STEVE GASKILL
Former Head US Nordic Combined Coach 70's/80's
Missoula, MT
International Cooperation
It was a long time ago in a land far to the North. The location was Mo-i-Rana, Norway. It is so long ago that I have forgotten exact
dates, but I believe it might have been March 19, 1978. March 19 because it was my birthday and 1978
because this story began at the World Championships in Lahti which, by the way,
will be the site of the 2017 Nordic World Championships.
The Nordic Combined team was having a pretty good year in
both the cross country portion and jumping events (except at the World
Championships). The team had gained a
lot of respect and we had spent lots of time training with other teams. Nordic Combined is a pretty small community
worldwide and back then, as I expect there still is, there was a good sense of
camaraderie between international athletes and coaches.
As the games were winding up, the Finnish head coach invited
me over for a sauna and celebration.
Saunas with the Finns are never to be taken lightly, but when mixed with
their love of spirits and competitive nature, they can be quite the
experience. This was not a letdown, and
by the time I finally bailed into the ice hole for the third time I was pretty
cooked (in more ways than one). Shortly
thereafter we were sitting on bearskin robes before a brightly burning fire and
sharing stories. Sometime during this
period I vaguely remember being asked if I would consider helping the Finnish
Nordic Combined team on the Northern Norway spring trip. The head coach needed to stay home and their
main assistant was expecting a new child.
What can one say? It was settled.
We worked our way north: Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim and Finally
to Mo-i-Rana (Mo) tucked just under the Arctic Circle. The competitions were
all great fun and fiercely fought. Kerry
Lynch, Pat Ahern, Mike Devecka, Gary Crawford and the juniors were all skiing
well as were the Finns. At Trondheim,
between the Finns and Americans, we accounted for six of the top 10 (3 American
and 3 Finns).
Mo was the end of the line.
We had traveled by rail north from Trondheim. I recall it snowed the entire way. Big wet flakes of spring snow. The jump in Mo looked out over the sea and
was a spectacular setting. Kerry Lynch
was leading after the jumping with Pat, Gary and Mike Devecka all in the
hunt. Sunday morning; Temperature was right at freezing and those
big flakes of wet snow just kept falling.
Back then, Nordic Combined was still a classic cross country event and
this even was not being run in the pursuit format. The best skiers were seeded at the end. All of the Americans had jumped well, but unfortunately
some had to start in the early XC waves based on the seeding.
Race morning, every team member, both Finn and American,
were testing wax. I had tried everything
and sent the early skiers out on my two pairs of no-wax skis. The hairies
(base roughed up with sandpaper) were OK, but a bit slick, everything else was
walking on stilts. With the top flight
just getting ready to start one of the Finns handed me a tube of Rex Silver klister with a big smile and Thumbs up. “Hyvä!,
Niin sitä pitää! (Good – That’s the Stuff!)”. While skeptical I started applying it to skis
as fast as I could. All hands were
helping and each of the last two Finns and American barely made it to the start
line. WOW! Those four skiers finished 1-4 many minutes
ahead of the rest of the pack. I don’t
remember the final results, but here were two Finns and two Americans at the
top of the XC and overall results. There
was another sauna and celebration that night – this time by the skiers while I
slept in.
Steve is now a professor at the University of Montana. To see his UMT bio, CLICK HERE
IT HURTS HERE. Steve Gaskill gives a TEDx Talk on the connection between motion and learning. |
No comments:
Post a Comment