The Peterborough Examiner

Moguls king Kingsbury prepares to compete again after injury

Skier says he will be ready for his first World Cup of this season next week

- DONNA SPENCER

CALGARY — A place that gives Mikaël Kingsbury confidence is doing it again, but for different reasons.

The reigning men’s Olympic and world moguls champion from Deux-Montagnes, Que., is fine-turning his comeback from back fractures in Calgary ahead of his planned return to competitio­n next week.

Kingsbury has won World Cup gold in Calgary nine times over the past decade, and placed second the lone time he didn’t.

Those victories were fuel for nine consecutiv­e overall World Cup titles in men’s moguls.

The 28-year-old is using the Canada Olympic Park course to be ready for his first World Cup of this season Feb. 4 in Deer Valley, Utah.

“It’s giving me what I need,” Kingsbury told The Canadian Press. “What I need is time to boost my confidence, feel good and get all the timing back and the course right now is doing that for me.”

Kingsbury fractured his T4 and T5 vertebrae Nov. 29 while training for the season-opening World Cup in Ruka, Finland.

A man who hadn’t missed a World Cup start in his decadelong career was sidelined for the season’s first three. Doctors gave Kingsbury the green light Jan. 8 to start skiing again.

“The biggest test for me is the next few days when I’m going to push a little bit more, but I’m confident,” he said. “I feel like I’ll be ready to compete.

“I won’t have as much training as most people, but I have a lot of experience and I think I know how to deal with this situation with less training.”

Kingsbury’s initial target for

“Calgary has always been a course that I like and where I perform.” MIKAËL KINGSBURY MOGULS CHAMPION

his return to competitio­n was a pair of Calgary World Cups on Thursday and Friday, but those events were reschedule­d and eventually cancelled during his recovery.

“I think I would have been ready for this weekend,” Kingsbury said. “Calgary has always been a course that I like and where I perform.”

Kingsbury owns 63 career World Cup victories in 109 starts. He’s stood on the podium 91 times.

Kingsbury doesn’t know how much competitio­n he’ll get this season after Deer Valley.

The global COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc on internatio­nal sport.

Freestyle Canada and Canada Snowboard pursued the world freestyle and snowboard championsh­ips for Calgary as a replacemen­t site when China cancelled, but plans for a Feb. 24-March 14 event at Canada Olympic Park fell apart.

So Kingsbury doesn’t yet know if he’ll compete in a world championsh­ip this year.

The only other moguls World Cup left on the calendar for him is March 13-14 in Almaty, Kazakhstan. Kingsbury isn’t confident that event will go ahead.

“It’s crazy a little bit,” Kingsbury said. “We get curveballs every day. I call them knucklebal­ls now because they move even more than curveballs.

“Right now, I control what I can and I’m going to do my best to perform in Deer Valley.”

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Mikaël Kingsbury of Deux-Montagnes Que., is using the Canada Olympic Park course to be ready for his first World Cup of this season Feb. 4 in Deer Valley, Utah.
JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Mikaël Kingsbury of Deux-Montagnes Que., is using the Canada Olympic Park course to be ready for his first World Cup of this season Feb. 4 in Deer Valley, Utah.

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