A TEAM of eight British skiers, five men and three women, leave today
for a three-week, nine-race tour of northern Norway as part of their
early season build-up.
Three Scottish men are in the party -- 21-year-old Scott Ballantyne,
from Bearsden, British junior champion in 1989; Alain Baxter, the
17-year-old Aviemore youngster who claimed his place on the British
development squad as top junior in the British championships slalom and
runner-up in the giant-slalom at the British junior championships last
year; and Scottish team member Euan Aitken, also 17, from Glasgow.
All three girls in the squad for Norway are Scottish. Deirdre Angella
and Stephanie Grant, both established development squad skiers, from
Carbridge and Aviemore respectively, are joined by Aberdeen's Scottish
team member Shona Robertson.
This is a crucial year for the skiers, and responsibility for the
development squad -- a transition group which has existed for more than
five years, linking the national team and the British Alpine team -- has
changed significantly with the financial burden now pitched on the
shoulders of the athletes themselves and their respective training group
or national authority.
The early season tour is fortunate in being supported by
Aberdeen-based insurance and financial services brokers Hanson and
Robertson, who are helping with the funding for trainers Nigel Smith and
new coach Jorn Kasine, a former Norwegian women's Europa Cup team coach,
who will accompany the squad and provide much needed back-up.
''This is a great opportunity for these athletes to get their season
off to the best possible start,'' says Alpine director Sarah Lewis.
The tour, which offers the skiers an equal number of slaloms, giant
slaloms, and super-G races over the period, is seen by many as the
forerunner of stronger links with Norway, who host the 1994 Winter
Olympics, and whose skiers have become the dominant forces in the
international World Cup rankings.
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