JWOC Long Distance- another good day for Australia.

At an altitude over 2000m today was the JWOC Long Distance event on a very steep and rocky map that certainly provided a physical and also technical challenge. The Australian team again had some very good performances after yesterdays success in the Sprint. Matt Doyle who was the last starter on the mens course had a very impressive run in this challenging terrain to finish strongly and he ended up in 18th place, time 73:48, 13.5% down on the winner J Hadorn from Switzerland (the winner of the gold medal in the sprint yesterday). In fact the top three today were the same as the top three from the Sprint. Matt had a very steady start and after some time loss at controls 8 and 9 where he was in 39th place  finished the latter part of the course strongly to move up to a very impressive 18th position.

Matt celebrating
Matt celebrating

The two youngest members of the team Aston Key and Tara Mellhuish who are both still 16 years old had very impressive debuts in their first JWOC  Long Distance event. Aston who had a very steady run but tired a little after starting fast was in 55th place in a time of 80:57. Tara who was slightly disappointed with her run in the sprint showed very good resilience today to be the best of the Aussie women in 60th place in a time of 76:10. Both of these performances indicate that both these young orienteers have a good future as they develop more with age and experience.

Tara at Finish
Tara at Finish

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mens splits graph
Men’s splits graph
Womens Splits Graph
Womens Splits Graph

Tomorrow is a rest day and after the sunshine and very warm weather of the last 9 days tomorrow is forecast to be wet and cooler. On Wednesday the Middle Qualification heats will be held on the slopes above the village where we are staying -Ftan. The team will be having an afternoon tea for all the Australian supporters who are in Switzerland cheering the team on tommorrow afternoon at the team hotel and then we will be attending the medal presentation for both the sprint and the long.

Full results, maps and photos-JWOC 2016

http://www.jwoc2016.ch/

Event analysis can be seen on the World Of O

http://news.worldofo.com/2016/07/11/jwoc-2016-long-maps-and-results/

Nick Dent

 

JWOC Sprint- Henry comes 6th and Double Gold to Switzerland

In todays JWOC sprint held in sunny and quite hot Scuol the Australian team celebrated the first Australian on the podium at JWOC since 2007. Henry McNulty finishing a fantastic run in equal 6th place in a time of 13:20 just 3 seconds from 4th. Henry was very pleased with his run and said that he did not think he could have made up any time. The whole Aussie team and all the supporters we had in the large crowd were very excited with this result.

Aussie Team Celebrations
Aussie Team Celebrations

 

Crossing the Finish line
Crossing the Finish line

The two winners today of the gold medal were both from the home country- Switzerland. S Abersold made it two JWOC Sprint victories in two years with a decisive victory by 52 seconds. In the mens race the winner was J Hadorn, with the Swiss having 4 runners in the top seven places.

The Aussie men performed very well overall with Aston Key in his first JWOC  41st place, Matt Doyle  45th place, Simeon Burrill 55th, Jarrah Day 62nd and Patrick Jaffe 91st.

In the women, Lanita Steer had a very steady run  to finish in an excellent 26th place.Other results were: Winnie Oakhill  41st, Asha Steer 91st, Tara Mellhuish 104th  and Zoe Dowling 122nd. Unfortunately Anna Dowling missed a control.

Some analysis of the Aussie Performances

Men Splits Graph
Men Splits Graph
Women Splits Graph
Women Splits Graph

The team is now recovering and resting for the Long Distance event to be held tomorrow.

A great way to start a long week and we can look forward to more good performances during the rest of the events. It has certainly given the whole team a boost of confidence.

Nick Dent

 

National Orienteering League program for 2017

The National Orienteering League program framework for 2017 has been agreed, as follows:

11-12 March Pittwater, Hobart, Tasmania (middle, long)
25-26 March Canberra, ACT (sprint, middle)
14-17 April Auckland, NZ (Oceania Championships)
10-12 June Wagga Wagga, NSW (Australian 3-Days) (middle, long, sprint)
26-27 August Canberra, ACT (ultralong, sprint)
23 September – 1 October Bathurst/Hill End, NSW (Australian Championships)

Items still to be finalised are:

  • Which events at the Oceania Championships will be National League events (which may differ for seniors and juniors)
  • Which events (other than the Australian and Oceania Championships) will be World Ranking events
  • The sequence of events within each of the non-championship weekends.

JWOC 2016-Opening Ceremony

JWOC 2016 starts today in Scuol, Switzerland with the Opening Ceremony to be held at 16:00 in Scuol, which is also the location for the Sprint Distance event to be held on Sunday morning. The Australian team has settled into their JWOC accommodation in a small village Ftan, overloooking the very picturesque Engadine Valley and only about 15 minutes from Scuol. The accommodation is very close to the middle qualification area (Wednesdays event). The team has been spending the last five days preparing for the events by visiting some of the training maps and having talks about the mental and technical challenges of each of the disciplines. The team has responded very positively to the coaching from Julian Dent and Ralph Street and are relaxed and focused ready for the Sprint Distance event tomorrow.

Yesterday the team travelled to the model area for the Long Distance event which will be held at an altitude of over 2000m at Pass dal Fuorn. The team did a map walk checking out the main features of the map and got a birds eye view of the arena for the long from the higher section of the model map. This area will provide a true Long Distance experience for the athletes- steep terrain with some areas of low visibility and rocky ground. The expected winning km rates are 8min/km for the men and 9min/km for the women.

The program for the week is very intensive and certainly provides these young athletes with both a physical challenge and a mental challenge during the five days of competition, especially given that on the Long Distance event there is a lot of travelling involved in getting to the event.

All team members are well and relaxing today before the start of the competition tomorrow. They have been posting on their blog and many photos can be found on the facebook page and on instagram- see these link

https://www.instagram.com/ausjwoc/

http://ausjuniororienteering.blogspot.ch/

https://www.facebook.com/AusJWOC2014

There will be live production of the events and this can be found from the JWOC 2016 website

http://www.jwoc2016.ch

It is planned to provide daily reports for the events on this website.

Nick Dent

Pre JWOC 2016 Preparation- Sent, Switzerland

The 2016 Australian JWOC team assembled in Sent on Sunday for the 5 days of pre JWOC preparation with a focus on 1. terrain familiarisation, 2.  mental techniques 3. technical challenges of each discipline and 4. creating team harmony and focus. A detailed plan for the 5 days has been prepared by the two coaches who are working with the team during the week-Julian Dent and Ralph Street. These two older elite athletes who have both recently achieved impressive results in the two biggest relays in orienteering- Ralph being in the winning team at 10Mila in Sweden and Julian in the second placed team at Jukola in Finland, have prepared a structured program for the athletes to prepare each athlete for the challenges of the JWOC competition which starts on Sunday with the Sprint Distance in Scuol.

Some of the tam have been in Europe for some time competing and training and all have arrived in Sent healthy and relaxed. There are three newcomers to JWOC competition in the team- Aston Key, Tara Melhuish and Zoe Dowling. We have some experienced JWOC team members with Matt Doyle, Henry McNulty, Lanita Steer and Anna Dowling all having been to at least two previous JWOC’s and are all competing in their last JWOC before moving into senior elites. Winnie Oakhill, Asha Steer Patrick Jaffe, Simeon Burrill and Jarrah Day are competing in their second JWOC.

The JWOC week of competition is very challenging as all athletes compete in five events over the six days. The Sprint on Sunday is followed by the Long Distance event on Monday which will be held at an altitude of 2100m. A rest day follows and then there is the Middle Qualification , Middle Final and the team Relay on the Friday. There will be live streaming on the JWOC website of all the finals and the relay including GPS tracking for some athletes.

2016 Australian JWOC Team

2016 Australian JWOC Team at Tarasp

Nick Dent

 

OA High Performance Vacancies; Head Coach, Administrator, Manager Coach Development.

Application Are Sought for High Performance Officer Positions

After 5 years of service to Orienteering Australia, Nick Dent is retiring as Head Coach and HP Administrator. Orienteering Australia thanks Nick for his outstanding service and is now seeking applicant/s to lead the National High Performance program. We are also seeking to fill a related role to assist the development of coaching. These positions will be appointed initially for a one year term only, to be reviewed (particularly in the light of available funding) and extended if possible for an additional one year term. There are 3 interrelated positions:

  1. Orienteering Australia Head Coach ($22,500 /annum)
  2.  Orienteering Australia High Performance Administrator ($12,300 /annum)
  3. Manager Coaching Development ($6,000 / annum)

More detailed position descriptions are available in the links above.

As an overview, the Orienteering Australia Head Coach has been restructured to enhance the effectiveness of the role. To strengthen the authority and effectiveness of the Head Coach (at the top of the structure) this position will include the role of being the coach of one of the traveling national teams. This is our preferred structure. The Head Coach will have first preference in being the coach of one of the travelling national teams; WOC, WUOC, Bushrangers or JWOC on the understanding that this role will be fulfilled in the traditional volunteer capacity.

Applications for these other national touring coach and manager positions; WOC, WUOC and JWOC for 2016 and 2017, will be called for in the coming months after the appointment of the Head Coach.

The Manager of Coaching Development role will focus on the development of coaches across national and state systems. To strengthen the capacity to achieve this, the Manager of Coach Development will not have an administrative or development role in the controlling and officiating area (as has traditionally been the case). The Manager of Coach Development will work closely with the National Coaching Committee and the OA National Sporting Schools Manager. There is scope, if mutually agreed, for this role to take on additionally funded project work; an update of the Level 1 Coach Manual and the development of club coaching resource material. This will be negotiated, if appropriate, after appointment to the Manager of Coaching Development role.

It is anticipated that the dates for the one-year term for all the positions will be from 31st of July 2016 to 31st of July 2017

Candidate/s for the advertised positions above may wish to apply for one or more positions and it may be desirable to consolidate positions depending on the skills, goals and experience of candidates. Applicants (or group applications) are requested to clearly outline the position/s applied for.

HOURLY RATE OF PAY: $34.50 plus the superannuation contribution guarantee of 9.5% (SGC) The quoted per annum amounts above are a total package of wages plus super.
REIMBURSEMENT OF EXPENSES:
i. Mileage incurred travelling on OA business will be reimbursed at a rate of 30 cents per km;
ii. Other personal expenses incurred on OA business (such as postage, phone calls, train and bus travel to meetings, and stationery) will be reimbursed on submission of records and receipts.

Applicants are requested to outlining experience and background on no more than 2 A4 pages and forward to John Harding at orienteering@netspeed.com.au

Applications close: 15th July 2016.

World Orienteering Championships 2016- Australian Team

World Orienteering Championships 2016

Australian Team

Women

Sprint: Natasha Key, Krystal Neumann, Aislinn Prendergast

Sprint Relay: Natasha Key, Krystal Neumann.

Middle: Jo Allison, Vanessa Round.

Long: Jo Allison, Natasha Key.

Relay: Jo Allison Krystal Neumann, Vanessa Round.

Men

Sprint: Leon Keely, Henry McNulty, Simon Uppill.

Sprint Relay: Leon Keely, Henry McNulty

Middle: Julian Dent.

Long: Julian Dent

Relay: Julian Dent, Leon Keely, Simon Uppill.

Coaches: Tom Quayle, Wendy Read.

This team is a mixture of very experienced orienteers, with five team members (Jo, Natasha, Vanessa, Julian and Simon) having competed in seven world championships each and less experienced orienteers with two team members (Leon and Henry) making their debut at the world championships.

Due to the performance of the men’s team at the previous two world championships we are only permitted to have one runner in each of the middle and long distance events. The women are entitled to have two runners in each of these events.

Jo Allison returns to the WOC team after having two children. She last represented at WOC in 2008. Her best performances are 17th in middle in 2008 and 23rd in long in 2004. She was a member of the relay team that finished in fourth place in 2006.

Natasha Key  a mother of three, is also making a comeback to WOC representation after last being in the team in 2005. Natasha has a best result of 10th in the sprint in 2003. Natasha will have her eldest son Aston representing Australia in the Junior World Orienteering Championships in Switzerland. So maybe a first in orienteering with a mother and son both representing their country at world championships.

Vanessa Round who has been living in Switzerland for a few years has a best performance of 31st in middle in 2012. She has competed in the last 6 world championships.

Krystal Neumann who has been living in Sweden since the end of last year will be competing in her second WOC. She has joined a strong club in Stockholm, Jarla, and has been getting some very good experience in Swedish terrain.

Aislinn Prendergast will be attending her fourth WOC and is making a comeback to WOC representation, last being in the team in 2013. Her best result has been 35th in long in 2012.

Julian Dent will be competing in his 8th WOC and as he has been living and competing in Sweden for the last 4 years he is very keen to compete at the world championships in Sweden. He is returning to the team after missing the world championships last year due to the birth of his daughter, Freja. His best result at WOC is 24th in long in 2011 and 22nd in the middle in 2005.

Simon Uppill will also be competing in his 8th WOC. His best result in sprint is 30th in 2013 and he is currently ranked 93 in the world in sprint.

Leon Keely will be competing in his first WOC after having been in two JWOC teams in 2008 and 2009. He has recently returned to elite orienteering and last year spent some time living and competing in Norway.

Henry McNulty who is still a junior and who is also in the JWOC team, will be competing in the sprint and the sprint relay. He has been showing very good form in the last few months in sprints.

WOC will be held in Stromstad, Sweden- August 20th– 27th.

Good weekend for Cockatoos, but Nuggets still lead

The Canberra Cockatoos had a successful weekend at last week’s National Orienteering League rounds in St. Helens, Tasmania. They were particularly successful in the long distance on Sunday, with convincing wins by Jo Allison and Matt Crane, and have closed the gap in the senior men’s competition to seven points. The Victorian Nuggets still lead, as they do in the senior women’s event by a much larger margin.

The long distance took place at Transit Flat, where the World Cup long distance took place last year. The vital statistics of the courses were similar but this was a tougher challenge, with more in the big hills, and wet fallen timber adding an extra element of difficulty, leading to winning times being well above those of the best Australians in the 2015 race. Allison was up to the challenge, leading for most of the way, and once Aislinn Prendergast’s challenge dropped away with mistakes in the second half, a small margin turned into a double-digit one. Natasha Key edged Prendergast out for second. Crane was not quite as dominant, but still pulled away to a five-minute win after a close battle with Simon Uppill in the first half, with a fast-finishing Leon Keely just catching Uppill for second.

Uppill’s win had come the previous day, in a complex middle distance in the mining terrain and low visibility of the Golden Fleece. Such terrain brought his skills to the fore as he edged out Brodie Nankervis on his home turf. Key might not have seemed so suited to the terrain, but was the one standing at the top of the results table after a fluctuating contest in which she, Anna Sheldon, Bridget Anderson and Allison were separated by under three minutes.

The junior fields were thin, but with quality at the front end as Aston Key won both races comfortably. In the junior women’s, Rachel Allen had a win on Saturday with Anna Dowling 2nd and Zoe Dowling 3rd, but Zoe turned the tables on Sunday finishing 1st, with Anna Dowling 2nd and Rosie Dalheim 3rd. The Tassie Foresters edged out to a four-point lead over the Nuggets in that competition.

Uppill and Key lead the senior individual standings. Uppill has a nine-point lead over Leon Keely, and they will probably fight out the title along with Matt Crane. Key’s lead is a more commanding 27 points, but Allison only has six scores so far and could challenge if she runs well during the Australian Championships week. Matt Doyle and Patrick Jaffe, neither of whom contested the weekend, are setting the junior men’s pace, whilst only 25 points separate the top five junior women.

Updated scores are available. Results are on Eventor, and splits on Winsplits.

History of the Meredey Run property orienteering venue in South Australia

This monograph, raising funds for the South Australian Junior Squad, tells the story of the Meredey Run in the mid north of South Australia beyond Burra, and the Stewart family who a hundred and fifty years ago called it their home.

 

In it is found much information on the land that the current owners, the Thomas families, kindly allow orienteering to take place. The history of the land and its peoples is fascinating and gives an insight into the pastoral and family struggles that have resulted in the stations we know today. South Australian orienteers and all who have visited Merridee or Burra should read this story.

The compact book comprises fifty-six pages in full colour, including ten of nineteenth and twentieth century maps, eight pages of photographs, a comprehensive index of names and numerous footnotes. Authored by Peter Kreminski, it is available from pvk@internode.on.net or phone 0414 81 0058.

 

$15

ALL  PROFITS  WILL  BE  DONATED TO SOUTH AUSTRALIAN JUNIOR ORIENTEERS

 WC 1

 Pictured at the pack-up of a 2015 Merridee event are some South Australian orienteers. Peter Cutten is holding bolt cutters which were used to successfully cut the chain to a locked gate. The cut link was later replaced with a padlock. Andrew Kennedy is bringing in the last of the controls, or so he thought. A final tally showed one to be missing, forcing Andrew to go out again.

 WC2

 

 

 

Wonna Creek looking east; this watercourse divides Merridee from the Bri Glen map and was the safety bearing for all courses. Just out of sight on the left was the arena and the finish for Day 1 of the Easter 2015 carnival.

World Orienteering Day – A record breaking event

Press release from the International Orienteering Federation 2016-05-26

World Orienteering Day – A record breaking event

On Wednesday May 11th 2016, the first ever World Orienteering Day took place all over the world. It proved to be a great success, with more than 250 000 participants taking part in a global orienteering event.

After having finalised the results, the total of participation in the first ever World Orienteering Day stands at 252 927 participants at 2013 locations in 81 countries and territories.

What was once only an idea, has come to be a reality beyond what anyone could have hoped. Schools, clubs and enthusiasts in every global region made a fantastic contribution, and together managed to beat the world record.

From South Africa to Hong Kong, from Greenland to New Caledonia, from Ecuador to Ukraine, hundreds of thousands of youngsters participated in World Orienteering Day. Following the idea “Think globally, act locally”, people took part in locally organised orienteering events, and together celebrated the biggest world-wide orienteering event ever.

– World Orienteering Day has demonstrated that we are truly a global sport, and I just want to thank the thousands of people who organised over 2000 competitions for 250,000 people on all continents except Antarctica. – Well done the world orienteering family, says Brian Porteous, president of the International Orienteering Federation.

World Orienteering Day is an International Orienteering Federation project that aims to increase the visibility and accessibility of orienteering to young people, to spread orienteering to new countries and places, and to help teachers to implement orienteering in schools in a fun and educational way.

 http://worldorienteeringday.com