Thursday, July 3, 2008

Middle Final

Well today was a very exciting day all round with some good and not so good results, but a lot was learned and everyone is keenly awaiting the long. So long as it isn't as hot as today was. The day started with Simon and Scott setting off into the bush forst. Both confident they would nail their 2.3km course in the C final, with Jack, Tom and I staring soon after. Unfortunately it wasn't to be for Jack and Scott however Simon managed to "flop it out" and came in with a very impressive 5th place. in the B final Tom also made a few mistakes and ended up around the middle of the field. For the girls, those of us in the B final managed to make it through our course. Georgia, Angela and Tessa all made a few too many mistakes and were disappointed with their results. However I think with such a strong field of girls this year and in unknown terrain they are all doing incredibly well, especially Angela and Georgia for their first JWOCs. I managed to have a relatively clean run after I restarted myself at #4 and managed to come in 2nd place. For Kate and Lizzie in the A final it was not to be their day, despite our premonitions this morning. Both got caught up on the same control and managed to get very impressive double digit splits. However it was Lizzie's superior sprint finish that pushed her in front of Kate as they were tied at the last control.
Unfortunately we had a rather serious casualty today, Jack managed to roll over his ankle in the last downhill of the finish sprint and had a rather large lump 50m later at the finish. I'm really hoping it wasn't me yelling at him from behind on the way to the last control to "go faster" that was the cause of his injury. It was quite a good sight when Angela, Jack and I all ran down the finish chute together. He was taken to hospital with what they suspect might be a broken ankle however he is yet to reappear so we all have our fingers crossed it isn't that serious. Luckily he is in the very capable hands of Norm and Todd so we are sure we will see him sometime soon, preferably sooner rather than later.
Everyone struggled with the heat today as we were told after our run that it was around 30degrees both during and after our runs. It made it rather hard to cool down afterwards but when we were actually racing it didn't seem to affect anyone too seriously. It also wasn't too bad in that all the good looking Scandi's seemed to undress as much as possible in the heat so both the boys and girls enjoyed that. Hopefully it will get a bit cooler for the long on Saturday as we are all running around the middle of the day which should be rather interesting.
Tomorrow is our rest day and I think the main plan is for just that, rest. The boys are planning to head into town and I think there was some mention of finding a beach to swim at but other than that we are all looking forward to catching up on a bit of sleep. As the computer queue gets even larger there is some pressure for me to get off but if you want to look at photos I think there is a link to Norm's picassa album and most of the racing photos are there or there might be some on the official website. The photographers seem to hide up trees or behind rocks and as we aren't really used to that all us Kiwis probably look rather surprised in those ones.
Greta

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Middle Qualification

Hey everyone, middle qualification today and sweden certainly turned on the sunshine for it! somewhat uncomfortable in the start area with limited shade, and the most communal toilets ive ever encountered (try facing someone a meter and half away!). Luckily it wasnt so hot in the forest though. Kate got things kicked off for the team, in the third start group, and she had to wait the longest of the girls to confirm her placing aswell, finishing in 19th place to qualify for the A final for the 2nd year in a row! Tom also had an early start, and a long wait at the finish, but in this case unfortunately he was painfully slowly nudged out of contention for the A final throughout the morning, finishing 27th. Also in the earlier starts Georgia finished 25th, Angela 37th and Scott 47th.
In the later start block, Greta ended up 30th in her heat, Tessa made a few errors to finish up 36th, one place ahead of Angela, whilst Jack with the last start of the day finished 46th. Simon was caught up by the swedish guy behind him. Unfortunately, although he could keep up with the swede, it would seem that swedes can float across marshes, whilst new zealanders, well they dont. Simon ended up 41st, one place out of the B final, although we're hoping he will be moved up to B final after laying a complaint against the Austrians for using a cellphone on the way to the start.
Personally, as last starter of the NZ girls i had a reasonable run, spiking the first control, which always helps. I managed to turn up at 5 before 4, and found the other two splits at 6 before mine, but in a qualification race everyone is under the same pressure so i knew enough other people would be making similar mistakes. I finished eighth overall, which should give a reasonable position to start from tomorrow.
So overall the team has two girls in the A final, and four in the B. At the moment its just Tom in the B final for the boys with the rest in the C, but we're hopeful for Simon.
Thanks to everyone who's watching (or trying to) from home. Tomorrow should be another sweet day of competition. The weather looks good again, so hopefully Todd will have his SPF 6 sunblock with him so we dont get burnt!! Our main aim is to have NZ's first mp-free JWOC in a long time!
Lizzie (and Tessa)

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

The sprint

First event down. Mixed day for a team. Sounds like the results over the internet weren't so good. It was a bit like that at the event centre, more Danes than Swedes!
Course was in an area of the Ruddalen Påvelund map that had been heavily remapped. It had heaps of changes between buildings and little portions of forest. Looking at routes and times in many cases it was much faster to go off line to avoid the forest and stay on grass and roads.

Lizzie had the best result for the team with a 15th place beating some pretty good runners and one of the best of the non Scandinavian runners. Greta did well with a 36th. Next were kate 70th and georgia 74th both of whom made a few mistakes. Tessa finished 97th with a few dodge route choices and angela was 106th.

Simon was the best of the boys with a consistent run to 37th. A few small mistakes but very few made it through the course error free. Scott and Tom were both very disappointed with their 100th and 101st placings. Scott felt like he never got going and smashed his compass about 1/3 of the way around which upset his rhythm. Tom had a shocker in the middle part of the course through 6,7,8 and then lost about 45 seconds on the second to last control. Jack was 129th and suffered with a few route choices and running speed.

It was interesting to see how spread the sprint was, many runners clustered around a time with gaps between groups of 10 to 15 runners. The unforgiving nature of the terrain punished small mistakes and bad route choices.

The opening ceremony was in the evening afterwards. Held in liseberg theme park in Göteborg it was one of the better organised aspects so far. Spent an hour on the rollercoasters before the ceremony. Lizzie carried the flag for us, best result for the day and 4th JWOC in a row.

Model day today and were just relaxing for the afternoon after having already been out this morning. Everyone is alright physically and looking forward to middle qual tomorrow. Thanks to everyone who was watching on the internet, hopefully it works a bit better tonight.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

The eve...

Last day before JWOC officially starts. Pretty quite day for the whole team watching movies on the 'borrowed' couch and easy runs to get the legs turning over. The army base were staying at has its own map so most of us used that for our session today.
Most of the brochures from the other teams are up, so the boys replied with a poster that really captures the laid back and envronmentally conscious nature of New Zealanders.
Tomorrows when the action starts, live on the jwoc website....

Tom and Jack








Taking a break from training on Partille, the long map. Sweet lake behind where the photo was taken

Saturday, June 28, 2008

A week in Göteborg

We've been pretty busy all week training on new maps, so we're a bit out of date with the blog, but now its time to catch up...

We've done some awesome training at some cool maps, including Björnbergen, and the trial race maps that Georgia ran against the Swedes on a few weeks ago. We're all getting more used to the mapping of bare rock as clearings, and mossed over rock as just normal forest and knolls. We did a bit of relay training with the Aussies, and discovered that they're almost all sick, including Ollie, who had fainted at breakfast that morning - luckily we don't seem to have caught anything. Sprint training at Eriksberg was pretty cool, and the course had about the same ratio of forest to urban that is going to be in the race on Monday (20:80). Ross rejoined the team for a little while, and is helping out a bit with our training. Angela's back is getting better - she's jogging quite a bit now, and Todd's physio seems to be working, but Tessa's leg has gone downhill a little bit, so she's been taking it easy the last few days, and hopefully it will improve. Greta's calves are tight and a few others have got niggles, but nothing too serious we hope.

On Friday we visited Rannebergen, and did some control picking at 1:15000, sorting out some more marshes and working on our compass bearings. Greta and Georgia are getting pretty good at Nana-napping in the afternoons, but tea at 4pm puts a bit of time pressure on things. After tea we went to the Göteborg O shop (open Fridays, 5-6pm, in the owner's basement), where a few people got shoes that are more appropriate to Swedish terrain. We also discovered that we've been driving through part of the sprint map everyday - its that close to where we are staying.

Today we had a rest day, which involved the girls tramming it into town to find a party uniform, and the boys chilling out at the base watching movies. Greta and Kate discovered that their sense of direction was not what they thought when they sat at the wrong tram stop for an hour, but we eventually got them back (lets hope the fashion for tie-dyed stuff hits New Zealand soon though, after their shopping spree). Lizzie is also the proud new owner of a moose shaped hat.

Most of the army people have left now, which means they're not attempting to assimilate us to their rules, but its also a lot noiser, and the computers are always busy! We've got the Irish and the Germans on our floor, the Hong Kong and Hungary teams above us, and Spain and a few others below us, all sharing the one wahing machine in the basement and the three showers on two of the floors. The boys were disgusted to find the other day that a sign on our floor has gone up telling us that our showers are 'women only' - a rule which has already been flouted several times, and doesn't make much sense, as the room doesn't have a door anyway.

Norm has done an awesome job sorting out stuff for us, sourcing the weirdest things, including a blind for one of the windows, some washing powder, and a kettle...and the boys have just commandeered a couch from somewhere for movie-watching purposes. We're hoping Sweden will discover some new music soon, as 'the Voice of Hiphop and R and Bay' doesn't seem to have much of a play list, but the weather's warming up, so its all looking good for the week ahead.

We should be updating this every day now, so keep checking on us...

Tessa

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Tuesday training in Göteborg

Waiting.... in Oslo Bus station




We managed to make it to breakfast this morning, following the 6-7am military breakfast timetable. At least the food pretty good and not too weird.
Picked up some more rental cars this morning after deciding that public transport to the maps like the organisers suggested wouldnt really work for us.
Today we headed out to Partille-Gunnilse, the map for the long distance. We trained on the North Eastern bit which isnt being used and did some long leg training. We all found it much easier than norway, the contour features are much easier to read and the visibility is slightly better so you can get a better perspective of whats going on around you. Still a really physical map with lots of blueberries and heather all over the place. The marshes we have been warned about are reso dry at the moment, but a bit inconsistent with some being pretty deep. Saw a couple of snakes, we think, Kate almost stood on one, we think.
The irish moved in downstairs from us today and the candians, americans and russians are all in another building, not quite like jwoc yet, should get more other countries towards the end of the week.
Everyones in pretty good condition, Angelas back is getting better and Georgia tweaked her ankle but will be sweet to train and race.

Monday, June 23, 2008

O-festivalen Relay

Last day in Siggerud. Had the relay from the same events centre. Tom and Greta who were both first leg found it the most physical start to a relay they had done. lots of pushing and shoving and really fast. Tessa found the same when she was handed off too just as the m/w12 grades started and having to fight though swarms of little kids.
Greta and Tom both had good runs to bring both teams back near the front. Kate and Scott on second leg found the same and both teams were consistent around 20th to 25th. Unfortunately scott mispunched, not sure where and didnt really chase it with the organisers. The aussies mped on the same leg too so not too sure.
Georgia and Lizzie both had longer legs to finish off the girls relay and moved the team up to 16th which they were stoked as with.
Jack had by his own admission, his worst run so far, and lost some time. At least he looked good in his singlet and tights. Simon had the longest leg for the guys and made it around with only a few small errors.
Ross ran for his danish club Pan Århus and they finished in 11th after running in 3rd for a long time. The commentators kept calling it the joint Danish New Zealand team.
All of us felt like we had learned heaps from the first few days and that the mapping style and terrain is starting to help, hopefully we can translate this to göteborg.

Norway turned the rain on for us as we rushed to the bus station to leave. Norwegian public transport it turns out isnt flawless either and we had to wait an hour and a half for a bus. Lots of weird looks for our huge pile of luggage in the middle of oslo central bus station. As well as our luggage we also have another team member, Todd Oates is going to be our team physio.

Now that were in Göteborg were getting a taste of the Swedish military staying in an Army barracks. Had to present our passports to get in last night for our escort to our quarters. Also turns out were sharing our floor with a few soldiers until the end of the week. Lots of food though and plenty of space. Going to get our first taste of Göteborg terrain this afternoon.

We will add some photos here soon, otherwise check out Norm's Picassa Web for all the photo updates.
http://picasaweb.google.com/Norm.Jager