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#1
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Vasaloppet (Sweden) USA team results
Here are results from todays vasaloppet for those registered to USA as club those with times less than 1.5 of winning time get medals. which should be 6.51.13 1 04:34:09 Daniel Tynell Grycksbo IF OK 1 04:59:24 Christina Paluselli (damer) Italy therefore agre, cooper, and gillis would i think get medals. kalember is right over by a few seconds. i have no idea about how precise they are.. would be a shame to miss by two sipps of blueberry soup! (sport news this evening is replaying video of young woman skiier begging to get past blue rope and continue. i don't think anybody could get past the blue rope and she didn't either! besides if she were that slow, on average, she wouldn't make the next control for sure) Chamberlain was doing well and then he disapperaed. here are standings by control 16 33 76 45 117 143 but he broke at h=F6kberg (which means between oxberg and h=F6kberg, something happened. that is not a bad stretch so will have to see if anyone comments. and conditions today were not good. this is one of the slower, i think in recent years. Namn Startnummer Klubb/ort Lopp =C5ktid Placering Agre, James 3154 USA Vasaloppet 6:35:33 2551 Agre, Mark 15034 USA Vasaloppet - - Agre, Peter 16159 USA Vasaloppet 10:15:07 10386 Akerlund, Nels 15013 USA Vasaloppet - - Andersson, Lars 10506 USA Vasaloppet 9:49:53 9719 Baverstam, Per 14638 USA Vasaloppet - - Berg, Cory Peter 14675 USA Vasaloppet - - Billgert, Peter 11758 USA Vasaloppet 10:21:58 10574 Bohnhorst, Daniel 15721 USA Vasaloppet - - Bohren, Oyvind 12443 USA Vasaloppet - - Borzecki, Stanley 13844 USA Vasaloppet 7:49:29 5366 Cedarholm, Todd 15345 USA Vasaloppet 8:37:28 7238 Chamberlain, David 314 USA Vasaloppet - - Cook, Thomas 15389 USA Vasaloppet 7:46:21 5235 Cooper, Brandon 1273 USA Vasaloppet 5:34:42 630 Dahlen, Kjell 8623 USA Vasaloppet 9:00:44 8101 De Beer, Marc 14715 USA Vasaloppet - - Gee, Brian 10554 USA Vasaloppet 9:44:00 9523 Gillis, Anders 1223 USA Vasaloppet 5:02:55 183 Goeben, Charles 15263 USA Vasaloppet 11:03:15 11340 Hall, Scott 15200 USA Vasaloppet 9:58:41 9977 Harrison, Matthew 10211 USA Vasaloppet - - Hayes, Alice 17835 USA Vasaloppet 11:30:59 1138 Hervela, Jeff 10940 USA Vasaloppet 7:20:20 4242 Jewett, Chip 14369 USA Vasaloppet 9:58:51 9980 Johnson, Matthew 12750 USA Vasaloppet 10:32:48 10805 Kalember, Jeffrey 10592 USA Vasaloppet 6:52:54 3260 Karlsson, Jonas 15343 USA Vasaloppet - - Kelley, James 11648 USA Vasaloppet 7:01:08 3541 Kosowski, Michael 11135 USA Vasaloppet 8:06:35 6048 Kuznia, Ken 10851 USA Vasaloppet 7:48:11 5328 Lysholm Mckay, David 14371 USA Vasaloppet - - Murray, Gregory 15336 USA Vasaloppet - - Obukowicz, Tim 14740 USA Vasaloppet 9:13:01 8550 Quinn, Darlene 17962 USA Vasaloppet 9:51:09 705 Rachitskaya, Olga 17732 USA Vasaloppet 8:01:35 241 Rachitskiy, Anton 15205 USA Vasaloppet 7:49:24 5363 Rachitskiy, Val 15204 USA Vasaloppet 7:20:46 4255 Risch-Boody, Daniel 14606 USA Vasaloppet - - Stevens, Stuart 8429 USA Vasaloppet 9:41:19 9444 Tetreault, Pierre 5904 USA Vasaloppet - - Wojton, Andrzej 14910 USA Vasaloppet 7:51:10 5457 Ziegler, Jennifer 17718 USA Vasaloppet 7:50:01 214 Zuelsdorff, Ned 16165 USA Vasaloppet - - |
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#2
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Ned Zuelsdorff, who doesn't have a finishing time, is the Birkie exec
director. Must have been hard to stay in shape. Gene " wrote: Here are results from todays vasaloppet for those registered to USA as club those with times less than 1.5 of winning time get medals. which should be 6.51.13 1 04:34:09 Daniel Tynell Grycksbo IF OK 1 04:59:24 Christina Paluselli (damer) Italy 214 Zuelsdorff, Ned 16165 USA Vasaloppet - - |
#3
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JK / Jeff Kalember - nice job Michigan home boy !
Pete Vordenberg wrote on teamtoday.org: "Dave Chamberlain is bib 314. He started out with a tight back... was in 250th place at 5km and skied himself up to lead the race from about 10 to 15km. Here he is in the lead group at about 50km." Dave began with a tight back, which seized after 70k. I'm proud of that kid. He is facing a wicked racing schedule. He JUST got over to Europe. So he had a rough start, or was given a citizens start pen, which does happen, got himself to THE FRONT of the race, and stayed in the hunt thru 70k. Till his back failed. ouch. Well done solider. We'll see more exciting stuff from him. |
#4
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One long day....!
I love this race. Such a great Nordic festival. But man, this was one long tough slog. I'd be very curious what others did about waxing and structure. I packed skis when it was looking warmer and had a pair of new Fischer RCS Plus with a factory grind. Used Start HF cold -- blue I guess -- with their cold fluoro.Underneath it I'd waxed warmer back in the states...Anyway, not sure what happened but I had the slowest skis I've ever had. Probably the structure and maybe some kind of strange interaction between what I added and had on previously. Hell if I know. At about ten k, I actually took them off and sort of stared at them in disbelief, like I was looking for a flat tire or something. I kept thinking it would change, double polling down hill. I think I passed one person all day and I'm pretty sure they were in the process of falling down. I should have stopped to see if they were okay but I was so excited to be passing somebody, I kept going. By 50 k, it felt like I was in the Russian retreat from Stallingrad. I kept trying to run into trees on the downhills to have a legit reason to dnf but I was so tired I couldn't even hit the trees. I started in 6th start group and it took 45 minutes to go 3 km. Of course I didn't understand that would be about my pace for the day. Americans posted some really good times and let me tell you, anybody who did well yesterday deserves all kinds of applause. To fight through the crowd, that cold snow with very snakey tracks, man, that's some kind of impressive to actually race it vs. the tour I put in. I was at Vasa office today and they were talking about how strong David Chamberlain looked. Around 11% of the starters didn't finish, which was a modern record. And the winners were about 20% slower than anticipated. I should have known it was going to go like this when I saw the women's world club 45 k, the day before. They anticipated finishing in under 2 hours and it ended up taking something like 2:20. I saw Beckie Scott --- 11th, super congrats -- about 2 km out from the finish and she looked to be skiing on pure guts, working like hell. Interestingly, there were over 40 Americans and only 5 Canadians entered... Stuart Stevens |
#5
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Anders wrote:
kirjoitti: snip snip...... would be a shame to miss by two sips of blueberry soup! (sport news this evening is replaying video of young woman skiier begging to get past blue rope and continue. i don't think anybody could get past the blue rope and she didn't either! besides if she were that slow, on average, she wouldn't make the next control for sure) It made for good reality-TV:-) Her bus had apparently arrived too late for the start (though I'm not sure how much that matters when there's an enormous log jam at the foot of the first hill anyway) and she'd had some sort of passing problem with a nauseous feeling (presumably stomach/ingestion problems), so she was arguably in perfect shape to ski onwards a bit faster and the guard could've let her slip unnoticeably past the rope - but once she landed on live TV, her chances obviously dropped to absolutely nil... her particular situation was that she was trying to complete the fourth leg of the svensk classique which is a 30km foot race, a 3km swim in 17C water , partly upstream, a 300km bike ride, and then the 90km ski race. you can start with any one but then must do the other three in seqence before your start comes around again. if you miss one you start over and this was her last one! I think she used poor judgement to have not gone =F6ppet sp=E5r the weekend before and heged her bets with an additional chance with vasaloppet. further, she probably could have taken an earlier bus? and i suspect if she were a strong skier, she could have started at 9am and still made it to m=E5ngsbodarna before kl 12. I think she was going slow and probably not well trained for this race. add to that an unhappy stomach and the tough skiing conditons with cold and fresh snow..... she was going to have a hard day. and once SVT picked up her plea to get past, I agree she was certainly done for. even without that, i don't think she would have gone on. I have encountered the blue rope by seconds once and there was no way those guys would have let me go by. And realistically, if you are that close to 'track' time (sp=E5r tid) at a control, you probably wouldn't make the next one anyhow. You are already going slow and not likely to get faster then. and her next leg to risberg had some down hill but not enough to give her a real recovery. for her, there is n=E4sta =E5r and more training for XC! =20 =20 =20 Anders |
#6
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Thge RCS Plus grind can be pretty aggressive, as in it starts to be
fast about the time the snow starts getting wet at around 32F (0C). So if you had that type of grind, and then a new grind (sigh)...and it was cold so you were using the cold Start Green Flouro (SF80?), that would be a good reason for a long day. Jay Wenner |
#7
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Not exactly. Watching the video, at 50k Leijon of Mora is about
1:45 down the trail. Chamberlain would have been in the trailing pack, but unfortunately there is not a second camera for another several K. They catch Leijon around 58k and at 61.7k, going thru the second sprint, Chamberlain is not in the top 50. I do wonder if the back seizure was coincidental or related to his effort. Gene "delltodd" wrote: JK / Jeff Kalember - nice job Michigan home boy ! Pete Vordenberg wrote on teamtoday.org: "Dave Chamberlain is bib 314. He started out with a tight back... was in 250th place at 5km and skied himself up to lead the race from about 10 to 15km. Here he is in the lead group at about 50km." Dave began with a tight back, which seized after 70k. I'm proud of that kid. He is facing a wicked racing schedule. He JUST got over to Europe. So he had a rough start, or was given a citizens start pen, which does happen, got himself to THE FRONT of the race, and stayed in the hunt thru 70k. Till his back failed. ouch. Well done solider. We'll see more exciting stuff from him. |
#8
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don't think so.
at 09:47:56 (1:47.56 from start) Leijon is 2nd through the clock at Risberg which is 34.5km. at 10:30:01, he is 1st through the clock at evertsberg which is 47.1km. chamberlain was 45th at evertsberg 10:32:12 and was going slow into evertsberg. there is a long hill up to it. after evertsberg, he enjoyed the down hill run of 7km and sped up much but fell back to 117 at oxberg. at h=F6kberg, he was 143. after h=F6kberg there is a nice downhill run of a km but aterwards mostly flat. had he kept going, he still would have had a nice finish. if he had a back problem at the start, he certainly didn't make it better with this run! it was really nice for a change to see a usa flag listed with the top runners (or at all usually). not much comment as i recall about an american up there by the sverige tv. and for those who want to do their own time-standsings research, go to http://www.resultat.vasaloppet.se/Va.../result/search Se toppstriden for top 10 Se resultatlista to choose a range, eg, 100 - 200 |
#9
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" wrote:
don't think so. at 09:47:56 (1:47.56 from start) Leijon is 2nd through the clock at Risberg which is 34.5km. at 10:30:01, he is 1st through the clock at evertsberg which is 47.1km. I took it off the video (www.denness.com - thanks, Jan!). Leijon is 1:42 up at the first shot, 47.1k (where Chamberlain is 45th), and then the camera follows him pumping away until he tires and is quickly caught and dropped at 58-59k. chamberlain was 45th at evertsberg 10:32:12 and was going slow into |
#10
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Stuart, nice meeting you at the airport Radisson on Monday before our
flights home. I'll look for your name in the credits of Northern Exposure next time I watch a re-run. I bumped into Jim Agre in the expo tent just before the start when he recognized my Riverbrook uniform. Nice race Jim!! Quite the epic day. I knew a day or so before the race that I would have some ski "issues". I am 10-11 lbs heavier this year than last (can you say ice cream?) when I bought my newest 2 pair of classical skis and have paid for it in every race this year with poor ski fit/flex as a result. I decided I was going to use my stiffer skis (which goes against the soft powder condition rule) due to my heavier weight. Only problem is, those skis have an agressive LJ03 grind from Zach Caldwell that probably were not the best choice. My heart sank a little when we opened the door of our B&B in Mora to load up the car race morning to see 4-5+ inches of new powder. But I made the conscious decision to go with it and see what happens, so I paid the price with somewhat slow skis. I think my softer skis would have been much too soft though. I was amazed how orderly the start and first 4-5 kms were (I had start group 2). Nice change of pace from the carnage of Wave 1 in our Birkie. I didn't feel very rested going into the race. At about 10k I started having thoughts of just relaxing and enjoying the day instead of beating myself to a pulp. At 30k my quads starting cramping for some reason (that has never ever happended before) so I was forced to be conservative regardless. They would cramp up again every 10k or so. The last 40k were tough for me and I got pretty chilled the last 20k. Ended up with a 7:01 - far from my goal of sub-6. The organization, volunteer force, and sheer magnitude of this race is absolutely amazing. It puts the American Birkie in a very different frame of reference in my mind. I think I missed getting a medal by 15+ minutes or more but I don't mind. I have every intention of getting one in 2007 - I already registered this morning!!!!! Congrats to fellow U.S. skiers that made the trip. JK Stuart wrote: One long day....! I love this race. Such a great Nordic festival. But man, this was one long tough slog. I'd be very curious what others did about waxing and structure. I packed skis when it was looking warmer and had a pair of new Fischer RCS Plus with a factory grind. Used Start HF cold -- blue I guess -- with their cold fluoro.Underneath it I'd waxed warmer back in the states...Anyway, not sure what happened but I had the slowest skis I've ever had. Probably the structure and maybe some kind of strange interaction between what I added and had on previously. Hell if I know. At about ten k, I actually took them off and sort of stared at them in disbelief, like I was looking for a flat tire or something. I kept thinking it would change, double polling down hill. I think I passed one person all day and I'm pretty sure they were in the process of falling down. I should have stopped to see if they were okay but I was so excited to be passing somebody, I kept going. By 50 k, it felt like I was in the Russian retreat from Stallingrad. I kept trying to run into trees on the downhills to have a legit reason to dnf but I was so tired I couldn't even hit the trees. I started in 6th start group and it took 45 minutes to go 3 km. Of course I didn't understand that would be about my pace for the day. Americans posted some really good times and let me tell you, anybody who did well yesterday deserves all kinds of applause. To fight through the crowd, that cold snow with very snakey tracks, man, that's some kind of impressive to actually race it vs. the tour I put in. I was at Vasa office today and they were talking about how strong David Chamberlain looked. Around 11% of the starters didn't finish, which was a modern record. And the winners were about 20% slower than anticipated. I should have known it was going to go like this when I saw the women's world club 45 k, the day before. They anticipated finishing in under 2 hours and it ended up taking something like 2:20. I saw Beckie Scott --- 11th, super congrats -- about 2 km out from the finish and she looked to be skiing on pure guts, working like hell. Interestingly, there were over 40 Americans and only 5 Canadians entered... Stuart Stevens |
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