Top juniors head to Mammoth for NDS camp

By Published On: June 9th, 2008Comments Off on Top juniors head to Mammoth for NDS camp

Skiing in June? Yes and with fervor! The future of ski racing is gathered at Mammoth Mountain for the sixth annual U.S. Ski Team National Development System training camp designed for promising young alpine racers (ages 14 and up).
    "We've brought together about 25 of the best juniors from across the country to ski and train with experts from the U.S. Ski Team," said National Development Director Walt Evans. "These young athletes are the future of the Team. We could see them at the 2014 and 2018 Olympics so it's exciting see their potential out here."
MAMMOTH MOUNTAIN, Calif. — Skiing in June? Yes and with fervor! The future of ski racing is gathered at Mammoth Mountain for the sixth annual U.S. Ski Team National Development System training camp designed for promising young alpine racers (ages 14 and up).
    "We've brought together about 25 of the best juniors from across the country to ski and train with experts from the U.S. Ski Team," said National Development Director Walt Evans. "These young athletes are the future of the Team. We could see them at the 2014 and 2018 Olympics so it's exciting see their potential out here."
    The NDS camp brings together an elite group of approximately 25 athletes and their coaches from around the United States who have qualified for the camp based on strong results from key junior competitions this past winter, and who also have been identified by their clubs/academies as having national team potential. While being invited to the camp recognizes the achievements of the home programs' development and growth of athletes, the NDS camp looks to complement their work and bring together America's best juniors in an environment that one club alone could not create.
    The Mammoth Mountain camp includes early morning on-snow ski sessions as well as afternoon educational programs like dryland training techniques, goal setting and video analysis. All techniques have been developed by U.S. Ski Team's Sport Science department and implemented at the national level.
    "A highlight of this program is the involvement of U.S. Ski Team alumnae," added Evans who brought two-time Olympian and World Championships medalist Jonna Mendes and Alex Krebs, who was on the team in the '90s. Both teaching tactics and sharing knowledge they gained from years on the national team.
    The young teens attending the camp hail from New England's Green Mountain Valley School and Stratton Mountain School; Utah's Park City Ski Team and Snowbird Ski Education Foundation; Colorado's Steamboat Springs Winter Sports School, Ski Club Vail, and Team Summit; California's Squaw Valley Ski Team, Sugar Bowl Ski Team and Mammoth Mountain Ski Club; Nevada's Team Savage Ski Racing; Washington's Crystal Mountain Alpine Club; and Idaho's Sun Valley Ski Club.
    The NDS pipeline program started the Spring of 2002 following the Salt Lake City Olympics and while still in its infancy, it has helped nurture racers like first-time Olympian Stacey Cook, Junior Worlds champion Chris Beckmann and Megan McJames, who won three 2006 NorAm titles including the overall.
    Mammoth also is hosting the U.S. men's alpine team who also are training at that mountain for the week.

Share This Article

About the Author: Pete Rugh