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Street Leads Four into Top 20
LAKE LOUISE, Alberta (Nov. 29) -- Former two-time World Cup downhill
champion Picabo Street (Park City, UT), whose first World Cup came
at Lake Louise seven years ago, nailed the bottom Thursday and hung-up
her best World Cup result since 1998, finishing sixth in the opening
DH of the season. She led three other teammates into the top 20
while Isolde Kostner of Italy won her third race at the Canadian
Rockies ski area.
Outdoor Life Network will broadcast coverage of the Winterstart
World Cup downhill(s) Dec. 3 at 9 p.m. EST.
"Good day...good -- not great -- but a good, solid start by
everybody," said downhill Head Coach (and birthday boy) Jim
Tracy. "They gave me a nice present. I'm pleased with all of
them -- a big step back for Peek and Jonna and Katie, really big
steps, and good steps for Clarky and 'Liner' [Lalive] and the young
ones, who're paying their dues. We've got things to clean up, but
right now they're all moving forward."
"I made a few mistakes, definitely, but bottom line was I
had a good time running that down hill," Street, who started
eighth, beamed after finishing in 1:37.61. She credited "a
quick, powerful report" from Caroline Lalive (Steamboat Springs,
CO), who skied No. 1, for helping set the stage for her and Jonna
Mendes (Heavenly, CA), who started right behind in No. 9.
Lalive course report sets stage for success
Kostner, in collecting her third win -- and seventh top-3 -- at
Lake Louise, finished with a time of 1:36.75. Overall, it's her
10th victory, all in downhill; she won here last season wearing
bib No. 22, the same number she wore Thursday. Austrian Michaela
Dorfmeister, the defending downhill world champion who won the season-opening
giant slalom at Soelden, Austria, a month ago, was runnerup in 1:37.08
and Corinne Rey Bellet of Switzerland was third in 1:37.26.
Close behind Street were Kirsten Clark (Raymond, ME) in 11th, Mendes
-- rebounding from a broken bone in her right ankle -- in 13th and
Lalive in 19th. Katie Monahan (Aspen, CO), returning after two years
on the sidelines with knee injuries, was 33rd, just .05 away from
the top 30.
Street gave Lalive a hug in the finish and thanked her for the
course report. "She said, 'The light is great. You'll be able
to see more but don't let that change your plan. The course is faster.
It's going to come at you a little bit more, so be ready for that,
and just grab your tuck whenever you can. It's race day, so let's
race this thing.' It was nice, precise, to the point, exactly what
Jonna and I needed to hear. We both looked at each other afterwards
and kind of gave each other a nod and a big high-five in the start...
"It's been really fun having my team, and that's something
I'm really relying on a lot right now, the support of the team and
the camaraderie we have and the support we give one another. We
genuinely hope everybody does well and I hope the coaches have a
heckuva time trying to pick an Olympic Team in February," a
buoyant Street said.
She had a couple of mistakes at the top, she told reporters in
the finish, "I got off line a couple of times but pulled it
back in and that's what downhill's all about. Thank God for the
flat bottom because I can still glide...whhhewwwww...
Street: "I took advantage..."
"I nailed the bottom and I knew I had to, so I really skied
a aggressive and assertive. I was a little bit angry when I got
into the bottom. I have a sore spot on my elbow right now because
I got real close to a couple of gates and hit 'em. Downhill's a
minute and 40 seconds long, and I took advantage of the whole dang
thing. I messed up the top and hit the bottom, and who knows? Maybe
tomorrow I'll do the opposite," the 1998 Olympic super-G and
1996 world downhill champion said.
Clark, who earned her first World Cup win a year ago in Lenzerheide
with Street seventh, overcame two mistakes high on the course, she
said, costing her speed as she headed into the flats at mid-race.
So, she said, she was "psyched" for her result.
"You've got to be able to ski those technical sections and
especially me I've got to be able to nail those sections to be able
to carry my speed across the flats," she said, noting the 11th
in downhill and her ninth in the giant slalom at the Chevy Truck
Women's World Challenge in Copper Mountain, Colo., a week ago give
her two solid results to start the season.
Mendes echoed her teammates about being glad to finally have a
race. She didn't get to spend much time on snow during the preseason
but Lake Louise -- where she got her first World Cup points (en
route to the 1998 Olympics), her first top-20 ('99) and her first
top-10 (a year ago) provides a comfort factor as she eases back
into racing.
"After you've been injured, there's a coming-back period that
you just hafta kinda see how it's going to go. I needed this first
race to say, 'Okay, I can get a top-15, no problem. Now, here's
what I'm going to do, this is what I'm capable of. I know it. I
needed to get this race under my belt," she said, "and
now that I've got it, I don't see why I can't get a top-10 again
this year."
Monahan glad to be back...and healthy
Lalive said the good weather, which followed two training days
in fog and overcast conditions, was fortunate, so she was able to
attack as much as possible from the No. 1 start. "I'm happy.
I made it down. I skied well and I'm happy," she said. "I
made a little mistake on the top, which I wasn't too pleased with,
but that's okay..."
It was a relieved Monahan -- a 1998 Olympian who injured her right
knee in the first race of the '00 season -- in the finish, conceding
she was glad to be racing and glad to finish. After two seasons
out of action, she noted, "This is a good start and it's only
going to get better," she said. "When I get nervous, I
just think of how lucky I am to even be here and be doing it...and
get things in perspective."
Women's Head Coach Marjan Cernigoj agreed with Tracy. "There
were a lot of positives today. Peek, Jonna, Katie -- all really
good...and they all know they can do better," he said. "we'll
attack again [Friday]. There are such small margins and you have
to pay attention all the way. This was good for the start of the
season."
The women race downhill again Friday
and super-G Saturday. They will stick around next week for Nor
Am Cup races at Lake Louise.
Two downhills and super Gs are scheduled before they head to
Europe.
CAFE DE COLOMBIA WORLD CUP
Winterstart World Cup
Lake Louise, ALB - Nov. 29
Women's Downhill
1. Isolde Kostner, Italy, 1:36.75
2. Michaela Dorfmeister, Austria, 1:37.08
3. Corinne Rey Bellet, Switzerland, 1:37.26
4. Catherine Borghi, Switzerland, 1:37.48
5. Ingeborg Helen Marken, Norway, 1:37.48
--
6. Picabo Street, Park City, Utah, 1:37.61
11. Kirsten Clark, Raymond, Maine, 1:38.09
13. Jonna Mendes, Heavenly, Calif., 1:38.14
19. Caroline Lalive, Steamboat Springs, Colo., 1:38.29
33. Katie Monahan, Aspen, Colo., 1:39.18
44. Julia Mancuso, Squaw Valley, Calif., 1:39.95
45. Tatum Skoglund, Bellevue, Wash., 1:39.96
-
Did not finish: Lindsey C. Kildow, Vail, Colo. "
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