australian Olympic Team.

“I’m feeling like I’m in a really good spot right now and have had a heap of help from some amazing people and I’m looking forward to displaying all the new skills I’ve learnt,” Hughes said.

Hughes finished 14th in his Olympic debut at the Sochi 2014 Games, but has continued to improve over the past four years taking out the 2016 X-Games over teammate Pullin and securing two World Cup victories in 2017.

Victorian Cameron Bolton echoed Hughes’ thoughts, grateful for the opportunity to represent Australia on yet another Olympic stage.

“I can't wait for another opportunity to do my favourite thing in the world in front of our largest audience yet,” Bolton said.

“This Olympics will be another rollercoaster ride, and I'm looking forward to strapping myself in and taking it all on.”

Bolton was Australia’s top finisher in the boardercross event in Russia in 11th place. The 27-year-old secured his career best result in December 2015 with a World Cup fourth place at Montafon, Austria.

The only rookie in the quartet, 20-year-old Adam Lambert proved he was hungry for Olympic qualification when he secured a World Cup silver medal in December 2017 after only one season on the circuit.

“I'm really excited to get the nomination, the Olympics is the event that everyone wants to participate in and I've been working hard to solidify my spot. I feel like I'm well prepared, ready to compete and show Australia and the world what I've got,” Lambert said.

The Jindabyne athlete burst onto the international stage when he finished 7th in his second World Cup of his career. The youngster then went on to finish 6th at his first World Championships in Sierra Nevada, Spain.

Belle Brockhoff will join the boys, racing in the women’s event on Day 7 (February 16) of the 2018 Games, despite having endured an injury rollercoaster over the past year. The 25-year-old competed at the Sochi Games where she finished as the top Australian competitor in 8th place.

The Victorian has competed in 33 World Cup since her international debut in 2012, with three gold, three silver and one bronze to her name.

The Australian men will take to the snowboard cross track on Day 6 (February 15) of the PyeongChang 2018 Games at the Bokwang Phoenix Park.

The selection of athletes in the men's snowboard cross event is currently subject to an appeal. It should be noted that any appeal is on the basis of non-selection of an athlete and not an appeal against an individual who has been selected. 

Find out more about the snowboard at the 2018 Olympic Games HERE.

Ashleigh Knight
olympics.com.au

Hughes lines up for Bankso and Feldberg Snowboard Cross World Cups

24/1/2018

 
PictureJarryd Hughes winning gold at the SBX Montafon World Cup in December. Photo: Getty Images
After electing to skip the last Olympic qualifying World Cup in Turkey last week for more training in Whistler, Canada, Jarryd Hughes will rejoin the Aussie contingent for two more World Cups in Bankso, Bulgaria and Feldberg, Germany over the next two weekends before the Games begin in PyeongChang.

“I’m in Whistler for the first time. It’s pretty fun,” he said last week. “I’ve been here since December 24th with my coaches. It’s just about being here to do what I need to do without distractions.”

Hughes, who won the Montafon World Cup in December, has had a productive time in Canada ahead of the next round of events.

 “At Montafon it was good to finally put another win the column and walk away with a W – that’s just a side piece at the moment and going towards my confidence into the Games.”

“It was good to have my whole team there and work on a few crucial points, crucial points.”

Feeling “healthy, strong and ready”, Hughes says he is looking at the courses in Bansko and Feldberg as an important lead up for different reasons.

“We’ve only had two actual world cup courses this year in Argentina and Montafon with a World Cup standard course. The other two have not really been up to scratch,” he said.  

“Bansko is more of a sprint event, which isn’t really the crucial performance event for me and not a course that will be anything like we are going to race (in PyeongChang).  It’s more to get the team altogether again and touching on finer details.”

“Feldberg will be good to go back after having a strong result there with a podium last year and it was good to work on passing last year after not being where I wanted to be at the start. It’s really cool to work on the passing in that event and good practice going towards the Olympics.”

 “The course in PyeongChang will be 1.20minutes. That’s good for certain people."

The Sochi Olympian, who was just 18-years-old at the time has fond memories of the Opening Ceremony.

“It was really cool to walk out with my friends that I’d done training with and take in the whole Olympic experience,” he recalled. “And, really cool to facetime my parents during the Opening Ceremony. It was as much their opening ceremony as it was mine. They basically walked around with me.”  

The Bansko Snowboard Cross World Cup will be contested this Saturday, January 27. Feldberg on February 4.

Currently leading the World Cup standings is Alex ‘Chumpy’ Pullin. Adam Lambert is 6th, Jarryd Hughes 10th and Cam Bolton 21st. Also at the starting gate are NSWIS riders Matt Thomas (28th), Josh Miller (32nd) and Adam Dickson (41st).

Belinda Noonan
OWIA

 


Turkish weather not such a delight

21/1/2018

 
PictureErzrurum World Cup in Turkey yesterday. Photo: FIS
Ezurum proved to be challenging for the first ever Snowboard Cross World Cup held in Turkey last weekend.After an unusual trip to the picturesque ski resort that required a detour through the mountains, the weather did not cooperate requiring the cancellation of training and qualifications.

Racing went directly to finals without the riders having the opportunity to train on the course and whilst the Aussies put on a good show with five of the six-man squad making it through the heats, the best result came from Alex ‘Chumpy’ Pullin placing fourth in the small final and eighth overall.

Pullin retained his leader’s yellow bib and overall number one world ranking, now sitting on 3,346 points.

“Chumpy feels pretty positive about the result, more just keeping his points up to stay with the yellow bib” coach Ben Wordsworth said.

Adam Lambert made it to the semi-final finishing overall in 13th, Matt Thomas 22nd, Cam Bolton 28th, Josh Miller 29th and Adam Dickson 38th.

Cam Bolton had been looking to build on his previous tenth place in Italy.

“I had OK result in Italy and was looking forward to building on that for Korea,” Bolton said.

“It was so windy (in Erzurum). Today was the first time that I even went to the top of the course because there was so much snow and wind. It was about who picked up the course the quickest today would be rewarded.”

“The start section was tricky because the first feature was changing because of the soft snow, so, how you rode it completely changed.”

“In the heats I started strongly in the start section. Then I was having a tough time of the heat.

In the second heat I got sucked behind and couldn’t make the pass I was planning on making.”

Getting to Erzurum was problematic after the plane that was carrying many of the SBX World Cup tour athletes was diverted to another airport near the Syrian border.

“It’s been a crazy trip so far and definitely made it a very interesting four or five days. Our flight was delayed and we couldn’t land (near Erzurum) but flew further south near the Syrian border. Then we were all on a bus and had a military escort through the mountains.”

The Australians found an upside in the situation. For Adam Lambert, making another semi in adverse conditions is a plus for the 20-year-old.

“Erzurum was definitely interesting. I’ve never done a World Cup and not done a qualification because of weather. They (the Turkish resort) put on a pretty decent show though,” Lambert said.

“Racing was alright. I did the best I could and put out the runs and ended up 13th.”

“Got a poor start in the quarters but tried my best to get through that heat. The track was a bit small and you do what you can do.”

“I’m happy that I got to the quarters again. That makes it every quarters this year. That’s pretty good.”

The Erzurum World Cup was the final race for Olympic qualification. Selection of the four male Snowboard Cross to the Australian Olympic Team is expected this week.

There are more events on the calendar before Pyeongchang and that’s the focus for the SBX team as they head to Bankso, Bulgaria for the next World Cup on January 27th and then to Germany for another event immediately prior to Korea.

Belinda Noonan
OWIA


Confident Lambert soaking up advice

18/1/2018

 
PictureAdam Lambert on his way to silver in Val Thorens in December. Photo: FIS
There’s a quality about Jindabyne’s Adam Lambert, who Snowboard Cross head coach Ben Wordsworth described recently as “a perfect athlete”.

‘Lambo’ possesses a quiet resilience and focus on his burgeoning international career with a purpose that is laced with a willingness to learn, innate confidence in his own ability and a maturity that belies a young man just out of his teens.

“I know what I want to do and know what I have to do to get there,” Lambert said earlier this month. “It’s a matter of putting it together at the end.”

After breaking out of the Europa Cup circuit into World Cups last season, Lambert learned fast. His first World Cup result of 52nd was turned around in 24 hours to 7th in his second World Cup and ended last season with a sixth place in the World Championships.

The podium seemed not far away and that outcome was ticked off with a silver in last December at Val Thorens in France.

“It was pretty surreal,” he said of his first World Cup medal. “I’d raced on that course before and came in with a little bit of confidence. I felt it all day and made it to the finals.”

“Afterwards I was stoked. There’s always a twinge of ‘what if I’d done this’ but definitely it does heaps for my confidence knowing I can perform that well in a high-end event.”

Learning from his team mates, particularly Alex ‘Chumpy’ Pullin, is valued by the young gun.  

“Chumpy, especially, talks to me when I ask him about his path and how he got there. He tells me.”

“All the guys are fun to hang around with. They’re all really awesome blokes.”  

“It helps that our sense of humour is pretty similar on the long drives we have to do every week, which is my least favourite part (the driving), but that’s OK. It’s just a really good group.”

Stepping up full-time onto the World Cup circuit has meant changes to his training, all of which he has embraced.

“The scale of training has changed. I’ve had a lot more on the courses. Before it was turns on mountains and now with these guys and the funding we have, we help organise the construction on the courses – a cost that is split with other countries.”

“Having the other guys (from OWIA) and NSWIS is great. We are all really good riders and it’s good to get out together to train. It all adds up. This is so much better.”

“This year there’s a lot more actual training time compared to last year. Last year we spent a lot of time driving from place to place. Every other day we were racing - having to squash Europa’s in. Not having to do that has knocked out about 16 races.”  

“There are eight different locations that I don’t have to go to this year, which takes a lot of stress away and off my body. It’s good not to have to do that every week.”

Australia has a strong squad of riders in Snowboard Cross and only four can be selected for PyeongChang. Lambert is planning to be one of those four and already thinking about the Olympic course and how he can get the most out of the World Cup this weekend in Turkey before team selections are announced.  

“It (Erzurum, Turkey) will be a good course and a copy of the Olympic start section.”
 
“I race my own race. I go into every race with a good plan with what I want to do and figure out the places I can consistently make passes. My tactical races are pretty good and I’m patient. I’m not rushing things.”

Coming from the NSW Snowy Mountains, Adam Lambert is not missing anything about a hot Australian summer. He is exactly where he wants to be.

“I’m a winter person. Anything above 32 degrees and I’m out.”

The Erzurum Snowboard Cross World Cup in Turkey qualifying round begin this Friday evening 6.30pm (AEDT) with finals on Saturday from 6.30pm (AEDT) and can be viewed live on Eurosport, or follow OWIA on Twitter here for updates on all the Aussies competing.  

Belinda Noonan
OWIA

 


Last Snowboard Cross Olympic qualifier in a new location

17/1/2018

 
PictureAlex Pullin is up for extending his World Cup lead in Turkey with the Erzurum SBX World Cup. Photo: FIS Miha Matavz
Snowboard Cross riders return to World Cup competition this weekend in the last Olympic qualifying event in Erzurum, Turkey with Alex ‘Chumpy’ Pullin looking to extend his comfortable lead on 3,026 points at the top of the world rankings.

The Erzurum event becomes the first ever Turkish ski resort to host a Snowboard Cross Word Cup and therefore a new venue for Australia’s strong team that includes Alex Pullin, Adam Lambert, Cam Bolton and NSWIS riders Josh Miller, Matt Thomas and Adam Dickson.

Jarryd Hughes is sitting Turkey out, electing instead to train in Whistler, Canada.
 
“We’ve never raced there,” Head SBX coach Ben Wordsworth said about Erzurum. “There won’t be a great deal of snow and we think the course will probably be something close to Cervinia (Italy).”

Pullin, who won double gold in Argentina at the start of the season and a bronze at Cervinia late last year, is an athlete making smart decision says Wordsworth.

“Chumpy is in a good place - a really good place. He didn’t have the results he wanted in December. He wanted to win one of the three races he had, but he managed to pull together some good results and bounced back.”

Coach and athlete have been working together for eight years, with Wordsworth seeing a positive shift in Pullin going towards PyeongChang.

“He’s an older athlete. His decision making is better now and more adaptable to all the situations and he is extremely talented.”

 “He is good at reading race situations, getting into heats and coming out the other end at the final - better than what I’ve seen in the past.”

“Certainly, Chumpy is making good decisions in his racing and it shows. Argentina was back to back (gold). Val Thorens was not so great and then Cervinia (with bronze).  All those decisions make the difference in the long run.”

“One of the big decisions is to stay healthy. (It’s about) racing to your potential.”  

PictureAdam Lambert winning silver in Val Thorens, France Dec 13, 2017. Photo: FIS Chad Buhholz.
Jindabyne’s Adam ‘Lambo’ Lambert stamped his claim to a potential Olympic selection last season and has only looked forward, now currently fourth on the world leader board on 1,690 points going into Erzurum.
 
According to Wordsworth, Lambert has fitted into the SBX team with ease.

“Lambo’s a good snowboarder and good racer. His results have shown that over the past two seasons,” Wordsworth said.

“There was silver at Val Thorens and he knows what he wants. Lambo is in the sport to have a career and he wants to win races. That’s what drives him – there’s nothing else he’s in it for.”

“He’s the perfect athlete.  He wants results and has fitted in really well - good to travel with and fits into the group. Just got on with it, got results and tried to keep it pretty simple.”  

Australia is looking to qualify four men to PyeongChang and with a strong team, Turkey is the last event to cement a place – a goal that will be high on Cam Bolton’s to do list.

“It was good for Cam being in the top again (Cervinia with a tenth place),” Wordsworth said. “He’s got the skills and we want to see him push toward the small final and final and believe he can do it. It was a super close race in Cervinia.”

“Turkey is the last qualifying. The other three have an opportunity. Should be an interesting race,” he added.

Qualifiers for the Erzurum World Cup stop are on Friday, 19 January from 6.30pm (AEDT).
Finals start at 6.30pm (AEDT) on Saturday. 
 
Live timing links for qualifiers and finals, can be found here
Follow OWIA Twitter for updates here and watch the Finals live on Eurosport from 6.30pm on Saturday, 20 January.
 
Belinda Noonan
OWIA

 


How Chumpy got his resilience mojo back

9/1/2018

 
PictureCurrent Snowboard Cross World Cup leader, Alex 'Chumpy' Pullin. Photo: Red Bull
Revisiting an outstanding story by revered sports reporter Nicole Jeffrey that was published in The Weekend Australian  on January 6.

Snowboard cross world champion Alex “Chumpy’’ Pullin is out of air. He’s lying on the bottom of a swimming pool, there’s a man standing on his chest, his lungs are screaming but he’s trying to stay calm. He’s there voluntarily, after all.

This is a training drill, one that he hopes will teach him how to keep his cool in the cauldron of Olympic competition in South Korea next month, and emerge with the gold medal that was denied him at the Sochi Games four years ago.

Pullin was the reigning world champion, world No 1, Olympic gold medal favourite and Australian flag-bearer in Sochi, but his campaign unravelled, picked apart by internal and external factors. Aside from competing in one of the most unpredictable events on the Olympic program, Pullin was wrestling with physical and mental demons in Sochi.

His confidence was dented by a less-thanperfect preparation. Some of his lead-up events were cancelled; he picked up an injury; and there were distractions of dissent and jealousies in the Australian team. Then warm conditions in the Caucasus mountains reduced the snow on the Olympic course to Mr Whippy consistency rather than the hard, fast, technical conditions in which Pullin usually thrived.

The event became a lottery and Pullin picked out No 13. A lot of soul-searching followed. The consensus was that although Pullin was the fastest, fittest, strongest rider in the field, he had not been the most adaptable to circumstance, and that had brought him undone. In the past four years he has embraced far less regimented training.

He’s still fast, fit and strong but he’s more resilient when things aren’t going his way. And most of that is down to Nam Baldwin, the Gold Coast strength and conditioning expert who trained surfing world champion Mick Fanning.

When snowboard cross head coach Ben Wordsworth brought Baldwin in to do some group training with his riders, Pullin and Baldwin clicked immediately. “Chumpy took an instant liking to him,’’ Wordsworth said.

Pullin began making pilgrimages to the Gold Coast to work with Baldwin, who employs some unusual methods to improve the strength and agility of his athletes, in both body and mind. His signature is the breath-hold exercises he has athletes do under water. His sessions also include obstacle courses of hurdles and balance boards that Pullin has to complete while dodging the balls Baldwin is throwing at his head.

“Nam has been unreal,’’ Pullin said. “We moved up to the Gold Coast for two months after Argentina (the first two World Cup events in September) to be closer to him and it was a really great thing. I have been training since I was really young and it’s refreshing to see a new challenge like that.

“We talk and discuss each training session as if it’s a competition event and we look for those one percenters in every session. “With Nam I am really challenged. I am always a little nervous before a session because I don’t know what he will throw at me.

“The pool stuff is really different, the empty lung breath holds and doing wrestling under water. It’s always really difficult to get that exact feeling of race day, to get those nerves, but that’s what Nam tries to do. He brings the physical and mental side into play.

“If I exhale and then he pushes me to the bottom of the pool and stands on my chest, it means I have to stay calm and if I do, I gain confidence.’’

Pullin showed all of that confidence at the start of the season in Argentina. He dominated the first two World Cup events there in the hard, fast conditions he loves, riding at a level above all of his rivals. But when the circuit reached Europe last month, the conditions didn’t suit him at the next race in France, where he finished sixth, and then he crashed in training in Austria, injuring his shoulder, which forced him out of the next World Cup at Montafon.

He returned at Cervinia, in Italy the week before Christmas and bounced back to the podium, finishing third.

Wordsworth says things that once would have shaken Pullin no longer do.

“Nam has been really effective in making him aware that you have to be good in every situation, not just the ones that suit you,’’ he said.

“The training they have done has really calmed him down. Now he can take in any situation, bad weather or conditions or something happening off the course, and think his way through it.

“When we did the test event in South Korea (two years ago), we had a bad event. There was a lot of wind and other variables and that was unsettling for Chumpy, but now he’s a very different athlete.’’

Pullin said the entire aim of this Olympic cycle had been to prepare him “for what you don’t see coming’’.

He now regards his Olympic flop in Sochi as “an opportunity to grow as a human being’’ and he wants to show that he has.

“If I can be there feeling 100 per cent ready and I have enjoyed getting myself there, if I can enjoy it all, I think that’s the best way to bring out my best performance,’’ he said.

“I was ranked No 1 before the last Games and I’m currently the World Cup leader and that’s where I want to be, on top.

“(Olympic gold) is the one I would love to have in my career and I am pushing as hard as I can to be as ready as I can be for the Games.’’


By NICOLE JEFFERY
Senior Sports Reporter
06 Jan 2018 Weekend Australian, Australia




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