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Flemmen Wins, Clarky 9thCopper Mt., CO (Wednesday, November 21, 2001) - Norway's Andrine Flemmen, shaking off the effects from a knee injury a year ago, picked up her second World Cup win Saturday while Kirsten Clark (Raymond, ME) tore out of No. 50 start and finished ninth in giant slalom at the Chevy Truck Women's World Challenge.
"Copper did a great job. The race crew did a great job keeping it smooth," she said, and course reports from her teammates and other coaches helps her visualize potential trouble spots on her first run. She attacked the bottom and looked to increase the aggressiveness on her final run. With that accomplished, Clark said she would be taking more confidence into the two downhills and a super-G Nov. 29-Dec. 1 at Lake Louise in the Canadian Rockies. Cernigoj saluted Clark, citing her "professional approach" to training throughout the preseason as well as her obviously strong skiing despite a way-back start number. "I cheer for one but I worry for the others," he said, referring to the frustrating performances by other U.S. racers. Only Sarah Schleper (Vail, CO) also had a second run and she had problems before finishing 30th (2:27.32). He pointed to the Ski Team's weather-troubled training camps in Chile, Norway and central Europe plus another European camp lost following the attacks of Sept. 11, which grounded many Americans. The women are in a catch-up mode, trying to train, race and make-up lost training time, he said. "The Europeans just out-ski us in September and October-time. They have the luxury of staying home when the weather's bad and coming out [to train on glaciers] when it's sunny," he explained. Cavagnoud remembered at Copper Many racers wore a black ribbon or armband to honor the memory of French skier Regine Cavagnoud, the 2001 world and World Cup super G champion who died in a fluke on-course crash during training on the Pitztal Glacier in Austria shortly after the season opener in Soelden, Austria. Coincidentally, Cavagnoud marked her return to World Cup racing from injuries by winning the Chevy Truck GS at Copper in November 1999. Organizers showed TV footage of her winning run on the big-screen TVs in the finish area. Clark, echoing the top three finishers, praised Cavagnoud as "a great competitor but, even more so, she was a great person and she's definitely missed on the the World Cup circuit." Forsyth added, "I think everyone misses Regine." The World Cup stop at Copper -- the second time in three seasons the Summit County resort has taken women's races because of little or no snow elsewhere -- concludes Thursday with the first slalom of the season. CAFE de COLOMBIA ALPINE WORLD CUP Chevy Truck Women's World Challenge Copper Mountain, CO - Nov. 21 Women's Giant Slalom 1. Andrine Flemmen, Norway, 2:23.81 2. Allison Forsyth, Canada, 2:24.48 3. Sonja Nef, Switzerland, 2:24.50 4. Karen Putzer, Italy, 2:24.67 5. Stina Hogard Nilsen, 2:24.80 6. Carole Montillet, France, 2:25.06 7. Michaela Dorfmeister, Austria, 2:25.08 8. Caroline Pellat-Finet, France, 2:25.20 9. Kirsten Clark, Raymond, Maine, 2:25.27 10. Alexandra Meissnitzer, Austria, 2:25.31 - 30. Sarah Schleper, Vail, Colo., 2:27.32 - Did not qualify for 2nd run: Kristina Koznick, Burnsville, Minn.; Caroline Lalive, Steamboat Springs, Colo.; Tatum Skoglund, Bellevue, Wash. - DNF-1: Lindsey C. Kildow, Vail, Colo. Cafe de Colombia Alpine World Cup Women's Overall & GS (2 races) 1. Nef, 140 points 2. Dorfmeister, 136 3. Forsyth, 130 4. Flemmen, 111 5. Maria Jose Rienda Contreras, Spain, 65 6. Putzer, 64 7. Montillet, 62 8. Regine Cavagnoud, France, 60 9. Brigitte Obermoser, Austria, 53 10. Nilsen, 45 - 19. Clark, 29 27. Koznick, 16 36. Schleper, 4 |
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