Inside Edge
North of 60
Although Whitehorse’s Mt. Sima has
technically been in operation since
1993, it fl ew below the radar for its first
decade and won’t debut on the national stage
until February-March 2007 when it hosts the
40th issue of the Canada Winter Games (CWG).
This will be the first time the Games have
been held north of the 60th parallel.
Always on the lookout for historical
moments in the development of Canadian
snowsports, I’ve made a commitment to
preview the mountain and Games here, then
I’ll mosey on up the Alaska Highway next
February to cover the athletic action as it
unfolds. From my perspective, there’s a new
kid on the block in Canadian ski racing and I
want to be part of the Welcome Wagon making
introductions to Canada’s southern skiers.
Of course, everybody in Canada, thanks to
Pierre Berton, is familiar with the Yukon and
the Klondike Gold Rush, but not all realize
the territory has had a long and lasting
love affair with sports almost from the very
beginning. The building in Dawson City that
now houses Diamond Tooth Gertie’s gambling
hall, for the longest time the only legal
casino in Canada, was originally called the
Dawson Amateur Athletic Association when it
was built in 1902. There were curling rinks,
hockey rinks, gymnasiums, ski racing tracks,
baseball fields and dog racing back in the
days when the argonauts were going from the
Klondike to the next rush at Nome, Alaska,
just a couple thousand klicks down the Yukon
River. The baseball tournament held every
August during Discovery Days was begun in
1898 and has run continuously ever since.
But perhaps the most famous Yukon athletic
moment was in 1905 when the Dawson City
Nuggets travelled to Ottawa to challenge the
Silver Seven for the Stanley Cup and lost
23-2 to a one-eyed goaltender named McKee.
It remains the most lopsided score in Stanley
Cup history and the farthest distance any
team travelled to try to win Canada’s most
coveted trophy.
In the 1960s, a legendary Whitehorse
hotelier named “Calgary” Miller was
instrumental in starting the Arctic Winter
Games, which features competitions between
Alaska, the Yukon and the Northwest
Territories, and are still ongoing—the 2006
games were held on Alaska’s Kenai Peninsula.
Ski racing has always been big in northern
Canada, but it was nordic, or cross-country,
not alpine and certainly not snowboards. At
one time the TEST (Territorial Experimental Ski
Track) facility in Whitehorse was considered
the best in North America, and it was also
the first to install lights for night racing. The
famed Firth sisters from Inuvik raced there,
and it was also the home course for Lucy
Steele, a Whitehorse girl who went on to the
World Cup.
And don’t get me started on the century-old
discussion about whether dog mushing
is a sport, a recreation, a means of
transportation or an outdoor act of idiocy.
(It’s most definitely a sport, requiring great
athletes both in front of the sleds and
behind them.) To this day, I can’t decide
which I enjoyed more, covering Canada’s top
dogs and mushers up and down the circuit on
the Alaska Highway when I was sports editor
of the Yukon News or the world’s greatest
alpine ski racers in Europe when I did the
same job out of Whistler. World Cup female
ski racers are powerful athletes, but none of
them have the strength and power of Libby
Riddles or Susan Butcher, both of whom won
The Iditarod, possibly the world’s toughest
sporting event. Ski races last two minutes
or less. The Iditarod goes on for 10 days or
more and covers some of the roughest terrain
and temperatures in North America.
But alpine ski racing in the Yukon? Nyet.
Snowboarding in the Yukon? Nope. Freestyle
in the Yukon? Hardly. These are all going
to be first-time experiences next February
for this observer at the CWG, and will likely
endure longer in my memory than the 2010
Winter Olympics because I’ve already been
there and done them. There’s nothing warm
and endearing about the Olympics after all
their greedy, crooked and dopey scandals, but
the idea of a bunch of Canadian youngsters
frolicking in the Yukon snow warms me down
to the tips of my mukluks.
Mt. Sima is not a big western mountain
with its 335 metres of vertical. In fact, with
Canada’s tallest mountain, Mt. Logan, up
the road in Kluane National Park, Mt. Sima
is just a bump alongside the Alcan, which
you wouldn’t even notice if they hadn’t cut
ski runs into it. In the summer of 2005, the
“ski chalet” was a trailer with a small lunch
room serving chili, but that changed in the
summer of 2006 with the funding in place
to build a proper log base lodge that will
be the headquarters for the alpine events.
The halfpipe is already built and was in use
last winter for the first time, another snow
cannon will be added before the Games and
a new T-bar was installed in the off-season
to complete the infrastructure. Whitehorse
and Mt. Sima will definitely be ready for next
February, and everyone is hoping Mother
Nature co-operates because generally the
area shuts down if the temperature drops
below -40 C, which it can do anytime
between November and April. Canadian kids
are tough but, hey, frostbite is frostbite.
The Canada Games began in 1967 as part
of the centennial celebrations and have run
continuously for the last 40 years, alternating
between Summer and Winter Games. The
2007 issue will feature 2,700 young athletes
in 22 sports, none of whom are allowed
to be older than 20 on the day the Games
begin. The Games budget is $18 million, as
compared to $4 million for the last Arctic
Winter Games and $1.2 billion for the
Vancouver/Whistler 2010 Olympics. Generally,
hockey is the main attraction in the Winter
Games and baseball in the Summer, but
this time it appears the alpine events will
receive top billing because of their historical
context. Of course, that could just be a
unique Ski Canada perspective because, like
palm trees in Tuktoyuktuk, alpine ski racing
in the Yukon is something we never thought
we would see or report to Canadian skiers.
In the dozen years since Mt. Sima has been
open, things have progressed steadily. There is
now a Yukon Alpine Ski Racing Association. It
has a Nancy Greene Ski League going on and
even a pre-NGSL program called Snow Stars.
There are ads on the Web site for snowboard
instructors. Several big competitions have
been held there before the Canada Games,
such as the 2006 K2 Westerns (alpine), the
North of 60 Showdown (snowboarding) and
the Canadian National Junior Freestyle Skiing
Championships last March. This was the first
time the national championships had ever
been held north of 60° and included aerials,
moguls, dual moguls and halfpipe.
Near as I can tell from memory and glancing
at the Canadian Alpine Ski Team’s roster of
ex-athletes, there has never been a worldclass
Canadian ski racer who developed north
of the provinces. Alaska has produced several,
the best being Hilary Lindh and Tommy Moe,
both of whom learned their racing at Juneau’s
Eaglecrest. Although improbable, it’s not
impossible some hot Yukon racer will come
along and make it to the World Cup. Who
knows, maybe one will identify himself or
herself at these 2007 Canada Winter Games and
be ready for the 2010 Olympics.
So, for now, I will just officially welcome
the Yukon, Whitehorse and Mt. Sima to
Canada’s alpine ski world and look forward to
a trip up the Alaska Highway next February
to see what’s going on in the northern
hinterlands. It’s paved now, you know, and
has a pretty yellow stripe down the middle
informing you when it’s safe to pass. I’ve been
up and down it many times, but never before
to watch and report alpine skiing events.
Who needs Europe when you have alpine
skiing in the Yukon, the most beautiful part of
the world’s most beautiful country? And it won’t
be the first time young people headed north to
the Canadian sub-Arctic looking for gold.