By Tim Hipps
U.S. Army Installation Management Command
PARK CITY, Utah, Jan. 23, 2014 – Three soldiers from the
U.S. Army World Class Athlete Program earned nominations for the U.S. Olympic
Luge Team for the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia.
Team USA luge coach Staff Sgt. Bill Tavares will lead Sgt.
Matt Mortensen and Sgt. Preston Griffall, who secured their spot with a
ninth-place finish in doubles at the Luge World Cup stop, Dec. 13, 2013, at
Utah Olympic Park.
The U.S. Army World Class Athlete Program, or WCAP, duo
completed its first run down the 1,335-meter track that features 15 curves in
43.948 seconds, followed by a shakier slide down the mountain in 44.132 seconds
-- for a cumulative time of 1:28.080. Germany's Tobias Wendl and Bvias Arlt won
the race with a 1:27.326 clocking.
"There's always a little bit of pressure when you're
sliding, but for Preston and I, the main thing was just get down to the finish
without walls -- do something that you've done hundreds of times, and just do
it OK," said Mortensen, 28, of Huntington Station, N.Y. "Second run,
I tried not to do it OK, but we still managed to get down without any
walls."
Griffall, a 2006 Olympian who just missed making the team in
2010, had even more reason to be concerned. As the bottom guy on a doubles
team, it's often difficult to see what is happening.
"Our second run, like Matt said, we had some problems
on the run," said Griffall, 29, of Salt Lake City, Utah. "There's a
big scoreboard, actually, behind curve 14 -- because I can't see directly in
front of me because Matt's sitting there -- so I was turned around and trying
to look at the scoreboard to see what place we were in. And we're still
traveling at 60 or 70 miles per hour, and I couldn't see where the place was on
the board."
Another four years instantaneously flashed through the mind
of Griffall.
"I had no idea what place we were in, and Matt wasn't
doing anything, so there was no reaction at first. I was like, 'Oh, my God,
maybe we didn't get the place that we needed,' he recalled. "I finally was
able to see around him once we got further up the outrun and I saw that we were
in second place [at that point in the competition] and at that point I knew
that we had met the place we needed to in order to qualify for the Olympics.
"I was just extremely excited," Griffall said.
"That was what we needed to do. I was happy for both Matt and I that we
were finally able to do this after seven years. This is the goal that we had,
and we finally met that goal. I'm just trying to enjoy it right now and we're
going to look forward toward Sochi, get there and try and go for it -- give
ourselves the possibility of going for a medal."
Mortensen was "paralyzed by emotion" the moment he
realized the WCAP duo's second run was good enough to earn an Olympic berth.
"All that matters is that we qualified for the Olympics
and we're going to Sochi," he said. "We ended up in ninth place
today, which is same as last week, so that's really, really good for us."
The next day, Mortensen and Griffall enjoyed a "victory
lap," of sorts, by anchoring Team USA to a silver medal in the World Cup
team relay, an event that will make its Olympic debut in Sochi. Kate Hansen
slid the women's singles leg and Chris Mazdzer filled the men's singles spot on
the relay team.
USA Luge officially announced nomination of the 2014 Olympic
Luge Team, at the Utah Olympic Park Museum.
Joining the WCAP lugers on Team USA: Mazdzer of Saranac
Lake, N.Y., Tucker West of Ridgefield, Conn., and Aidan Kelly of West Islip,
N.Y., in men's singles; Erin Hamlin of Remsen, N.Y., Hansen of La Canada,
Calif., and Summer Britcher of Glen Rock, Pa., in women's singles, along with
Christian Niccum of Woodinville, Wash., and Jayson Terdiman of Berwick, Pa., in
doubles.
"It's unbelievable," Mortensen said. "I get
emotional thinking about it. It's been almost 17 years that I've been working
toward this point, and for it to finally happen is like a dream come
true."
Griffall hopes his third go-round might indeed produce the
charm.
"Emotionally, it's a pretty powerful thing," he
said. "This is the biggest event for our sport. It only happens every four
years. We have World Cups and World Championships in between, but this is the
big one, you know? Yeah, after Matt and I missed it narrowly in 2010, this has
been a long time coming."
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