DUSSELDORF, Germany (Oct. 28) - Olympian Andy Newell (Shaftsbury, VT)
collided with another racer in his semifinal heat of the season-opening
World Cup sprint Saturday but rebounded to finish eighth in the rainy,
soft-snow conditions. He was fourth-fastest in qualifying.
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U.S.
sprinter Andy Newell was eighth in front of a huge crowd on a
snow-covered track along the Rhine in Dusseldorf. Photo by Lars
Baron/Bongarts/Getty Images |
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"Not
a bad start for the season. I have no complaints," Newell said. "The
snow wasn't bad, considering it was raining last night and off and on
during the day; the snow stayed surprisingly quick and didn't break
down too much."
For Newell, who produced the first U.S. podium in 23 years last season
in China, it was his third consecutive top-10 finish; he was fourth in
the qualifying round to reach finals. The 800-meter course of
machinemade snow - from a suburban indoor ski dome - ran along the
Rhine River and had a couple of small ripples to break-up the flat
terrain.
Newell collided with Norwegian Petter Northug on the first lap of their
semifinal heat, then led the B Final (to determine final rankings 7-12)
until being out-lunged at the finish by Swiss skier Christoph
Eigenmann. Coincidentally, Eigenmann edged Newell for second place last
March in the first World Cup staged in China.
Newell vs. Scandinavian Superman?"
It was tight and Northug came up and tried to pass me on a small hill,
tried to cut over my skis - just kinda ‘Supermanned' it over my skis,
but we hit and went into the fence. I don't really have a problem with
that because I've done it myself," Newell said.
"The qualifying round went well. I didn't feel great about 10 minutes
after the finish of the quarterfinal and was throwing up, and that got
me a little dehydrated, and I started cramping...but I still can't
complain. It turned out okay," he added.
Expanding the semifinal and final heats to six skiers created tight
conditions with precious little wiggle room for skiers. "There was a
lot of contact out there and Andy was on the losing end in the
semifinal," said Sprint Coach Chis Grover. "But then he came back in
the B Final, controlled it the whole way and just got out-lunged by
Eigenmann.
"What Andy did, though, considering how he felt, was pretty heroic in
some ways. What did the Red Sox call it two years ago [when they won
the World Series] -‘Cowboy up' to get tough. That was Andy today,"
Grover said.
Grover said, "Newell nearly bonked at one point and wasn't firing on
all cylinders, but he pulled it together and was just so tough. He ran
into some bad luck in the semifinal heat when they got tangled up, but
it was an outstanding performance...
"It was so tight. They've always had four in the semis and finals, and today it was six in pretty tight conditions.
FIS sets new heats format
In a new sprint format designed by the International Ski Federation,
the field is cut to 30 after the qualifying round; the fields race six
five-skier heats with the top two advancing so there are 12 in the two
semifinal heats with the top three in each heat making for a
six-athlete A Final (medal round) and a six-skier B final (positions
7-12).
Defending World Cup champion Marit Bjoergen of Norway won the women's race. No U.S. women competed.
The weekend - the first time the U.S. Ski Team has entered the opening
sprints in Dusseldorf, which started in October 2002 - is scheduled to
conclude Sunday with two-skier team sprints. Chris Cook (Rhinelander,
WI) and Torin Koos (Leavenworth, WA) failed to qualify.
The U.S. men, who trained last week in Sweden, head to Ramsau, Austria,
and the Dachstein glacier for a mini-camp and will be joined by World
Cup Coach Justin Wadsworth and two-time Olympian Andrew Johnson
(Greensboro, VT) before returning to Sweden. The next World Cup stop is
Nov. 18-19 in Gallivare, Sweden, with the next sprint the following
weekend, Nov. 25-26 in Kuusamo, Finland.
VIESSMANN CROSS COUNTRY WORLD CUP
Dusseldorf, GER - Oct. 28, 2006
(6 make finals; 12 make semifinals)
Men's 1.5K FR Sprint
1. Eldar Ronning, Norway
2. Oystein Pettersen, Norway
3. Tor Arne Hetland, Norway
4. Tobias Angerer, Germany
5. Jon Kristian Dahl, Norway
-8. Andy Newell, Shaftsbury, Vt.
46. Chris Cook, Rhinelander, Wis.
51. Torin Koos, leavenworth, Wash.
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Women's 800-meter FR Sprint
1. Marit Bjoergen, Norway
2. Natalia Matveeva, Russia
3. Ella Gjomle, Norway
4. Lina Andersson, Sweden
5. Arianna Follis, Italy
(No U.S. women raced)
For complete results:
http://www.fis-ski.com/uk/604/1228.html?cal_suchsector=CC&event_id=21042