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  • Vancouver Olympics: Novato's Serebrakian savors time with Armenia te

    Marin Independent-Journal
    Feb 13 2010

    Vancouver Olympics: Novato's Serebrakian savors time with Armenian ski team

    John Dugan
    Posted: 02/13/2010 04:47:58 PM PST

    WHAT is a baseball player without a diamond? Or a hockey player without ice?

    A skier without a mountain? Actually, that's Ani Serebrakian - the
    Novato native who is representing Armenia as the country's sole alpine
    skier in the Winter Olympics.

    "We were weekend skiers," said Serebrakian, 21. "They said it's not
    possible to succeed in skiing just training two or three times a week.
    But we made up for it. Ã? I'm proud to be from Marin, and not some
    snowy place where you can ski every day of your life."

    Serebrakian, who has dual citizenship in the U.S. and Armenia an
    speaks Armenian fluently, has been in Vancouver since Feb. 5, but
    won't race in the slalom and giant slalom events until Feb. 24-26. She
    hopes her presence in the Games can prove you don't have to live in
    the mountains to be a world-class skier.

    It's not a story exactly on par with the Jamaican bobsled team, but
    growing up in Novato left Serebrakian at a decided disadvantage for a
    dedicated skier. So she and her dad, Armen, set about training in
    their own way.

    "We'd only be able to get up to the slopes on weekends, so my dad
    asked my middle school for permission to use the gym before school to
    train (my brother and I)," said Serebrakian, whose older brother Arman
    is a senior captain of the University of Colorado ski team. "We'd be
    up at 6 a.m. at the gym, running and doing drills to keep us in shape
    and work on our skiing, even though we weren't in the snow."

    That hard work has paid off. Serebrakian


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    began skiing when she was just 2 years old and was racing by the time
    she was 5. She trained at Northstar-at-Tahoe Ski Resort under Nick
    Maiocco, and her talent stood out immediately.
    "She just knew how to race," said Maiocco, who is now the Federation
    International Ski coach at Squaw Valley USA at Lake Tahoe. "She had
    that knack, that talent for downhill racing. And she's fearless, which
    helps."

    Serebrakian trained under Maiocco until she was about 12 years old,
    when Maiocco left Northstar for Squaw Valley. The two reconnected
    three years ago when Serebrakian approached Maiocco to be her
    individual coach as she tried to make the Olympic team.

    The training was grueling - Serebrakian, a sophomore at the University
    of San Francisco, is a year behind graduating on schedule because of
    her skiing commitments - and often took a toll on her social life.
    Serebrakian was a tennis star at Marin Catholic High, where she
    graduated in 2007, but most of her classmates remember her most for
    missing almost every winter weekend to drive up to Lake Tahoe and ski.

    Just two weeks ago, all the hard work and lost weekends paid off.
    Serebrakian got the call from the Armenian Olympic committee that she
    had been chosen, and it has been a whirlwind ever since. In the short
    time she joined the team, Serebrakian has been getting to know her
    teammates (one other male alpine skier, and a male and female nordic
    skier). As the only English-speaker and non-Armenian native of the
    lot, she's had to act as translator for the team.

    "We became really close friends really quickly," Serebrakian said. "It
    didn't even take a day to become totally comfortable with each other.
    Ã? They've been asking questions about what it's like in America, what
    kinds of things we do, but I probably ask them twice as many questions
    as they ask me. I'm very curious about life in Armenia."

    Despite growing up in Marin, Serebrakian feels a strong connection
    with her Armenian heritage. Her parents immigrated to the U.S. before
    she was born, and much of Serebrakian's extended family still lives in
    Armenia. She says she is proud to represent them in the Olympics.

    "For her to be able to come out and become a role model for Armenia,
    that was a huge inspiration for her," Maiocco said. "She wanted to ski
    for the people of Armenia, for her cousins and aunts and uncles and
    everybody. She wasn't just doing it for herself."

    Serebrakian is a long shot to medal in Vancouver - no betting house is
    offering better than 125-to-1 odds that she'll make the podium, and
    most Web sites don't offer wagers on her chances. But Maiocco said she
    has a strong shot at placing well in her events, despite not having
    the World Cup or international experience that many other top alpine
    skiers have.

    "There are a lot of people who have dedicated their entire lives to
    doing this, and the resources for a lot of skiers representing bigger
    countries are better than what Ani and her coaches have to work with,"
    Maiocco said. "But I give a lot of credit to the Armenian committee
    for wanting to pursue this and give Ani the chance to compete. They
    built the Federation and really got behind her as much as they could."

    Regardless of her medal chances, Serebrakian has made it further than
    almost any skier in the world can claim. And while the momentousness
    of her experience in Vancouver hasn't hit Serebrakian yet, she knows
    it's just a matter of time.

    "Going into the Olympic Village cafeteria for the first time and
    seeing all those great athletes, that was a real moment for me,"
    Serebrakian said. "I'm sure once I see (U.S. skiing stars) Bode Miller
    or Lindsey Vonn, I'll be totally starstruck. That's when it will
    really hit me."

    http://www.marinij.com/sports/ci_143975 53

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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