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Wednesday, February 17th, 2010
Alpine Report by Coach Mitchell
The Harvard Alpine Team competed in the 100th Dartmouth Winter Carnival this past weekend at the Dartmouth Skiway. Conditions were fantastic, both weather and snow. The team skied well but struggled a bit on such a flat hill. Nonetheless, there were some encouraging results, with Chris Kinner putting down two solid, relatively clean runs in slalom to finish 25th, which he followed up with a 41st in GS. Alec Boardman also chipped in a respectable 43rd in slalom, which Kevin McNamara and Andrew Spielvogel followed up in GS with a 44th and 49th respectively. The women were in great position after the first run of the GS, poised to match their strong 6th place from the UVM carnival. A missed gate in the second run put a slight kink in the plans and the team moved back a few spots, but was only a few small points from moving up three places. Caroline McHugh was the best finisher on the day, with a 26th in the GS and Catherine Sheils added a 38th. The women showed some promising form in the slalom, with Sheils leading the way in 22nd, backed up by Tenley Malmquist in 35th and Margie Thorp in 37th. A big thank you goes out to Meghan Luck, who skied with a broken arm in the GS to help the team’s chances in scoring a good team result; that is some serious dedication!!
The women also had a GS FIS University race that was not scored as part of the Dartmouth Carnival on Sunday and there was some great skiing happening again. With a good chunk of the college field in attendance, Catherine Sheils charged to a 27th place with Caroline McHugh nipping at her heels in a very strong 29th. This weekend the team contests the Williams Carnival at Jiminy Peak, MA. The hill is a bit steeper and more technical, which is to our liking, so the team is fired up to do some fast skiing!
Nordic Report by Coach City
We had an excellent day in the 15km mass start classic on Friday. Audrey Mangan, Esther Kennedy and Alena Tofte were seeded near the front of the group because of their classic performances this season, and they maintained that position through the first 7.5 km lap. On the second lap Esther and Alena started to move up through the field, and they were in the high teens going into the last 5km. Both skiers found a finishing kick and passed several skiers in the last 2 km. Alena finished in 14th and Esther was about a second behind in 15th. Audrey skied a strong race, too, and was a minute behind Esther in 30th. Cara Sprague was not far behind in 35th and Clare Miller finished 58th in an expanded field. Tony Ryerson led the men’s team with a solid race and a 41st place finish. Tony skied up into the 20s at the start and, after recovering from what Sara jokingly called “a spot of bother” between the 2 and 5km marks that set him back into the low 50s, managed to ski up to 41st.
In the relay on Sunday, Audrey skied a split that was one of the 15 fastest on the day and put us in 7th. Esther held on to that spot despite a fall. Alena’s fast Friday race caught up to her with about 2km to go on the anchor leg and she slipped to 9th. Tony and Trevor Petach had good relay splits, while Kevin Sprague was a bit under the weather. We’re shorthanded, so Tor O’Brien only raced the first leg for our B team. After having raced 20km on Friday, he declined our offer to let him wear all three bibs and keep skiing.
 Alena in the classical train
 Tor catches a U of Maine skier
 Audrey tags off to Esther in the relay
 The women's team celebrates Carni Crush weekend with loud lycra
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Monday, February 15th, 2010
Last weekend the team was in action at the UVM Carnival in Stowe, Vermont, where both alpine and nordic women posted historic finishes!
Alpine Report by Coach Mitchell
The Harvard Alpine Team did battle last weekend (Feb. 5-6) on Spruce Peak at Stowe, VT for the UVM carnival. On a number of fronts, this weekend could be considered one of the best results for Harvard Alpine in the last 30 years or so. The women’s team led the way with a strong 6th place showing in Friday’s GS race despite the absence due to injury of the team’s top ranked GS skier, Meghan Luck. The Crimson ladies skied aggressively on a tactically challenging hill, with Catherine Sheils leading the way in 18th, followed closely by Caroline McHugh in 22nd on the strength of an amazing 2nd run. Tenley Malmquist and Margie Thorp both made huge moves forward as well, finishing 33rd and 36th respectively. The team was only a few points shy of catching Williams College for 5th place in the standings, so that will be a good target looking forward. The women were skiing well again in Saturday’s slalom, but a few tactical mistakes took the team out of contention for what looked to be a similarly promising result. Tenley Malmquist put down two solid runs to lead the way in 27th, with Margie Thorp matching her GS result in 36th, and Tess Wood right behind in 37th.
The Men’s Alpine squad continued to ski extremely fast, but suffer untimely mistakes that thwarted some otherwise good skiing. Chris Kinner had the most consistent weekend, finishing 36th in GS and 31st in slalom. Kevin McNamara chipped in a 38th in GS, with Andrew Spielvogel notching the men’s best finish of the weekend with 29th in slalom. Sam Harrison showed his continually improving form with 33rd in slalom and Brad Alvarez followed that up with a 38th in slalom.
 Catherine on the Eastern Cup podium
A number of our skiers also competed in a FIS Eastern Cup slalom race on Sunday, with almost the entire collegiate field in attendance, as well as a few Olympians you’ll see racing for the US in Vancouver in a few weeks. So needless to say, the fields were very strong. Kevin McNamara overcame a start spot of 66 and deteriorating course conditions to rally to an impressive 22nd place finish, some of the best skiing we’ve seen from him to date. The women had a tremendously successful day as well, with Tenley Malmquist making a big move up to finish 17th, and Catherine Sheils linking two nearly flawless runs for 3rd place and a podium finish! In the process, these three Harvard skiers beat a good chunk of the regular collegiate field, so this should prove a valuable confidence booster heading into the upcoming Dartmouth Carnival. The teams are headed in the right direction, and we couldn’t be more excited!!!
Nordic Report by Coach City
Last weekend saw perfect race-time temperatures in the 20s and fresh powder that fell in the days leading up to the carnival. The highlight of our weekend was the women’s 5km Classic on Saturday when we put three skiers into the top 25 (Alena Tofte – 18, Audrey Mangan – 20, Esther Kennedy – 24). I’m certain we’ve never placed 3 women in the top 25 before, but would love to hear from any alums who can tell me otherwise! To give you a sense of how tough EISA is, it was only good for a team finish of 7th on the day (although just one spot behind Middlebury and a few points out of 5th). The 5km classic was a breakout race for Alena, a freshman whose previous classic best was a 36th. Cara Sprague and Anika Petach were not far behind our scorers in 34th and 41st, respectively. In Sunday’s 10km skate, Esther significantly improved on her previous skate finishes this year to lead the team with a 25th place finish. Alena was close behind her in 33rd, and Clare Miller scored for the first time for us with a 46th place finish. Audrey missed Sunday’s race due to illness.
Things are also looking promising on the men’s side. Freshman Tony Ryerson jumped into 41st in his second 10km classic race of the season (from a previous best 62nd). Trevor Petach led the men in Sunday’s 10km skate with a solid 43rd, a minute out of 27th. The guys looked much sharper after the rest week. Indeed, most of the team improved their previous placings in one technique or the other, which suggests that we’re rounding into peak fitness. Where we didn’t improve our placings, it was because we weren’t aggressive enough in passing slower skiers at the first opportunity. In an individual start race, like both events at UVM, one has to ski one’s best pace the whole time. By drafting or cruising for a few seconds behind a slower skier when you don’t need to, you can lose several places in a short race very quickly.
 Esther
 Team with the Laval (Quebec) coach - who jumped into the photo.
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Tuesday, January 26th, 2010
The teams ended their January break by racing in the St. Michael’s Carnival in Vermont. The Alpine events were held at Smuggler’s Notch, while the Nordic events were at Sleepy Hollow Inn in Huntington.
Alpine Report by Tim Mitchell
The weather and snow conditions were ideal both days and the team is skiing better every race. The men’s team is still finding its feet in terms of consistency; there is plenty of fast skiing, but we’re just not finding the finish line cleanly right now… Despite a few bobbles here and there, there were some encouraging results. Chris Kinner led the way in GS with a 35th, followed closely bay Sam Harrison in 40th and Andre Spielvogel in 41st. Alec Boardman put two solid runs together for a 35th place in slalom, a career best result, followed by Sam Harrison in 38th. On the women’s side, the alpine squad was led by Catherine Sheils, who finsihed with two strong results, 17th in slalom and 21st in GS. The women’s performance was supported by a 27th in GS from Meghan Luck and a 31st in slalom by Margie Thorp. Things are starting to come together for the alpine team, and they continued to roll along with a strong performance by Catherine Sheils on Sunday at a FIS Eastern Cup SL race with the majority of the collegiate field plus other top Eastern athletes. Sheils was 8th after the first run, and despite a brief “hip check” fall in the second run, held on for 13th place. Next up, the team takes to the hill at Stowe, VT for the UVM winter carnival. Don’t forget, you can “watch” the race results in real-time at www.live-timing.com!
Nordic Report by Chris City

- Esther
Our headline result this weekend was the team’s 5th place finish in the women’s classic sprint relay on Saturday. It was an unusual format for us: teams of 3 skiers, with each skier racing 1 km and then tagging off in the stadium to the next leg. Each skier raced three legs. Esther Kennedy got pinched between other skiers at the start and finished her first lap in 11th, but within sight of a number of other racers. Audrey Mangan picked up a few of these spots, moving us to 8th. In their second laps, Cara and Esther continued to close the gap to the skiers in front of them while holding off the teams Audrey had passed. On her second lap, Audrey moved the team up to 6th. Esther stumbled going out of the stadium for the final lap, but still managed to close on Dartmouth’s B relay skier in 5th. Audrey caught the Dartmouth skier as she came into the stadium to tag off to Cara and then Cara opened up the gap by a few more seconds. It was really exciting to watch our team race through the pack! It was a team effort: Audrey passed the teams in front of her and Esther and Cara helped make that possible by skiing consistently fast splits even as other teams started to fade on their second and third laps. We finished ahead of all but 4 A teams (Dart, Midd, UVM and UNH).
Our women’s B relay team skied very well, too, finishing ahead of two A teams (St. Mike’s and UMPI) and a number of B teams. Anchoring our B team, Alena Tofte skied splits that were as fast as those on our A team, and Anika Petach’s were not far behind. Our guys skied fast early splits but faded as the race went on. They finished ahead of Bowdoin and were battling with St. Mike’s through the last few laps, but just couldn’t hang onto them near the end of the race.
The skate courses at Sleepy Hollow for the individual 10/15km races on Friday were very difficult. There were two long steep climbs, including one that was over 2km long. The course had suffered a significant melting last week and so the thin snow cover quickly sheared off the downhill turns, leaving them as glare ice. These conditions applied to everyone, though, and I’m generally pleased with how we attacked the course. Trevor Petach skied well on Friday, as did Audrey, who placed a team-high 24th. Esther and Clare significantly improved on their skate results from the first weekend. Tor O’Brien had a solid season debut after injury kept him out of the St. Lawrence carnival. Ollie Burruss ‘08, now skiing for the Green Team in Craftsbury, Vermont, finished 16th! As you’ll see from the photos, the team was sporting pink headbands made for everyone by Anika and Audrey.
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Sunday, November 1st, 2009
There may not be any snow on the ground in Cambridge, but that detail hasn’t stopped the nordic team from doing some racing this month.
On November 1st, the team took part in the annual 15k classic rollerski race in Andover put on by the Cambridge Sports Union. Greeted by warm weather and fresh pavement, everyone cruised to personal best times.
 The start of the 15k classic
 Captain Audrey Mangan cruising to a 2nd place finish
 Freshman Esther Kennedy rolling in 3rd place
Women’s Results
1. Alex Jospe 43:52
2. Audrey Mangan 46:46
3. Esther Kennedy 51:47
4. Alena Tofte 52:23
5. Clare Miller 55:51
6. Jody Newton 59:31
7. Anika Petach 62:57
Men’s Results
1. Jackson Rich 39:58
2. Andy Milne 39:59
3. Tony Reyerson 41:31
4. Trevor Petach 43:01
5. Bob Burnham 43:18
6. Rob Bradlee 43:23
7. John Rich 44:45
8. Jamie Doucett 44:46
9. Dave Loney 48:04
10. Erlemo Lochan 48:42
11. Robert Faltus 50:52
12. Will Brote 53:23
13. Tor O’Brien 54:30
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Monday, February 16th, 2009

- Trevor Petach
From Coach Mitchell: The Dartmouth Carnival saw an upturn in the results for the Alpine squad. Chris Kinner skied to 23rd place in the GS and was 13th on the second run, just over 1 second out on the run despite a few minor mistakes. Freshman Kevin McNamara anchored the team in the Slalom with a 37th place result (which was top-30 for collegiate athletes). Brad Alvarez and Alec Boardman made huge strides in their skiing this weekend, as they were both able to transfer much of what they have been working on in training to a race situation for the first time, a HUGE step for sure! The Alpine squad had a more difficult go of things at the UVM carnival at Stowe. The weekend was marred by bad luck and very difficult course conditions. The team battled valiantly, but broken skis and a few untimely binding releases somewhat derailed the team’s performance this weekend. On the bright side, Caroline McHugh put down a fantastic first run of Giant Slalom, just over 1 second behind the leader; while skiing a very aggressive second run, Caroline hooked her arm on a GS gate and crashed out only a few turns from the finish and what surely would have been a top-15 result. With the Dartmouth results, however, it appears things are starting to pick up, and after a great day of Slalom training at Pat’s Peak on Sunday, the team is anxious to get back in the gate this weekend for the Middlebury carnival!
From Coach City: Last week’s warm rain and subsequent cooling led to icy and fast conditions over the weekend at Oak Hill. We saw quick times and relatively little separation between places. Both men and women skied well, including the downhills, and with a few more seconds here or there and we could have picked up a number of places. Cara Sprague posted a second-straight top-25 finish in the classic 5km on Friday. She was followed by Alyssa Devlin (41); Audrey Mangan (48); Anna Schulz (55); Shannon Mulshine (57); and Meri Burruss (65) in an expanded field of 68 racers. Saturday was a mass-start 10km race for the women. Cara placed 35th to lead the team; she was followed by Alyssa (43); Audrey (50); Shannon (52); Anna (55); and Meri (60). On the men’s side, the men were just on the back edge of a tightly-packed group of finishers in Friday’s 10km classic. Trevor Petach led the team in 56th place; he was followed by David McCahill in 57th, Joe Tofte in 59th and Tor O’Brien in 60th. The guys moved up a few spots in Saturday’s 15km skate, which took them all over the Oak Hill trail system. David (50th) edged out Trevor (51st), followed by Joe (57th) and Tor (58th).
The highlight of the UVM carnival was our best women’s team placing in at least 20 years. The weather for the classic race was unbelievable: when we arrived it was sleeting, and this quickly changed over to snow, 40mph gusts of wind, and even thunder. About half-way through the race, the clouds cleared and the sun came out. Scott and Sara found some wax that worked fairly well for the women. Even so, two of our skiers competed on racing waxless skis. The women focused on the race rather than the conditions, and the result was a 19th (Cara); a 21st (Anna); and a 31st (Audrey), and a team finish of 8th – one point behind Williams. The snow continued to change through the guys race, and their finish positions don’t indicate much except that they can double-pole for 9 miles. I’m proud of the determination and effort the entire team showed under very difficult conditions.
Many thanks to the parents and friends who have come out to cheer over the past few weekends. We’ve enjoyed great post-race lunches the past two weeks provided by the Devlins, Schulzes, Burrusses, Mulshines, and Spragues!
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Wednesday, January 28th, 2009
 Alyssa Devlin
This past weekend both squads weathered the adjustment from exams to racing (in some instances less than 18 hours separated the two!) with fair team results and some solid individual finishes at the Bates Carnival.
From Tim Mitchell: Our weekend was highlighted by Chris Kinner’s 22nd place result in the GS; this was the best alpine result in recent memory. Kevin McNamara was solid in both the SL & GS to notch the first finishes of his collegiate racing career. Alec Boardman and Brad Alvarez both made huge strides in their performances over last year and each contributed to the scoring on the alpine side. Caroline McHugh notched her first collegiate results as well, knocking on the door of the top-30, while Tess Wood put down two solid runs each day to bolster the women’s team score. Conditions at Sunday River were good, with fantastic, hard snow for the GS and average conditions for the SL. The weekend was marked by seriously chilly temperatures which continued for the next several days as the Alpine squad remained at Sunday River for three more days of training before the Spring Semester begins.
From Chris City: Cara Sprague continued to build on her early season results by placing as the first Harvard woman in the 5km classic (48th) on Friday and overcoming a bad start to finish second among Harvard women in the 15km skate on Saturday. Alyssa Devlin took top honors for Harvard on Saturday with a 47th place finish. Audrey Mangan also scored for Harvard on both days. Other notable results were a personal best by Meri Burruss in the skate race and the college carnival debut for Shannon Mulshine. Captain Anna Schulz started both races despite fighting flu-like symptoms. Illness and injury kept three of our four men from starting on Friday. Trevor Petach had a good race in the 10km classic and a personal best on Saturday in the 20km skate (53rd; 57:29; 2:52/km; 16 sec./km behind the winning pace). Tor O’Brien was well enough on Saturday to make his Harvard racing debut (at four times his previous longest race distance!). Many thanks to David Rand and the Drifters Ski Club in Jackson, NH for hosting us during intersession, and to Thom Perkins of Jackson Ski Touring Foundation for providing complimentary training on the Foundation’s trails.
A full race story and link to the complete results can be found here: http://www.gocrimson.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=9000&ATCLID=3654371
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