Otago Daily Times

Youngsters groomed for top

- sean.nugent@odt.co.nz

In March, two 16yearolds from Wanaka defied gravity at the Winter Olympics by flipping and spinning through the air so gracefully it looked like a video game. They each won a bronze medal, and broke a 26year medal drought. But how did they get so good at such a young age?

Sean Nugent finds out how talented young Kiwi freeskiier­s and snowboarde­rs make it to the top.

IT has been a month since Wanaka teens Zoi SadowskiSy­nnott and Nico Porteous threw down the best runs of their lives in the Winter Olympics, ending New Zealand’s 26year medal drought at the Games.

Upon their return, there was mayhem.

Everyone wanted a slice of their success. Crowds swarmed, people cried, parades were had.

The two 16yearolds were at the forefront of New Zealand’s most successful Winter Olympic campaign, a team in which more than half were 22 or younger.

So how did this group of ‘‘kids’’ do so well?

Strong, focused developmen­t, and an eye on the future, according to Snow Sports New Zealand head park and pipe coach Tom Willmott.

Snow

Sports receives just over $2 million from High Performanc­e Sport New Zealand (HPSNZ), which goes towards helping ‘‘carded’’ athletes develop into stars.

Willmott said Porteous was carded at age 12, SadowskiSy­nnott and fellow Wanaka snow sportsman BeauJames Wells at 14, and Carlos GarciaKnig­ht at 16.

Those carded athletes then began a yearround training programme, spending up to six months of the year in the northern hemisphere, and four months in Wanaka.

‘‘Athletes work on all aspects of performanc­e from physicalit­y and robustness, to on and offsnow movement, technical skills, tactical skills, mental skills and putting it all together in competitio­n,’’ he said.

Wanaka Olympic freeskier Finn Bilous (18) said he was carded in October 2014 as a 15yearold and the additional help definitely helped him improve ‘‘quicker than most’’.

‘‘Being able to attend training camps, learn about being an athlete both on and off snow and having more of a financial backing made it much easier for me and my family to focus more on my performanc­e and not be as stressed out about everything that comes along with living a crazy lifestyle like mine.’’

Likewise, Olympic snowboarde­r Tiarn Collins (18), from Queenstown, who could not compete in PyeongChan­g due to injury, said his developmen­t had been given a ‘‘huge boost’’ after he was carded in spring 2016.

While these athletes are being carded relatively young, Snow Sports high performanc­e director Ashley Light said upandcomin­g athletes were being scouted even younger.

‘‘PostSochi [2014 Winter Olympics], after a robust review, we set about implementi­ng an eightyear rolling programme [called Pathway to Podium] that would identify athletes eight years out from podium. The young cohort at PyeongChan­g were the first athletes to come through the programme strategy. Their peak will be in 2022 and beyond.’’

According to HPSNZ, athletes who are demonstrat­ing potential to be future high performanc­e athletes, i.e. likely to be carded in one to three years, are selected for the programme.

National snowboardi­ng champion Zephyr Lovelock (12), of Auckland, is one of them.

In 2016, the then 11yearold won the national under14 boys snowboardi­ng title, and backed it up with another victory in the inaugural World Rookie Tour competitio­n at Cardrona last October.

Last month, Zephyr boarded a plane to Finland to train before the World Rookie

Finals in Austria start on Tuesday.

Zephyr’s father, Kelly Lovelock, said it would be his son’s first season in the northern hemisphere. Some of his contempora­ries were, had already been doing backtoback winters for a ‘‘ridiculous amount of time’’, Mr Lovelock said.

‘‘Sometimes I’m in two minds. If you oversatura­te and put too much pressure on them at a young age, they bow out. But, definitely, they need to be competing and being alongside good riders around the world is the best way to do it.’’

Mr Lovelock said Snow Sports had ‘‘had an eye on him’’ and helped fund the journey to Austria. It also assisted with providing Zephyr with quality coaching.

‘‘Zephyr, without a doubt, is wanting to be at the next Olympics. He’ll be 16 then. His results so far show he’s on track, the trajectory is in the right direction and we’re working towards that.’’

However, the pathway to the top was not always so meticulous­ly planned.

Bruce Wells, father and coach of the four Wanaka olympians, Jossi, Byron, BeauJames, and Jackson, said things were a lot different 15 to 20 years ago.

‘‘The pathway didn’t exist. There wasn’t even an internatio­nal pathway back in the day,’’ he said.

Twintip skis were not invented until 1998, which Bruce said was ‘‘the first time got into park and pipe in a meaningful way’’.

Byron (25) recalled how he and older brother Jossi (27) used to make their own fun on the slopes at Cardrona.

‘‘We were hitting wooden logs at the back of Skyline [a trail at Cardrona] because there were no rails.’’

There were no park coaches, no training, and no ideas on how to make it to the top.

In 2000, the Cardrona High Performanc­e Centre began, allowing talented athletes to enter a structured programme that would help them rise to the top.

The first group to come through the programme included both Jossi and Byron, Mitchell and Kendall Brown, and Lyndon Sheehan, while recent graduates include Bilous, Collins, SadowskiSy­nnott, and Nico and Miguel Porteous.

Cardrona general manager Bridget Legnavsky said the programme was started ‘‘because we foresaw the sport changing’’.

Now there were about 100 athletes between the ages of 5 and 20 training in the programme ‘‘pretty much all season’’.

Zephyr Lovelock has been one of those for the past three seasons, and planned to return this coming winter.

Mr Light said there were similar regional programmes around the rest of the country’s ski fields, with an average of 30 to 60 participan­ts in each.

Bruce Wells reckoned those numbers could grow this year.

‘‘The more successful a sport is on the world stage, the more people will do it back home, and I’m sure we’ll see that this year. We’ll see an increase in young kids wanting to go skiing.’’

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Eye on future . . . Zephyr Lovelock, a national snowboardi­ng champion, is in Austria, starting his first snow season in the northern hemisphere.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Eye on future . . . Zephyr Lovelock, a national snowboardi­ng champion, is in Austria, starting his first snow season in the northern hemisphere.
 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Crisscross . . . Finn Bilous competes in the freestyle men’s ski slopestyle qualificat­ion at PyeongChan­g.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Crisscross . . . Finn Bilous competes in the freestyle men’s ski slopestyle qualificat­ion at PyeongChan­g.
 ??  ?? Tom Willmott
Tom Willmott
 ??  ?? Ashley Light
Ashley Light
 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? On board . . . Zoi SadowskiSy­nnott finishes a run at the Winter Olympics in South Korea.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES On board . . . Zoi SadowskiSy­nnott finishes a run at the Winter Olympics in South Korea.
 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? On top of the world . . . Bronzemeda­l Olympian Zoi SadowskiSy­nnott (left) trained at Cardrona with fellow bronze medallist Nico Porteous.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES On top of the world . . . Bronzemeda­l Olympian Zoi SadowskiSy­nnott (left) trained at Cardrona with fellow bronze medallist Nico Porteous.
 ?? PHOTO: HAMISH MCDOUGALL ?? All the help . . . Queenstown Olympic snowboarde­r Tiarn Collins said being carded by High Performanc­e Sport New Zealand was a "huge boost" to his developmen­t.
PHOTO: HAMISH MCDOUGALL All the help . . . Queenstown Olympic snowboarde­r Tiarn Collins said being carded by High Performanc­e Sport New Zealand was a "huge boost" to his developmen­t.
 ?? PHOTO: TOMMY PYATT ?? Big air . . . Nico Porteous gets some air off the halfpipe at Cardrona during last year’s Australia New Zealand Cup, a warmup for the Winter Games.
PHOTO: TOMMY PYATT Big air . . . Nico Porteous gets some air off the halfpipe at Cardrona during last year’s Australia New Zealand Cup, a warmup for the Winter Games.
 ?? PHOTO: MATEUSZ KIELPINSKI ?? Continuing to improve . . . Wanaka Olympic freeskier Finn Bilous recorded a personal best fifth place at a World Cup event in Italy last month.
PHOTO: MATEUSZ KIELPINSKI Continuing to improve . . . Wanaka Olympic freeskier Finn Bilous recorded a personal best fifth place at a World Cup event in Italy last month.
 ??  ?? Bruce Wells
Bruce Wells

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