Imperial Valley Press

Wyoming cowboy is snow master for Olympics

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JEONGSEON, South Korea ( AP) — Cattle rancher Tom Johnston is a Wyoming cowboy gone global who’s the master of snow for Alpine skiing events at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics.

Johnston, the chief of race for ski events at the 2018 Olympics, is responsibl­e for preparing the snow to world-class conditions at the next Winter Games.

Having honed his craft at annual World Cup races and last season’s world championsh­ips in Beaver Creek, Colorado, the snow maestro prepared courses for the 2002 Salt Lake City Games and 2014 Sochi Games. Skiers got another taste of Johnston’s skills over the weekend at the Alpine test event for the 2018 Games.

There was a chorus of approval for the “hard, aggressive and grippy” snow, which is just the way racers like it whether on European or U.S. slopes. “It’s nearly identical,” said Italian racer Dominik Paris, who finished second in Saturday’s World Cup downhill. “It’s like cooking. If you’ve got a good chef, the food is always good.”

From Boulder, Wyoming, a town Johnston describes as essentiall­y a single gas station, he learned how to prepare ski courses in nearby Jackson Hole. When the U.S. nationals were held in the Wyoming resort in 1998, the U.S. Ski Team hired him as a technical adviser — a role he’s held ever since. what’s going to happen with the racers so we had to put a lot of extra snow in some places — a lot,” he said.

A sign of success came when not a single racer fell or crashed in Saturday’s downhill. After an overnight dusting, things got a little more complicate­d for Sunday’s super-G, when most of the favorites struggled.

With such a perfect surface, skiers have to be careful not to dig their edges in too hard.

“It’s really aggressive so if you overdo it, then you’re slow. So there’s a lot of tactics involved,” said Canadian downhiller Erik Guay, the 2011 world champion. “The snow is amazing. It’s just so much fun to lay it over.”

Unlike previous Olympics, Johnston will be preparing the course for both men and women as there is only one track at the newly developed course in Jeongseon, which was designed by Bernhard Russi, the 1972 Olympic champion.

“He has an amazing knowledge of prepping snow and working with people,” U.S. men’s head coach Sasha Rearick said. “There’s no better guy to do the job and there’s a reason why Gunter (Hujara, the Internatio­nal Ski Federation’s technical specialist) wanted him and he only wanted him.”

While the snow conditions are Colorado-style, that doesn’t necessaril­y mean that U.S. skiers have a home advantage.

“This job was always just to support my cow and my tractor habit. That’s all,” Johnston said in an interview at the finish area of Sunday’s race. “And they just kept asking me to move to the next level and the next level so this is my third Olympic venue. I did Salt Lake, I did Snowbasin for the women and Sochi for the women and then this new one.”

For months, Johnston has been directing a crew of Koreans on the intricacie­s of laying down the 1.8-mile track with artifi-

 ??  ?? Fans gather at the rally, crowding into Denver’s downtown to salute the Broncos for the team’s victory over the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50.
Fans gather at the rally, crowding into Denver’s downtown to salute the Broncos for the team’s victory over the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50.
 ??  ?? Tom Johnston stands near the finish area following a men’s World Cup super-G race, also a test event for the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympics, on Sunday at the Jeongseon Alpine Centre in Jeongseon, South Korea. AP PHOTO
Tom Johnston stands near the finish area following a men’s World Cup super-G race, also a test event for the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympics, on Sunday at the Jeongseon Alpine Centre in Jeongseon, South Korea. AP PHOTO
 ??  ?? Denver Broncos guard Evan Mathis holds up the Lombardi Trophy at a rally following a parade through downtown Denver on Tuesday. Fans crowded into Denver’s downtown to salute the Broncos for the team’s victory over the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50.
Denver Broncos guard Evan Mathis holds up the Lombardi Trophy at a rally following a parade through downtown Denver on Tuesday. Fans crowded into Denver’s downtown to salute the Broncos for the team’s victory over the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50.
 ??  ?? Denver Broncos head coach Gary Kubiak and his wife Rhonda soak in the moment during a parade for the NFL football Super Bowl champions Tuesday.
Denver Broncos head coach Gary Kubiak and his wife Rhonda soak in the moment during a parade for the NFL football Super Bowl champions Tuesday.
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A Broncos fan
holds up sign
during the rally.
AP PHOTOS A Broncos fan holds up sign during the rally.

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