
Q & A
Heading to Whistler? What to know before you go.
by STEVEN THRENDYLE
WHY DOESN ’T THE RACE END IN THE VILLAGE?
“Olympic”—one of the first runs ever cut on Whistler Mountain—ended up over at the garbage
dump, which is the site of the current Whistler Village. And ideally perhaps, the Olympic downhill
would end there. However, a World Cup downhill race held in 1982 was given a big thumbs-down
due to its long flat sections. The Dave Murray course will provide much more challenge.
HOW CAN YOU CHEER ON
THE RACERS?
Make like they do in Kitzbühel and get your
official VANOC souvenir cowbell (available in
two sizes, 2.5 and four inches)—and maybe a
set of earplugs. There’s even a VANOC-logoed
reusable ice pack, suitable for soothing sore
muscles or an aching head from a tough day
on the slopes.
HOW DO I GET TO
THE RACES IF I ’M IN
VANCOUVER?
Though the Sea-to-Sky Highway has trimmed
travel time from downtown to about an hour
and twenty minutes, Olympic spectators are
being asked to allow at least three hours to
travel one-way to Whistler. Book your bus
tickets early—the $25 round-trip fare goes
up to $50 after January 4. Thinking of doing
some skiing while you’re waiting for your event
to start? Take note: if you’re coming from
Vancouver for the day, Whistler-bound Olympic
buses will not be equipped to carry skis.
WHO WAS DAVE MURRAY?
Easy—the main run and finish line for both
men’s and women’s races will be on the Dave
Murray Downhill. This much-loved member of
the Crazy Canucks successfully parlayed his fame
into a second career as the founder of the Dave
Murray Masters Racing Camps. Though “Mur” passed away in 1990, his racing camps—suitable
for recreational skiers of all ability levels—are
still a staple of ski instruction on Whistler
Mountain. Murray married professional freestyle
skier Stephanie Sloan and their daughter Julia is
a member of the Canadian Ski Cross team. Sloan
and Murray’s many friends are still very active in
the Whistler community.
HOW IMPORTANT IS THE
MEN ’S DOWNHILL?
Like the men’s hockey finals and the men’s
and women’s figure skating finals, the men’s
downhill—to be held on the first official day of
competition—was earmarked as a “premium” event of the Games. All 7,700 tickets were
snapped up in the first round of ticket purchasing.
WHEN ARE THE RACES
SCHEDULED?
February 13, 2010 - Men’s Downhill
February 14, 2010 - Ladies’ Super-Combined
Downhill/Ladies’
Super-Combined
Slalom
February 16, 2010 - Men’s Super-Combined
Downhill/Slalom
February 17, 2010 - Ladies’ Downhill
February 19, 2010 - Men’s Super-G
February 20, 2010 - Ladies’ Super-G
February 21, 2010 - Men’s Giant Slalom
February 24, 2010 - Ladies’ Giant Slalom
February 26, 2010 - Ladies’ Slalom
February 27, 2010 - Men’s Slalom 1st Run
WHAT ABOUT
COURSE PREP?
Though Whistler-Blackcomb has its own
impressive armada of grooming machines,
VANOC purchased 20 state-of-the-art Pisten
Bully snowcats to exclusively groom the
downhill course for the races. Snowmaking
was beefed up as well and VANOC even started
making snow back in October.
WHERE ’S THE PARTY?
What’s a trip to Whistler without a good
party? The joint will be rockin’ for sure with a
wide range of watering holes like the Savage
Beagle. At the opposite end of the spectrum
are those party-hearty Swiss, who will be
taking over the Mountain House (in Village
North) during the Games. Expect moderate
mayhem should Swiss racers like Didier Cuche
or Carlo Janka take home a gold.
IF YOU GO?
• Staying in Whistler and skiing while the
Olympics are on? Be aware that while
Whistler is proud to keep 90 per cent of the
mountain’s vast acreage open, the heavily
used—especially by Vancouverites—Creekside
lifts and parking area will be closed. However,
Blackcomb is wide, wide open and given the
likelihood of fresh powder during the two-week
period (nothing like a race to bring fresh
snow) is likely to be well worth exploring.
• The female downhillers will surely be
rippin’ down two of Creekside’s fastest
pitches: Mid Franz’s from below the Little
Red chairlift all the way to where it joins
up with the Dave Murray Downhill. For
recreational skiers, these are some of
the best slopes to get your speed freak
on during the “Peak to Creek” annual
downhill, which, alas, has been strangely
pre-empted for this year.
WHO ’S ON THE CANADIAN MEN ’S TEAM?
No rest for the wicked: watch for Canadian downhillers Manny Osborne-Paradis, Jan Hudec, Erik
Guay and newcomer Robbie Dixon. Olympic rules restrict teams to fielding only four members;
little surprise that World Cup races leading up to the Games are being fiercely fought.
WILL YOU BE ABLE TO
WATCH THE RACE IF YOU
HAVE A LIFT TICKET?
Don’t have a ticket to the races? Not a
problem! Your Whistler-Blackcomb day ticket
allows you to view the races from selected
vantage points near the Dave Murray Downhill
course.Still,you ’re a long way from the finish
line—best to have your 3G phone handy to
“watch” the action via your web browser.
WILL THE WEASEL
WORKERS BE THERE?
The highly skilled Weasel Workers volunteers
will be out in full force and working
throughout the Games to manually prep the
course, make adjustments to the netting and
to sideslip the course. Alpine Canada selected
some of the volunteers through a special
lottery system that was based on how many
people volunteered at previous events.
Take home the ultimate Olympic
souvenir
■ Whether you live in Whistler or in
Vancouver, the hot topic of coffee shop
conversation is real estate. Both city and
resort have the frothiest real estate markets
in Canada, with sky-high prices for shoe-box-sized
condos to single-family homes. And
the Olympics will have a profound effect on
housing as well.
Athlete housing for the 2010 Winter Games
in both Vancouver and Whistler will become
residential housing after the Games. Ironically,
the billion-dollar-plus Olympic Village on the
southeast shore of False Creek in Vancouver
is being partially financed by Fortress
Capital—the financially troubled NYC-based
equity fund that owns Intrawest, Whistler’s
mother. Housing in this innovative new
neighbourhood—the greenest in Canada— will range from subsidized family housing
to multi-million-dollar penthouses designed
by renowned (and recently deceased) West
Coast architect Arthur Erickson. Local real
estate marketer Bob Rennie has come up
with a clever slogan to pitch these condos
to international guests visiting Vancouver for
the Games—“take home the ultimate Olympic
souvenir.” Indeed. Over 750 new units will go
on sale shortly after the torch is extinguished,
in addition to the 250-plus that have already
been sold.
Alas, Whistler’s Olympic Village is
considerably smaller, by any measure—and
less pricey. Cheakamus Crossing units have
been snapped up by primarily Whistler
locals looking for environmentally friendly,
below-market-value units. Located near the
glamorous Whistler Wastewater Treatment
Plant and just down from an asphalt and
gravel aggregate facility, Cheakamus Crossing
has nevertheless sold all of its units.
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