The
last day of free training time is now over! During the next week
each country will get two training sessions of four hours each.
To give 30 countries training time is not easy. There are many people
coming on the 19th for one week of training for the event. It is
quite possible that they can do well, but many of them will struggle
to get comfortable in the hole. The moves don’t all come that
easy in this hole.
There are reactionary holes coming off the eddies on either side
of the hole. These reactionaries shoot straight into the middle
of the foampile on the backside of it. They cause people fits for
two reasons. Number one, when somebody tries to do a move on the
corner of the hole, they get pushed back on the pile and dropped
right into the center which is sucking in quite hard. Then they
have to either tuck and throw immediately or get launched into the
pit. Is this good or bad? Yes, it is good or bad, depending upon
how you deal with it. If you hold back and don’t take advantage
of the fact the hole wants you in middle and throw down when you
get there, then it is bad. If you do any of the classic hole moves
as soon as you get to the meat, such as back loops, splits, cartwheels,
cleans, tricky woos then you will be rewarded.
This hole will be the ultimate open boat hole! I am actually looking
forward to watching the open boat competition for the first time
in a long time. The open boats will get spun on the corners, and
dropped into the meat which is steep and strong, so they will get
vertical, like it or not, and then, it will happen again, and again!
I expect some real intense open boat rides!
I feel sorry for anybody with a really short boat here too. The
foam is quite thick and the smallest boats don’t reach the
green water so they get vertical and either fall down or get launched
into the green water. This hole isn’t good for loops unless
you have a long enough boat (Yes, that is correct, long enough)
and you have the technique down of launching way up into the green
water doing a meltdown under the foam. Andrew Holcomb is awesome
at this and really opened up peoples minds to the possibilities
of the hole. I heard numerous complaints that this hole isn’t
worthy of a world championships. The two reasons were, one, it is
too hard, and two you can’t do big air loops.
What do I think? Well, it is the world championships, if it is
too hard or you can’t get certain moves, well then you will
get beaten by those who can. It isn’t the job of the organizers
to make a feature suitable for the lowest common denominator. Instead,
it is great when there are a couple of hundred kayakers trying airloops
and only a couple get them. Javid Grubbs will do well getting loops
here, it is his kind of loop hole. But loops are only one of many
moves. In the slalom world championships it is typical for the course
designers to make a course with one or two moves that only the top
5 men’s kayakers, at best, can do the moves direct (with out
spinning or backferrying). This is always cool because everybody
wants to be one of those athletes who can do it direct. The rest
of the classes (except perhaps C-1) have to spin or back ferry the
move, which is cool too, but it means that the course is always
challenging and gives people something to strive for.
Every body is looking for a move that they can do that nobody else
can. Andrew Holcomb is doing the big airloops with some consistency,
50%, and that is his ace in the hole. Tobi Bersch is doing the tricky
woo at an 80% consistency and almost nobody else can get it here
without flushing, that is his. I have my entry Space Godzilla, which
is my ace in the hole (plus the Tricky woo, and perhaps the McNasty,
if I can get it down better here)
I will give a report on the Women and Junior Women next.
EJ
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