Tove Alexandersson was one year old
when she was taken out on her first orienteering course. From that
early beginning, she has moved up to taking three victories in a row
in the first round of the World Cup in Foot Orienteering at the
beginning of the season, and to gold medals in Sprint and Relay in
the World Ski Orienteering Championships two weeks ago. A remarkable
start to the year which places her, currently, in the lead in the
IOF’s World Rankings both in Foot Orienteering and Ski
Orienteering.
Name: Tove
Alexandersson
Country: Sweden
Born: 7th September
1992
Disciplines: Foot Orienteering and Ski
Orienteering
Career highlights:World Orienteering
Championships: Six silver medals (2014, Sprint and Long Distance;
2013, Middle Distance and Long Distance; 2012, Middle Distance and
Relay), three bronze medals (2014, Middle Distance and Relay; 2011,
Relay). European Orienteering Championships: two bronze medals (2014,
Middle Distance; 2012, Relay). Junior World Orienteering
Championships: Five gold medals (2012, Sprint and Middle Distance;
2011, Relay; 2010, Middle Distance; 2009, Middle Distance). World Cup
in Foot Orienteering: One victory and one second place overall
(eleven winnings in stages).
World Ski
Orienteering Championships: Five gold medals (2011, Sprint; 2013,
Sprint and Mixed Sprint Relay; 2015, Sprint and Relay), one silver
medal (2013, Relay), one bronze medal (2013, Long Distance). Junior
World Ski Orienteering Championships: gold medal (2009, Relay; 2010,
Relay; 2011, Sprint and Middle Distance; 2012, Sprint, Middle
Distance, Long Distance and Relay). World Cup in Ski Orienteering:
Two second places overall (thirteen winnings in stages).
IOF World Ranking position in Foot
Orienteering: 1st
IOF World Ranking position in Ski
Orienteering: 1st
“Foot orienteering is the most
important discipline for me, but so far I feel that ski orienteering
also makes me a better orienteer. I don’t focus on SkiO during the
orienteering season, but I always focus on orienteering and do what I
think is the best for me to be better”. It was in this way that
Tove Alexandersson answered, one year ago, the Portuguese
Orienteering Blog’s question about the “duality” of being both
Foot orienteer and Ski orienteer. At that moment she was close to the
top in the IOF World Rankings, both in FootO and SkiO, but now she is
at the very top. The answer hasn’t changed, however. Just a little
upgrade, so to say: “For the last few weeks I have been focused
only on ski orienteering, but I’ll probably switch the focus soon”,
Tove states.
These were the very first words of a
conversation that will enable us to visit some of the most important
moments of Tove’s career. But it’s important to set down, right
now, a warning: The girl who saves all the energy she has, applying
it only on what is essential (and the essential item is the
competition, of course), is the same person who is answering these
questions. So, don’t anticipate big revelations or extraordinary
advice. Just small ideas, little pieces in this kind of puzzle that
we’ll show you. Just … the essential!
“I love orienteering”
To be the number 1 in the IOF’s World
Rankings both in Orienteeering and Ski Orienteering was something
that she had never dreamed of. “Actually I have never cared much
about the IOF’s Ranking List. I don’t look at it that often, so I
didn’t know that I was on the top before someone told me.”
Otherwise, to be the world number 1 is unimportant: “I see it most
like numbers, the competitions are much more important”, she said.
Despite Tove’s short career, the
number of times that she has climbed on to the podium in major
competitions is amazing, and today she has no doubts: “I love
orienteering and I’m quite sure that I will continue even after my
elite career is over.” If not orienteering, Tove would choose a
sport also linked to nature: “cross-country skiing or mountain
running”, she admits. And she would be the best, that’s for sure!
Seven days of sport
Tove says that she has no typical
training week: “Sometimes I’m at home a whole week, but most of
the time I’m at different training camps or competitions. The last
7 days have been like this: Friday: Rest day; Saturday: World Ski
Orienteering Championships Middle Distance; Sunday: World Ski
Orienteering Championships Relay; Monday: 1 hour of running; Tuesday:
Ski race 10 km 0:30h + 0:45h warm up/cool down; Wednesday: a.m.: 2
hours running half of the time in snowy forest; p.m.: 2 hours of
classic skiing; Thursday: a.m.: intervals on treadmill 6-5-4-3-2-2
minutes with a 1-minute rest; p.m.: 2 hours running in forest”, she
says.” And also an interesting revelation: “I don’t have any
technical or physical coach, I plan it by myself”.
Having run in many terrains – “many
of them bad, but nothing that stands out”, she says – Tove’s
favourite is Norrlandskusten, “a nice forest, hilly and with many
details”. Her training diary shows that she ran 1,999 km and skied
1,633 km during the last season. “I don’t always have a gps-watch
with me so it’s probably some more”, Tove says. Her physical
shape stays next to optimal and it’s all about how to deal with the
pressure in the big competitions. It doesn’t seem to be a problem
for her: “I know that I’m competing for myself and no-one else”,
she says.
Australia
You finished last season in the lead
in the World Rankings and we could see you confirm it in Australia,
during the FootO World Cup first round. Was it in your plans to be so
strong at this time of the season and win so “easily”?
“Of course I wanted to have good
performances. I had a really good training period in the months
before the competitions but actually not so much running, most
skiing”.
What are the best (and worst)
memories that you keep from the Australia days?
“I have just one bad memory from the
days in Australia days and that was when Karolin twisted her ankle.
Besides the competitions, my best memory is when we were running on
Cradle Mountain some days after the World Cup. I like to travel and
see new places, and I think it’s good that there are big
competitions also on that side of the world. But I prefer to not have
them during the winter.”
Running and skiing; summer and winter
After her stay in Australia, Tove took
the plane in Sydney, arriving in Switzerland for the European SkiO
Championships. Was it a “shock”? Tove says “no” and explains
why: “I’m quite used to switching between running and skiing and
summer and winter. I had some days at home with good ski training
before arriving in Switzerland so it wasn’t a problem.” This kind
of switch from “FootO mode” to “SkiO mode” is seen as
natural: “I really looked forward to the ski orienteering and that
was the only thing I needed to come in the right mode”, she adds.
Seeing the European Ski Orienteering
Championships “as a good preparation for The World Championships”,
it was in Norway that Tove concentrated her attention, there that she
focused on her biggest goals of the SkiO season. And she shares her
feelings about her performances and achievements: “Yes, they were
really nice competitions. Maybe too many ups and downs in the results
for me to be totally satisfied, but it was fun to be there.” About
the best moments of the Championships, Tove elects “the Sprint,
definitely. It was a really nice course and I was in good shape and
had one of my best performances ever. The worst moment was that one
person close to the team passed away during the week, that was really
hard.”
WOC is the big goal
Switching into “FootO mode”, the
conversation is looking now towards the World Orienteering
Championships (WOC). Tove explains how her training is going to be up
until then: “The next important competitions are the World Cup in
Norway and Sweden. Also some Swedish championships and the 10-mila
before that. It’s not so often I have such a long training period,
but that’s good and I’m looking forward to it. The plan is to
train as much and as hard as I can, continue skiing as long as it is
possible and train in relevant terrain for Scotland.”
Noting that, personally, the most
important moment of last season was “of course the World Cup Sprint
Final and winning the race and the overall World Cup”, Tove is
pointing at the WOC being her big goals now: “I will prepare for
all disciplines and do what I can to be the best.”
“The most important thing is to be
motivated”
When asked about Rune Haraldsson’s
victory in “The Orienteering Achievement of 2014”, a poll
promoted by the website WorldofO, Tove states: “It was cool that
Rune Haraldsson won the prize, his life is really impressive.” And
she has no doubts: “I also want to be able to run in an
orienteering event when I’m 96 years old”.
The last words take the form of advice;
advice especially to the youngsters, those who dream, some day, about
becoming like Tove Alexandersson: “The most important thing is to
be motivated. Enjoy challenges and train on the things you need to
improve.”
Athletes’ questions and answers
The question from Michael Johansson,
the Athlete of the Month in February: “Have you tried mountain
bike orienteering and trailO? Or will you do so?”
And Tove’s answer: “Yes I have been
on some competitions in both. I really like mountain bike
orienteering, if I had more time I would like to go in for some more
competitions.”
Finally, the question from Tove
Alexandersson to Hana Dolezalova, Athlete of the Month in April:
“Where is your favourite place in the Czech Republic and why?”
Worldly matters
What time would you sleep until,
every morning, if possible? I don’t like to sleep in the
mornings and most of the time I don’t need an alarm to wake up. I
usually wake up between 6:30 and 7:30.
What is your dream car? Do you
prefer to drive a car or to be driven? I have no dream car, but I
want to have a car that is good in winter conditions. I prefer to be
driven but sometimes it’s nice to drive too.
If you had a band what would be the
name of it and what kind of music would you play? I just know
that I would need someone who is a bit more musical than me!
Please, choose a crew for your
sailing boat and the route of the trip of your dreams. I like to
travel and see new places but I don’t want to travel on a sailing
boat, so I think I will stay close to land. I will bring some friends
who like adventure and want to run with me.
Pick one of these and tell me why: a
tree, a stone, a beach, a domestic animal, a sunset. A big
stone, so I can do some rock climbing on it.
You invite Barack Obama to dinner.
What would you cook for him? I don’t know, I have no
speciality. I’d cook what I felt like that day.
After a big scary skiing run down
the mountain, what drink would you prefer for relaxing? Hot
chocolate.
What is your favourite movie? What
character would you like to play in it? I think it’s boring to
watch movies, so I don’t see them so often and especially not a
whole movie.
You have the chance to make a trip
to Mars but then you can’t go orienteering for the next thousand
days. Would you go on the trip? No, definitely not. I don’t
want to go to Mars. It’s a long boring journey and what should I do
there?
Tell me one thing that you would
absolutely carry with you to the desert island? Some friends.
[Text: Joaquim Margarido; Photo:
Swedish Orienteering Federation / orienteering.org. See the original
article at
http://orienteering.org/best-in-summer-best-in-winter-iof-athlete-of-march-2015/.
Published with permission from the International Orienteering
Federation]