JWOC 2014 Final Report

Yesterday saw the conclusion of JWOC 2014 with the relays for men and women held at Borovets near to the team’s accommodation for the week. The map was not as technical as the middle and appeared to be very well suited to a relay. The men did not have such a good day with unfortunately a mp in the second leg by Oliver Poland. The second men’s team finished in 28th place. The women struggled to deal with the relay challenges and finished in 29th and 31st positions.

relay map JWOC

Brodie Nankervis who has achieved three top 20 results in the individual events has reported on his experiences

Brodie Middle q

“Today was not the day for Australia. Oscar McNulty ran like a champion, running most of the course with an injury that required a hospital visit! Olle Poland and I pushed until the end but unfortunately it wasn’t enough!

But the day was not without positives! As I was competing my last loop I had the opportunity to cheer Nick Hann and the New Zealanders into 6th place. I have a lot of respect for the New Zealand team and you guys deserve this 100%! Congrats.

With three top 20s in 3 races I can say that my JWOC 2014 was a real success! I am looking forward to what I can achieve in the future.”

In a final report on JWOC we must mention the performances not only of Brodie but also Oscar McNulty in finishing 17th in the sprint and 19th in the long, making the A final in the middle and completing the first leg of the relay with an injury in a competitive time.

A special thank you to Hanny Allston for all he coaching efforts especially as she travelled to Bulgaria straight after competing at WOC in Italy and to Karen Blatchford for her management of this 2014 Australian JWOC team. I know that the athletes and the supporters all greatly appreciate your efforts.

Hanny middle

Karen B 2

Detailed report on JWOC can be seen here

http://news.worldofo.com/2014/07/28/jwoc-2014-maps-results-and-medal-overview/

JWOC Middle Final- Brodie our best performed.

Three Australian men competed in the A final of the JWOC Middle Distance today. Brodie Nankervis doing the best of the three to achieve his third top 20 position with a very good performance to finish in 16th place after being in 6th place at the first radio control. This result means that Brodie has achieved a top 20 place in all the individual events at JWOC- sprint, long and middle. The first time since the sprint was introduced into the JWOC program in 2006 that an Australian has achieved this. Oscar McNulty finished in 32nd place (+8:59) and Oliver Poland in 34th place (+9:20). In the B final Henry McNulty finished in 21st place, Matt Doyle in 32nd place and Ashley Nankervis in 51st place.

Oscar middle final

All the women competed in the B final with the best performances coming from Michele Dawson in 12th place, Anna Dowling in 17th place. The other results were Nicola Blatchford 22nd, Lanita Steer 23rd, Olivia Sprod 45th and Asha Steer 50th.

Lanita middle

Tomorrow sees the final event of this JWOC carnival with the relay for men and women. The men will be represented by two teams: Oscar McNulty, Oliver Poland, Brodie Nankervis and Henry McNulty, Ashley Nankervis, Matt Doyle.

The womens teams are: Lanita Steer, Anna Dowling, Michele Dawson and Asha Steer, Nicola Blatchford, Olivia Sprod.

The JWOC blog has been updated with some reports from the middle qualification and middle final

http://ausjuniororienteering.blogspot.it/

Full results are available from

http://www.jwoc2014.bg/index.php?name=livecenter

Good luck to all four teams in the relay tomorrow.

JWOC Middle Qualification

Today was the qualification heats for the middle distance final to be held tomorrow. After a rest and recovery day yesterday which included a get together with all the Aussie supporters in Bulgaria and also the NZ team and their supporters, the team was faced with what promised to be a very technical middle distance qualifier. The top 20 from each of the three heats progresses to the “A” final.

Oscar McN Middle q

Our men continued their very impressive performances at this JWOC with three qualifying for the A final. Oscar McNulty and Brodie Nankervis continued their great form with Oscar finishing 11th in his heat and Brodie finishing 17th in his heat. Oliver Poland had a much improved performance in his heat to finish 11th and easily qualify for the A final.

Brodie Middle q

This is the most men (3) who have qualified for the A final in the last ten years. Henry McNulty in his first JWOC had a steady run to finish in 23rd place in his heat.

Oliver P Middle Q

Unfortunately the women have not managed to make the A final tomorrow. The best performed were Anna Dowling and Michele Dawson who both finished 25th in their heat.

The start times for the A Final Men are Brodie Nankervis 10:22, Oscar McNulty 10:54 (wearing GPS), Oliver Poland 10:58.

The maps from the long distance event are available on the JWOC website

http://www.jwoc2014.bg/index.php?name=maps

It is worth having a look at the map and especially the legs 3-4 and 7-8 for both the men and the women. It is not hard to see why the winning time for the women was 13 minutes longer than expected.

You can also see the old map of the middle qualification and final. Some very interesting contour detail.

JWOC Long Distance- Aussie men great performances

Today in Bulgaria the Australian men had a great day in the long distance event which was held in very steep terrain with a lot of “green” areas on the map.

Brodie Nankervis and Oscar McNulty followed up their good results in the sprint distance event with in some ways even more impressive results today. Brodie finishing in 13th place (+8:20). He was one second behind 12th place. This is Australia’s best men’s result in the long distance event at JWOC since Simon Uppill 4th in Dubbo in 2007. To make it an even better day Oscar McNulty finished in 19th place (+10:28) to give Australia two runners in the top 20. This has not been done for a very long time. (Beyond my records). The other Australian men were Henry McNulty (+16:49), Matt Doyle (+26:08), Oliver Poland (+31:18), Ashley Nankervis (+57:02). The winner was Anton Johannsson (Sweden) in a time of 75:17. There was 3 New Zealanders in the top 30 with Tim Robinson following up his win in the sprint with a 16th place in the long.

Brodie long 2014

Brodie’s comments after the race

“I don’t really know how to describe today.. Coming through spectator I had no idea that I was on a half decent run but with the amazing aussie support on the run through I was able to keep it together and run solidly in the last loop! To finish in 13th today is absolutely amazing for me and shows that perseverance after making mistakes certainly pays off.

This result has been a goal of mine for the past 3 years but I couldn’t have made it without the help of Michael Dowling, you have been an amazing mentor and have taught me many important lessons over the past few years. I would also like all those who helped with my preparations for JWOC 2014, including but not limited to; Hanny Allston (an amazing coach and mentor), Karen Blatchford and of course two of the most supportive parents you could ask for Kim Nankervis andDirk Nankervis!
Finally I would just like to thank all of the aussie support I have been receiving over the past couple of days and a special shout out to the boys who accompanied me in Bulgaria for final preparations over the past two weeks!”

Brodie and Oscar long

The women’s course was a very challenging one as the winning time of 68:15 is 13 minutes longer than the expected winning time. The winner was Gunvor Hov Hoydal (Norway). The best Australian was Michele Dawson finishing 58th (+26:31). The others were Lanita Steer 86th, Olivia Sprod 88th, Asha Steer 97th, Anna Dowling 103rd, Nicola Blatchford 105th.

Michele long

Tomorrow will be a day for rest and recovery in preparation for the Middle Qualification heats on Friday.

Wrap up of JWOC training week

2014 JWOC team

The team met in Sofia at various hours of the afternoon and evening on Sunday 13th July. We were most impressed with our accommodation, quite luxurious really with shared rooms but no other teams around, a huge lobby with terrific wifi and the meals were going to prove to be just as impressive.

Our first morning together involved introducing ourselves as we had planned to be working closely with the New Zealand team. Their coach, Rob Jessup and our coach, Hanny had worked together to plan the training activities for the week.

Our training this week has involved:

· Middle distance training with a map walk and course on Shiroki Dol

· Long distance training on Govedarci – a course with a long leg

· Sprint intervals in a park

· Long simulation on “Marchaevo”

· Middle simulation on “Reylovo”

· Sprint simulation on “Vazrajdane”

· Walk/jog intervals around relay map.

By all accounts the team has been extremely happy with the professional quality of the training and the effort of Rob in bringing flags across to Bulgaria, setting the courses and having them preprinted, extra effort with splits for mass starts has been very much appreciated. To have the assistance of Toph to put out controls and his demo of 3D rerun has been invaluable. How lucky are we to have the experience of our own WOC runner Hanny with her knowledge of pre race preparation and working through major competition races? That has been terrific for all involved and the two teams have worked extremely well together. Anna and I have had a blast as Managers and have even been entrusted to collect some controls – like boot camp really !

With the training week complete we look ahead to a week of competition. The emphasis on the athletes has been to do their best, to go in feeling prepared and to enjoy the experience and not put heavy expectations on themselves.

We’d like to sincerely thank the Aussies for your support – to know that so many are reading their blog and checking out their facebook page and showing appreciation for their intstagaram pics has been really comforting.

Rest assured all the athletes are very appreciative of this experience and their behaviour and commitment have been exemplary. They will be doing their very best this week.

The competition week program is as follows:

· Tues 22nd SPRINT Samokov

· Wed 23rd LONG Malyovitsa

· Thurs 24th Rest Day

· Fri 25th MIDDLE QUAL Zheleznica

· Sat 26th MIDDLE FINAL Zheleznica

· Sun 27th RELAY Borovets

We’d love you to follow the events via the JWOC 2014 website: http://jwoc2014.bg/index.php We are 7 hours behind Eastern Standard Time Aus.

For each race 40 men and 40 women (randomly chosen) will have GPS tracking, except in the relay where it will only the 3rd leg male runners.

Hopefully (depending on wifi at the arena) we can keep you updated with results and pics via our facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/AusJWOC2014

With a full rest day tomorrow our athletes are starting to prepare fully for their races and think about their preferred start blocks. I’ll inform you of start times via the facebook page and their blog during the week. Hanny and I are enjoying our new roles immensely. Cheers from Bulgaria.

Karen Blatchford, Team Manager

Junior World Orienteering Championships- Bulgaria.

The 2014 Junior World Orienteering Championships will be held next week in Bulgaria. The event centre and the location for the relays is Borovets which is Bulgaria’s main ski resort and is 1300m in altitude. The Australian team are currently in a pre-competition camp along with the NZ team undergoing some exercises set up by Rob Jessup the NZ coach.

The Australian team is:

Coach: Hanny Allston

Manager: Karen Blatchford

Women: Nicola Blatchford, Michele Dawson, Anna Dowling, Olivia Sprod, Asha Steer, Lanita Steer.

Men: Matt Doyle, Henry McNulty, Oscar McNulty, Ashley Nankervis, Brodie Nankervis, Oliver Poland.

This year’s Australian team is a mixture of experienced JWOC competitors and those who are experiencing JWOC for the first time.

JWOC training 2014 2

Oliver Poland is competing at his 5th JWOC, Oscar McNulty at his 4th, Brodie Nankervis and Michele Dawson at their 3rd. Matt Doyle, Nicola Blatchford and Lanita Steer are competing at their second JWOC. The debutants are Anna Dowling, Olivia Sprod, Asha Steer, Henry McNulty and Ashley Nankervis.

JWOC is a little different to WOC in that all team members can compete in all events, so we have six representatives in both the women’s and the men’s events. The events do not include a sprint relay, but there is a qualification event for the middle.

The program for the week is:

Tuesday 22nd July: Sprint– Samokov, mixed urban and park terrain.

Wednesday 23rd July: Long Distance– Malyovitsa, moderately hilly pine forest between 1300m and 1750m altitude.

Friday 25th July: Middle qualification– Zheleznica, hilly terrain between 900m and 1000m altitude.Terrain with many details. The using of magnifier is recommended!

Saturday 26th July: Middle Final– Zheleznica,hilly terrain between 900m and 1000m altitude. Terrain with many details. The using of magnifier is recommended!

Sunday 27th July: Relays– Borovets. Moderately hilly terrain in the forests nearest to Borovets resort. About 1300m altitude.

The well-known elite Bulgarian orienteer Kiril Nikolov will be the course setter for both the Long Distance and the Middle Distance events.

There is no indication on the official website about live results. Bulletin 4 indicates that there will be GPS tracking of 40 athletes in the Sprint, Long and Middle distance events so something may become available.

Event website is

http://www.jwoc2014.bg/index.php?name=home

The Australian team’s blog is being kept up to date with the latest team info

http://ausjuniororienteering.blogspot.it/

A/NZ MTBO Challenge Results

The official results from the recent Australia-New Zealand MTBO Challenge held recently in Alice Springs, reveal a win for Australia, on the dry, rugged tracks that surrounded the township. Here are more details on the class results…

Sprint Distance

First Team Places Second Team Places
WO AUS (C Jackson 21.30 + M Simpson 24.09 = 45.39) NZL (No Riders)
W50 NZL (S Dickson 19.52 + J Boland 26.12 = 46.04) AUS (A Scown 23.11 + H Leslie 26.59 = 50.10)
W70 AUS (D Gordon 33.56) NZL (Y Gelderman 39.31)
MO AUS (C Firman 28.00 + R Thackray 29.07 = 57.07) NZL (G Barbour 32.01 – only NZL rider)
M40 AUS (C Steffens 21.34 + N Kerr 22.25 = 43.59) NZL (No riders)
M50 AUS (D Sullivan 21.20 + A Power 22.22= 43.52) NZL (D King 20.21 + A Metherall 27.59 = 48.20)
M60 AUS (P Cusworth 16.23 + D Firman 18.49 = 35.12) NZL (M Wood 17.16 + NZL dnf)
M70 AUS (K Wade 22.17) NZL (C Gelderman 28.07)

Middle Distance

First Team Places Second Team Places
WO AUS (C Jackson 1.08.05 + M Simpson 1.24.15 = 2.32.20) NZL (No riders)
W50 NZL (D Bain 44.05 + S Dickson 44.50 = 88.55) AUS (A Scown 53.23 + H Leslie 77.31 = 130.54)
W70 AUS (D Gordon 54.48) NZL (Y Gelderman 98.48)
MO AUS (A Randall 67.45 + R Thackray 81.22) NZL (G Barbour 78.08 – only 1 NZL rider)
M40 AUS (N Kerr 68.31 + C Steffens 69.31 = 2.18.02 NZL (No riders)
M50 NZL D King 51.22 + A Metherall 60.38 = 112.00) AUS ( A Power 55.43 + D Sullivan 60.27 = 116.10)
M60 NZL (M Wood 40.45 + J Sheriff 41.44 = 82.29) AUS (D Firman 43.42 + P Cusworth 45.01 = 88.43)
M70 NZL (C Gelderman 33.30) AUS (B Gordon 36.44)

Long Distance

First TeamPlaces Second Team Places
WO AUS (C Jackson 2.19.20 + M Simpson 2.26.54 = 4.46.14) NZL (No riders)
W50 NZL (D Bain 1.29.54 + S Dickson 1.36.14 = 3.06.08) AUS ( A Scown 1.47.09 + H Leslie 1.58.48 = 3.45.57)
W70 NZL (Y Gelderman 1.13.57) AUS (H Smith 1.17.20)
MO AUS (C Fiman 2.04.07 + A Randall 2.05.23 = 4.09.30) NZL (No riders)
M40 AUS (C Steffens 2.07.35 + N Kerr 2.09.27 = 4.17.02) NZL (G Barbour 2.08.54 – only NZL rider)
M50 AUS (D Sullivan 1.36.08 + A Power 1.36.44 = 3.12.52) NZL (D King 1.41.20 + A Metherall 1.50.06 = 3.31.26)
M60 AUS ( P Cusworth 1.09.45 + R Armstrong 1.20.15 = 2.30.00) NZL (J Sheriff 1.14.37 + M Wood 1.25.10 = 2.39.47)
M70 AUS (T Hackney 46.56) NZL (C Gelderman 1.23.51)

WOC 2014 Final Report

Here is a summary of Australia’s performances at WOC 2014 in Italy which concluded on Saturday with the relays for men and women. There are two aspects to our performances given the new system the IOF have for determining the numbers of runners each country has in the middle and long distance events. They are the individual performances of each of the athletes in the team and also the points that we earn from the long, middle and relay which go towards determining our quota for 2015.

WOC Team 2014

Individual performances

Sprint Qualification

Hanny Allston 7th, 14:243, +1:26. Felicity Brown 16th, 15:09, +1:31. Rachel Effeney 3rd, 13:51, +:12

Julian Dent 12th, 13:18, +:41. Lachlan Dow 22nd, 13:32, +1:02. Simon Uppill 22nd, 13:50, +1:04.

Hanny, Rachel and Julian qualified for the final.

Sprint Final

Hanny Allston 24th, 17:42:3, +2:10:3. Rachel Effeney 27th, 17:52:4, +2:20:4. Julian Dent 36th, 17:32:7, +1:55:5.

Long Distance

Hanny Allston 13th, 85:86, +6:12, Vanessa Round 43rd, 98:23, +18:39. Simon Uppill 43rd, 115:35, +20:50.

Middle Distance

Hanny Allston 15th, 42:02, +4:59. Jasmine Neve 55th, 54:45, +17:42. Julian Dent 25th, 43:54, +5:42.

Team Performances

Sprint Relay

Rachel Effeney 6th, 14:46, Julian Dent 10th, 15:50, Simon Uppill 13th, 16:24, Hanny Allston 10th, 14:45

The team finished in 10th place, +2:41 against the winners Switzerland.

SPRINT RELAY TEAM

Womens Relay

Jasmine Neve 42:51, 14th, Rachel Effeney 55:41, 23rd, Hanny Allston 40:57, 16th

The team finished in 16th place, +28:08 against the winners Switzerland.Womens relay

Mens Relay

Simoin Uppill 42:54, 17th, Lachlan Dow 47:15, 22nd, Julian Dent 46:33, 17th.

The team finished in 17th place, +19:53 against the winners Sweden.

Mens relay team

Our performances in the events which generate points for determining the number of runners in 2015 (ie: middle, long and relay) means that in 2015 Australia will have two runners in both the women’s and the men’s. Given that 2015 is also the year for the Oceania Championships middle and long distance events in Tasmania in January in conjunction with the World Cup events, it is possible that Australia may have three runners in the middle and long next year at WOC if an Australian athlete can win the Oceania Middle or Long. The winner of these regional championships which are held every two years automatically qualifies to compete in that event at WOC in that year. So there is some great opportunities for our elite athletes in the next year, both at the World Cup events in Tasmania and also at WOC to be held in Scotland in the first week of August 2015. The preparation for these starts now.

In a weeks’ time we will have our JWOC team competing at the Junior World Orienteering Championships in Bulgaria. A prelude for these events will be coming soon.

WOC Middle and Relay

The final two events of WOC 2014 in Italy were held in the same area, Campomulo. A region near Asiago with altitude above 1200m. The organisers choose a great area for the arena and it was the same for both events with some small changes to the runners directions. It promised to be a very good place for viewing both the big screens and also the run through and the finish. This was the case for the middle but unfortunately for the relay the day started out fine and sunny but by the time the men’s relay started the rain had set in and continued for the rest of the afternoon.

The middle was a very physical challenge for the athletes and the times indicated this. The women ran first and this time the seeded runners started last. Jasmine Neve was our first starter and finished in 55th place.

Hanny Allston was running well and came through the run through looking good. She eventually finished in a very good 15th place, 4:59 minutes down on the winner Annika Billstam (Sweden).

Hanny middle

The mens field included Thierry Gueorgiou who has won more middle distance WQOC events than anyone else and after his win in the Long he was obviously feeling confident. Julian Dent was our sole runner and he was running well at the run through being the leader at that stage. He went out onto the very physical last section of the course looking a little tired. He eventually finished in equal 25th position only 5:42 minutes behind the winner. Julian got to sit in the second place chair for a while after he finished.

The fastest over the finish was Thierry Gueorgiou, from Olav Lundanes. Very quickly there was an announcement that Thierry Gueorgiou had been DSQ- the crowd went silent in surprise and then Olav Lundanes was confirmed as the winner of the middle. Julian was happy with his run and said that he was just not strong enough up the hills- “not enough hills in Sweden”.

Julian chair

The relay was always going to be a big day for a lot of countries given the new structure that the IOF have implemented for determining the numbers of runners each country will have in the middle and long distance events in 2015. This very much was influenced by the results in the relay as double points can be gained from the relay. The men needed a result similar to 2014 or better to ensure that they would have two runners next year. This was so particularly after Simon’s and Julian’s good performances in the long and middle. The women started first and were faced with a long uphill leg to the first controls. The field soon started to spread out due to the physical nature of the terrain and the forking. Jasmine was our first leg runner and she came to the finish in 14th position after a steady run which she felt good about. On the second leg Rachel Effeney was a last minute replacement for Vanessa Round who was still sick. A difficult position for Rachel to be in and she managed to finish in 23rd position. Hanny after her good performances in the long and the middle was feeling confident particularly due to the physical nature of the terrain. She had a very strong run and we finished in 16th position and running the 5th fastest time on her leg. Switzerland was a slender winner in the end after three teams were running the last loop together- Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland. Judith Wyder gaining enough lead over Maja Alm (Denmark) to avoid a sprint finish.

Rachel relay

Jas Relay

The men’s race started minutes after the women’s race was decided. Again they were faced with a long uphill leg to the first control. Simon Uphill was our first leg runner and were expecting Simon to stay in touch and he came into the finish in 17th place. Lachlan Dow went out to have a steady run and maintain our position as best he could and he had a very steady run to come into the finish in 22nd place close behind a pack of runners. In steady rain Julian went out on the third leg feeling quite confident after his performance yesterday in the middle. He was with a group of runners at the run through and he lead some runners into the last control and improved our position to 17th. This was enough for Australia to be one of the two top countries in division three of the IOF groupings and so we will qualify to have two runners in the middle and the long in 2015. This was a good day for our relay teams and means that we can start preparing to have more opportunities at WOC in 2015.

Mens relay team

More detailed summary of our WOC performance will follow once time has been found to do some detailed analysis.

WOC Middle Distance

Yesterday (Thursday) was a rest day for the WOC teams but it was an opportunity for the other Aussies to experience the WOC Long terrain on day four of the Five Days of Italy event being held in conjunction with WOC. After this we were invited by the WOC team to an afternoon tea at their team hotel on the south side of Lago Lavarone. A very pleasant and peaceful environment beside this picturesque lake. Toph and Lachie were the captains of the paddle boat entertaining Linus Quayle while the rest of us enjoyed coffee and cakes on the balcony overlooking the lake. A very nice occasion and the team seemed very relaxed about the challenges of the next two days.

WOC afternoon tea 1

WOC afternoon tea 3

Unfortunately Vanessa will not be running the middle today as she is not feeling well. She was a little off colour before the long but did an exceptional performance considering her physical state to finish and run so well. The coaches have decided to replace her with Hanny in the middle giving her a rest and a chance to recover for the relay on Saturday. Hanny is relaxed about the middle and will no doubt have the stamina to back up after the long on Wednesday. Jasmine Neve will be having her first run at WOC and will start at 12:35, Hanny starting at 13:19. The women will run before the men. Julian will be our representative in the men’s event and he will start at 15:07.

The terrain for the middle and the relay is described in the Bulletin 4 as “the middle distance final is organized in Campomulo, which is part of Asiago karstic highland, in the altitude of 1500-1700 meters above sea level. The landscape is characterized by many terraces divided by steeper areas.
Vegetation varies from alpine pastures to open forest, mainly coniferous, and the ground surface is very rocky throughout reducing the runnability in the forest. Trenches from World War are very common in this area. The network of paths, tracks and roads is not very dense. Cross country ski tracks exist in parts of the area”.

The men have a course distance of 5.86km with 290m of climb. The winning time is down as 35 minutes (6min/km). The women have a course distance of 4.96km with 230m of climb. The winning time is down as 34 minutes (just under 7min/km). Yesterday when some of the team went training on the model map there was fresh snow in the forest.