Author Archive | Adam Terko

Club Cup: Your Feb 17th update!

From Katie Hill:

MASTERS – MNC NEEDS YOU FOR THE CLUB CUP!

(First-time racers & casual racers – this means you too!) 

As you’ve probably heard several times by now, the Club Cup race is very tight this year.  For the first time ever, MNC stands a real chance of upsetting perennial powerhouses NWVE and CSU to claim bragging rights as THE BEST NORDIC SKI CLUB IN NEW ENGLAND, but we need everyone’s help to do this.  That includes getting some of you first-time racers and more “casual” racers to the starting line to earn Club Cup points too (yes – we mean you there, hiding in the back-of-the-pack).  Please consider entering a Club Cup race to help the team effort!

What is the Club Cup?

The Club Cup is the ranking of all the NENSA ski clubs in New England, based on age group race results of club skiers 15 and older in designated Club Cup races.  MNC is currently in 2nd place out of 55 teams, and closing in on 1st.

Who is eligible to earn Club Cup points?

Any MNC member who is 15 years of age or older; individual NENSA membership is not required.  IMPORTANT:  SKIERS MUST IDENTIFY THEMSELVES WITH MANSFIELD NORDIC CLUB AT RACE REGISTRATION TO EARN POINTS.  

Which races count for the Club Cup?

Each year NENSA designates a series of masters-friendly races that are used for both the Club Cup (team rankings) and Zak Cup (individual rankings).  This year there are 23 Zak/Club Cup races across New England, culminating with the New England Club Relay Championships at the end of March. You can see the full list of Zak/Club Cup races here.  At each race, one distance is designated for Zak points but all distances are scored for Club Cup points. (See below for Club Cup races that are most suitable for novice/casual racers.)

How do the points work?

Club Cup points are awarded based on age-group finish place for each gender and for each race distance.  10 points are awarded for 1st, 9 for 2nd, 8 for 3rd, and so on down to 1 point for 10th; all skiers 11th and beyond also earn 1 point.  Age groups are U16, U18, U20, U23, SR (23 to 29), and masters by five-year increments: M1 (30-34), M2 (35-40), etc. Scoring is by displacement (i.e., non-club skiers are included in the results when assigning points).

Why do you want a slow-poke like me to enter a Club Cup race?

Because EVERYONE who finishes the race scores points!  With so many age groups, there are typically only a handful of skiers in each age group (the Craftsbury marathons are the exception).  That means even the slowest person in the age group still often earns 5 or more points. Two slower skiers can typically match the 10 points of an age-group winner.  Women tend to earn more points than men simply because there are fewer women in the races. 

Most teams average about 6 to 7 points per skier.  NWVE, with the fastest roster of masters skiers in New England, is only doing slightly better at 8 points average per racer.  With such a small point differential for speed, the best strategy is to send more people to the races rather than focus on just the fastest skiers.  

A few more bodies can make all the difference in the point totals at the end of the season.  Last year MNC finished 2nd, just 23 points ahead of 3rd place CSU. This year, MNC has been within 20 points of NWVE (last year’s winner) for most of the season.  It only takes about four more skiers – of any speed – to cover a 20 point spread so literally every skier makes a difference!

What upcoming Club Cup races do your recommend for novice/casual racers?

  • MNC Skiathlon  (this weekend, 2/22) – If you aren’t up for the full 14k skiathlon (7k classic + 7k skate), then enter the 5k “What the Heck, I’ll Try it” race, with your choice of technique.  MNC Skiathlon info.
  • Trapp’s Race to the Cabin (3/1) – 5k classic hill climb with fire, food, and drink at the end.  Race to Cabin info.
  • New England Club Relay Championships (3/22) – Join an MNC team for this 4x5k relay (2 legs skate, 2 legs classic).  This is a great starter race, suitable for skiers of all levels. Club Relays info.

 

MNC Junior National Team 2020

Congrats to the 6 MNC athletes who qualified for the New England team heading to 2020 Junior Nationals! On March 7th this group unites in Truckee, CA to take on the best juniors in the country. Way to go Charles, Ava, Hattie, Rose, Sammie, and Ali!

Wednesday Night Worlds: MNC Day! Feb 12th

All MNC Masters,

Whether you’re a seasoned racer or someone who has never put on a bib, we encourage you to come out to Sleepy Hollow this Wednesday night for this week’s edition of Wednesday Night Worlds! February 12th.

This is a super-popular, super-fun community event that has something for everyone. Sign-up at the front desk and choose the 2km, 4km, or 6km race in classic or skate technique. Hard to think of another race with that much flexibility and variety. Race begins at 6:30 under the lights, and is followed by an awesome potluck dinner in the lodge dining room. Nothing beats a fun ski race with dinner after.

Conditions look amazing, with mild temps (even into the night) and Sleepy Hollow operating at 100% open and groomed!

Find the race website HERE.

Picture

 

Eastern Cup #3

Just like that we are counting down the days till departure for Eastern Cup Finals. In keeping with tradition, and a good tradition to have, this third Eastern Cup weekend continued our roll of momentum toward the stressful end of the season. The VT Qualifier was the mid-season boost of confidence needed to take our racing another step higher, and we saw our best collective effort yet in Rumford.

Sammie in a photo by River Valley Graphics

On Friday we drove AWAY from the big snowstorm, instead having a real fun time navigating sleet and ice on our journey down the venerable Route 2. There was in fact some new snow in Rumford, but not nearly what we would return home to.

Saturday’s individual start skate races were on the cold side, with silky packed snow and steam billowing from the lungs. The women started it off with a few really strong showings such as Rose and Sammie who have put up some of their best distance races this season. Right in that pack were Hattie and Finnegan who continue to be locked in a battle for the U16 team with CSU and a few other competitors we have keen eyes on!

The course featured a lot of rolling downhill at the start, before climbing on mixed terrain toward the legendary High School Hill which was lined with fans and coaches giving their loudest encouragement to tired bodies. The sun was out and after testing wax in puffy coats and squeaky snow in the early morning, most were out enjoying the bright blue sky and snowy trails for the men’s race. The girls team positioned themselves on HS Hill while Charles put forth his best race of the season, catching a ride from the Middlebury College skier who started 15 seconds behind him and sticking it out the whole way to slide ahead of some big competition.

On Sunday morning we could feel the cold inching in underneath the cheap, poorly-insulated hotel door at the Blue Iris Motor Inn…Rick actually pulled back the curtain on the sliding back door to reveal the ice that had built up inside the room. Sure enough, it was -11 out there during the wee hours. The coaches dined on luxurious oatmeal and coffee prepared on the official MNC hotplate and hit the trails to test kick and glide for a chilly classic sprint.

We arrived to find a big rise in temps to -9, and a sprint course laid out with tracks that were, uh, how do I put this…it was very “Rumford”.

Rose gaining ground on one of the more acceptable sections of tracksetting on the course (River Valley Graphics)

Good thing we can be kind of scrappy when we need to be. Kick was also interesting and provided the big lesson and coaching takeaway from this race weekend. The weather was very cold…around 4 degrees at race start. The course was what many would consider pretty flat, save for one hill where striding/running was required for abotu 10-15 seconds. Various green hardwaxes were working and we chose a combination that we felt provided both kick and free glide. Everyone had this same wax on, and the different reports were staggering. We had every response, from “perfect” to “just a little more under the toe” to “my skis are complete $#&@”.

Interestingly, this spectrum occurred roughly along the lines of age and experience. Classic sprinting is one of the toughest events to race in: everyone knows smooth classic skiing is beautiful and effortless. But channel that into a 4-5 minute race and most tend to ski a lot more haphazardly and uncontrolled due to the feeling of “this is so short, I have to go faster and faster and faster”. Oftentimes though, going harder doesn’t make you go faster and this is never more true than classic skiing. What’s really required is careful reading of the course, the conditions, and your technique of choice for various elements of the loop.

I would love to have kept a timer out there, but in a 5 minute race this course was probably broken into 3.5 minutes of double poling, 1 minute of being in low tucks, and 30 seconds of striding. Adding it all up, kick becomes relevant for 10% of the race. Of course you want that 10% to be GOOD kick, but in hearing feedback from athletes who have done a lot of classic sprinting, the takeaway was to be comfortable with enough kick to run or stride up the main climb and then not sacrifice anything on the larger double poling and tucking portions of the course. One athlete’s report: “I tested my skis and thought maybe they were a little slippy, but I knew I was just going to get out of the tracks and run up that hill anyway, which I did.”

Now, it’s probably easy to read into this as me complaining about people wanting more kick. That is not the case! Kyle and I applied kick, more kick, and even more kick as folks came back. But it’s important to come away from the experience with a takeaway that can be used for the future. As early as Sunday night I was texting with Sara about the workouts we’ve done that helped skiers handle that course well, along with ideas to incorporate in the upcoming summer. Days like this are why Eastern Cup racing is so valuable!

Charles in an SMS-sandwich (River Valley Graphics)

Anyway, on to the races. The qualifier was fun to watch, especially from the stadium area where skiers came flying into the last straightaway with guns blazing. Charles continued a killer weekend with an absolutely devastating qualifier in 8th place! Not to be outdone, the women put 4 into the open heats with Sammie (15th), Ali (17th), Finn (27th) and Julia (28th). Making it into the open heats is a huge deal in these races, with college skiers sticking around to contest the day along with other Eastern Cup teams. On the women’s side only CSU put more skiers into the open heats, which is a really cool marker of where this team is at. Just outside was Rose in 33rd, making her one of the top qualifiers for the Junior heats. In the U16 heats we had Hattie, Lydia, and Virginia all representing!

Open heats came first, with Charles hanging on to 4th in his heat. It was a super fast one though, and he moved onto the semi-finals as a result. In one of the most hotly-contested heats of the day, with poles flying and elbows being thrown, the report was that Charles slid through the chaos and nabbed his first overall Eastern Cup top-10 in 10th place!

In the women’s heats, MNC suits lined up in race after race. This was a little bittersweet, as after the hype of some great qualifying nobody made it past their quarterfinals. But that’s to take nothing away from some really exciting racing. On the big climb, Ali went for the Klaebo move and ran past the whole field, but unfortunately on the long downhill into the finish the others were able to catch her draft and slingshot around. Although they were all involved in tight battles, Sammie, Julia, and Finnegan were out in the Quarters. But it’s a pretty good feeling to know that no matter how a heat goes, you scored a top-30 and got to race head-to-head with the top guns.

In the Junior heats there was a lot more excitement, with Rose having a really good double pole start (a goal she has been working on) and taking 3rd in her heat. At the very end of the day, we had some of the most exciting and cool moments. The shadows were growing long when the U16 girls lined up. Hattie absolutely smashed her first heat, to the point where I realized I never told her that if she was winning by a lot she didn’t HAVE to go hard the whole way and could save some energy for the final (spoiler alert, she had plenty of energy for the final). In what was a very intense personal battle, Virginia put on her best game-face yet and hammered out an epic battle with her rival from Putney, Caroline, coming all the way down to a lunge.

An epic finish! (River Valley Graphics)

Virginia has gotten more aggressive and assertive with every race, and this was another step up toward what I think will be a really cool end-of-season run at BKL fest (still an 8th grader) and U16 Championships in March.

Lydia was a little bummed to not move on after a great qualifier, but has gotten two rounds of head-to-head racing in both sprints this year and is now shooting up in the overall U16 rankings. Lots of young MNC speedsters on the cusp of big things.

The drive home was, as always, a good chance to reflect. Each weekend has gone a bit better as we get ourselves in race mode again and again. It’s easy to lose sight of the fact that a few years ago we would have been thinking “I hope someone can make it into the open heats” and we’re now having to use a whiteboard after the qualifier to organize skis into the “open heat pile, Junior heat pile, and U16 heat pile”. All of this after an already-successful skate day on a tough course and slow snow that left nothing to skis or technical skill, really…just the fittest and fastest in the bunch.

I can’t lie, and they’re public so everyone can see anyway: we’re LOCKED in tight battles across the board for “bubble” spots on some championship teams. No way to sugarcoat it…this weekend is going to be really huge. Luckily I know that we race better and better when the pressure is on. Time to pull out all the stops!

U16 girlz ready to shred some heats

 

 

The Qualifier Day

On Sunday most teenage racers in Vermont swarmed the tiny, yellow-housed mountain retreat of Middlebury’s Breadloaf Campus for the Eastern High School and U16 Championship qualifier race. Or, as it’s know to most in shorthand, “The Qualifier”.

Charles working on his Klaebo flow (Photo: Dave Priganc)

This is quite a scene, and it’s an important snapshot of Vermont skiing at the Junior level. The JN team is big drama every year, with races down-to-the-wire and competition from colleges and pros at big events…but this race is much more accessible for all athletes and it truly paints a picture of how the state skis when we’re all together: high schools, academies, clubs, and even some incredibly talented middle school racers who ski up each year.

One thing is for sure: Vermont is the strongest skiing state in America. I am just saying that flat-out, right now, and you can fight me if you disagree. That’s right Alaska, I said it. The dedication, skill, work ethic, guts, and power it takes to ski at the highest level in this state is unprecedented. What’s more, the DEPTH is insane. The speed on skis it takes to make the Vermont Eastern High School Championship team is equivalent to the skiing it takes to earn a spot on many Junior National teams from other regions.

So the measuring stick is poking out of the snow each year at this collection of races; a 3km classic race in the morning, followed by a 3km skate race in the afternoon. Simple but effective!

Skiers from MNC totally crushed this year. With Charles leading the charge on the men’s side, a collection of seniors like Silas, Jax, and Ethan all skied strongly and even though they didn’t all make the team outright via this initial naming, they proved they have the chops to do it in a few weeks at the State meet where additional spots are up for grabs. On the women’s side, it was quite frankly an MNC swarm stacking the top ranks…of the top 25 athletes in the final rankings, 13 are affiliated with the club.

Particularly strong for the club was the classic race, which mirrored last year. In this case the snow was a bit odd and it was certainly not straight blue hardwax conditions. The skiing required finesse and confidence and that’s where we shined. In particular both Julia and Ali had some of their best races of the season only a week removed from a classic race that left them both disappointed and struggling with the skis and conditions. It would’ve been very easy to let that spiral downward but instead this was a chance to go out with something to prove. Rose also shined in conditions and on a course that would have spelled a lot of trouble in previous years.

Sammie keeping it stable and powerful (photo: Dave Priganc)

Charles rocketed to 10th and proved again how capable he is of competing with JN-bound skiers, and keeping himself in the mix for the next two Eastern Cup weekends. Silas and Ethan seem to always finish near each other, and this battle was no exception. With Jax in the mix too, the State meet is going to be pretty exciting!

A really strong group of BHS skiers (Isabelle, Grace, Maeve, Silas, Ethan, and of course Quincy) are really showing some cool dedication and excitement for the sport…there’s a special culture on that team for sure and it’s exciting to see momentum building for the Seahorses.

For the skate race, brutal climbs and harrowing descents were the name of the game. Some went for smooth skiing, but were a bit TOO smooth. Others went for pure raw tempo, and it was a bit TOO wild. Hattie was the perfect combination of the two, and watching her ski up the A-climb it was clear she was going to be the top skier from our group even without seeing splits or times. Sure enough the finish held up, as did that of Finnegan who continues to improve with every race: those two U16 gals are starting to really turn heads on the New England level! Also embracing the tougher trails, Lydia Hodgeman put up a blistering 13th place, one serious jump from last year when she was 32nd in the skate race.

Ali heading out on course in the skate race (Photo: Dave Priganc)

A real breakthrough for Hanna came with her skate race and a hard-fought battle with Charlotte Brown from GMVS. Charlie has been skiing great this year, and she caught Hanna from 15 seconds back around the 1km mark. At the base of the steepest, longest hill Charlie made the pass but Hanna stayed tough and they skied all the way up and down the hill together, coming into the finish close together. It’s one thing to see someone always finish an “untouchable” distance ahead of you on the results list, but another to suddenly ski with that person for almost a whole race and know that you can do it too.

Snow and Hanna: last year Snow was 47th in the skate race…this year, 24th! (Photo: Dave Priganc)

Jax, Silas, and Ethan all improved 20+ places from their 2019 rankings, while Noe Lindemuth went from 87th (2019) to 58th. Improvements are cool to measure at races like this, and they mean a lot when you are taking both a classic and skate race into account. As a one-day opportunity it says a lot about what some good work can do! Charles secured his spot with another strong skate race in the afternoon and 13th overall.

If you didn’t know, Virginia Cobb works very hard! (Photo: Dave Priganc)

A special shoutout has to go to the strong contingent of MNC U16 skiers, many of whom earned a spot on the U16 trip! When it comes to diligence and hard work, you can’t ignore Virginia Cobb who is a really great example of commitment day-in and day-out. Virginia is an 8th-grade U16 who really began training “for real” this year. She began summer training and could barely hang on during distance runs and hard ski workouts. She has often been the youngest one at practice, kind of flying solo for her age group on occasion, but that hasn’t stopped her from being really committed to showing up every week, filling out her training log, keeping up with the strength training, and having good personal analysis of her racing and work…it has really paid off, as she jumped from 21st (2019) to 10th in the U16 standings with a 9th place finish in the classic race (did I mention she is a biathlete?). Given she is still in 8th grade, she’ll also be competing at the BKL Festival which I’m sure will go out with a bang for her!

 

In the end a group of 20 boys and 20 girls were called up for the EHS team, and 24 for the U16 team, with alternates also brought up who will most certainly get a spot once the JN team is announced (the groups overlap this year, so those who attend JNs will miss EHS). MNC-affiliated athletes nominated include:

EHS Team:

Charles Martell, Rose Clayton, Hattie Barker, Finnegan Mittelstadt, Sammie Nolan, Ali Priganc, Julia Oliver, Lydia Hodgeman, Lily Porth, Hanna Holm, Isabelle Mittelstadt, and Snow Lindemuth. With a special shoutout to Esther Cuneo who is skiing with CVU this season!

U16 Team:

Hattie Barker, Finnegan Mittelstadt, Lydia Hodgeman, Virginia Cobb, Maeve Fairfax, Maisie Franke, Carly Trapeni, Rachel Porth

A collection of gang members feeling the vibe (Photo: Dave Priganc)

It is honestly very inspiring to be a part of this team, and to see how this group interacts and carries itself on a big race day. The vibe was incredibly powerful for this one, and I think part of it just has to do with the spirit of Vermont skiing and the gathering of most every team, athlete, and force in the sport. In past years this event has been divisive, as certain powers struggle to prove themselves against others or whatnot. I’m sure I have been guilty of that mentality. While of course that measuring stick is always there, I like to think that in this case it mostly measured the level of Vermont skiing as a whole, independent of who skied for what group, and found the results to be off the charts.

Results via Underdog Timing

Link to photos by Dave Priganc

And a parting photo by Dave of none other than the human cowbell himself, Peter Mittelstadt:

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