SWENSON BREAKS POLE, STILL FINISHED 5TH IN WORLDS 50-KM

VAL DI FIEMME, Italy (March 1) – Two-time Olympian Carl Swenson (Boulder,
CO), the top skater on the U.S. Ski Team, put an exclamation point Saturday
on the team's performance at the 2003 FIS Nordic World Ski Championships as
he finished fifth in the 50-km freestyle race behind surprise gold medalist
Martin Koukal of the Czech Republic with Swedes filling the next three
places.

NBC will broadcast coverage from the World Championships Sunday 1-3 p.m.
EST. Italy wound up medal-less for the championships.

Koukal won in 1:54.25.3 with the silver medal going to Anders Soedergren in
1:54.40.3 on another sunny, 40-degree day in the Val di Fiemme's Lago di
Tesero course of machinemade snow. Joergen Brink, whose collapse at the end
of the men's 4x10-km relay when it looked like Sweden would take gold, was
bronze medalist for the third time at the championships (1:55.09.0).

THIRD ALLTIME BEST U.S. RESULT
Swenson, 32, and a pro mountain biker during the spring and summer, was
second at the 12.5-km mark – before he broke a ski pole and lost about 30
seconds. Still, he finished a career-best fifth with a time of 1:55.49.2,
which also was third alltime best result by a U.S. skier at any Worlds,
behind Bill Koch's bronze medal in the 30-km at the 1982 Worlds in Oslo and
Kris Freeman's fourth in the 15-km classic Feb. 21.
 
"This was a tough race," Swenson, a former Dartmouth ski captain, told
reporters. "But I was having a good time; I had great skis – our wax team
did another tremendous job.

"It really came down to who could survive those final five Ks."

One day after Johnny Spillane's gold medal in the nordic combined sprint
electrified the championships – the first nordic gold by a U.S. skier at the
Olympics or Worlds, Swenson said that was a spur for him. "They've been
great championships for us. Kris Freeman started it with his fourth in the
15K and then Johnny's gold [Friday] was great," he said.

He snapped the pole when he tripped over another skier who crashed in front
of him at about 14-km mark. "It was a early in the second [12.5-km] lap and
I normally could've gone either way around him, but he was right in front of
me, we crashed and the pole broke…yeah, frustrating, but that's also ski
racing," Swenson reasoned.

ASHLEY: COMMITMENT ASSURE MORE SUCCESS
He skied his way back into the race but the lost pole may have cost him a
better shot at the podium. Still, he was wearing a very satisfied look
during the top-6 podium ceremony and as FIS President Gian-franco Kasper
shook his hand and congratulated him on the race.

USSA Vice President of Athletics Alan Ashley, understandably buoyant about
the U.S. results at the championships, said, "We've seen nearly two weeks of
outstanding skiing, and certainly two great events in the last 24 hours.
Johnny did a great job [Friday] and Carl…he's so tough. He goes down when
he's second, snaps a pole, finally gets one, and works his way back. He's
just such a tough guy.

"These results are the product of great teamwork – the athletes and coaches,
for sure, the waxers, the support personnel – medical personnel,
conditioning and physiotherapists and nutrition…and we've made some good
steps forward," Ashley said. "But we've also got a long way to go…Norway
gets something like 14 medals in cross country alone, and they don't get a
single medal in the last two races.

"We're not kidding ourselves. The athletes have bought into the dedication
and we're going to keep providing opportunities for success…but we've still
got a lot of work to do. We all know it and. From everything I see and hear,
we're going to make it happen."

Swenson, who skied eighth in the field of 66 racers, was fifth or sixth
throughout the second half of the race. His best previous performance was
last Sunday in the mass-start, skiathlon (10-km CL leading into a 10-km free
technique race) and 11th in a 30-km FR, mass-start race in Ramsau, Austria,
in December 2001.

The viessmann Cross Country World Cup resumes March 6-8 at Holmenkollen in
Oslo with classic 1.5-km sprints for men and women plus the women's 30-km CL
and men's 50-km CL.

2003 FIS NORDIC WORLD SKI CHAMPIONSHIPS
Lago di Tesero
Val di Fiemme, ITA – March 1
Men's 50-km Free Technique
1. Martin Koukal, Czech Republic, 1:54.25.3
2. Anders Soedergren, Sweden, 1:54.40.3
3. Joergen Brink, Sweden, 1:55.09.0
4. Mathias Fredriksson, Sweden, 1:55.25.2
5. Carl Swenson, Boulder, CO, 1:55.49.3
 -
37. Andrew Johnson, Greensboro, VT, 2:00.16.9
48. Lars Flora, Anchorage, AK, 2:02.59.8
58. Justin Freeman, Andover, NH, 2:07.26.3

- Best in the World! -



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