After the first major competition of
the XI World Trail Orienteering Championships WTOC 2014 - and with it
the emotions of TempO and Luis Gonçalves' fantastic 9th place (!) -
it's time to take a look at the Pre-O competition that will have its
epilogue next July 11th and whose first day's Model Event took place
already this morning. The issues on the table are many, and about
which we exchanged a couple of points of view with Nuno Pires, Team
Official of the Portuguese delegation present in Lavarone.
Are you fully recovered from the
emotions of yesterday? (laughs)
Nuno Pires (N. P.) - It was
really a very intense day. At the beginning, expectations were
identical for everyone, but after the qualifying, each of us had a
very precise idea of what had gone less well. Personally, I struggled
in stations 5 and 6, I was clearly penalized by repeating answers in
the same stations and I knew that hardly would reach a place in the
Final.
And then, in the end, the result
that we all know.
N. P. - Yes, a great joy. It is
worth mentioning that this joy was shared with everyone in the team
and also with Antonio Hernandez, who has been with us all time.
Actually, at the course's place, Portuguese and Spanish are always
very close and often exchange impressions. This is quite helpful, our
teams developing together in terms of ideas and knowledgement. There
were also other countries that were associated to our special moment,
mainly from Eastern Europe, showing curiosity in how Luis got what
he did. Curiosity and affection, a smile that reveals a message of
appreciation to anyone who comes to intrude within the countries that
usually dominate this discipline.
Is there anything incidental in Luís
Gonçalves' 9th place?
N. P. - I cannot answer this
question very well... But no, I don't think so. Luis has been an
orienteer since a long time, he is an athlete of our national Elite
class in FootO, has above all good technical qualities and the fact
that he is still young and has a really fast reaction time, gave to
him the perfect profile for TempO. Interestingly, given the
complexity of the terrain and the challenges in this competition,
Luis clearly adopted a strategy which proved much better than the
strategy of many so-called “Nordic machine-guns”. They are used
to “shoot” in five or six seconds which was, in this case, almost
impossible without mistakes. Hence, he had such a good performance and have achieved a
result that no one was waiting.
What impact this may have in the
further development of this discipline in Portugal?
N. P. - Well, this proves that
TempO is, at least, one discipline to work in the future. I would
like to see more TempO events in the official calendar in Portugal,
maybe to find a solution making possible to fit the TempO in the
Portuguese TrailO Cup ranking, a hybrid solution, I don't know. We
have to think, but it's like Antonio Hernandez said yesterday, using
an analogy with what happens in Foot Orienteering: the Portuguese
will never be able to hit the Nordic in long distances, but we
already have some nice results in the Sprint. Applying it to Trail
orienteering, in TempO we can get closer to the Nordics and faster,
while in PreO we still have a long way to go.
Luis Gonçalves reached a historic
result, as we already know, but it was not the only Portuguese in the
start for this competition. The difference is that both Nuno and
Ricardo couldn't reach the finals. What was wrong?
N. P. - In the case of Ricardo,
I would not say that things have been wrong. The issue is that for
the technical level of Ricardo, these challenges proved to be more
difficult than what he's used to face. But it also happened with me.
With this map and this kind of forest, both I and Ricardo were unable
to make decisions safely. It is very easy to be drawn into the error
by questions related to what I would call “optical illusion”. It
is easy to be deceived. Clearly, the challenges were placed on a very
high platform and we have to recognize that course planning was very
careful this time. The key to success could be hit in the first
problem in every station. But I must acknowledge that, in this
particular, we weren't well.
We had today the Model Event in
PreO. Want you tell us your impressions about this morning in Forte
Verle?
N. P. - It was a Model Event
with ten control points and one more station with two timed controls.
The terry was wide open with few areas of forest, but with many
depressions - reminiscences of World War I - which makes the map with
an increased complexity in relation to the natural elements. The
readability of the terrain and the proximity of the flags for the
points of view meant that the level of technical difficulty was not
very high, but there were some small “traps” to which we need to
be alert. Generally our performance was good, we didn't make big
mistakes and we always hit averages above 80%. But we think that
tomorrow the number of individual elements will be much higher and we
are also, of course, waiting for more difficult challenges.
Incidentally, if it happens what happened in TempO, we have a huge
disparity between the Model Event and the course. But we are going to
analyse things quietly and I hope that tomorrow things will go well,
opening good perspectives for the second day of competition.
When you say good perspectives, you
are talking what about? Luis Gonçalves has assumed the top-25 as his
major goal. What about the other members of the team?
N. P. - We haven't yet discussed
the subject. Luis pointed to the top-25 and I am convinced that he
will be able to achieve that goal. But we also know that one point
more or less can vary many places our positions in the
classification. I believe that, in this kind of terrain, we'll have
more people answering wrong than in the European Championships and
one or two wrong answers wouldn't make such a big difference in the
final standings.
How is it going, the World
Championships, from the point of view of the Team Official Nuno
Pires? The increased responsibilities have taken many hours of your
sleep?
N. P. - The atmosphere within
our team is excellent. I try to remove all troubles from the athletes
and the factors that could destabilize before the courses and I have
also tried to keep myself calm and solve the problems, fortunately
few, that have arisen - a blown headlight on the vehicle, mechanical
problems with Ricardo's wheelchair. It is fair to note that we have
been able to count on the support of all the staff of our hotel, they
are helping us to find the best solutions for the little things that
eventually emerge, particularly in coordinating our schedules with
the schedules of the Hotel itself.
And the organization? Does it fit
with the high standards that are always waiting for an event of this
magnitude?
N. P. - Until now, I have to say
that the organization has been in a World Championships level. It is
true that not everything has gone well and the weather also does not
help too much. But I think that, technically, the event is having an
excellent quality. The Senior Event Advisor, a Swedish, is an
extremely well known and respected person in TrailO. It is a “cold”
person, but a person with whom you can talk and know to listen you
and answer to your questions. Within half an hour we will have the
second Team Officials Meeting and quite frankly, I do not expect that
major issues are raised in relation to Model Event and which may
influence the planning of tomorrow's course.
In two words, what is your greatest
wish?
N. P. - Well, there aren't two
words, but three: A great result! I expect a great result from the
Portuguese athletes that are here. Tomorrow we'll have with us João
Pedro Valente in the Open Class and I think he will be a great
surprise, as Gonçalves was a great surprise in TempO.
Follow the XI World Trail Orienteering
Championships WTOC 2014 at http://www.woc2014.info/wtoc.php.
[Photo courtesy of Nuno Pires]
Joaquim Margarido











