Friday, August 21, 2009

2009 USA Canoe Kayak National Championships - Day 2

Day two of the 2009 USA Canoe Kayak Sprint National Championships is complete. Athletes from all over the US met this morning to compete in the 500 meter events, which were held on the site of the 1996 Centennial Olympic paddling & rowing events.

Today's action saw cooler weather, more fast times, and VERY close finishes.
Day three features 200 meter heats and races, and distance events. The racing program starts back up at 8am EST.

The event was broadcast live via The LCKC Channel with a couple of interruptions due to technical difficulties with our Internet feed. This is an emerging technology and we've had almost 40,000 different users watch the event over the last 2 days. If we had that many people visit our venue this week, imagine the traffic jam! We have our techie fingers crossed that tomorrow's events will be covered without interruption.

Video from today's races have been posted to the On Demand Library at The LCKC Channel, and are also being rebroadcasted on our video loop for those who may have missed it.

All of today's official results at Powerhouse Timing.

Once again, LCKC wishes to extend our thanks to all the teams, coaches, officials, and volunteers that contributed to making this year's Nationals possible. Good luck tomorrow!

Thursday, August 20, 2009

2009 USA Canoe Kayak National Championships - Day 1

Day one of the 2009 USA Canoe Kayak Sprint National Championships is complete. Athletes from all over the US met this morning to compete in the 1000 meter events, which were held on the site of the 1996 Centennial Olympic paddling & rowing events.

Today's action saw some suprising wins, fast times, and special moments. (when's the last time you saw a 7-year old complete a 1000m race?) LCKC is proud to have the opportunity to host this year's event, and if today's events are any indication of what's to come, we're all in for a great Nationals. Day two features 500 meter heats and races. The racing program starts back up at 8am EST.

The event was broadcast live via The LCKC Channel with a couple of interruptions due to technical difficulties with our Internet feed. We apologise for the disruption and we are taking steps to insure that future problems are less likely to occur.

Video from the morning and afternoon sessions have been posted to the On Demand Library at The LCKC Channel. Today's races are also being rebroadcasted on our video loop for those who may have missed it.

All of today's official results at Powerhouse Timing.

LCKC wishes to extend our thanks to all the teams, coaches, officials, and volunteers that contributed to making this year's Nationals possible. Good luck everyone!

Saturday, August 1, 2009

US Team reports from 2009 Jr. Worlds in Moscow: Day 2 - 1000m Semis

Here's more from Cheryl in Moscow - via Mac Hickox:


DAY 2 — SATURDAY, AUGUST1 — MORNING REPORT

1000M SEMI FINALS

6:50 — Coach Barlow, Ben Hefner, Ian Ross and I leave the hotel for our 15 minute walk to the boat house

7:20 — Ben goes to the water for his pre race paddle

WEATHER — clear blue sky & “dead calm”

MOOD — the atmosphere is changing – some athletes are still competing while others are out – the semi finals have been announced and some are “harder” than others BUT all are very demanding – some countries will be battling for placement into the ‘A’ Finals while others will fight to get into the ‘B’ Final.

In the end it will be about your time – there will be very few surprises – times that have been posted throughout the year, see some improvement BUT 10, 15 and 20 second improvements in the last six weeks will not occur.

8:35 — Ben clears Boat Debarkation & heads up the course to SF #1 with top 3 to ‘A’ Final / 4 - 7 to ‘B’ Final / with next best time from either semi final also going to ‘B’ Final — Rest Out – his goal is the ‘B’ Final – it will be very competitive – he will have a battle to make the ‘B’ Final BUT it is doable

Rest of the team arrives with Coach Anderson. Chris Miller and Zach Robertson have secured the video camera and long range camera and are off to the grandstand – their assistance is appreciated

MK2 — have gone to the water for a pre race paddle

Wk2 — have gone to the water for a pre race paddle

9:00 — SF #1 – Lane # 9 Ben Hefner USA – finishes 9th in a time of 4:36.198 / 1st place is 4:13.913 from Kazakhstan – this athlete raced at the Beijing Olympics in C1

Japan was 7th in 4:26.550 and 8th place was 4:28.528 – Ben is eliminated.

Reaching the dock he was emotionally upset – he did not have his best performance and in this arena, that is all you can ask of yourself – a personal best must be brought when it counts – this morning it counted.

10:00 — MK2 – final prep period is on – Luke and Cedric are now loosening up near the boat – a few final reminders of the progression – it is strictly by position – Top 3 to ‘A’ Final / 4 – 6 to ‘B’ Final.

They race well and execute their plan to perfection – they are exhausted as they paddle to Boat Control – they are elated as they should be they have just done a personal best and finished 6th – they are in the ‘B’ Final with a time of 3:29.630 / Japan was 5thwith a 3:28.811 – in the SF #1 – 4th was Iran in 3:28.070 and 5th Ukraine was 3:29.527. SF # 3 – Great Britain was 5th with a 3:28.031, while Slovakia was 6th in 3:30.742

It is exciting for the whole team to see a crew perform so well. It will be a great B final at 3:36 this afternoon.

10:40 — WK2 – Chelsea Smith and Katy Hill are now headed to the Boat Debarkation – they are quiet but determined – they are reminded of the progression and the need to bring all they have. “Get ‘er done” is the last thing they hear – Chelsea smiles broadly.

Their performance although raced according to their plan places them in 9th in their SF with a time of 4:06.256 – they are out of the 1000m competition – 8th was Iran in a time of 4:04.381 and 7th was from Japan with 4:03.436 and 6th Belarus – 4:00.393. In the SF # 1 – Poland was 1st in 3:52.369 / 1st in SF #2 was Germany in 3:50.367

This morning dramatically showed all countries how competitive the ICF Junior World Championships have become. Our time standards are very relevant for USA to continue to attain – Luke Potts and Cedric Bond will carry the stars and stripes into our only final this afternoon. As Cedric Bond stood tall on opening night as our flag bearer – he and his partner Luke Potts will do us proud this afternoon

Mac Hickox
National Development Director
USA Canoe Kayak

Friday, July 31, 2009

US Team reports from 2009 Jr. Worlds in Moscow: Day 1 - 500m Heats

Here's more from Cheryl in Moscow - via Mac Hickox:

DAY 1 — Friday July 31 — AFTERNOON REPORT

500M HEATS


3:00 — Coach Barlow and C2 of Ben Hefner and Ian Ross arrive and immediately head ovr to Boat Control to be sure boat is still making weight – ALL IS GOOD.

3:30 — MK2 Luke Potts and Cedric Bond arrive and head to the water 15 minutes later

4:00 Coach Anderson arrives with the rest of our team – many have slept BUT all have eaten since the races this morning

NOTE: the food at our hotel has been very good, but all teams feel that the portions have been limited – the delegations appeal for extra quantities – Org Com says this will imp[rove tonight

5:00 — MK2 heads back to the water for their 500m heat

NOTE: the wind has dropped off a bit BUT remains a steady tailwind

WK2 has returned from their pre race paddle

WK4 will also go to the water for a pre race paddle – long before their scheduled 7:30 start

NOTE: most teams in the sport are dong this – a pre race paddle to check out wind, boat and to relax the nerves of all involved – this is followed by the normal on water warm up just prior to the start time.

5:30 — MC2 – 5th of 7 in a 2:04.03 – Lane # 8 – wash from lane #7 from the Czech Republic, who finished second was a difficulty that forced major adjustments to an otherwise solid first 250m – winning time of 1:43.71 – “good performance for a young C2” both have another year in Junior – Coach form Sweden remarked that it was good to see USA competitive in the canoe events.

Both Ian and Ben were very happy with their performance and look forward to Sunday’s semi finals.

6:00 — MK2 – must finish in the top 6 or have one of the 3 fastest times outside the top 24 – first 6 in each of the 4 heats advance plus the next 3 fastest times – ready for this – their time of 1:39.214 was second fastest – 3rd fastest was 1:39.514 and eliminated was 1:39.844. MK2 advances to the semi final

6:30 WK2 — finish 6th with a time of 1:56.52 – this placement will advance the WK2 of Chelsea Smith and Katy Hill to the 500m semi final – the girls K2 is ranked 17th out of 20 – are targeting the B final — sub 1:50 will be needed for the A final

MK4 heads to the water – for heat #2 and lane 9

NOTE: events are seeded based on your nation’s performance in the previous Junior World Championships

Our team of Jared McArthur / Nick Hanoian / Chris Miller and Zach Robertson finish 9th and are eliminated – time of 1:34.062 – winning time of 1:24.413 – our MK4 is ranked 27th of 27 – this is a very disappointing result for all involved – the 4 boys gave everything they had and just admit that the field is exceptionally fast.

NOTE: I wish to thank the crew for all of their efforts over the past 6 weeks – they gave everything they had all of the time – it was a pleasure for every coach who worked with them.

7:30 — WK4 – finishes 5th of 6 in a time of 1:44.264 and is ranked 14th of 19 and a solid shot of being in the B final and ranking in the top 12 in the World

It has been a very good first day – all crews have advanced to the semi finals except the MK4. A team meeting has just concluded and the four men are handling their setback as I would expect of this group. They are now in a very supportive role of their team mates who are advancing and will assist with video and stroke rate recording for the remaining races.

Mac Hickox

National Development Director

USA Canoe Kayak

Team Leader Moscow Junior World Championships Team

US Team reports from 2009 Jr. Worlds in Moscow: Day 1 - 1000m Heats

Cheryl Smith is in Moscow with the team, and she sent this report she received from Mac Hickox - Team Coach.


DAY 1 — Friday July 31 — MORNING REPORT

1000M HEATS

7:00 — Coach Barlow, Ben Hefner and I walk to the course – weather is perfect – clear blue sky – no wind

7:30 — Ben heads to the water for a warm up

8:00 — Ben back from his easy paddle / water secured from the Org Com for our team / Coach Anderson at breakfast with rest of the team

Vaija / Nelo and Plastex booths are open for service – we have picked up our MK4 that needed some small hull repairs discovered during Boat Control on Wednesday

One country is frantically going through Boat Control – unbelievable, one hour prior to the start of the regatta..

Coach Barlow and I take Ben’s boat over to Boat Control to recheck the boat weight – 16.2 kg

8:35 — Ben heads to water – each athlete must clear “Boat Debarkation” – our process has a Coach and Team Leader go through carrying the boat while the athlete carries their paddle – the ICF official checks their boat for the Boat Control sticker / athlete Body Number and Athlete Photo ID

Coach Barlow goes up the course on his bike to support Ben – athletes paddle up a warm up channel then must dock and crossover a grass median to another dock on the race course.– athletes are not allowed to paddle up the race course for their race

8:45 – Two USA Canoe Kayak ICF accredited officials — Connie Hagler and Connie Naughton go to their positions

9:00 Races begin.

9:07 – Heat #2 – Lane 9 – 1000m C1 – Ben Hefner – Result = 7th 4:27:52 – ranked 18th of 25 – his goal is now to qualify for the B final - top 9 to ‘A’ Final; 11 – 18 to ‘B’ Final

Poland recorded the fastest time with a 3:59 – the Polish entry won the Pre Test Regatta September, 2008.

Ben said it was cool in the start area when each country is called to the line – “Lane 9 USA” he was very proud to be part of the Junior World Championships as are all of our athletes.

Earlier in the week we took the team over to where the Org Com has all of the competing nation flags – there are 55 countries competing in this the 13th ICF Junior World Championships – it was pointed out to our athletes that it is because of them that the US flag is on that pole – if we are not here competing, our flag is not present – then we said on a count of 3 the loudest Team USA you have ever heard – Putin could hear it in his parliament office in downtown Moscow..

10:15 — WK4 heads back to the hotel, a short 15 minute walk up the side of the course, after a light am paddle, as there is no 1000m for women, they will compete this afternoon in the 500m heats.

MK2 returns from their pre race paddle while the WK2 warms up and stretches with bands.

11:00 — MK2 heads to the water while WK2 continue their pre race routine

MK2 — finishes 4th 3:26.70 and advances to the semi final — ranked 13th of 33. Luke and Cedric both felt they need to back of a little in the first 500 to be able to attack more in the final 500m

11:30 — WK2 finishes 5th 4:02.25 and advances to the semi final — ranked 19th of 25. Katy and Chelsea also felt that they have to back off a little in the first 500m in order to attack the final 500m

11:50 — MK4 heads to the water – 2 of the athletes are asked to remove wrist watches – these are not prohibited by the rules – the Chief Official indicated this at the Team Leaders meeting the day before – another example of an official being too officious – it was refreshing to hear the Chief Official say that we must educate the Juniors versus punish them through disqualification.

MK4 – finishes their race and feel that was the best they have felt – finishing 8th in a time of 3:14.90 — ranked 27thof 28 – they are eliminated – their time in a strong tailwind today has not improved since Lake Placid.

Mac Hickox
National Development Director
USA Canoe Kayak

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Atlanta-bound team safely home

Hi!

The French airport was very entertaining for our group. Some of the more energetic boys and girls found that with no one in the airport, it was fun to play escalator games and run with the carts to burn up that excess energy from our bus ride. Some of the kids were still pretty tired, so Holly, Blake and Heather decided to take a nap. Marcy had a great idea to enclose an area with the carts and bags and we patiently waited for the airport to "wake up" so we could begin our journey to our next destinations.

Once we were able to get in to our gates at the airport in France, the Atlanta-bound group found our flight to Amsterdam was delayed. It was not the news homesick people wanted to hear, but, the pilot must have seen the desperation in our eyes. He gets many kudos from our group for making a 1 1/2 hour plane ride into a 45 minute plane ride. We landed in Amsterdam ON schedule, but the four of us (Sheaffer, Blake, Anna and myself) literally had to jog to make our connecting flight which was to leave in about 35-40 minutes and was located totally across the airport (from gate 1 to 47). All of those monastery runs must have paid off, because we made it without any problems. Our flight back was uneventful. The fun part was when Blake had taken a nap and Sheaffer tried to convince him that while he slept the plane had problems and was on its way back to Amsterdam. Blake ended up not totally buying it, and we landed with our nine hour flight feeling more like fifteen hours. The fun wasn't over, because once we slid quickly through customs and were retrieving our luggage, mine wasn't there. It took quite a while to get through the line to take care of all of the paperwork, but many thanks goes to Sheaffer for staying with me (thanks to Anna and Blake who also had to endure the long wait) and making sure all of the paperwork was done properly and with the correct numbers so my bags could be found. We finally went through security for the final time and were able to get on the shuttle and out to our loved ones who were patiently waiting for our return. On a happy note, my luggage was found and returned safe and intact. Thank you KLM for finding it!!

Susan Shilling

Monday, June 29, 2009

Back in the USA!

Hi everyone!

Approximately 2pm est the team flew into JFK International in New York. They had to take a shuttle bus to LaGuardia, and had a 7 hour stayover until the flight later this evening to get to the Lake Placid area.

Heather called, and said "...the trip on the plane was long but nice.". She also reports that the rumors about the acquisition of cheeseburgers were untrue. She said she planned on "... eating one of everything on the $1 menu!"


I hope to get a call from Marcy when they get settled, and perhaps they can fill in the details of the last couple of days, as well as continue the blog from Lake Placid.

If anyone hears any word about our Atlanta-bound travelers, please let me know at chucklana@mac.com and I'll post it here!

10:20pm update:

Kelley Foote (Blake's mom) reports the Atlanta-bound part of the Romania team have returned safely! Also, Ms. Susan may have lost her luggage (yikes!) and yes, Blake is VERY happy to be back home, and he did indeed eat a cheeseburger in Germany.

It's great to have y'all back home.

10:30pm update - The Lake Placid group has arrived in Albany, and is waiting for Claudiu at the airport to take them the rest of the way to the Training Center. The plane they took was apparently, well, one of the SMALL ones and she reports it felt like the ground crew had to come over & push it away from the gate when they left New York.

She also mentioned some of the team took the opportunity to snooze a bit more.