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USF student competing in Olympic slalom

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  • USF student competing in Olympic slalom

    San Francisco Chronicle, CA
    Feb 14 2010


    USF student competing in Olympic slalom
    John Crumpacker, Chronicle Staff Writer

    Sunday, February 14, 2010

    As it turns out, father does know best, at least when the father is
    Dr. Armen Serebrakian of Novato.


    The exercises and drills that the good ear, nose and throat doctor put
    his son and daughter through as children led, in due time, to daughter
    Ani making it to the Winter Olympics as a member of Armenia's
    four-member team.

    "It's kind of funny," 21-year-old Ani Serebrakian said. "My classmates
    said this day was coming."

    It's here. Ani marched in Friday night's Opening Ceremonies at BC
    Place Stadium with her three teammates, the sixth country in a roll
    call of 82 countries to have their moment in the indoor spotlight.

    Serebrakian, a sophomore at USF and a Marin Catholic High graduate,
    will race under the colors of Armenia in the women's giant slalom on
    Feb. 24 and the slalom on Feb. 26 at Whistler. Her Armenian parents
    were born in neighboring Iran and emigrated to the U.S. more than 30
    years ago.

    Armenia, competing as an independent nation since 1994 after the
    dissolution of the Soviet Union, has never won a Winter Olympic medal.
    Serebrakian does not expect to be the first.

    "I'm kind of still in awe that I'm here," she said. "I'm not
    surprised, but it hasn't hit me yet. I'm just really enjoying the
    whole thing. My whole goal was to make it to the Olympics. Qualifying
    for it, I feel I've achieved so much already. I'm excited to ski with
    the best in the world and do my best."

    Reaction to tragedy
    Like other athletes in Vancouver - and, really, anyone involved in the
    Olympics - Serebrakian was saddened to hear of the death of Georgian
    luger Nodar Kumaritashvili, who died Friday in a training accident.

    "We were so upset and sad when we heard," she said. "It was great that
    they even came to the ceremonies. We're going to go over to their team
    and offer our condolences."

    After marching into the stadium and taking her seat, Serebrakian said
    she was so moved by the events of the day that "I sat down and cried."

    Serebrakian's two slalom events are considered safe by skiing
    standards as they require technical skill in negotiating around the
    gates with proper form and efficiency, rather than a healthy dose of
    courage.

    "Slalom is my favorite," she said. "I just really enjoy the whole
    thing. It's very quick. You're hitting the gates. It's very
    therapeutic to me. It's almost like boxing, because you're hitting the
    gates as you go downhill. Just like boxing with any kind of aggression
    or anger, you want to win, so you put it out there."

    Starting early
    The young woman seen smiling and holding a small Armenian flag in the
    Opening Ceremonies has been preparing for this moment since she was 2
    years old, when her father put her and her brother Armon, now 22, on
    tyke skis at Northstar-at-Tahoe. Dad had his kids racing when they
    were 5.

    Once she mastered the kids' hill at Northstar, Serebrakian moved on to
    Squaw Valley, where she continues to train.

    "My dad got my brother and I skiing as soon as possible," she said.
    "He himself was a skier. He's a very athletic person. One of the
    things he liked about skiing was it was for the whole family.
    Eventually, he saw we were good enough learning to ski that we started
    racing at age 5."

    As kids, Ani and Armon were running up a hill outside their elementary
    school at their father's urging and later going through drills in
    their middle school gym before the first bell rang.

    "They would open it specifically for us so we could use it," she said.
    "We'd whine, but we'd go. He'd get us doughnuts afterward."

    Armenian roots
    Serebrakian grew up American in every sense, a Marin County girl
    excelling in school and on the tennis courts. However, a recent visit
    to the old country kindled in her a sense of what it is to be
    Armenian.

    "The whole idea to go for the Armenian team began two years ago when
    we visited the country for the first time," she said. "We kind of fell
    in love with it. That brought us to qualifying for the Olympics and
    here I am."

    Serebrakian said her brother, who lives in Boulder, Colo., is also an
    accomplished skier. He fell short of qualifying for the Armenian team,
    however, spoiling what would have been a great story of skiing
    siblings.

    "I'm very privileged. Very privileged," Serebrakian said.

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f =/c/a/2010/02/13/SPSQ1C1CQ1.DTL
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