Tag Archive | "curling"

Attention Curling Fans!!!


For all you Curling fans out there, you will have the unique opportunity to attend a special appearrance by curling superstars, Team Bernard & Team Martin at The Olympic Superstore, The Bay Downtown Vancouver!

On Thursday, January 28th, the first 200 curling fans to purchase a Signature Series item at The Olympic Superstore at The Bay Downtown Vancouver have a chance to meet curling superstars Team Bernard and Team Martin.

One of the following items must be purchased at The Olympic Superstore at The Bay Downtown in order to meet Bernard and Martin and have it autographed in person:

* Signature Series Men’s Team Signed 8×10 Matted Photo
* Signature Series Woman’s Team Signed 8×10 Matted Photo
* Signature Series Men’s/Women’s Combined Team Signed 16×20 Photo
* Signature Series 2010 Curling Poster

Prices start at $49. Signature Series items are currently on sale at The Bay Downtown Vancouver.

Thursday, January 28th
The Olympic Superstore, The Bay Downtown Vancouver
Team Bernard 4:30 – 6:30 pm
Team Martin 6:30 – 8:30 pm

(Please remember that the Olympic Superstore accepts only Visa and cash.)

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Posted in Fans, Vancouver 2010Comments (4)

Wrapping Up Torino 2006, Part 1 ~ Olympic Outsider podcast #5


Host Dave Thorvald with Dan Funboy and buddy Lance wrap up the performances of Torino 2006 with emphasis on Team Canada’s athletes. Topics include notable Men’s and Women’s performances in Luge, Skeleton, Bobsled, Curling, Short-Track Speedskating, Long-track Speedskating, Alpine Skiing, Nordic Skiing, Biathlon, Freestyle Skiing, and Snowboarding.  Plus banter on doping measures, police raids, sportsmanship, new sports, and herbal remedies.

Download: Wrapping Up Torino 2006, Part 1
Olympic Outsider # 5 (.mp3, 38:18, )

Photo by Scales on Flickr, art’ed up by authour

Alt version: Olympic Outsider Episode 5 – Wrapping Up XX Part 1 (.m4a) enhanced with ‘chapters’ for your listening convenience.

Posted in Podcast, Torino 2006Comments (0)

Day Eight ‘not so Great’ but Day Nine ‘looking Fine’ ~ Olympic Notebook for Feb. 19th


Well after the euphoria of Day Seven, Day Eight was a bit of a reality check after a variety of disappointments and underwhelming performances.  Day Nine though is shaping up nicely despite the being down 2-0 to Finland after 1 period.

A few notes:

Men’s Hockey loses to Suisse

For a loss, oddly this one didn’t hurt all that much. Switzerland played their guts out and scored another huge victory.  I won’t go on cause i blogged live during the game, but the short version is, … Way to go Switzerland for stepping it up and (with your 2 huge wins) welcome to the big leagues.

Men losing to Finland

Underway now in the second which must be better than the first in which Canada stood around and watched Finland put on a clinic in team play, skill and hustle.  I am bit peeved right now so will hold my tongue in anticipation of a spirited comeback.

Speed Skating

Jeremy is broken… a lackluster performance in the 1000m makes me wonder why the announcers are even asking Wotherspoon if he plans to come back for 2010 cause the way he performed at this games (and last for this matter) is just weak and not worthy of the slot if he is not commited to massive clutch improvement.  Sorry man, i am a fan and cheer for you every race but I am done.  Build the oval in Richmond and let’s get some youngsters training to take the torch.

Cindy Klaussen however is better than expected with 3 medals already, the most recent, a Silver in 1000m with her fave 1500m still to go. (The adorable) Timmer from Netherlands won Gold and (the scandalously sultry) Anni Freisinger scoring Bronze.

Bobsleigh

Fun to watch, the sleds are cool (note: all sleds must weigh the same with riders on board which is what you want heavy guys who can run fast so they can push the heavy sled, rather than skinny fast guys who would have to push a heavier sled, dig?).

Veteran Pierre Leuders and partner Lascelles Brown (welcome to Canada bro) did not disappoint with improvements each run including the final runs in the evening with snow falling – great scenes and great Silver medal finish.  Canada 2 sled finished 10th if i recall correctly, boding well for 2010.

Ski Jumping

I only saw clips but i love this sport, so graceful to watch (as i posted to Boris’s blog, re: fave from SLC, “Ski jumping, which should be called Ski Falling, blew my mind – the massive size of the hill, the wee-ness of the skiiers and the gracefullness of the whole routine.  One second the jumper is a speck atop a masive tower, and a blink later, the skier is sliding to a stop next to you in a puffy suit, after a controlled fall that must feel like a flying for a hour when you are doing it.”)

Again with a ski jump somewhere besides Calgary, this is a sport which Canada could improve in in future games.  Young Read (nephew of Ken) finished like 30th so not to bad.

Curling

The people’s champion in Italy – curling is scoring huge rating in the bocce-enthusastic country.  The Italian men beat Canadian men to put pressure on their hopes of making the playoffs.  Ditto for the Women who also dropped to 4-3 to Japan but then came back today with a win against Italy as did the men who beat up on New Zealand.  So both rinks are looking solid to advance to the playoff.

Alpine Skiing

Great performances by skiing legends Aamodt and Meier kept Eric Guay off the podium after he turned in a great run after being questionable due to a leg injury.  He took an injection and skiied his guts out and sat fourth til the Herminator did his usual dominant run (if he doesn’t crash, he medals it seems) – way to go 4th place for Guay though.

Other CDN Super G’ers were a bit hosed since they had to re-ski due to weather issues.  After the first run, our lads were sitting well but after the race was called, their runs on the restart didn’t merit medals.  The guy who was really pissed was the Frenchman who was sitting first after the cancelled run and botched his 2nd misses a gate and squirrelling down the hill in obvious anger and crashed through the exit area hollering epiphets to the worldwide audience.

Other news

Austria cross country ski team got shook down by the Italain fuzz in a early morning raid which seems selective and fishy to me.  That didn’t stop, CBC heel Terry Liebel from asking Beckie Scott and Sarah Renner about it over and over again (shut the hell up woman!).

In other hockey games, … Slovakia continues to roll winning over Kazakhs, Russia is on track and beating up on Lativa (whoa re out of gas) and the USA is still scrambling after losing to Sweden who are trying to find consistency.

All for now, heading to Whister for tubing after game.  Go Canada!

Posted in Torino 2006Comments (0)

Snowboard, Facilites, Biathlon, Luge, Curling ~ Olympic Notebook for Feb. 13


I watched bits and pieces of coverage today and catching up tonight, so here are few notes along the way, …

Snowboard Half-pipe

Watching replays of Shaun White’s snowboard run and also watching video of him on skateboard half pipe, I am very impressed by the athleticism, imagination and enthusiasm displayed by the young, gangly redhead.  Kudos also to two-time medalist Danny Kass who scored his second Silver.

Markku Koski of Finland took Bronze while another Finn, world champion Antti Autti dropped to 5th.  Finland may be the best per capita Winter Olympians, – maybe.

The best Canada could muster was 11th with 2 other not making it past qualification. Now, I can’t do *anything* like those tricks, but 11th?  Seems Canada would do better considering the succes in related freestyle skiing disciplines and the prolifieration of snowboard culutre in Canada. Comments?

The American women carried the Snowboarding mojo into today with Gold (the funloving Hannah Teter) and Silver (the saucy Gretchen Bleiler) and SLC Gold Medalist finishing in 4th after a wee fumble on her 1st run and a crash on her 2nd run after enormous airs.  The rolling Norweigians scored another medal with Kjersti Buaas winning Bronze.  note: Maybe it is the Norweigians who are the best Winter Olympians?  Someone needs to do some math here.

This sport has evolved so fast since debuting in 1998, the riding is so good now and the bar is raising so fast.  17ft walls of pipe, 18th ft airs, linking 720, 900s, reversing 540s – form, style amplitude in spades – really unbelievable how much the sport improves each Olympics. Canadian women finished scattered in the 20s up to 15th.  This event was one my faves to watch in SLC 2002.

Like White, 19yr old Teter got a real-time victory lap to whatever they want as they ride down to claim the Gold Medal.  Whoa, can you write a funner ride?  What a thrill for those youngsters with so much in front of them (Tony Hawk is still an innovative skateboarder in late-30 so White could be doing both for decades still). Unbelievably, Hanah Teter rode so loose and smooth and high that she almost accidentally scored a higher score than her first run.

Long Track

Jeremy Jeremy Jeremy, … and even worse, 9th in the 500m (by the way, ESPN has Wotherspoon listed as USA) not even close and then an smiley American wins – couldn’t it have been veteran Shimizu or anyone?  Argh.  I dig the event and think doing the 2 races (the event is determined by the combined time of 2 runs) in one day is sensible though the racers may not like it.  Who’s the Canadian hope for 2010?

Biathalon

What a wild sport! and very popular in Europe.  Looks totally fun, like aerobic-paintball – the Russians dominated the women’s event though there are a lot of medals in this sport with different lengths and variations.  A Canadian Woman finished back in the pack with 3 penalties (i believe this means a missed shot requiring an extra km or so of skiing) – I’ll learn more about this sport.

Facilities

After much pre-games negative blather about not being finished in time, the facilities look great on TV – in particular the downhill ski hill was beauty and long track speed skating oval and cross country ski areas too.  I think being on the ground before hand, it is easy to see all the stuff not finished.  But, only the parts which appear on TV is *really* important (heh) and the rest of the “uncompleted” parts are draped over with bunting and decoration.

News Coverage

A note for my Olympic Flashback file: Once you are there, and the events are on, you are running on adrenaline and excitement and are just focused on the amazing sports in front of you and hardly aware of the rest of the commotion – you are in the center of the universe and the rest of the world is just taggin along.

That being said, I found the “big news stories” for Canada in 02 didn’t hit the street buzz as fast as it did the TV coverage.  Examples are both the Sale/Pelltier issue and the Wayne Smackdown – we were so caught up in events  that we didn’t know what was up for a day or two when the buzz got so huge and strangers stopped us to tell us how upset they were about the incident and we were like, “what?”, and then the Wayne incident was the buzz at the next game.

But, we were only catching a little bit of grating Bob Costas in the US-centric delayed coverage in the evening wrap up.  This time maybe different with more communiation abilities but who knows, public may travel faster on the ground.

The newsmedia doesn’t seem to like to create controversy, but sure likes covering any hullabaloo going on.  As such, the sensational story of the day is (duh) covered to death – like is the case the alleged Gretzky gambling conspirisy which is being blown WAY out of proportion.

I say, shut up already, let the courts do their business and the athletes tend to theirs and move on already!  Seeing Wayne being grilled by the same stupid questions over and over after he politely explains the situation and asks for questions about Team Canada Men’s Hockey and nobody can muster a hockey question, instead another inane gambling-related question.  Ashamed, these reporters should be ashamed and obliged to turn in their hack credentials and find a new profession with nothing to do with hockey, or interpersonal relations for that matter.

Luge

Women Luge too, several luges crashed which looks really unpleasant terrifying really. The sport would be fun for amateurs with some kind of easy-luge for beginners.

The track is tough with harsh corners and hard ice.  Really the sliding sports are better on TV then in person as the luges move so incredibly fast that you can hardly process what is going on and before you can blink they are rumbling down and around the next turn.

Some Canadians representing – Red Deer’s Regan Lauscher 25, Meaghan Simister 19, from Regina, the cool and tough Alex Gough 18, from Calgary. But the event is tense and ugly after a few wrecks and trouble in general.  Go Alex Gough!

Curling

The Curling tourney got underway today and I saw breifly…

- the Shannon Clyde Rink losing a defensive battle against Norberg of Sweden in a good game despite missing a team member to illness.

- the Newfoundlanders representing Canada curled well and beat Germany after falling behind 2-0 early.

These may be replayed in full later …

All for now,

Posted in Torino 2006Comments (0)


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