Cannot disagree with that!I said this last year, but Laukli climbs like Quintana. Diggins climbs like Froome. It might be effective, but hot damn is it hideous.
She really came unglued there; that is definitely not her forté.That last 2 minutes by Diggins was something to behold.
Great result for her; feeling like she should have some great momentum for the rest of the season hopefully.Eiduka ended up 8th in the total. Only 17 seconds from 6th.
If she'd been fully healthy with a proper summer prep, there's a significant risk that the team would have overraced her in December, though.Stadlober has some of the sorst tactics ever. Burn yourself out quickly by doing all the work on the part of the stage that suits you the least,great idea...
Now I wanna see a healthy Laukli with a proper Summer prep.
If the 2 last classic races weren't somewhat neutralized by the weather Niskanen might have won the whole thing...
She need to spend the summer adding a few kilos muscles and work on her classic technique instead of traveling the world racing trail running and getting drunk.Now I wanna see a healthy Laukli with a proper Summer prep.
Lol what?!?! She absolutely LOVES trail running, she's skiing the best she's ever skied in her life, and apparently having a blast doing it. It would be silly to change what's working imho. Every athlete is different, some thrive on being 'monks', others don't like the ascetic focus and thrive on having some variety; Sophia certainly appears to be in the latter category and if it means her sticking with the sport rather than quitting like Hailey Swirbul for example, it's all to the good. Just my .02 of course.She need to spend the summer adding a few kilos muscles and work on her classic technique instead of traveling the world racing trail running and getting drunk.
Well it works well as long as shes happy with entering the top 10 now and then and then win this Alpe Cermis stage. If she wants to take it to the next step she has a lot of work to do, and it would likely take some changes.Lol what?!?! She absolutely LOVES trail running, she's skiing the best she's ever skied in her life, and apparently having a blast doing it. It would be silly to change what's working imho. Every athlete is different, some thrive on being 'monks', others don't like the ascetic focus and thrive on having some variety; Sophia certainly appears to be in the latter category and if it means her sticking with the sport rather than quitting like Hailey Swirbul for example, it's all to the good. Just my .02 of course.
Agreed. The mental part of athletics is every bit as important as the physical part; a healthy and happy skier is virtually always going to be a faster skier, and a health happy skier will almost certainly have more longevity in the sport. One of the most important parts of any difficult endeavor, whether learning a musical instrument, or becoming a great nordic skier, or whatever, is imho about love of process. Certainly, a laser-like focus on skiing will work for some, but for someone wired like Sophia it's a sure path to burnout; it is what it is. She's better served staying the course and if her skiing goals take on more importance she can alter her approach accordingly; for now it's hard to argue with success.yeah, her interviews made it pretty clear that Laukli doesn't see herself as a professional athlete, and also doesn't want to live the life necessary for it. She probably could be more successful if she would, but if it's not what she is aiming for, I don't really see the issue either.
Laukli is half Norwegian and does things her own way, with her I'm the least worried about the classic American overracing of young talent (they are really like the Russians when it comes to this).If she'd been fully healthy with a proper summer prep, there's a significant risk that the team would have overraced her in December, though.
And your last paragraph is pretty soul-crushing to imagine. FIS engineered a race marginalising classic and giving out ludicrously over-the-top sprint bonuses to marginalise distance skiers and try to avoid large time gaps, and yet might still have got Kerttu freaking Niskanen as the GC winner if the weather hadn't intervened!
I'm not fundamentally disagreeing with you, but for now it seems like she's VERY happy where she is. She won the biggest trail running series in the world and I know it might seem like blasphemy to people for whom XC is a passion, but to her that's every bit as important and big a deal as skiing the world cup. And if it keeps her head fresh and her heart in endurance athletics, she will end up a much better skier than if she quits the sport because she's hating her lifestyle.Well it works well as long as shes happy with entering the top 10 now and then and then win this Alpe Cermis stage. If she wants to take it to the next step she has a lot of work to do, and it would likely take some changes.
I’m not saying that she should stop running trail races, never drink again and live like a monk. But cutting down on it a little bit should be possible without losing the joy about the sport. If she runs half as many trail races and get drunk half as many times and spend a little more time working on technique and strength it it would in my eyes likely make her a better skier.
There was a big article about her from NRK in the summer which I think is an interesting read with Google translate: https://www.nrk.no/sport/grat-seg-g...-til-norge-for-a-bli-et-medaljehap-1.16469841yeah, her interviews made it pretty clear that Laukli doesn't see herself as a professional athlete, and also doesn't want to live the life necessary for it. She probably could be more successful if she would, but if it's not what she is aiming for, I don't really see the issue either.
