Albany Times Union

U.S. sliders finally get back on track

Luge, bobsled and skeleton athletes missed first half of season due to coronaviru­s

- By Tim Reynolds

U.S. luge, bobsled and skeleton athletes have rejoined the internatio­nal World Cup sliding circuits, after they all stayed home for the first half of the season because of issues related to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

There are some exceptions: most athletes and coaches who are members of the U.S. Army’s World Class Athlete Program will not be with their teams for the remainder of the season, a list that includes USA Bobsled coach Mike Kohn. The Army hasn’t signed off on letting soldiers in that program, which includes more than a dozen Olympic sports, compete yet while citing concerns about the rising numbers of positive COVID -19 cases both in the U.S. and around the world.

Friday marked the first day of actual internatio­nal competitio­n for American sliders, with USA Luge taking part in a Nation’s Cup race in Konigssee, Germany. That was a precursor to this weekend’s World Cup races there, and seven of the eight U.S.

sleds that competed qualified for races Saturday and Sunday.

USA Luge athletes and coaches all had to get three negative COVID -19 tests in a three-day span before rejoining the circuit, and the Internatio­nal Luge Federation has been able to pull off four race weekends already this season without any major virus issues.

“I am so happy to be back in the World Cup,” said USA Luge’s Summer Britcher, who was third in the women’s Nation Cup race Friday and was the top-ranked American in last season’s World Cup standings.

The U.S. bobsled and skeleton teams flew to Germany this week and will re-join the World Cup circuit in Winterberg on Jan. 9 and 10.

Kohn, along with a handful of other coaches and USA Bobsled and Skeleton athletes, remained home to comply with the WCAP mandates for safety.

Brian Shimer will serve as the acting on-site head coach for bobsled, while Kohn will remain involved from his home in Lake Placid, New York, the team’s training base. A bright side for him: This will be the first time that he’s home for the birthdays for his wife and their two sons. He usually misses those because they all occur during sliding season.

Many of the top U.S. sliders are now in Europe, a list that includes reigning women’s bobsled champion Kaillie Humphries, three-time Olympic bobsled medalist Elana Meyers Taylor, 2018 Olympic men’s luge silver medalist Chris Mazdzer and women’s luge world championsh­ip medalist Emily Sweeney.

Lolo Jones, a three-time Olympian — two in track and field, one in bobsled — and seeking to make the 2022 Olympic team as a push athlete, is also among the Americans who were picked to compete this winter.

 ?? Ekaterina Lyzlova / Associated Press ?? Summer Britcher and her fellow U.S. lugers are back on the track after missing the first half of the winter sports season due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.
Ekaterina Lyzlova / Associated Press Summer Britcher and her fellow U.S. lugers are back on the track after missing the first half of the winter sports season due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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