The Borneo Post

The push for Pyeongchan­g starts on concrete

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BATH, England: The push for Winter Olympic glory becomes concrete right from the start for Britain’s aspiring bobsleigh and skeleton athletes.

The dry push-start track at Bath University in south-west England gave Amy Williams, skeleton gold medallist at the 2010 Vancouver Games, a first taste of the sport and Sochi 2014 champion Lizzy Yarnold has honed her technique there.

Shelley Rudman, 2006 Olympic skeleton silver medallist, also graduated from the undulating 140-metre run, on the campus edge alongside muddy playing fields and across the road from a cats and dogs home.

On a dank December morning, under a steady drizzle and occasional hail bouncing off the concrete surrounds, a group of athletes practised their starts in circumstan­ces far removed from the icy World Cup venues.

Sam Blanchet, a former rugby profession­al who played for the Exeter Chiefs and Bedford Blues as well as England in the 2014 Hong Kong Sevens before falling out of love with the contact sport, was one of them.

Working his way back from a recent injury sustained in a bobsleigh crash in Whistler, Blanchet pushed a makeshift welded metal sled on wheels as fast as he could along a set of rails from a standing start.

“We never really push this thing over the winter because we’re normally away (competing),” the Montreal-born athlete told Reuters.

“I can tell you it’s far better during the summer.

“(But) the Olympics are definitely the end goal and it does drive you on,” added the 25-yearold. “It could be worse, I could be on a rugby field getting beaten up for 80 minutes.” Test event Blanchet raced the two-man bob at last February’s world championsh­ips in Koenigssee, Germany, and has also competed on Pyeongchan­g’s Olympic track.

His immediate focus now is a test push at the Bath track at the end of the month that he hopes could put him back into contention for Korea.

“As a brakeman, you’re ranked on how well you start a bobsleigh. So if I was to go out for the second half of the season, I’d have to do well in the push starts,” explained Blanchet. “There’s still a lot to do.”

Built in 2001 with lottery funding, the push-start track was refurbishe­d in 2015.

“Because we don’t have our own sliding track, this is the place where we spend seven months of the year, in the gym, grinding all the training out,” Yarnold told Reuters on Wednesday.

“The dry push track that we have here at the university is only practising the start element, where you are running next to the sled and jumping on. Then we come back up to the top and do it all again.”

Initially designed with a bungee brake arrangemen­t that needed replacing every six months, the Bath track now has a magnetic system to return the sled automatica­lly to the start after every run.

“It’s a lot of fun; Very different from actual bobsleigh but really good for grooming your technique and getting those training adaptation­s that you look for,” said Blanchet. — Reuters

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