
PARK CITY, Utah (Sept. 12) - Sprinters Andy Newell (Shaftsbury, VT), who produced the first U.S. World Cup podium in over two decades last winter, and Kikkan Randall (Anchorage, AK), who produced the alltime best U.S. women's Olympic cross country finish, are among 14 athletes named to the 2007 U.S. Cross Country Ski Team.
U.S. Nordic Director Luke
Bodensteiner said the Ski Team - the largest since 11 athletes were named for
the 1998 Olympic season - also includes seven other 2006 Olympians. There are
seven men and seven women on the squad.
Newell posted the best U.S.
men's Olympic sprint result in Italy, finishing 14th and went on to finish third
in the first World Cup cross country race in China last March. It was the first
top-3 finish by a U.S. skier since March 1983 when Vermonters Tim Caldwell and
Bill Koch finished 2-3 in a World Cup race in Anchorage, Alaska.
During
the Olympics, Randall - whose uncle, Chris Haines, was a 1976 Olympic skier and
aunt, Betsy Haines, was on the 1980 Olympic Team in Lake Placid - finished ninth
in the sprint. It became the finest U.S. women's cross country result in any
Olympic race; after the Torino Games, she went on to post the best U.S. women's
finish in the 25-year history of the cross country World Cup, finishing fifth in
a night sprint in Borlange, Sweden.
"I'm very excited about this team. We
had our first podium in two decades last year from Andy and Kikkan was close to
a podium, and we had two guys in the Red Group [i.e., top 30 in sprint or
distance]. We had some real highlights, and that gives us good momentum heading
into this season," Bodensteiner said.
The 2007 U.S. Cross Country Team
(age, hometown, * if Olympian)
World Cup Team - Men: Chris Cook (26;
Rhinelander, WI*), Kris Freeman (25; Andover, NH*), Andrew Johnson (28;
Greensboro, VT*), Torin Koos (26; Leavenworth, WA*) and Andy Newell (22;
Shaftsbury, VT*); Women: Kikkan Randall (23; Anchorage, AK*).
Continental
Cup Team - Men: Matt Gelso (18; Truckee, CA) and Leif Zimmermann (22; Bozeman,
MT*); Women: Morgan Arritola (20; Sun Valley, ID), Taz Mannix (20; Anchorage,
AK), Morgan Smyth (20; Vernon, VT), Liz Stephen (19; Montpelier, VT), Lindsey
Weier (22; Mahtomedi, MN*) and Lindsay Williams (22; Hastings, MN*).
"It's refreshing for the veterans to have some young skiers around
them," Bodensteiner said. "This is the largest team we've had for quite a few
seasons, and we have good, diverse personalities. The Continental Cup Team is
going to be spending much of the season in Europe, along with the World Cup
group, because we want them exposed to not only the rigors of travel but also to
racing regularly against their peers, to have friends on other teams and do what
the World Cup group does. we want them to get ahead of the development
curve.
"We feel we're on target in nailing down how to deal with travel
and training," he said, "and we've got a great group of new coaches [headed by
former World racer and coach Pete Vordenberg], and there are tons of energy and
focus helping to make this team hum," he said.
The cross country World Cup season opens Oct. 28-29 in Dusseldorf, Germany, with sprints alongside the Rhine River. The FIS Nordic World Ski Championships will be held Feb. 22-March 4 in Sapporo, Japan.