After the
European champs in Sweden, it was a quite dense period with a lot of
competitions (and some important things at school too with exams and
projects-reports as always in June: tough but it must be good to come back to the
reality!).
Just the
weekend after EOC, we had some selection races with the French team in the nice
but challenging maps of the Jura Mountain. There we can also compete with many
strong international orienteers so it was really good to compeer routes and see
what to improve in that kind of terrain. On the Saturday, it was a middle
distance competition and it went quite well for me with no big mistakes and
rather good route-choices. (See the interesting article of O'training.net)
On Sunday,
it was a ‘short long distance’ (around 65’ for the winner) in the tricky Jura
terrain too. It went a little worse for me this time as I’ve done a whole loop
in the wrong side before realizing my mistakes (~5’ missed…)
Then, The 8th
of June, we had our sprint selection race for WOC in the street of Villard-de-Lans
were I won the test-race and I took my first ticket for Lausanne with Vinc,
Lucas, Amélie, Celine and Léa (see
selected French team down).
The weekend
of the 9th and 10th of June, it was the Middle and club
French championship in the south of the Vercors mountain. There the terrains
and maps are also really challenging. The middle distance was interesting and
we had to stay careful in this rocky ground to decide the right route choices
and to properly find the control. It went well for me and I took the French
champs title!
The Club
French Championship (CFC) must be the best orienteering event in France: it’s
almost the ‘French Jukola’ ;) where all the French club meet and compete on 4
different leagues (more chances to get medals :p ). For an individual sport as
orienteering, it’s very fun to run relay and to fight for a team and even for
the club! On this event, the main particularity is the team composition: it
should represent the whole club. That why in the 1st league, it’s a
8-leg relay where it should be at least 3 women with 1 young (under 18) and one
master (over 35) + 1 young + 1 master. Then it’s only 3 places left for elite
runners. That why it could be a lot of changes during the race as the teams
don’t launch there ‘rocket’ at the same time… For some years, I have the chance
to run the last leg in a quite strong team fighting for medals in the 1st
leagues: It makes the challenges even nicer to try to get the best
result-position for the team (before that, I was also really proud to run
another leg in this team). My team has done an amazing job so I started in a
perfect 3rd position quite close to the first competitors. So I run
very offensively to tried to catch times and places but I may have forgotten to
read the map and to orienteer cleanly so it leads to many mistakes and I lost
time instead of catching it: Finally, we took the satisfying bronze medal
confirming the good shape of Orient’Express club!
The next
weekend, it was the famous Jukola in Finland where I’m still impressed to see
how huge can be orienteering. Even if this event took place very close to
Helsinki, it was a really nice terrain and a quite wild forest with a lot of
bare-rock on the ills top. I was also running the last leg with my Swedish club OK Hällen.
And my
team-mate had done a good job before giving me the relay in a good start position
with the possibility to catch up other teams. The beginning of my race was ok
so I could catch some runners but after some mistakes, I was running in a big
group with clubs like KOK or Rehns BK. This group were growing control after
control… Then, as I had the good idea to take a different route choice for a
long leg and as I missed the control, I lost the group some hundred meters
before the finish and I couldn’t catch it again. Finally we took the 30th
place that is an OK result (if you compare to the 1 650 teams of the start
line) even if I’m not very satisfied of my performance (I didn’t lose any places
but I was running with the 23rd before my last mistake).
On the
following weekend, it was 2 world-cup stages in Switzerland with a middle
distance on Saturday and the Post-finance sprint on Sunday. For the
middle-distance, the Swiss organizers found some piece of forest still unmapped
(quite rare in Switzerland) on an ill slope whereas the sprint took part in the
city streets of St Gallen.
The middle
went well for me in spite of some mistakes (like 1st and 8th
control) and wrong route-choices (control 10 to the left) in the beginning. Then,
my speed seemed fast enough as I lost only 1 second to the leader from the 10th
control to the end.
Finally, I
took a very satisfying 5th place that is my best performance in
middle distance in World cup and it confirm all the solid performances I did in
this kind of format this year in France (Selections races, French champs…)
The
post-finance sprint is always a really nice competition to take part because of
the impressive and spectacular organization: we are like stars in the arena
when we run in the middle of the noisy spectators! It’s also fun to get sharing
at almost every controls: not that useful in orienteering. The course was
really interesting and it was sometime tricky to find the best route-choices.
And that was my biggest mistakes as I took bad decision to the 5 and 6 and I
lost a lot of time there (~ 2 times 15’’). Finally, the speed was ok and I took
the 12th position quite close to the top 6 (7’’) but with still a
margin to the lead (47’’). So there are still some correction to make and it
should be ok for WOC.
The last but not least test-race was the long distance close to the WOC
Long and relay area held last Wednesday with many other national teams. It was
a little bit tough for the French runners to start the earliest in such green
terrain so we should fight with the vegetation and make tracks in the
overgrowth. However, it was a perfect preparation for WOC to see what to expect
for and we could learn a lot of such race.
I’ve finally got my second ticket for WOC long distance and all the
French team is now decided (See below).
Now, one week left before the world champs in Lausanne, so we arrive in the
‘last strait line’ of the preparation where the goal is to be ready the D-day
and we will see what’s happens!