Vancouver Sun

‘Something big’ is on the horizon, Anderson says

Pyeongchan­g will be sixth Olympic ride for Quebec’s 42-year-old snowboarde­r

- DAN BARNES dbarnes@postmedia.com

EDMONTON Jasey-Jay Anderson was more or less snowboardi­ng his age this season.

The 42-year-old would occasional­ly sneak out of his retail shop — Jasey-Jay Snowboards in MontTrembl­ant, Que. — to get in some practice, show up on the World Cup tour in places like Carezza, Cortina and Lackenhof and finish 30th, 33rd or 43rd in parallel giant slalom races.

But he could feel something invigorati­ng start to build a week ago in Rogla, Slovenia, where he had his best finish of the season, a respectabl­e 13th. And then on Friday in Bansko, Bulgaria, the Canadian known on the circuit as “Old Man” won a gold medal in parallel giant slalom, his forte.

He’s the oldest winner in the history of snowboardi­ng’s World Cup tour. It was his 28th victory in his 257th race, his 62nd career podium, and he did it in fine style, beating 31-year-old Nevin Galmarini, the Swiss rider who leads the World Cup standings in PGS and is expected to medal in Korea.

“I’m holding on. I’m holding on,” Anderson told a reporter at the bottom of the hill. “I feel fine, you know. I train a little bit, I work a lot, though. I’m happy when I can get out of the shop and go ride some nice turns here.”

He rides his own equipment, of course. He came off a gold medal in parallel giant slalom at Vancouver 2010 and retired to pursue his small-business dream. He came back for Sochi 2014 because parallel slalom and giant slalom were on the program, and he’s back for a historic sixth Olympics, the first Canadian winter athlete to do so.

“There is still work to do before the Games,” he said in a statement sent to Postmedia. “Mostly the recipe is set, with only minor adjustment­s in the next weeks. The Games are often seen as one day, but for my sixth Games, I promise it’s about the four-year journey prior to this.

“The journey is for the individual. Although hurdles are set to standardiz­e the journey, they still remain different lessons and experience­s for everyone. Mine is one of a multitude of lessons that will be digested for the rest of my life.”

In South Korea, he also will become the only rider to have competed in every Olympic Games since snowboardi­ng was added to the program at Nagano 1998.

Before Friday’s breakout performanc­e, expectatio­ns for Anderson in Pyeongchan­g were pretty low. He hadn’t won a World Cup race since March 2010, a month after he took Olympic gold in Vancouver. And, as mentioned, he’s 42.

But he thinks he caught lightning in a bottle with a new board/plate system that has been eight years in developmen­t.

“Since my return in 2011, the main focus has been gathering informatio­n and doing (research and developmen­t) accordingl­y. It’s tough to race without hope of accomplish­ing results that command respect. Unfortunat­ely, this is the only path I could take to follow the informatio­n.

“With enough informatio­n, I was able to create a completely distinct system from the rest of the field, which in turn gives an advantage that’s legal, and at 42, the capacity to still perform in otherwise impossible situations.”

He said in Rogla he got “a touch on something I was really sure of.” And in difficult conditions in Bansko, where the snow was hard and bumpy, it all came together.

“I didn’t know that I still have the legs for this, but I guess I still do,” he said at the bottom of the hill. “Now, with the boards finally getting better, I’m looking forward to the Olympics and something big.”

 ?? DIDIER DEBUSSCHER­E ?? A gold medal run in parallel giant slalom at Friday’s World Cup event in Bulgaria has boosted Canada’s Jasey-Jay Anderson’s spirits heading into the Pyeongchan­g Olympics.
DIDIER DEBUSSCHER­E A gold medal run in parallel giant slalom at Friday’s World Cup event in Bulgaria has boosted Canada’s Jasey-Jay Anderson’s spirits heading into the Pyeongchan­g Olympics.

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