Up to Parra: Olympic medalist fills in as U.S. speedskating coach

Published: Friday, July 10, 2009 12:57 a.m. MDT
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With the 2010 Winter Olympic Games just a handful of months away, the U.S. speedskating team was in its final preparations for another run at gold medal glory.

A funny thing happened along the way, though.

Coach Bart Veldkamp, hired to bring a European training style and philosophy to the team, abruptly resigned or was fired — depending on which side of the story you read — with only 10 months remaining before the opening ceremony.

In his place, former Olympic hero Derek Parra was asked to step in, salvage the best of the situation and, along the way, try to get the skaters now under his charge onto the podium in Vancouver.

"I have to go with what I've got," Parra said. "You can't reinvent the wheel the year of the games."

Reinventing the wheel, though, might be the reason Parra finds himself with the job he now holds.

Veldkamp brought with him decades of Dutch experience when he agreed to mold the U.S. team. The Netherlands has long been the world's dominant country when long track speedskating is considered and Veldkamp was asked to help turn the Americans from contenders to champions.

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Though his training system had plenty of success in Europe, his style and manner did not sit well with the American team. Some athletes never fully bought into the training program, others stuck with their personal coaches at sites away from the Utah Olympic Oval in Kearns, and it was no secret many athletes were not happy with Veldkamp's training regiment.

"It took a while for the Americans to buy into his system," Parra said. "Some never really did. My job is to get everyone on the same page and focused for Vancouver."

The same page, however, might be from entirely different books and written by a handful of different authors.

With just nine months before competition begins in Canada, Parra acknowledges he doesn't have time to break everything down and start fresh.

Instead, he will ask his athletes to focus on what made them their most efficient in the past and to quickly build on that.

"Because this is the year of the Games," Parra said, "I'm going to try to refine the form."

For some, that won't be a difficult task. Shani Davis and Trevor Marsicano — perhaps not coincidentally two of the athletes who train with personal coaches — had stellar seasons. Others, such as veterans Catherine Raney-Norman and Chad Hedrick, did not have the seasons they had hoped for and are not at the level at which they enjoyed past Olympic successes.

"My job is to get (Chad) back to being Chad," Parra said. "He was the best skater in the world. But he took some time off and I think it's taken a long time to get his base back.

Recent comments

Until you have fought a long corner going 30 MPH on ice, you really...

Speedskater | July 10, 2009 at 10:34 a.m.

people spend decades of their lives training for what? a worthless...

swiftouch | July 10, 2009 at 4:42 a.m.

Image

New national coach Derek Parra watches Rebekah Bradford as he works with speedskating athletes at the Utah Olympic Oval this week. He is in for a challenge with the 2010 Olympics being less than a year away.

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