Sunday, November 29, 2015

Inside Orienteering 03/2015: Behind the Scenes - Jorn Sundby



The Norwegian Jorn Sundby is IOF WOC SEA which means event advising at World Orienteering Championships with TV-development as one key part.


Tell us about your work as IOF WOC SEA?

– The mission is to secure the quality of WOC-events. I have a SEA-assistant for all WOCs, and we also have at least one national controller in our team. In addition, we have different experts within the IOF we can involve in technical details if necessary. The SEA is the main link between the IOF and organizer. One main task is of course to make sure that the IOF rules are strictly followed. Some IOF-rules are different from national rules. We have to approve the solutions chosen by the organizers in all areas, making sure that they not only follow the rules, but also have the quality that we want for our main event. Fairness is the most important guideline in judging all aspects of a WOC. Our aim is to be a support and a help for the organizers (not only a controller). Most WOC organizers do this once in their life time, while the SEA-team have a lot of experience from
many WOCs. In many cases we know what works and what doesn’t work.

Describe your work?

– I started working for IOF ahead of the 2015-season, replacing Bjorn Persson. I had some previous SEA-experience as Bjorn´s assistant at WOC 2014. Right now I have the responsibility of the WOC’s from 2016–2018. Normally we visit the host city once or twice each year in the three years prior to the WOC. Every visit is normally three to four days. Beside the visits we stay in close contact with the organizer through E-mail. For WOC 2016 it is a bit different, both me as the SEA and Unni Strand Karlsen as the assistant SEA lives quite close to the area, so we are visiting more frequently. We might just go for an evening meeting or a day in the forest.

We spend a lot of time on the different things that are different at WOC compared to a “normal” event. This is often where the organizer needs support and advice. Very few have experience with television, with the infrastructure needed, demands for IT, and so on. The demands of an international event, language, fairness for all countries is also new to many. Still, in the end, most time is used on maps and courses. There are many events at a WOC, and we want the best possible quality for the athletes.

What do you like with this job?

– Meeting organizers from different countries and finding good solutions together as a team is very rewarding. There are so many people who spend so many hours for our sport, making these events happen. They all have this desire to make their event as good as absolutely possible, and this is fantastic to see. Especially I enjoy the early part of the event planning, when the main concepts are made. To find an arena and a terrain that can have world class courses, and at the same time give us a great presentation on TV and for spectators. I enjoy the challenge of trying to improve the standard of our events every year to the benefit of all our stakeholders.

The biggest challenge?

– The biggest challenge is to find the concepts that can fulfill all the intentions of a WOC. We need to have world class maps and courses at the same time as we need world class TV-production and presentation. This is often a challenge to combine, many of the best terrains are often in remote areas with struggling mobile connection no internet or infrastructure. The athletes will be happy there, but TV Broadcast and presentation will suffer. They need more infrastructure to be able to do their job. Many arenas that have the necessary infrastructure for the forest event don’t have the best terrain nearby, leading to compromises that in the end neither athletes or TV are happy with. So it is absolutely crucial that we search for the area where we both have access to world class terrain, but also have the infrastructure needed for spectators and media/television.

In such a big organization as a WOC there are many different people with many different opinions. This is often refreshing as it brings different ideas to the table. But sometimes it can be very difficult when decisions need to be made and it is impossible to keep everybody happy. This is a big challenge, most organizers are volunteers and if they are not happy with the decisions they may choose to do other things than organize a WOC… So it is important to have a good and clean communication with all the key people in the organization.

The sprint events are also a big challenge. Held in an urban area, it is very difficult to secure everything with so many people living and moving in the competition area. You always seem to get some unpleasant surprises.

The financial part of the event is also very challenging for most organizers, and it is sometimes necessary to choose second best or third best option because of financial issues.

Give us an example of an incident to avoid.

– The most important is of course to avoid incidents that makes the competition unfair or even cancelled. The most important is to think about possible scenarios and have back-up plans ready. So we spend a lot of time discussing potential problems. What if the area loses power? What if a bus breaks down on the way to the start? What if the competition maps get lost on the way to the start? And so on. The WOC 2015 organizers were great at making such plans. When a bus had problems on the way to the long distance start, they had already thought about this and could make fast decisions on what to do.

How do we prevent incidents as the punching system fail in the World Cup?

– By having done proper testing in advance with the same people, in the same conditions. It is very important that the organizers have test events where they test their systems (and people) in the same roles and with the same goal as in WOC. When people have to do something for the first time at WOC it increases the risk of error. People should have done their task so many times already in tests that they feel safe and know what to do during WOC. Many people were concerned about using punch-free system in WOC 2015 after the failure in June, but the organizer had done a really professional job testing many times and it worked well at WOC.

Who are you?

– I have a mixed background in orienteering. I competed myself at JWOC and Euromeeting for Norway, but I had to give up the national team early due to an injury. I worked as the coach of the Norwegian junior team for four years, and I was one of the assistant coaches of the senior team for four years, helping the athletes with the technical preparations (maps, courses and trainings) for WOC being my main task. So I know a lot about how the coaches think, and how the teams prepare. Beside coaching I have been working in media for the last 25 years. In orienteering I have been an announcer for many World Cup events and also WOC. In television I have been a commentator for the last 15 years, doing winter sports, football, handball, and also some orienteering. I have also been involved in productions from events.

For three years I worked full time for the Norwegian Orienteering Federation as their event manager, this included responsibilities in connection with WOC 2010. I have also been a course setter for many big events, including many Norwegian championships and also World Cup. I am a part time map maker, having maps made for Norwegian championships and for local events. So I have a very mixed background that hopefully can help the understanding of all aspects of a WOC, and to find the best possible solutions.

Can you compare the big orienteering events with other sports event?

– Our sport is very demanding to organize. So many details are important for a successful event, and this makes orienteering one of the more challenging sports to organize. What makes it even more challenging is that we don’t have a fixed arena, we pretty much have to build everything from scratch every time. There are also big costs involved, especially for mapping and TV-production. It is easier (and much cheaper) to put up a couple of cameras at a beach volley or tennis arena than putting several kilometers of heavy cables out in tough forest. One advantage is that our maps can be reused for years after our events, for everyone from elite to youngsters.

Orienteering organizers are generally good in the technical matters of the competition, but many other sports are much more professional in their work with presentation, TV, sponsors and partners. In this area we need to improve.

How can we develop big events in the future?

– I believe that we are moving towards a more professional handling of our main events. This means that some tasks will be done by specialists, who will do the same job every year. This is already the case with areas like TV-production and mapping, but also some other areas, like IT/time-keeping should have a professional team who secure high quality every time. I think this will benefit everyone, especially the organizers, as they can spend more energy on the tasks that they have experience and feel comfortable with, and they can sleep better, knowing that some of their critical tasks are taken care of.

From 2019 the new system with split sprint and forest WOC will start, and it will be very interesting to follow this development. There are some challenges with it, but it also gives us possibilities that we didn’t have before. New countries, new areas can be used, and with fewer events during the week it should be easier to improve the quality of the events held. I am hoping that we can improve the financial side of organizing a WOC, that would make WOC much more attractive and means that we can choose from more and better concepts.

The TV-productions are moving in the right direction now, with more and more countries buying the rights for WOC. Hopefully, within five-six years, we no longer lose money on our TV Broadcasts.

I also hope that the level of the athletes continues to improve, hopefully we will have many countries fighting for medals also in the coming years. I want us to give them some WOC events that gives them positive memories for life, and as long as I have this job I will do everything I can to make that happen!

Photo: Erik Borg

[See the original article at http://orienteering.org/edocker/inside-orienteering/2015-3/InsideOrient%203_15.pdf. Published with permission from the International Orienteering Federation]

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Ski Orienteering World Cup Sprint Relay: Gold for Sweden



After Ulrik Nordberg's historical victory yesterday, Sweden showed up being on top rating, winning today's Ski Orienteering World Cup Sprint Relay. Ulrik Nordberg and Tove Alexandersson took a convincing victory by large 65 seconds over Finland.


As we could follow yesterday, the Swedish Ulrik Nordberg was an outstanding winner of the Sprint race, the first stage of Ski Orienteering World Cup's opening round, in Ylläs, Finland. Today, he could taste the gold again, this time together with Tove Alexandersson, crowning an exciting Sprint Relay. Sweden started better, but not by Ulrik Nordberg, the fourth after the first leg, nine seconds after his compatriot Erik Rost. The Finnish Sally Koskela was the fastest in the second leg and took the lead with a little advantage over Mira Koskinen, while the Swedish Tove Alexandersson kept the fourth position, fifteen seconds to the lead. The Swedish started to designed the victory during the third leg, with Ulrik Nordberg shortening the distance to the Finnish Ville-Petteri Saarela and fixing it in a single second. And when Tove Alexandersson decided to show all her potential in the fourth leg, smashing the concurrence by margins bigger than 20 seconds, the race was over.

Ulrik Nordberg did (along with Erik Rost and the Russian Vladimir Barchukov) the best time in the fifth leg, increasing for 57 seconds the advantage over Finland, still second placed, and Tove Alexandersson showed unbeatable again in the last leg, setting the final time in 42:08 to Sweden, against 43:13 from Finland, with Ville-Petteri Saarela and Sally Koskela, and 43:45 from Russia, with Vladimir Barchukov and Mariya Kechkina. “Really nice to have a victory! Yesterday wasn't a good day for me, but today everything was different. We made no mistakes and I'm very pleased with our performances”, said Tove Alexandersson to Skidorientering, the specialized webpage in Ski Orienteering from Swedish Orienteering Federation. Tove also targeted the race as “really fun, in a very technical Orienteering day”. Nordberg also left some ideas to the same media: “I probably didn't some route choices in the best way, but I made three good legs overall”, he conceded.


Results

1. Sweden 1 (Ulrik Nordberg and Tove Alexandersson) 42.08 (+ 00:00)
2. Finland 1 (Ville-Petteri Saarela and Sally Koskela) 43:13 (+ 01:05)
3. Russia 2 (Vladimir Barchukov and Mariya Kechkina) 43:45 (+ 01.37)
4. Russia 1 (Eduard Khrennikov and Tatyana Oborina) 43:54 (+ 01.46)
5. Sweden 3 (Erik Blomgren and Magdalena Olsson) 43:55 (+ 01.47)
6. Finland national team-1 (Jyri Uusitalo and Mira Kaskinen) 43:56 (+ 01:48)

Complete results and further information at http://ensilumenrastit.fi/2015/.

[Photo: Skidorientering / orientering.se/skido]

Joaquim Margarido

Inside Orienteering: Issue 3, November 2015 is now published



The latest issue of the IOF publication Inside Orienteering is now available on the IOF webpage. On it, you may read about the upcoming SkiO Season, meet the new IOF Office in Sweden, follow the first ever Egyptian Sprint Orienteering Championships and much more.


In the last issue of Inside Orienteering, published in June [HERE], you could enjoy a look back at the years that the IOF Office spent in Finland, and remember the hard work and progress that was undergone there. Since then, a lot has been happening behind the scenes. The entire IOF Office has upped sticks and moved, from Finland’s capital Helsinki, to the regional capital Karlstad, in Värmland, Sweden. This is probably one of the main reasons why Inside Orienteering's third issue is been published so late. Written by Kirsty McIntire, “IOF Office – The Beginning of a New Era” is an informal (and nice) presentation of all staff, from Tom Hollowell, the new Secretary General / Chief Executive Officer, to David Wästlund, the Sports Administrator, Malin Björqvist, responsible for the Global Development & Communications Officer, Hans Jørgen Kvåle, the Marketing Manager, Jörn Sundby, IOF Senior Event Adviser for the World Orienteering Championships, Henrik Skoglund, who works with Eventor, Ed Niland, manager of the IOF's Anti-Doping plans and, of course, Kirsty McIntyre, the Office Administrator.

The Winter is here and Erik Borg talks about Ski Orienteering and the “Great motivations with the big events”. The 2018 World Cup Ski Orienteering races will be at Craftsbury Outdoor Center, in northern Vermont, USA, and the subject deserves his special attention. But also the next European Championships, in Obertilliach, Austria, “A perfect location for a Championship”. We can also read a nice interview with Daisy Kudre, expecting to see her “back in the ski-o world with a smiling face”, and another Interview with Juraj Nemec, IOF Event Adviser for the World University Championships and “a door opener on the Olympic Road”. We may also see in the words of Brian Porteous, the IOF President, a reinforcement of this “Olympic project”: “The International Olympic Committee's Agenda 2020 gives us real opportunities to be included especially in the Olympic Winter Games and it is important therefore that all federations who can support and encourage our skiO discipline.”

“Around the World”, José Angel Nieto Poblete presents the “Women and Sports” project, a program developed by the Spanish Orienteering Federation and the National Sports Council; Zoran Milovanovic invites us to the beautiful Al Azhar Park, in Cairo, for the first ever Sprint Orienteering Championships of Egypt; and Dominic Yue left us a general idea about the sixth World Military Games, in Mungyeong, South Korea. Finally, Daniel Hubmann, the current leader of the IOF World Ranking, describes his favorite map: Irbene, in Latvia. In this interview, conducted by Erik Borg, you can read that “he has been on the map only once. It was on the Long Distance at the European
Championship in 2008. Daniel finished second after Dmitry Tsvetkov. The difference between the Russian and Hubmann was 33 seconds on the 16,9 km long course with 33 controls.”


Joaquim Margarido

Friday, November 27, 2015

Ski Orienteering World Cup 2015-2016's opening round: Sprint victories for Ulrik Nordberg and Tatyana Oborina



The Ski Orienteering World Cup season 2015-2016 started in Ylläs, Northern Finland, in the best way. A perfect weather, demanding courses and, in the end, Ulrik Nordberg and Tatyana Oborina tightly winning the Sprint races.


Ylläs, in Lapland, Northern Finland, is hosting by this days the Ski Orienteering World Cup 2015-2016's opening round. 88 athletes from 14 nations joined the competition which hold, this morning, its first stage. The Women were the first in action, facing at the start a really steep course to the upper part. The Russian Tatiana Oboryna started earlier and, from the very first moment, she showed very confident, very fast, taking really good route choices and reaching here a good advantage that she managed to keep all the way till the end. She finished the 3.9 km of her course in the time of 13:22, seven seconds ahead of other Russian, Mariya Kechkina. Great specialist in the downhill sections and pointed for many as the favorite to the victory “on home ground”, the Finnish Milka Reponen did a great race, but she could never recover the time lost in the first part of the course, finishing with eight seconds more than Oborina.

As for the Men, when we see the three top athletes separated by two single seconds, what can we say? The Portuguese Orienteering Blog asked to the Swedish Ulrik Nordberg, today's winner, and we believe that his words say everything: “The race started with two controls in a steep section, so it was hard to stay up on my skies, in the hard 90 degrees small track turns. I can't complain, I took some decent route choices but it was after - in some short hard controls - that I made some really good route choices, kept the flow going and didn't make any mistakes till the finish line. I was lucky to have the seconds on my side this time”, Ulrik said. At the age of 22, Ulrik Nordberg took his first triumph in a World Cup stage, finishing with the time of 15:02 for a course of 5,1 km. The Bulgarian Stanimir Belomazhev, current IOF World Ranking leader, spend one more second, while the Russian Eduard Khrennikove was third, two seconds after Nordberg.


Results

Men
1. Ulrik Nordberg (Sweden) 15:02 (+ 00:00)
2. Stanimir Belomazhev (Bulgaria) 15:03 (+ 00:01)
3. Eduard Khrennikov (Russia) 15:04 (+ 00:02)
4. Erik Rost (Sweden) 15:17 (+ 00:15)
5. Lars Moholdt (Norway) 15:20 (+ 00:18)
6. Vladimir Barchukov (Russia) 15:26 (+ 00:24)

Women
1. Tatyana Oborina (Russia) 13:22 (+ 00:00)
2. Mariya Kechkina (Russia) 13:29 (+ 00:07)
3. Milka Reponen (Finlândia) 13:30 (+ 00:08)
4. Iuliia Tarasenko (Russia) 13:32 (+ 00:10)
5. Polina Frolova (Russia) 13:33 (+ 00:11)
6. Tove Alexandersson (Sweden) 13:40 (+ 00:18)

Further information and complete results at http://ensilumenrastit.fi/2015/. You can also see some nice reports through the IOF Live Center Broadcast, at http://livecenter.orienteering.org/.

[Photo: Ski Orienteering World Cup 2015-2016's opening round Ylläs . Finland / ensilumenrastit.fi/]

Joaquim Margarido

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Ski Orienteering: World Cup's season 2015-2016 is about to start



Ylläs, in Finland, is ready to host the IOF Ski Orienteering World Cup's first round. In the next four days, 88 athletes from 14 nations will compete for the gold in Sprint, Sprint Relay, Middle and Long Distance, both in Men and Women classes.


“As one season ends and we say thanks to organisers and congratulations to medal winners, we can look forward to our ski orienteering season starting”. These words are from Brian Porteous, the IOF President, and can be read in the Inside Orienteering's last issue, published today [HERE]. And so it is. The Ski Orienteering World Cup's season 2015-2016 is about to start in Lapland, in Northern Finland, and all the attentions are focused in Ylläs, a city that has, for more than 20 years, hosted the traditional opening of the Ski Orienteering season in Finland. Last time Ylläs hosted the World Cup opening round was in 2013 and this year the organization will offer an even more compact and visible event, fully centred in the Ylläsjärvi Ski Resort.

The Program will start tomorrow with the Sprint, while Saturday and Sunday we'll have the Sprint Relay and the Middle Distance. On 1st December, the Long Distance course will put an ending in the competition, which has 88 competitors – 49 male and 39 female – entered so far. Leaders of the IOF World Ranking, the Bulgarian Stanimir Belomazhev and the Russian Iuliia Tarasenko are the brightest stars in Ylläs, but we can also see here (almost) all the big names of the current Ski Orienteering scene, such as the Russian Andrey Lamov and the Swedish Tove Alexandersson, both current Sprint World Champions, the Norwegian Lars Moholdt, Long Distance gold medalist last World Championships, and the Finnish Milka Reponen, World Champion in Middle Distance. Big starts in the last European Championships, such as the Swedish Erik Rost, the Russian Tatyana Oborina and the Finnish Mervi Pesu, are also names to take in account when talking of medals. From the side of the absences, the remarks goes to the Swedish Josefine Engstrom, Long Distance World Champion and second placed in the IOF World Ranking and the Finnish Staffan Tunis, number four in the World Ranking and gold medalist in the Middle Distance of the last World Championships.

The IOF has produced a useful guide to the upcoming Ski Orienteering World Cup season, with interesting information about the sport, the events, the arenas and the athletes. The Ski Orienteering Season Guide 2015-2016 - an important document for anyone interested in Ski Orienteering in general, and the 2015-2016 Ski Orienteering World Cup season in particular – can be read HERE. As for the Ski Orienteering World Cup 2015-2016's opening round, you'll find all the information at http://ensilumenrastit.fi/2015/. You may also follow the races through the IOF Live Center from 9:00 a.m. tomorrow (GMT) at http://livecenter.orienteering.org/.

Joaquim Margarido