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Snow gives Lindsey Vonn and her shin another day of reprieve

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  • Snow gives Lindsey Vonn and her shin another day of reprieve

    San Jose Mercury News, CA
    Feb 13 2010


    Snow gives Lindsey Vonn and her shin another day of reprieve

    By Elliott Almond


    VANCOUVER, British Columbia ' Lindsey Vonn got another day's reprieve
    Friday when training runs on the women's downhill course were canceled
    because of heavy snow.

    The U.S.'s Vonn, a favorite in all five Alpine events, wasn't sure she
    could compete after bruising her shin Feb. 3. The super-combined,
    scheduled to be her first race on Sunday, was postponed indefinitely,
    with a training session slated instead.

    "My shin is feeling about the same as it was yesterday which I
    consider to be good news because I skied pretty hard on it yesterday
    testing it out," Vonn wrote Friday on her Facebook page. "It could
    easily have gotten worse, and it didn't."

    Some are circumspect about the seriousness of Vonn's injury. Swiss
    coach Hugues Ansermoz said, "Today on the hill the girls were saying,
    'I don't want to hear about (Vonn). We have heard 10 times before that
    she was hurt, and she has always come back to win.' "

    Marin connection: San Jose had its Armenian bobsledder. Now Marin has
    an Armenian skier.

    Novato's Ani Serebrakian, a sophomore at USF, will represent Armenia
    in the giant slalom and slalom Feb. 24 and Feb. 26. She is one of two
    members on the country's Alpine ski team.

    Serebrakian, 21, is carrying on a Bay Area legacy from Dan Janjigian
    of San Jose, who competed in the Salt Lakes Games for Armenia. She has
    never competed in Europe against the sport's stars but had to earn
    enough points on the world circuit to qualify for the Olympics. "It's
    almost too far of a dream to grasp," Serebrakian said.

    It certainly is when living four hours from snow. Serebrakian, who
    lives in San Francisco, learned to ski at Lake Tahoe when she was 2
    and began ski racing at 5.

    "I've just been a weekend skier," the exercise science major said.

    Her father found other ways to train his children. Serebrakian also
    was a top tennis player at Marin Catholic High whereas her brother,
    Arman, captain of the University of Colorado's ski team, played water
    polo.

    "It has been 15 years of waking up at 5 in the morning, just pulling
    every type of string to work out," Serebrakian said.

    Although she and her brother did well as juniors in the United States,
    they decided to switch allegiances in the 2007-08 season. "As
    Armenians it would be more meaningful for us to represent our
    country," said Serebrakian, whose father, an ear, nose and throat
    specialist, immigrated to the United States from Iran in 1979.

    Rahlves' glimmer of hope: Skier Daron Rahlves from Clayton this time
    is measuring his recovery from injury in weeks.

    Rahlves, 36, was injured in a crash during his opening skicross race
    at the Winter X Games on Jan. 31, just days after he was selected to
    represent the United States in the Olympic debut of skicross.

    Competition begins Feb. 21 at Cypress Mountain. But Rahlves remains at
    home in Truckee, going through hours of therapy each day, hoping he
    can strengthen his hip enough to compete in his fourth games. "There
    is a glint of hope and a chance I could pull it off," Rahlves told The
    Associated Press. "It's pretty much going to come down to the day
    before."

    U.S. ski jumpers all in: All three U.S. ski jumpers qualified on the
    normal hill for today's first round. The team was led by Peter
    Frenette, 17. He was 30th, Nick Alexander (35th) and Anders Johnson
    40th.

    http://www.mercurynews.com/olympics /ci_14394994

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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