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Difficult Teva Course Tests World's Best Kayakers
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Last modified
6/23/2010 3:08:01 PM
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Water Supply Protection
Description
RICD News Articles
State
CO
Basin
Colorado Mainstem
Water Division
5
Date
6/3/2005
Author
Scott Willoughby, The Denver Post
Title
Difficult Teva Course Tests World's Best Kayakers
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
News Article/Press Release
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12D THE DENVER POST *'* SPORTS FRIDAY, JUNE 3, ZOOS <br />' <br />Difficult Teva course tests world's best kayakers <br />Men's winner Tao Berman enjoyed the difficulty of the course <br />at the Teva Mountain Games. <br />Tao Berman of Seattle <br />wins the men's extreme <br />creek race while New <br />Zealand's Nikki Kelly <br />wins the women's event. <br />By Scott Willoughby <br />Denver Post Staff Writer <br />Red Cliff — Mountain rivers <br />are essentially composed of wa- <br />ter and rocks. Creeks, however, <br />reverse the order. <br />There certainly were more <br />rocks than water at this year's <br />edition of the Paddler magazine <br />extreme creek race Thursday, af- <br />ter a recent wave of cold temper- <br />atures in the mountains left a <br />scant 50 cubic feet per second of <br />liquid streaming down the jum- <br />bled cascade of Homestake <br />Creek where it joins the Eagle <br />River. Still, more than 40 of the <br />world's top kayakers willingly <br />risked battered elbows and occa- <br />sionally bruised egos to tackle <br />one of Colorado's steepest sec- <br />tions of whitewater during the <br />200 Teva Mountain Games. <br />"I think it's a good race that's <br />real technical and real difficult," <br />said race winner Tao Berman of <br />Seattle. "This is one of the more <br />difficult races just because there <br />are so many rocks and so many <br />little obstacles that you could <br />lose the race on. There are other <br />races that look much more spec- <br />tacular, but the lines are so much <br />easier to hit that there are fewer <br />variables in those races. This is <br />one of the hardest races that I've <br />done just because there are so <br />many places where you can lose <br />the race." <br />Berman, who lost the first race <br />of his 2oo5 kayaking season just <br />a day before in the Dowd Chute <br />Paddlecross at the Teva Games, <br />made a strong showing in his <br />first run of the 2 -lap race Thurs- <br />day, sluicing through the <br />48o- foot - per -mile gradient 2.8 <br />seconds faster than his closest <br />competitor, Pat Keller of Ash- <br />ville, N.C. <br />Keller, the 2003 race winner <br />who turns 19 on Monday, <br />trimmed the lead by two sec- <br />onds on his second run down the <br />river, but failed to match Ber- <br />man's winning time of 3 min- <br />utes, 33 seconds. Eric Jackson of <br />Rock Island, Tenn., finished <br />third in 3:41. <br />"I wasn't charging quite as <br />hard as I could have on my first <br />run because I wanted to save <br />some energy for my second <br />run," Keller said. "But on my sec- <br />ond run, I used everything I had. <br />You can't really go down the <br />whole run charging in this race, <br />because you're going to mess up. <br />You have to take your time, time <br />your strokes, use your edges to <br />help yourself turn and use your <br />energy the best you can to work <br />it out. You really have to stick <br />your moves." <br />Peter M. Fredin I The Associated Press <br />Laura Nash maneuvers her way down Homestake Creek dur- <br />ing the women's extreme creek race Thursday. <br />The precision necessary to be <br />competitive was evident <br />throughout the event, as some of <br />the world's best kayakers fell vic- <br />tim to the demands of Home - <br />stake Creek. Among the most no- <br />table was 2003 freestyle world <br />champion Jay Kincaid of Reno, <br />Nev., who was forced to swim <br />when his kayak was pinned be- <br />tween boulders on one of the <br />creek's many technical drops. <br />Women's champion Nikki <br />Kelly of New Zealand also found <br />herself on the rocks on a couple <br />of occasions, but managed to re- <br />gain her line and separate her- <br />self from the rest of the field by <br />12 seconds after two runs. Tanya <br />Faux of Australia finished sec- <br />ond, followed by Robin Betz of <br />Blacksburg, Va., 25 seconds off <br />the pace. <br />"If I hadn't gotten spun out on <br />a rock, I might have given some <br />of the boys' egos a bruise," said <br />Kelly, whose two -run time of <br />four minutes was better than sev- <br />eral men. "I'm just happy I've got <br />no holes in my boat." <br />Scott Willoughby can <br />be reached at 303 -820 -1993 or <br />swilloughby@denverpost.com. <br />Toni Axelrod I Special to The Denver Post <br />X <br />S <br />i <br />Peter M. Fredin I The Associated Press <br />Laura Nash maneuvers her way down Homestake Creek dur- <br />ing the women's extreme creek race Thursday. <br />The precision necessary to be <br />competitive was evident <br />throughout the event, as some of <br />the world's best kayakers fell vic- <br />tim to the demands of Home - <br />stake Creek. Among the most no- <br />table was 2003 freestyle world <br />champion Jay Kincaid of Reno, <br />Nev., who was forced to swim <br />when his kayak was pinned be- <br />tween boulders on one of the <br />creek's many technical drops. <br />Women's champion Nikki <br />Kelly of New Zealand also found <br />herself on the rocks on a couple <br />of occasions, but managed to re- <br />gain her line and separate her- <br />self from the rest of the field by <br />12 seconds after two runs. Tanya <br />Faux of Australia finished sec- <br />ond, followed by Robin Betz of <br />Blacksburg, Va., 25 seconds off <br />the pace. <br />"If I hadn't gotten spun out on <br />a rock, I might have given some <br />of the boys' egos a bruise," said <br />Kelly, whose two -run time of <br />four minutes was better than sev- <br />eral men. "I'm just happy I've got <br />no holes in my boat." <br />Scott Willoughby can <br />be reached at 303 -820 -1993 or <br />swilloughby@denverpost.com. <br />Toni Axelrod I Special to The Denver Post <br />
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