2010 Winter Olympics
From news on athletes, tickets, facilities and the border, Adventure writer Craig Hill takes you inside the ramp up to the 2010 Winter Olympics. Just 175 miles north of Tacoma, the Vancouver, B.C., games will likely be the closest the Olympics ever come to the South Sound region. Reach Craig via e-mail at craig.hill@thenewstribune.com.
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A look inside the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, B.C.
Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009
Posted by Craig Hill @ 09:05:04 am

Ever since Nicole Joraanstad graduated from Kentridge High in 1999 and moved to Madison, Wisc., she hasn’t had many reasons to return to the Northwest.

She picked the University of Wisconsin to study business, her parents – Gary and Debra -moved to Mississippi then Ohio and Joraanstad spends her spare time curling.

But in February she earned a reason to return to the Northwest when her team won the curling national championship for the fourth year in a row.

This time the national championship came with a spot in the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, making her – and her team – the first Americans to qualify for the games.

Most of the American athletes won’t officially be named until January. The games are Feb. 12-28.

“It’s nice to qualify so early,” said Joraanstad, a 29-year-old corporate recruiter for TDS Telecom. “It gives us a chance to plan out everything without being rushed.”

Joraanstad started curling because of her dad, Gary, who played out of Seattle’s Granite Curling Club. He played on some good teams that contended for national championships in the 1980s before curling was an Olympic event.

When Joraanstad turned 15 she started curling and in 1996 her team advanced to junior nationals and finished eighth.

“I was pretty much hooked after that,” Joraanstad said.
She quit the school softball, basketball and track teams to focus on curling and it paid off.

Her teams returned to junior nationals the next five years winning the title in 2000 and 2001 after she moved to Madison.
“Granite is a great club but I needed to go some place where there where more clubs and more curlers,” Joraanstad said.

Curling became an Olympic sport at the 1998 games in Nagano. Still a junior at Kentridge at the time, Joraanstad envisioned a day when she would be competing for a gold medal.

By the 2002 Olympics she was already in contention to qualify. Her team finished fourth in qualifiers. Only one team advances to the games.

It was qualifying for the 2006 games that proved to be one of the key moments in her career.

Her team along with Debbie McCormick’s Wisconsin team were the favorites, but both teams were upset.

The next summer McCormick and Joraanstad decided to combine forces to form a team that wouldn’t be upset the next time around. Joraanstad joined McCormick’s team, which also includes Tracy Sachtjen of Wisconsin and Allison Pottinger and Natalie Nicholson of Minnesota.

The team has dominated women’s curling in the United States ever since.

When this year’s national championships came around Joraanstad’s new team was ready. There would be no upsets.
As the team’s second – meaning she throws the third and fourth stones and sweeps for everybody else – Joraanstad helped her team go undefeated.

Joraanstad and her teammates usually take the summer, but not this year.

Three weekends a month Joraanstad makes the 21/2-hour drive from Madison to Green Bay to practice with her team. The team will also take a training trip to Switzerland this summer.

“This is a new model for us but I think it will work well,” Joraanstad said. “We are keeping our skills honed so we are starting off stronger next season.”

Perhaps that will also translate into a spot on the podium when she comes home to the Northwest where she says she still has lots of friends and extended family.

The team will have to be at the top of its game in Vancouver. As dominant as it has been in the United States, it has yet to win a world championship.

The team finished ninth in March at the World Championships in Korea. Its best finish came in 2006 in Alberta when it finished second, but it was fourth in 2007 and seventh in ’08.
The U.S. has never won an Olympic medal in women’s curling.

Joraanstad expects that to change in Vancouver. “We expect to win gold.”

(Photo: USACURL.org)

Friday, February 27th, 2009
Posted by Craig Hill @ 02:07:32 pm

Seattle's Colin Huffman is just one win away from earning a spot in the 2010 Olympics. Huffman is the fifth player on Tyler George's Minnesota-based team and Washington's final shot at putting a curler in the Olympics.

George's team beat John Shuster's Minnesota team 6-5 with a point in the final end to earn a place in Saturday's finals.

Categories: Curling
Thursday, February 26th, 2009
Posted by Craig Hill @ 09:29:17 pm

Washington might get a curler in the Olympics after all.

Seattle’s Colin Huffman was added to Tyler George’s Minnesota rink as their fifth player. A curling team has four players, so Huffman will be the reserve. Huffman played on Jason Larway’s accomplished Seattle team this season, but the team, which made the playoffs at nationals the last two seasons, just missed qualifying for the Olympic trials.

George’s team went 8-1 in pool play and is the top seed in the playoffs that start today.

Categories: Curling
Wednesday, February 25th, 2009
Posted by Craig Hill @ 10:19:41 pm

Cristin Clark's rink finished up at the U.S. Curling Trials tonight with a 9-2 loss to Patti Lank's team from New York.

Clark's team finished with a 2-7 record.

Categories: Curling
Posted by Craig Hill @ 06:11:44 pm

Greg Romaniuk rebounded from his morning loss to beat Kevin Deeren’s Chicago team 7-6 to stay in playoff contention at the U.S. Curling Trials.

Mark Johnson’s team blew a two-point lead in the tenth end on Wednesday night before falling 10-8 to Craig Brown’s Wisconsin Team in the extra end.

Both Seattle teams are 4-4 in pool play, with their final match tomorrow.

Posted by Craig Hill @ 01:40:56 pm

Cristin Clark's Seattle team lost 8-7 moments ago to Amy Wright's Minnesota Team at the U.S. Olympic Curling Trials in Broomfield, Colo.

Clark's team is 2-6 in pool play and was eliminated from playoff contention last night. The team plays its final match tonight.

Categories: Curling
Posted by Craig Hill @ 09:59:54 am

Mark Johnson’s team won this morning solidifying his chances of making the playoffs at the U.S. Olympic Trials in Broomfield, Colo.

Johnson’s Seattle team beat Kevin Deeren’s Chicago team 8-5 and improved to 4-3 in pool play. With two games to play Johnson is in a four-way tie for second.

The Greg Romaniuk team didn’t have a good morning. Romaniuk became the first team at trials to get shutout, losing 7-0 in five ends to Craig Disher’s North Dakota team. Romaniuk is 3-4 in pool play.

Both teams play again at 3 p.m. Johnson plays defending national champ Craig Brown of Wisconsin and Romaniuk plays Team Deeren.

Tuesday, February 24th, 2009
Posted by Craig Hill @ 06:04:44 pm

Greg Romaniuk and Mark Johnson, skips of Seattle's two teams at U.S. Olympic trials, both won their matches today.

Romaniuk defeated Christopher Plys' Minnesota team 5-4.

Johnson defeated Mike Farbelow's Minnesota team 4-3.

Both teams are 3-3 and in position to make the playoff that will determine the U.S. representative in the 2010 Olympics.

Posted by Craig Hill @ 12:45:23 pm

Cristin Clark of Lynnwood and her Seattle-based curling let and two-point lead slip away and lost a pivotal match today at the U.S. Olympic Curling Trials.

Clark's team lost 11-8 to Erika Brown's Minnesota team.

Clark is now 2-4 in pool play and has almost no room for error in her final three matches. Clark is two games behind the pace to make the playoff that will determine the spot in the 2010 Olympics.

Categories: Curling
Monday, February 23rd, 2009
Posted by Craig Hill @ 10:15:46 pm

After losing three matches in a row, Mark Johnson’s team rebounded with a decisive 10-7 victory of Craig Disher’s North Dakota team tonight.

For the second night in a row Greg Romaniuk went to extra ends in his team’s night match. But this time Romaniuk prevailed with a 10-8 win over Mike Farbelow’s Minnesota team.

Johnson and Romaniuk are 2-3 in pool play.

Posted by Craig Hill @ 07:04:55 pm

Cristin Clark's team scored two points in the 10th end to complete a come-from-behind victory over Gillian Gervais' North Dakota team Monday night at the U.S. Curling Olympic Trials.

Clark's 7-6 win was her team's second today improving its record to 2-3 in pool play. They are one game out of position to make the playoff that will determine which team goes to the 2010 Olympics.

Categories: Curling
Posted by Craig Hill @ 02:34:28 pm

Local curling teams skipped by Greg Romaniuk and Mark Johnson lost again today at the Olympic Trials.

Romaniuk lost 8-5 to tournament leader Todd Birr of Minnesota. Johnson lost 5-4 to John Shuster's Minnesota team.

Romaniuk and Johnson are both 1-3 in pool play and play again tonight. The top four teams in the 10-team field make the playoff to determine the 2010 Olympic participant.