March 8, 2002
An Alaskan biathlon
athlete stays the course as she skis during the 2000 Arctic Winter games in
Whitehorse.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF THE 2002 ARCTIC WINTER GAMES HOST SOCIETY)
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Self-reliant Alaska athletes
pay their own way
Youth sports thrive
with little government help
JANE
GEORGE
Alaska is sending a delegation
of more than 350 athletes, coaches and officials to the Arctic Winter Games
with little government assistance.
The total cost for the
Alaskas team participation in the games is more than $500,000 US.
All AWG participants from
Alaska get a complimentary parka, pants and hats, bearing the blue and gold
Alaska colours, to wear during the games.
To help cover expenses,
every participant will be pay about $700 US.
"Unless theres
some value attached to the participation, the athletes will feel there was no
value," said John Estle, Alaskas chef de mission, in an interview
from Fairbanks.
All Alaskans get a dividend
cheque every October from the North Slope oil revenues worth $1,800 US, money
that many participants drew upon to help pay their contributions.
Despite the high cost,
their large team, and daunting logistics, the organization in charge of the
Alaskas participation in the games is small.
Estle is the only full-time
paid worker at the states 2002 AWG office.
"Sports in Alaska
is way less organized than in Canada," Estle said. "For the most part,
theres no organized preparation."
Most of the sports have
no sport association, so this complicates team selection. It also means many
AWG teams never get a chance to meet or practise together until they make it
to the games.
Estle said Alaska has full
teams entered in every sport. More than half the athletes selected come from
Anchorage, about a quarter from Fairbanks, and the rest from other regions in
Alaska, including the North Slope Borough.
"Thats a reasonably
accurate reflection of the population distribution of the state," Estle
said.
Not that this organizational
difference has hampered Alaskas past success at Arctic Winter Games.
Brian Randazzo of Anchorage
is still the king of high-kick. He set world records in the one-foot high kick
and the two-foot high kick at the 1988 Arctic Winter Games.
Although Randazzo wont
be accompanying the team this time around, another Alaskan star, Jesse Frankson,
will participate in the senior male Inuit Games in Iqaluit.
Last year, Frankson beat
martial arts expert Michael Blanks, the brother of tae-bo creator Billy Blanks,
in a made-for-TV kicking contest that aired in September.
Both beat the previous
world record of eight feet, nine inches for a one-foot high kick and both hit
nine feet, three inches.
Blanks bowed out of the
competition at nine feet, six inches. Frankson went on to win and set a new
world record with a kick of nine feet, eight inches.
This result put Frankson
in the 2002 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records.
Frankson, who comes from
Point Hope, told the Anchorage Daily News he just kicked the way Inupiat did
back when a whale had been landed, and the news needed to be signaled to villagers
so they could beach and butcher the animal.
In 1998, as a high school
senior, Frankson scored nine feet, two inches at the Native Youth Olympics in
Anchorage. In Grade 6, he said he was already able to kick more than six feet.
Frankson coaches Point
Hopes Native Youth Olympics program and was an assistant coach this season
for the high school volleyball team.
To keep in shape, Frankson
does a lot of skateboarding. His upper body is strong, he said, because he does
"house chores."
"The elders dont
like drinking water from the faucets, so I drag a sled load of ice from the
lake into town and they drink that," Frankson told the Anchorage Daily
News, describing one of his chores.
But despite the presence
of elite athletes like Frankson on the Alaskan team, Estle said the promotion
of sportsmanship, rather than winning medals, is the most important aspect of
the games.
"Of course, you hope
that you sent the teams that have a chance to be successful. Its more
fun to win than to lose. But I would rather have a team and a coach that plays
well and plays within the rules," Estle said.
To promote competition,
the Alaskan team is sending a basketball team whose members are three years
younger than those from the Northwest Territories, Yukon or Nunavut.
Basketball, wrestling and
Inuit games are all popular in remote villages in Alaska. Smaller communities
have no arenas, Estle explained, so hockey is more of a city sport.
Estle said a non-athletic
event involving the Alaska delegation is particularly worth watching
thats the March 16 arrival of a huge jumbo jet from Anchorage in Iqaluit.
When it begins to disgorge
its passengers, with their skis, hockey bags, luggage, sleds and even dogs,
Estle said Iqalungmiut will start to feel the full force of hosting the games.
Estle said its an
"overwhelming" event when hundreds of athletes descend on the games
host community.
The entire Alaska delegation
including dogs is travelling on the same jet from Anchorage, a
trip of about five and a half hours.
Half of them will continue
on to Kangerlussuaq, Greenland, and from there, to Nuuk.
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