Raceline by James Christie
Hoping for the big backyard win from Buyer's Guide 2010
Twice Britt Janyk has wanted to storm the Olympic battlements and twice
she has not been part of the team.
But in February the Olympics are coming to
Britt's home hill, to Whistler, and with national
team slalom-skiing brother Michael, she hopes
to show the world that this is her mountain - the mountain she grew up on chasing Michael
and his friends down the slopes.
"I'm the oldest sibling by a year and nine
months over Michael, and I think skiing is in
our blood," said the 29-year-old Britt. "My
mother had been part of the national team. Her
father had helped open up Grouse Mountain
and helped build the first lifts at Whistler.
Mum has a knack for teaching and inspiring,
and she’s one of the top private instructors at
Whistler-Blackcomb."
Britt learned the hard way that she had to
put more into the World Cup - three seasons ago
Britt had to put up $25,000 of her own money
to stay with the team after a poor season. She
responded to the challenge not only by being
the GS national champion at Whistler in March
2007, but by coming through for an FIS race
win on the same hill, a 3rd in the Lake Louise
downhill at the start of the next season and at
Aspen on December 8, 2007, became the first
Canadian woman in 14 years to win a World Cup
alpine gold in downhill.
Feeling comfortable on their own turf is
important to the Janyks. "The Olympics come
only once every four years and relatively few
people get to compete in it," said Britt. "The
neat thing about the Olympics is that you have
to lay it out there and trust your abilities and
go for it. You can win and win and win on the
World Cup, but come the Olympics, it’s one run
and anybody’s day."
Britt missed the 2006 Torino Games because
she simply had an off-season. "It was the year
that sucked," she said. In 2002, she was the
third - best GS skier in the country, but met the
qualifying criteria for the Olympic team five
days after the deadline. So this time there’s a
bit of "I want to show them" motivating her.
"I’ll have a little bit of fight in me. I’ll want to
prove that this is my Games."
To that end, she is working with technicians
and one of the Canadian women's team
coaches, Rob Boyd, whom she watched win a
World Cup at Whistler when she was 11. "He's
good at visualization and mental exercises," she
said. "He can take me [mentally] to a calm and
relaxed place and talk me through the course. I
can do it myself, but it’s nice to shut things off
and hear a voice take you through the process."
Michael competed at the 2006 Olympics,
finishing 17th. His career has had a dramatic
upswing since a back injury hampered him and
knocked him down to a ranking of 55th at the
start of last season. However, he enjoyed four
of his 19 career top - 10s after Christmas and
capped that with a bronze in the 2009 World
Championships at Val d’Isère, France.
"I knew there would be a lot of guys that
would be nervous about the hill at Val d’Isère
and if I were able to push past that, I would
have my advantage," Michael said. "It's not the
fact that I won a medal, it’s that I won it my
comeback season. I proved a lot to myself this
year about my commitment and desire to win
and I’ll be taking that forward to the Olympics."
The familiarity of the Whistler terrain is
important to Michael and his sister, even
though the town will be wrapped in the
Olympic security bubble. "Hopefully, it will have
that comfort level where you can get relaxed
and perform," he said. "You know some things
are going to be different, but you look across
the valley and you see the same peaks and
the same mountain and the same runs that go
down. That kind of familiarity is all there, which
makes it feel like home."
And, he hopes, makes Canada's first family of
skiing the Olympic Games' first family.