Daily Times (Primos, PA)

All-female ski team provides another route for racers

- By Pat Graham

Foreste Peterson confronted a cold reality after four years on the U.S. ski team developmen­t squad and four more competing at Dartmouth College: Her racing days were about to end.

Not ready to retire, there were not many other avenues, either. Time to put those environmen­tal and geography studies to use , Peterson reckoned.

Out of the blue, Peterson received an offer almost too good to be true: Funds for housing, travel and coaching to keep her on the slopes.

The 25-year-old Peterson is a member of Team X , a newly formed all-female developmen­t ski team out of Park City, Utah, that’s trying to become an alternate way to prepare the next generation.

It also keeps an eye out for the occasional late bloomer — like Peterson.

“I knew I had a lot more in the tank and I was hungry for more,” Peterson said. “This gives me that chance.”

So far, the squad is comprised of four racers from all over the globe, two coaches and two ski servicemen. Backed by private capital and led by coach Jim Tschabrun , the racers are being prepared to compete on the NorAm and Europa Cup levels, along with possibly even at World Cup races. Last weekend, Peterson earned a spot through the U.S. team to compete in the giant slalom at Killington, Vermont. She nearly earned a second run, too.

No pressure, though. This isn’t a results-based team. It’s not win-at-allcosts.

Instead, they’re focused more on the process of developmen­t.

When Tschabrun was assembling the team of Peterson, 18-year-old Madi Hoffman (Australia), 19-year-old Katie Fleckenste­in (Canada) and 23-year-old Benedicte Lyche (Norway, Montana State), he asked them one simple question: What are your ambitions?

“I wanted their dream goals if they could lose all constraint­s,” Tschabrun explained. “If they say they want to be an NCAA All-American or be on the World Cup or if they have an Olympic goal, it gives us a better road map.”

About the name: After bantering around numerous ideas, they settled on Team X — to represent the extra X chromosome in females.

There aren’t many teams like this around the world — for women, anyway. There are men’s versions that feature racers still going into their late 20s.

“Men are given this message that they aren’t done when they’re older. At 23 or 24, there are still opportunit­ies,” Tschabrun said. “On the women’s side, because they physically and emotionall­y mature quicker, there’s this unfair tendency to close the door a few years earlier. There are a lot of women who continue to improve with age and as they gain experience and knowledge. But there haven’t been a lot of opportunit­ies for women out of college.”

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