okansas.blogspot.com Occassional thoughts about orienteering |
Sunday, January 05, 2003 F is for FranceI've orienteered in France once. I had a lot of fun. The terrain was interesting, most of the maps were fine, and the courses were good.Here are a few legs from the 1987 WOC relay race (with my routes). You'll notice that I spent a lot of time running on trails. The woods were nice. But, my strategy was to run trails as much as I could. I was running the first leg and was most concerned with having a clean race. My time was 79:53 for just under 10 km. The other US runners were: Mikell Platt (88:32), Dan Meenehan (74:13) and Eric Weyman (73:48). The best runners were just under 65. Any time around 70 would have been very good. Running the WOC in France was the first time I'd set up a goal (making the US team) that I really worked for. I almost missed it. I got sick at the team trials. Just before the team trials, I caught a virus (symptoms included being very tired, having trouble breathing, a sore throat, and strange fluid leaking out of my eye sockets). I was young and dumb. So, I ran the trials even though I was sick. I finished way back but was selected as a discretionary pick. The year before the WOC, France hosted a World Cup and a multi-event. A bunch of top US runners went to Europe and went to France to run those races. I went to Europe, but I didn't go to France. While most of the Americans were in France, I went to Norway. I figured I had more to learn by going to Scandinavia. The month or two before the WOC, I went to Scandinavia again. Once again, I figured I had more to learn by going to Scandinavia. I showed up in France a week or so before the WOC and spent a week trying to figure out how to orienteering in the French terrain. There is something to be said for preparing for a WOC by spending a bunch of time in the host nation. But, there is also something to be said for preparing for a WOC by spending a bunch of time in Scandinavia. posted by Michael | 8:24 PM
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