New National Junior Coach and Manager appointed

Orienteering Australia has appointed Nick Dent as Coach, and Hilary Wood as Manager of the National Junior Program, including JWOC 2008 and 2009.

Nick and Hilary bring with them a great deal of experience with junior orienteering. They have joint managed JWOC teams in 2005 and 2006, and Hilary was 2007 manager. In the five years of  managing the NSW Schools Team, they successfully won the Australian Schools Championships four times.

Orienteering Australia looks forward to the positive impact that Nick and Hilary will have on the development of our junior orienteers.

Note for juniors- a revised National Junior Squad will be announced in about 2 weeks.

New National Junior Squad and Junior Development Squad announced

The new National Junior Squad and Junior Development Squad have been announced. The National Junior Squad is open to all those eligible for JWOC in 2008, whilst the Junior Development Squad is open to those eligible for M/W16 in 2007.

The National Junior Squad is:

Morten Neve
Nick Andrewartha
Bryan Keely
Leon Keely
Lachlan Dow
Joshua Blatchford
Tristan Lee
Simon Mee
Oliver Mitchell

Heather Harding
Ineka Booth
Bridget Anderson
Belinda Lawford
Jess Davis
Rachel Effeney
Laurina Neumann
Krystal Neumann
Aislinn Prendergast
Brea Pearce

The Junior Development Squad is:

Oscar Phillips
Kurt Neumann
Max Neve
Rory McComb
Sam Webb
Luke Poland
Oliver Crosato

Claire Butler
Emily Prudhoe
Lilian Burrill
Tamara Orr
Nadia Velaitis
Melanie Neumann
Glennie Nottle

Subject to members accepting a place in the squad, those selected now will remain in the squad until next October, but the squads may be added to during the course of the year.

Vic Sprinters tackle Monash maze

IMG_4040Adrian Jackson is the 2007 Victorian Men’s Sprint Orienteering Champion after winning comprehensively today at Monash University in Melbourne’s east. Jackson’s time of 15.01 was almost a minute ahead of an ill Bruce Arthur, effectively ending his hopes of winning the Victorian championship trifecta.

The quirks of the 1960s campus architecture made for excellent sprint orienteering with a maze of buildings, alleys and passages… automatic doors were even part of many route choices.

Tash Key won the women’s open race ahead of second place Jasmine Neve, making it first and second place in men’s and women’s for the Melbourne Forest Racers club.

Results and splits available.

Dion Keech

Orienteers in the Mark Webber Challenge

mwchallengeThe Mark Webber Challenge starts tomorrow with orienteering again being represented within the competitors.

The high profile Challenge is a corporate adventure race style challenge held in Tasmania, now in its 3rd year. The event invites corporate groups to race alongside celebrities from different walks of life including television and sport. In 2007, particpants include Michael Klim and Tatiana Grigorieva. Money raised goes to a number of worthwhile charities including The Leukemia Foundation and The Save the Tasmanian Devil Appeal.

In 2006, World Champion orienteer Hanny Allston was invited to take part and this year, Orienteering Australia High Performance Manager and accomplished adventure racer Rob Preston will compete.

Further information and donations can be made at www.markwebberchallenge.com

National Junior Training Camp

Hi Juniors,
We are organising a National Junior Camp for the National Junior Squad and the Junior Development Squad after the Xmas 5 days. It will start on Tuesday1st January and goes until the following Sunday 6th January. There will also be a Park Series (sprint event) organised in Sydney on 7th January.

We are inviting any junior who is interested in developing their orienteering and is committed to competing at the highest level in their class as well as all members of the National Junior Squad and Junior Development Squad.
Please email us at hilary.f.wood@gmail.com to indicate your interest and if you would like to come along.
The camp  will be in the Newcastle area near to where the Xmas 5 days is being held  for 3 days and then finish up down at Belanglo in the OANSW  Hut.
For those who may be flying home the best location is via Sydney Airport to return to your home state.  More details about the camp will be provided soon.

Regards

Nick and Hilary
National Junior Coach and Manager

Australian wins US national title

Australian William Hawkins, who has been living in the United States for several years, won his second national open title last weekend when the U.S. Championships were contested over two days near Washington D.C.

The former Canberran was a minute behind Canadian Mike Smith after the first day, but was the only person in the field who was able to put two days together in the testing, low-visibility gully-spur terrain, coming second on both days to win by five minutes overall. Smith was second and Lachezar Iliev third.

It was a second American title for Hawkins, his first win coming in 2004. He has been largely absent from the Australian scene in recent years, his best local result coming when he won the M20 Australian title in 1997.

Results for the event are available.

Kiwis win the ANZ MTBO Challenge

New Zealand has retained the Australia New Zealand MTBO Challenge trophy after completion of the Australian MTBO Championships at Cessnock on Sunday.
The Kiwis took a close 11 to 10 victory after the dust had settled in the seven hotly contested age classes over the weekend races that included Middle, Sprint and Long Australian Championships.

The Middle and Long Championships were both World Ranking Events and saw Adrian Jackson take maximum points in the men’s elite class winning all three races with Alex Randall second. New Zealand’s Marquita Gelderman similarly dominated the women’s elite class with three good victories.

Heavy overnight rain on both Friday and Saturday ensured all riders had plenty of cleaning to do between races with mud, puddles and slippery tracks testing their technical skills.

All states scored points in the State Shield trophy based on results from the Long Championship with Victoria taking top place with 30 points from NSW on 24, Qld 18, SA 10, ACT 5, Tas and WA 1 point each.

Big Foot Orienteers took on a big challenge to conduct the three championships in two days and are to be congratulated for their great work in producing excellent courses on three excellent, although muddy, maps.

Full results can be found on the Big Foot site
http://www.bigfootorienteers.com/Results/

Adrian Jackson on his way to winning the Australian Sprint MTBO Champs. Photo: Dion Keech
Adrian Jackson on his way to winning the Australian Sprint MTBO Champs.
Photo: Dion Keech

Australian MTBO Championships

Big Foot Orienteers Inc. welcomes all riders to the 2007 Australian Championships. This event is open to all riders of all standards, not just those wishing to compete for an Australian title. The championships will be contested in specified age classes. Non-championship (or open) classes are also offered for those who want to ride an easier course. This event is an excellent opportunity for all riders to experience the best maps and courses that MTBO has to offer!
There are three races over the weekend of 3/4 November.  Middle distance and sprint races on Saturday at Killingworth and the long distance race on Sunday near Cessnock.  There are loads of tracks and lots of sweet single track to ride.  Entries close on Friday 26 October.  Full details of the event can be found athttp://www.bigfootorienteers.com/MTBO_2007/.  Event details are regularly updated at the moment with new information such as start lists, directions and the like.  For any questions contact Paul Darvodelsky onausmbochamps@psd.net.au.

Arthur does the double on Victorian Championships weekend

Bruce Arthur striding to the finish line Photo: Dion Keech
Bruce Arthur striding to the finish line
Photo: Dion Keech

Bruce Arthur did the double in M21A on the Victorian Championships weekend, winning the Middle Distance Championships at Deadman’s Flat on Saturday and then backing up with another win in the Long Distance Championships on Sunday. The Long Distance title, the first he has won in his adopted home state, was particularly impressive, as he had to deal with the worst of the conditions on a 34-degree day (one of the hottest October days on record in Castlemaine) and won pulling away. Blair Trewin, who picked a good day to have an organiser’s early start, was second on both days, 1.30 down on Saturday and three minutes behind on Sunday.

Kathryn Ewels also took out her first senior long distance title, opening up a narrow lead in the technical first part of the course and holding it to the end, just over two minutes in front of Natasha Key. This was the reverse of the Saturday result, in which Key, who has impressed on the comeback trail in recent weeks, scored by just 12 seconds. Jasmine Neve was third on both days.

 

Middle distance results, splits and RouteGadget.

Long distance results, splits, and RouteGadget.

Ryan Smyth dominates Tasmanian sprint championships

The Tasmanian sprint distance championships were held on a new Mike Morffew map in the Meehan Range recreation area, east of Hobart. At first glance, the area looks too steep for enjoyable orienteering, but a disused quarry proved ideal for the sprint format, with plenty of detail in the valley floor providing challenging courses with relatively little climb.

Ryan Smyth was a clear winner in M21, almost 4 minutes ahead of Jon McComb, with Nick Andrewartha third, just in front of Paul Pacque. In a close W21 race, Christine Marshall was a close winner from Christine Brown and Sue Hancock.

At the relay championships at Five Mile Beach the following day, course setter Lee Andrewartha made excellent use of a small area with a combination of standard relay course-forking and butterfly loops. At the race briefing, controller Wendy Andrewartha pointed this out to competitors, but at least half of those on the open course ignored the words of wisdom, and all teams were disqualified. Among those who should have known better were Mike Dowling and Paul Pacque (mis-punch), and Jon McComb (completely missed one of the loops on his course).

Australopers was the dominant club on the day, winning all the remaining courses.