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Rollerskiing season is here

This ended up being a week full of nice rollerski sessions! Although we got some rain for our running days, the sun and vibes were high for anything on wheels, it seemed. Early in the week the MNC University crew got in the first rollerski intensity of the year with some skate L3. They switched to classic on Thursday morning, while that afternoon the Juniors had their first skate session of the year.

Each week more MNC University skiers finish their semesters, and the group grows!

First skate ski of the year for the Juniors

Spoon-and-egg racing on rollerskis for balance and coordination

We take a lot of video for rollerskiing, pretty much during every session. Even if we aren’t doing intervals or specific drills, most days I end up emailing out about 2-3 minutes worth of ski clips.

Why so much video? For one thing, it’s just so easy these days. When I was in college, taking video meant coaches dragging out a camcorder, filming in a set location as skiers went back-and-forth. Then we would gather in the lodge or the athletic department (sometimes a day later) to plug-in a bunch of cables and play it all onto a TV or computer screen. I’m not talking about the stone ages here…this was like 2009.

Nowadays at least one MNC coach is usually on a bike for a rollerski session. With a GoPro that can fit in a closed palm able to shoot 4k quality video with automatic stabilization, there’s no reason at least a little bit of every session can’t be captured on camera. I usually sent out an email with follow-up session thoughts and a link to video as soon as possible following the ski, or at least by later that evening.

Here’s some video from a nice Sunday double pole down by Lake Champlain in Shelburne. Our “Individual Technique” playlist, where practice footage goes, is up to 974 videos and counting!

Even if we aren’t critically analyzing each clip, skiers just get to see themselves skiing on such a regular basis that they have a really accurate handle on how they currently move. That means that when they try to make changes, or view clips of World Cup skiers, they are able to better comprehend the steps from here to there…at least, that’s the goal!

Sunscreen necessary

 

Groups are growing

The summer months are approaching, and our training groups are assembling with more and more participants! Both the MNC University and MNC Junior squads are starting to heat up.

This week the Juniors hit up their second rollerski of the year, and things were looking great. Often for the first few rollerskis of the year it can feel like a “one step back, then two steps forward” situation. But this season everybody has just picked up right where they left off on snow, and we’re already onto step two without any backtracking.

The heat started to pick up for our Saturday workout, a really productive set of running intervals on Governor Chittenden road. These are popular intervals and we’ve written about them on the blog before. On this day we did just half a mile for each interval, but this session is one we’ll repeat all the way through the fall with incremental growth in both distance and hilliness.

Warming up from Catamount down to Rt 2 for some running intervals

While the Juniors are hard at week in the mornings at school, the MNC University crew gets going at 8:00am sharp. This year the group looks to be almost 20-strong, but things started small this first week with many still finishing up their semester. A small-but-strong crew took on some rollerskiing and running much like the Juniors.

This coming weekend, both groups will convene to run a 3000m together at the MMU track!

Some familiar faces and recent MNC alumni now in MNC University!

Junior training kicks off

We enjoyed a pretty beautiful spring week for our first team training sessions of the 24/25 season. Ironically, on Tuesday we had indoor space rented at the Jericho Community Center during what was maybe the nicest weather day of the year so far.

Everyone still got plenty of sunshine as we got in a nice dirt road cruise down Plains Road, and then we went through a brief slideshow before discussing some team goals. Skiers tossed out ideas and goals which we talked through as a group. There is a nice old school blackboard in the community center, which laid the groundwork for some goals…I’ll share the photo below, along with some more details of each as they were discussed:

Stay Motivated: Not every session, race, interval, or training mode is necessarily going to be the greatest ever (or your favorite activity)…but most of the goals below this one on the chart, and especially the goal balancing fun/work along with supportive teammates, can help you stay motivated. Hopefully you can also be a motivator.

Know when to have fun vs when to be serious: This can apply to a lot of situations, and is something we often lose the balance of when the pressure climbs higher and higher. Having fun can apply to races and being serious can apply to training days and not just the other way around.

Kind, constructive feedback: I am often expected to provide feedback as a coach, but I don’t need to (and shouldn’t) be your only resource when you are in a club environment. Kindness is also key, and I think it’s easy in today’s world to mistake kindness for weakness…which is not realistic!

Focus on structure/good listening: If you’ve been with this club for a while, you know that sometimes we struggle to pay attention in the moment/listening to directions/focusing on the task at hand…this is very related to the next goal too.

Organization: Do you have what you need for training? Have you set yourself up physically and mentally to perform? Are you going into the day ready to embrace all of the goals above?

After diligently setting goals, we got back to some more literal work with the creation of several batches of granola bars with a mostly-sticky collection of ingredients. Over the rest of the week we munched on these snacks during our sessions.

 

On Thursday, we embarked on our first rollerski of the season. Sticking to double poling, we explored our “usual” routes around the unofficial rollerski track of Southridge and the greater suburban Williston area.

With many of us able to ski on snow pretty late into the spring (even just casually) this felt like a nice smooth transition in terms of technique and body position on rollerskis.

Throughout most of May we will be sticking to rollerskiing once, maybe twice per week. Our focus will be on running both easy distance, and hitting some light intensity with a focus on pacing and consistency. We want to be able to complete a lot of big adventures in the summer, and to do so will require good running health and injury prevention! A lot of that actually starts very small: with short and easy runs, hip strengthening band work at each opportunity, and careful picking-and-choosing of when to push a little harder. We’ll also vary our locations, from flatter dirt roads and running tracks, to the steep climbs and technical descents of trails like Cochrans and beyond.

Warming up for some track repeats at CVU, with mini loop bands for hip activation

Off they go!

Anders in Bend!

At the end of the competition season, MNC skier Anders Linseisen was selected to attend a unique training camp opportunity in Bend, Oregon as part of the “National Training Group”.

This is a US Ski and Snowboard and NNF (National Nordic Foundation) supported project that brings top racers together for skiing on snow in Oregon to kick off the new season. With lots of fresh snow and plenty of great workouts, it was a busy and productive week…with some fun of course! The group put together a few clips:

MNC wins the NENSA Club Cup!

In all the business of spring recaps and planning, one big news item went under our own radar…

MNC won the NENSA Club Cup this year! 

This is a really cool achievement signifying not only our speediness on the race course, but our wide-ranging group of skiers of all ages. We had many skiers racing in many events across the whole season. If you donned a bib and represented Mansfield Nordic this season, thanks so much for being a part of it all!

Winning the Club Cup and not realizing it at first feels fitting for me (Adam) as a coach…if you’ve read our Junior blogs this season, you know how much of a philosophical wrestling match it is to grapple with results and achievement of the literal sense, versus growth and improvement in a holistic sense.

As a leader I used to simply focus on the outcomes as the driving motivation for training, racing, growing, improving, and measuring what we did.

As a club, we’ve also had years where we attempted to “rally the membership” with the Club Cup as a big goal.

As a leader I hope I have grown past that simple way of operating. And I like to think we’ve done the same as a club…We focus on doing the best we can, improving ourselves as skiers and an organization, and lo and behold it bears fruit in the results page, too!

Read the NENSA press release here…from NENSA:

The Club Cup rewards participation by lots of club members across many races and various age groups (up to three deep per gender). The strongest clubs generally are scoring in several age groups at many of the races. For overall Club scores, the Masters heavy NWVE came in 3rd place, with the multigenerational teams of Ford Sayre in 2nd and Mansfield Nordic Club coming in first this year!

Find the final standings below:

Club Cup Standings 2023/2024

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