Friday 10 January 2014

Seppe Smits, the lowlander with a licence to dream

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu.

Seppe Smits, the lowlander with a licence to dream

Seppe Smits, the lowlander with a licence to dream
©Getty Images (2)
10/01/2014
When he steps out at Sochi in 2014 Seppe Smits will become the first ever Belgian snowboarder to compete at the Olympic Games. Despite being born in a country with no mountains, he has doggedly pursued his dream to become one of his sport’s best performers and is a genuine medal prospect in slopestyle, having won the world title in 2011.
The Belgian city of Antwerp is not the kind of place where you would expect one of the world’s best snowboarders to hail from. Yet that is exactly where Seppe Smits grew up and where he developed his passion for acrobatics of all types on the trampoline and the bicycle. Forever looking to push the limits, he dreamed of making it big one day.
His first contact with the snow came on a family holiday in the Alps. The long drive down from Belgian proved worth it as the youngster excelled on the slopes before going back to his native Antwerp to hone his talent in the ski dome in the outskirts of the city.

Accompanied by his mother Niek Ducro, Smits discussed his love for his sport as part of IOC partner Procter & Gamble’s “Thank You, Mom” campaign: “People often say that you want the one thing that you can’t do,” he commented. Undeterred by the odds, he was determined to prove them wrong.
Top of the world
Smits made his international breakthrough in the halfpipe, Big Air and slopestyle events in the Europa Cup before going on to impress as a 16-year-old at the 2007 World Cup and on the profes-sional circuit, starring on the Ticket To Ride Tour and at the X-Games. The young Belgian rider has obtained his best results in Big Air, an event in which he has shown his gift for hanging in the air and pulling off amazing tricks.
Another forte is slopestyle, which the IOC added to the Sochi 2014 programme in 2011, the year in which the gravity-defying Belgian won the world title in La Molina in the Spanish Pyrenees, topping the podium from Sweden’s Miklas Mattsson and Finland’s Ville Paumola thanks to some typically polished tricks. Then in November 2012 he enjoyed one of his proudest moments as he triumphed in a World Cup event on a purpose-built jump in front of thousands of his fans in Antwerp. 
Podium possibilities
The intrepid Belgian set himself two objectives for the 2013/14 season: “The Olympic Games and the X-Games, where the level of competition is more or less the same. Win the X-Games and you become a rock star. Win the Games and you become a legend.”
He believes he has a genuine chance of getting in among the medals in Sochi. “The podium is a possibility,” he says. “I’ve got a good technical range and if I can break out my very best tricks, then anything can happen. That said, if the others all have their very best day too, then it will be tough. We’ll find out soon enough.”
Having already blazed a unique trail in his home country, the ambitious 22-year-old is ready to take his career to the next level. But no matter how he fares in Sochi, he will be guaranteed a place in the history books as the first Belgian snowboarder to compete in the Olympic Games, an achieve-ment that will give him much satisfaction: “That’s one thing you’re always looking to do as an ath-lete: do something that no one else has ever done.”

Kearney marks century with Park City triumph

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu.

Aksel Lund Svindal, up there with the greats

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu.

Aksel Lund Svindal, up there with the greats

08/01/2014
Reigning Olympic super-G champion Aksel Lund Svindal is one of the greatest Alpine skiers of the last decade and will be on the prowl for medals in four events at Sochi.
It seems inevitable that Norway’s Askel Lund Svindal will be in among the medals at Sochi 2014. After all, the imposing all-rounder, who is a worthy heir to Norwegian skiing greats Kjetil Andre Aamodt and Lasse Kjus, has been a regular presence on World Cup, world championship and Olympic podiums since 2007.
Setting out his objectives for the 2014 Olympic Winter Games, he said: “My aim is to arrive in Sochi as the favourite. That’s something I can do by myself. I don’t need any luck for that.”
Svindal won the 2007 and 2009 FIS World Cup titles and has collected a total of seven crystal globes in super-G, giant slalom, downhill and the combined. He has been a serious World Cup contender in every season of a career, with the exception of 2008, when his career was put on hold for a year following a serious injury at Beaver Creek the previous December. His haul of eight world championship medals includes five golds (downhill in 2007 and 2013, giant slalom in 2007 and combined in 2009 and 2011), and he has also won three Olympic medals, beating the American duo Bode Miller and Andrew Weibrecht to take gold in the super-G title at Vancouver 2010, where he also collected downhill silver and giant slalom bronze.

An incredible experience
“It’s really cool to take part in the Olympic Games. It’s an incredible experience,” says Svindal, whose middle name, Lusk, is the maiden name of his mother, who died when he was eight. “You feel as if you belong to something that’s much bigger than your sport and your day-to-day surroundings.” Though he competes in every event bar the slalom, the Norwegian star is primarily a speed specialist and has notched a hatful of downhill and super-G wins at all the major venues on the global circuit. He is also a formidable competitor in giant slalom and is regularly in the mix in the combined.
As he looked ahead to Sochi, where he will contest all four Alpine ski events, Svindal offered an insight into the secrets of his success: “I visualise the race, the turns, the terrain and the line I need to take to find the fastest route to the bottom. I don’t listen to music. I try to block everything out and just focus. I also work on my adrenaline levels to find amount the energy I need to go fast.” Revealing what he has learned from his sport, he added: “To go hell for leather. To pick things up along the way by winning and losing. And to work hard and play fair.”
It is qualities such as those that could well see the Norwegian on top of the Olympic podium once more in 2014.

Svendsen lands 33rd biathlon win

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu.

Svendsen lands 33rd biathlon win

Biathlon - Vancouver 2010
©Getty Images
08/01/2014
Norway’s Emil Hegle Svendsen’s preparations for Sochi 2014 gathered pace in Oberhof (GER) at the weekend as the three-time Olympic medalist secured wins in the biathlon sprint and the men’s pursuit.
Svendsen, Olympic champion in the 20km individual and 4 x 7.5km relay events, earned his 33rd career victory on Sunday by winning the pursuit in a time of 34:47.7, seeing off compatriot Ole Einar Bjoerndalen by 35.6 seconds. France’s Martin Fourcade finished third, one minute behind.
An identical lineup had taken the sprint honours in difficult, foggy conditions, Svendsen finishing in 26:44.3 seconds to beat Bjoerndalen by 0.4 seconds. Fourcade picked up three penalties and took third place once again.
The Norwegian admitted surprise at his success, saying: "I did not come here thinking that I could win two times, but I raced at Schalke after Christmas and I had a good feeling after that."
There was better fortune for Fourcade the following day, when he won the season’s first mass start event. Silver medalist in this discipline at Vancouver 2010, Fourcade finished 5.2 seconds ahead of Russia’s Alexi Volkov – while Tarjei Boe, another Norwegian, came in 19 seconds behind in third. Svendsen had led the field early on, but eventually had to be contented with 11th position.
Fourcade explained that he had used the disappointments of earlier in the weekend as motivation to break his Oberhof duck. “I was not happy about my last shooting yesterday and found the power inside to win and I am happy,” he said afterwards. “This was the only World Cup venue where I had never won before, so I am quite happy.”
The World Cup now moves to Ruhpolding (GER) – its penultimate event before Sochi 2014.

What sports will be on the programme in Sochi?

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu.

What sports will be on the programme in Sochi?

What sports will be on the programme in Sochi?
©Getty Images (16)
08/01/2014
It's Go Time!
The full lowdown on each winter discipline.
Alpine skiing
Medal events: 10
Athletes: 320
Dates: 9–22 February
Alpine skiing first appeared on the Olympic programme in 1936, when men’s and women’s combined events were held. Now, the Olympic programme features ten medal events, with men and women both contesting downhill, super combined, super-G, giant slalom and slalom. The Sochi 2014 Alpine skiing events will open with the men’s downhill on 9 February, when Norway’s Aksel Lund Svindal will be looking to improve on the silver medal he won in Vancouver in 2010.

Biathlon
Medal events: 11
Athletes: 220
Dates: 8–22 February
Biathlon debuted at the Winter Games in 1960, when the only event was the men’s 20km individual race. The relay was added in 1968, while the 10km sprint debuted in 1980, before women’s events were first held in 1992. Pursuit and mass start events were added in 2002 and 2006 respectively, while Sochi 2014 will see the mixed relay make its Olympic debut. Reigning women’s 15km champion Tora Berger, of Norway, will be eyeing more gold in Sochi, having enjoyed a superb 2013 World Cup season.
What’s New?
Biathlon mixed relay – MixedTeams will comprise of two men and two women. Women will open the relay, completing the first two 6km legs. The men then complete the next two 7.5km legs.

Bobsleigh
Medal events: 3
Athletes: 170
Dates: 16–23 February
A four-man bobsleigh race took place at the first Winter Games in 1924, with a two-man event added four years later and the women’s two-man event debuting at the 2002 Games. Swiss duo Beat Hefti and Thomas Lamparter have already tasted success in Sochi, having won the two-man event at the World Cup in February 2013. The home crowd, meanwhile, is sure to get behind Alexander Zubkov as he aims to lead the Russian four-man team to Olympic success at the Sanki Sliding Centre.

Cross-country skiing
Medal events: 12
Athletes: 310
Dates: 8–23 February
Cross-country skiing has been contested at every edition of the Winter Games, dating back to 1924, and Sochi 2014 will feature 12 events (six for men and six for women) ranging from a 1.5km sprint to the 50km (men) and 30km (women) mass start races. Norway’s reigning sprint and individual pursuit Olympic champion Marit Bjørgen is again expected to challenge for medals in the women’s events, while her compatriot, Olympic gold medallist Petter Northug, will look to dominate the men’s events.

Curling
Medal events: 2
Athletes: 100
Dates: 10–21 February
After featuring at the first Winter Games, in 1924, curling did not appear on the Olympic programme again until 1998, when the men’s and women’s titles were won by Switzerland and Canada respectively. Canada won the men’s title in 2006 and 2010, while Sweden’s women – led by skip Anette Norberg – also topped the podium in both 2006 and 2010. With Norberg now retired, Sweden will be looking to new skip Margaretha Sigfridsson to help them complete a hat-trick of titles.

Figure skating
Medal events: 5
Athletes: 148
Dates: 6–22 February
In addition to the singles, pairs and ice dancing events, a figure skating team contest will also be held in Sochi – marking the event’s debut on the Olympic programme. Three-time world champion Patrick Chan, of Canada, will be aiming to win his first Olympic medal in the men’s singles, while South Korea’s Yuna Kim will be hoping to defend her women’s singles title. Russian hopes are likely to rest on world pairs champions Tatiana Volosozhar and Maxim Trankov.
What’s New?
Figure skating team event – MixedFeaturing teams made up of six skaters – one male, one female, one pair and one ice dance couple. Points will be awarded for each routine and the team with the highest number of aggregate points will win gold.

Freestyle skiing
Medal events: 10
Athletes: 282
Dates: 6–21 February
Sochi 2014 will see four new events join the freestyle skiing programme, with both a men’s and a women’s event in ski slopestyle and a men’s and a women’s event in ski halfpipe joining ski cross, aerials and moguls. Great Britain’s James Woods is the reigning World Cup champion in the men’s ski slopestyle and will be aiming to win his country’s first ever Winter Olympic skiing medal in Sochi, while Switzerland’s two-time world champion Virginie Faivre will be the woman to beat in the ski halfpipe.
What’s New?
Ski halfpipe – Men’s and Women’s  Each athlete will perform an array of big airs and other tricks in the halfpipe before being judged on technical difficulty, style, flow, variation and execution.
Ski slopestyle – Men’s and Women’s  Skiers combine airs and tricks on a course featuring rails and a variety of jumps before being scored on execution, difficulty of line, landing and their use of the course.

Ice hockey
Medal events: 2
Athletes: 468
Dates: 8–23 February
Ice hockey has been played at every edition of the Winter Games, with the women’s event making its debut in Nagano in 1998. In Vancouver in 2010, hosts Canada enjoyed a fairy-tale ending to the men’s tournament as Sidney Crosby scored the gold medal-winning goal seven minutes and 40 seconds into overtime to secure a 3-2 win over the USA. The Canadian women also delighted the home crowd by winning their third successive Olympic title, following a 2-0 win over the USA.

Luge
Medal events: 4
Athletes: 110
Dates: 8–13 February
Luge first featured at the Olympic Winter Games in Innsbruck in 1964 and has remained on the programme ever since, with Sochi 2014 marking the debut of the mixed team relay event. Germany enjoyed a clean sweep of the 2013 World Cup titles, with reigning Olympic champion Felix Loch and 2013 world champion Natalie Geisenberger claiming the men’s and women’s crowns respectively, while Tobias Wendl and Tobias Artl topped the doubles standings.
What’s New?
Luge team relay – MixedEach country will field a men’s singles sled, a doubles sled and a women’s singles sled. All three will slide down the track, one after another, with the clock stopping only after the third sled has crossed the finish line.

Nordic combined
Medal events: 3
Athletes: 55
Dates: 12–20 February
Nordic combined, which features ski jumping and a cross-country skiing race, has appeared at every Winter Games since 1924. The results of the ski jumping element determine the starting places for the cross-country race, with the jumping points converted into time penalties. France’s Jason Lamy Chappuis, who won the individual normal hill/10 km event in Vancouver in 2010, will be among the medal favourites again after finishing second overall in the 2013 World Cup.

Short track speed skating
Medal events: 8
Athletes: 120
Dates: 10–21 February
Short track speed skating was added to the Olympic programme at the 1992 Winter Games, with one individual and one relay event for both men and women. Additional individual distances were added in 1994, before men’s and women’s 1,500m events joined the programme in 2002. In Sochi, men and women will contest the 500m, 1,000m and 1,500m, while there will also be a 3,000m relay for women and a 5,000m relay for men.

Skeleton
Medal events: 2
Athletes: 50
Dates: 13–15 February
Men’s skeleton featured on the Olympic programme at the 1928 and 1948 Winter Games, which were both held in St Moritz, where the sport originated on the famed Cresta Run. Following a 54-year absence, skeleton reappeared on the programme in 2002 in Salt Lake City, when a women’s event was also added. The Olympic skeleton competition consists of four heats run over two days, with the gold medal going to the competitor with the fastest aggregate time.

Ski jumping
Medal events: 4
Athletes: 100
Dates: 8–17 February
Ski jumping has been contested at every Winter Games, but Sochi 2014 will mark the first time that women will compete in the event at the Games. From 1924 to 1960, only the individual large hill event was held at the Games, with the individual normal hill being added in 1964 followed by the team large hill event in 1988. Austria’s Gregor Schlierenzauer won the men’s overall World Cup title in 2013, while Japan’s 2012 Youth Olympic champion Sara Takanashi took the women’s World Cup crown.
What’s New?Women’s ski jumping – Women’sThe women’s normal hill event will mark the first time that women will compete in ski jumping at the Winter Games.

Snowboarding
Medal events: 10
Athletes: 252
Dates: 6-22 February
Snowboarding is the newest discipline on the Winter Games programme, having first been held in Nagano in 1998, when giant slalom and halfpipe events were contested. Snowboard cross was added in 2006, while Sochi 2014 will see slopestyle and parallel special slalom events make their first appearances at the Games. The last two men’s Olympic halfpipe titles have been won by American Shaun White, who wowed the crowd in Vancouver in 2010, scoring an Olympic record 48.4 points out of 50.
What’s New?
Snowboard slopestyle – Men’s and Women’s  Athletes will be scored after descending a course consisting of rails and a variety of jumps, as they combine big airs and technical tricks into one run.
Snowboard parallel slalom – Men’s and Women’s
Riders will race two at a time down the same slope on two parallel courses, outlined with gates and triangular flags.

Speed skating
Medal events: 12
Athletes: 180
Dates: 8–22 February
Speed skating has been part of the Winter Games since the first edition, in 1924, with women’s events added to the programme in 1960. In Sochi, men and women will each race over 500m, 1,000m, 1,500m and 5,000m. Men will also contest the 10,000m, while women will also race over 3,000m. Since 2006, men’s and women’s team pursuit events have also been held. The Netherlands’ Ireen Wüst and Sven Kramer are the athletes to watch in the women’s and men’s events respectively.

Germany sweeps the board in Winterberg

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu.

Germany sweeps the board in Winterberg

Germany bobsleigh Vancouver 2010
©Getty Images
08/01/2014
World champion Maximilian Arndt was the driving force between a superb weekend for Germany at the bobsleigh World Cup event in Winterberg (GER). Arndt was part of the four-man team that won both of their races in style, beating a fellow German team piloted by Francesco Friedrich by 0.17 seconds on Saturday, January 4 – and repeating the trick, this time by 0.23 seconds, the following day.
The second victory completed a German clean sweep of the podium, with Thomas Florschuetz and his team claiming third place. Germany had only narrowly been denied another 1-2-3 on the first day, when Russia’s Alexander Zubkov pipped Florschuetz to third place.
A satisfied Arndt said: “It was great to win in such lovely weather and in front of such a brilliant audience. We know this track much better than the ones overseas, and so can react faster in any situation.”
Arndt sits at the top of the four-man FIBT World Cup rankings on 1,038 points, leading second-placed Zubkov by 116. The USA’s Steven Holcomb lies third on 918 points.
There was further success for Germany on Sunday when Sandra Kiriasis and Franziska Fritz edged to a dramatic victory over the USA’s Elana Meyers and Lolo Jones in the women’s two-man bob – winning by just 0.01 seconds the day after Kiriasis’ 39th birthday.

Tuesday 7 January 2014

All about the Sochi 2014 venues

KALYAN KUMAR MAHATA The true appellation of Apu.

All about the Sochi 2014 venues

The Sochi 2014 venues
©Sochi 2014
07/01/2014
Sochi 2014 will be the first Winter Games to have venues in two distinct ‘clusters’, with 11 newly built arenas set to provide world-class stages for the athletes


Adler Arena
Venue for: Speed skating
Capacity: 8,000
The oval-shaped Adler Arena has been designed to resemble an ice fault, with angular walls and triangular stained-glass windows creating a crystal-style facade. The walls have been made as transparent as possible, enabling spectators to admire the scenic views around them, while the ice track itself has been designed to enable the athletes to perform at their best.

 
Ice Cube Curling Centre
Venue for: Curling
Capacity: 3,000
The 3,000-seat Ice Cube Curling Centre features a combination of smooth and well-rounded contours reminiscent of the shape of the curling stone, which is accentuated by the bright polished surfaces of its façade. The simplistic design of the venue is supposed to symbolise democracy and accessibility.

 

Shayba Arena
Venue for: Ice hockey
Capacity: 7,000
The Shayba Arena takes its name from the Russian word for puck, while Russian fans are also renowned for shouting “Shaybu” when supporting the national hockey teams at major championships. A symbolic hockey puck was laid at the foundation of the arena during construction. The circular exterior of the 7,000-seat venue features an attractive blue and white swirling motif, with the design based on a snowdrift.


Bolshoi Ice Dome
Venue for: Ice hockey
Capacity: 12,000
The eye-catching design of the Bolshoi Ice Dome is based on the image of a huge frozen water droplet. The 12,000-seat venue features innovative heat transfer fluids that are used to create and maintain the arena’s high-performance ice surfaces. The heat transfer fluids are also being used in the air conditioning system to provide reliable, steady temperature control to maintain ice quality and allow better performance and safety for athletes.

 
Iceberg Skating Palace
Venue for: Figure skating, short track speed skating
Capacity: 12,000
The smooth curves of the Iceberg Skating Palace’s beautiful glass façade are designed to evoke associations with a figure skater’s trajectory when landing a triple toe loop. Incredibly, it will take organisers just two hours to adjust the ice when switching from figure skating to short track speed skating during the Games.


Fisht Olympic Stadium
Venue for: Opening and Closing Ceremonies
Capacity: 40,000
The elaborate jewel-encrusted Fabergé eggs that are a renowned Russian icon inspired the unique shell-like design of the Fisht Olympic Stadium. The venue features a translucent polycarbonate roof, which will be used to project vivid illumination shows during the Games, while also giving the venue an appearance of snowy peaks, ensuring it sits in harmony with the landscape of the Imeretinskaya Valley and the Caucasus Mountains.


RusSki Gorki Jumping Centre
Venue for: Ski jumping
Capacity: 7,500
Located on the northern slope of the Aibga Ridge, in the village of Esto-Sadok, the RusSki Gorki Jumping Centre sits on the junction of two ridges in order to ensure that the ski-jumping facilities fit well with the surrounding landscape. The venue’s name plays on the abbreviation of Russia to “Rus” and the word “Ski”.



Rosa Khutor Extreme Park
Venue for: Snowboarding, freestyle skiing
Capacity: 4,000 (Freestyle Skiing Centre); 6,250 (Snowboard Park)
(Freestyle Skiing Centre); 6,250 (Snowboard Park)
Located on the west of the Rosa Khutor plateau, the Rosa Khutor Extreme Park will host snowboarding and freestyle skiing events during the Games. The unique snow conditions combined with specialised tracks will make this permanent facility a popular venue for world-class competitions, with the 1.2km ski-cross track, for example, featuring a thrilling 213m vertical drop.


Laura Cross-Country Ski & Biathlon Centre
Venue for: Cross-country skiing, biathlon
Capacity: 7,500
Located on the crest and slopes of the Psekhako Ridge, approximately 10km to the northeast of Krasnaya Polyana, the Laura Cross-Country Ski & Biathlon Centre is unique as it comprises two separate biathlon and cross-country stadiums, each with their own tracks and start and finish zones. The venue takes its name from a turbulent mountain river with a large number of waterfalls, which has its source in the southern slopes of the Assar, within the boundaries of the Caucasian nature reserve.




Rosa Khutor Alpine Centre
Venue for: Alpine skiing
Capacity: 7,500
Located on the Aibga Ridge, approximately 80km outside Sochi, the Rosa Khutor Alpine Resort will host all Alpine skiing disciplines. Bernhard Russi, a world-renowned ski architect and Olympic champion, developed the competition tracks, which measure around 20km in total, with the men’s downhill course stretching to almost 3,500m and featuring a vertical drop of 1,075m.


Sanki Sliding Centre
Venue for: Bobsleigh, skeleton, luge
Capacity: 5,000
Approximately 60km northeast of Sochi, the Sanki Sliding Centre has been built at the Alpika Service Mountain Ski Resort, with its track finishing area at Rzhanaya Polyana. The 1.5km track features 18 corners and a vertical drop of 131.9m, with state-of-the-art ice preparation technology ensuring optimum temperature control along the entire length of the track.