Freestyle
Coaches and Camps: Priceless
By: Veronica Brenner
Can you imagine
attending a hockey camp and being
coached by Wayne Gretzky or Mario
Lemieux? Apparently Mastercard
thought it was so exciting to see
Cassie Campbell and Bobby Orr coach
a group of kids that they made a
TV ad about it. Called the experience
"priceless." And when Scotty Bowman
decided to pass along some of his
expertise to non-NHLers, CBC created
an entire TV series.
One of the things that drew me to
freestyle skiing when I first started
(other than the fact that I thought it was
the coolest sport in the universe), was
having the opportunity to be coached
by some of the top athletes in the world,
even as a beginner. In fact, the very first day
I started freestyle at a Christmas camp in
1988, I was coached by two of the most
successful freestyle skiers in history,
Meredith Gardner and Anna Fraser.
I have participated in a whole slew of
other sports, but I have never encountered
one that allowed such easy access to top
athletes. Although freestyle has undergone
a number of changes since my first day, the
sport still offers what I think is a pretty unique
opportunity: a chance to be coached by some
of the best in the world--without going over
your Mastercard limit.
Finland's Janne Lahtela is a skiing god. He's the 2002 Olympic Champion,
1998 Olympic Silver Medallist and six-time World Cup Champion. When
I asked him how many World Championship medals he'd won, he couldn't
tell me--he'd lost count.
Lahtela has been coaching at World Freeride and Mogul Camp (WFMC)
at Whistler, my alma mater, since 1997. I was attracted to the camp back
in the early '90s for the same reason the camp still draws skiers from
around the globe: coaching from some of the best in the business.
Lahtela first started coaching because he believes that "to become really
good you need to ski almost 12 months of the year." Since he wasn't getting
that from team training camps, he needed to figure out a way to make that
happen. Coaching summer camp provided Lahtela with what he was
looking for. The relaxing atmosphere on the glacier gave him a mental
break, and coaching paid the bills.
Surprisingly, Lahtela found that coaching forced him to think about
technique in a different way. "I had
to think hard to make things simple
for the kids, which helped my own
understanding. Coaching helps me
to keep my own skiing simple."
Other skiers agree that coaching
at camps helps them to become
better skiers themselves. U.S. team
member Emiko Torito says she
learns a lot just by listening to the
other athletes coach. Plus, campers
have more exaggerated versions of
her own weaknesses. "By helping
campers fix their issues, it helps me
fix my own problems," says Torito.
Torito was once a camper herself,
and was inspired by the top athletes who
coached her. Today's campers are no
different. Nineteen-year-old Kyle Ewing
of Steamboat Springs, Colorado, has
been coming to WFMC for six years.
Lahtela is his hero, as well as his coach.
"This is the only sport where the best in
the world come and coach and don't act
like celebrities that are untouchable,"
says Ewing. "At first I was in awe of
being coached by my hero. It would have
been intimidating but the coaches were
so friendly. You didn't feel like they were
on a pedestal, like they didn't have time
for you." Ewing hopes to one day join
Lahtela on the World Cup tour.
Katherine James, a 12-year-old from Eagle, Colorado, says seeing that
her heroes are "regular people who are just really, really good at skiing,"
makes World Cup competition seem like an attainable goal.
But it's not only aspiring Olympians who attend summer mogul camps.
And they're not just for kids. Dale Simmonds, a 34-year-old ER doctor
from Virginia, convinced his friends, 53-year-old firefighter Bob Silver
and 43-year-old publisher Leon Capers, to join him for a week on the
glacier in Whistler. Silver figured that if he became a better mogul skier,
he'd be able to tackle anything on the mountain.
Simmonds says he was worried their little escapade was going to be
too intimidating. "It was a bit intimidating in the beginning, but the
coaches
made us feel comfortable. I had the best skier in the world [Lahtela]
delivering breakfast to my room. It was amazing."
"The campers learn that it's about having fun. There are no heroes or
gods here. We're all here to have fun and learn to ski," says Lahtela.