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Speed Skating Canada Rewards Deserving Athletes and Volunteers

Date posted: 06/20/2009

This year’s most deserving athletes and volunteers were recognized by Speed Skating Canada at tonight’s Annual General Meeting Banquet in Richmond, British Columbia. The banquet is held yearly to celebrate the successes of the past season and thank those who made a difference To the Relentless Pursuit of Excellence, from coast to coast to coast.

National Team members Charles Hamelin (Ste-Julie, QC), Jessica Gregg (Edmonton, AB), Denny Morrison (Fort St. John, BC) and Kristina Groves (Ottawa, ON) were all named Skaters of the Year, respectively for Short Track and Long Track, Male and Female. Hamelin is the current 500m World Champion in the 500m, he was nominated to the short track Olympic team because of his third place overall at the World Championships, and he won 8 individual medals on the World Cup Circuit this past season. He also established a new World Record in the 1000m and captured, with his teammates, the World Cup title in the Relay. Gregg had her best ever season on the international scene, winning her first individual World Cup gold medal in February. She also won her first World Championships medal, a bronze in the 500m, and took the 6th place overall at the event.

In long track speed skating, Denny Morrison and Kristina Groves both had amazing seasons once again. Even with a slower start due to equipment changes, Morrison capped off his season with one silver and one bronze medal at the World Single Distance Championships on the Olympic ice in Richmond. He also took the 5th place at the World Allround Championships and was 2nd in the 1000m World Cup rankings. Groves captured no less than 11 medals on the 08-09 World Cup circuit. She took the Overall World Cup Title in the 1500m, finished 2nd in the 1000m and 3rd in the 3000m. She also was a silver medallist at the World Allround Championships and captured two individual bronze medals at the World Single Distance Championships as well as the gold medal with her pursuit team. Read more -->>

VANCOUVER 2010 : FULLY FOCUSED- Denny Morrison

To get to the top of the podium, Morrison's already been building his stamina for the intense training his coach demands of him. Whether it's calisthenics or 100 laps around the rink, he does it all in an effort to get the 1,500-metre world record back

Balance, Denny Morrison says, has never been a problem for him. Even from the time he was very small. At two, he was able to ride a bike without training wheels on the streets of Chetwynd, B.C., where he was born.Great, thought his parents, he'll be able to skate and play hockey like every other Canadian kid.

"But when they checked into hockey at the local rinks, there was nothing available for three-year-olds. It happened that one of my mother's friends had started a speed-skating club, so I was at least able to start learning to skate," Morrison said.

That little bit of fate or luck in a small B.C. foothills town of 7,000 would determine the sports path of Morrison, one of Canada's top medal hopes in speed skating for the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics.
"When I was four, we moved to Fort St. John and, as luck would have it, they had one of the biggest speed-skating clubs in B.C.," he said.

"I could play hockey there, but I never felt any reason to quit skating. I've been doing it my whole life. There's something cool about being the speed skater among a bunch of hockey-playing friends growing up."
Fort St. John, a city of 17,000 in B.C.'s northeast, has produced "NHL players and world champion chuck wagon racers," said Morrison, 23.
He's out to put it on the map in his own way, as an Olympic medalist - hopeful of bringing home the 1,500-metre gold in what ultimately could come down to a head-to-head battle with one-time training partner and friend and rival, American Shani Davis.

Morrison has traded the world record for the 1,500-metre distance with Davis, the current holder.
The Canadian won gold at the 2008 world single-distances championships and added bronze in 1,000 metres. But Davis took back the world title on the Olympic ice at this year's championships in Richmond, B.C.
To get to the top of the podium in 2010, Morrison's already been building his stamina for the intense training he knows coach Marcel Lacroix will demand of him.

"Marcel has emphasized doing shorter sets with high quality, rather than a lot of volume done poorly," he said.
Fort St. John, where his parents still live, is known as The Energetic City - fitting for the workload Morrison undertakes.
To be close to his workouts, he lives with older brother Jay - also a speed skater - in a house owned by his father in Calgary. He bikes to the Olympic Oval, four kilometres away, drops his backpack and gets immediately into jogging two laps to warm up.

"Some people are surprised at the workout itself," he said. "A lot of preparation takes place. It will be an hour and 40 minutes from the time I leave the house to the time I actually start the skating program."
The laps of jogging are followed by five to 10 minutes of calisthenics. Then, there's stretching on mats, and an on-ice warm-up with two sets of 10 laps each.
On the ice, the actual training program can vary from hard-paced short sprints, on and off for 45 minutes, to "the centurion - 100 laps."

During summer months, Morrison says, he meets up with other skaters for a long bike ride, anywhere from two to six hours. They may also meet at the oval for a "fartlek" - a run combined with dry-land exercises.
"Sometimes, we do speed-skating motions, but not on skates, smooth lunging steps," he said.
They look like a herd of Groucho Marx impersonators.
"You can do one minute jogging, then one minute walking, then two-and-two ... and just when you're feeling good, you tell yourself there's 16 more sets to go."
He does the sets. He doesn't forget that Davis, who used to train in Calgary, once admonished him for letting up during a practice.

When a season is done, Lacroix gives his charges up to four weeks off, "and I try to stretch out my recovery phase as long as possible," Morrison said. "It's more about staying moving at this point.
"I'll ask to do a mountain-bike ride so I can enjoy what I'm doing. But once I start the program in May, I'll do more of what's written down. I'm doing speed-skating training all the time, saying to myself, 'This is what's going to put me on the podium.' It's hard on the mind."
It's a grind, but the words of Lacroix echo in his head: "Today, not tomorrow."

Morrison owns an Olympic silver medal from the team pursuit race in Turin in 2006, but now wants to add individual hardware. He finds it inspiring to be around other Canadian athletes with solid work ethics such as Olympic gold medalists Clara Hughes and Cindy Klassen.
When Morrison is away from the oval, he works on his 1991 Dodge Stealth. He says on his website that he sometimes takes a framed picture of the car with him on the road. He lists his favourite reading material as the magazine Car and Driver.
"I'm a car fanatic. I really enjoy it when it runs."

He and his brother also make a break from speed skating by playing other sports - volleyball, basketball, badminton and track - all good for cross-training, Morrison says. But the goal ahead of him always remains speed skating and the loop of ice in Richmond, under the six-acre wooden roof.
"Johann Koss [Norway's speed-skating Olympic icon] came and told us, 'It's not enough just to want it badly, you have to stay focused on the little things that can do it for you,' " Morrison said.
"For me, as an Olympic athlete, when I am training, the training is all that matters. It's what's going to prepare me for the Olympic Games. It's what keeps me training."

At the top
Born Sept. 8, 1985, Chetwynd, B.C.
Hometown Fort St. John, B.C.
Residence Calgary
Olympic medal Silver in team pursuit at Turin 2006.
World Cup Ranked No. 1 in 2008-09 season with Canadian team pursuit foursome, with two team wins; No. 2 at 1,000 metres with two wins; No. 7 at 1,500 metres with one win; 37th at 500 metres; 43rd at combined 5,000-10,000 metres.

James Christie

Morrison no longer top dog

Canadian surrenders 1,500-metre world title to friend and former training partner Davis Mar 13, 2009 04:30 AM
 
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS
Canada's Denny Morrison enters the speed zone prior to a third place finish in the men's 1500m event at the World Single Distance
 

SPORTS REPORTER
RICHMOND, B.C.–Canada's Denny Morrison didn't hesitate yesterday when asked if he'd still be training with American rival Shani Davis if the decision was up to him.

"Definitely. I won't be shy about that one," said Morrison, after finishing third to Davis in the men's 1,500 metres as competition opened at the World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships at the Richmond Olympic Oval.

"There's a lot of people who disagree with me on that and think that Shani needs me more than I need him, because he doesn't have training partners and people to train with. I don't think that I can get another training partner like Shani, with that experience and with that many medals."

One more gold medal as of yesterday, as Davis stripped Morrison of his world title a week after he took his world record away in Salt Lake City. Trevor Marsicano, a fast-rising 19-year-old American, took silver to make it a North American sweep.
"These two Americans, Shani and Trevor, are definitely doing something that I'm not," said Morrison. "I've got to figure out what that is and make sure I'm doing it better than they are next year."

The thing is, Morrison used to have a front-row seat to watch Davis. They trained together in Calgary leading up to the 2006 Turin Olympics. It seemed to be a fruitful partnership for the two friends, who have a neat rivalry in practice where they compete for an imaginary "championship belt" as if they were heavyweight prizefighters.
Davis said yesterday the imaginary belt was more important to him than his new gold medal.
Morrison said it was his understanding they can't train together because the Own The Podium (OTP) program doesn't want an American skater to benefit from its funding.
But Speed Skating Canada official Brian Rahill said he didn't think it had anything to do with OTP and that he believed it was a coaching decision. Whatever the reason, Morrison is yearning for his old pal.

"It just seems like the opportunity of a lifetime that's just gone to waste," said Morrison. "I know a few months ago, I was getting a little down because I wasn't having the best ever World Cup performances and I was just thinking `I can't wait for this Olympics to be over so I can start training with Shani again in the fall of 2010.'

"Not to say I'm not excited for the Olympics, but I really miss the opportunity to train with the best."
Ironically, Morrison said he got himself back on track at the world sprint championships, with a little help from his old buddy.
"You know what the difference was? I watched video after my first races – I watched video of Shani racing – and just put my head back on my shoulders and said `Here's what I've got to do. That was the turning point from when I wasn't getting any podiums to getting podiums the rest of the season."

The respect Morrison and Davis have for each other was clear as they sat together at the post-race news conference.
Davis, who doesn't seem to be affected by the fact he trains on his own these days, has plenty of confidence in his Canadian pal.
"Denny I think has all the potential, he has all his tools, he has all the staff, he has a facility, he has the homecourt advantage," said Davis. "I think Denny has everything together, he just has to build his confidence up. And once he builds his confidence up, there's no telling what he can do." TheStar.com

Morrison taking silver at ISU World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships in Richmond

(Richmond, BC, March 13, 2009) Denny Morrison, 23, of Fort St. John, BC, ranked No. 2 in World Cup rankings for this season in the 1,000m, continued staking his claim to the podium with silver in the distance for his time of one minute, nine seconds. A day earlier, he took bronze in the 1,500m.

Nineteen-year-old American skater Trevor Marsicano took gold with a time of 1.08.96, while world-record holder and his U.S. teammate Shani Davis settled for bronze with a time of 1:09.02.

“I could have taken off three or four tenths of a second. It was a close race, any three of us could’ve won,” said Morrison of the three North American skaters who also dominated the podium on Thursday. “I’ll probably have some nightmares for a week but I’ll get over it. It was a pretty good race for me.”

Kyle Parrot, 23, of Minnedosa, MB, briefly set a new track record at the Richmond Olympic Oval with his time of 1:10.15 until it was shattered by Marsicano. He eventually finished ninth, while François-Olivier Roberge, 23, of St-Nicolas, Que., finished 16th. Read more --->>>

Brothers are speed skating's Northern Lights- Pride of Fort St. John now pride of Canada

By Ed Willes, 12 march 2009 

Canadian speed skaters, including Fort St. John's Denny Morrison (right) and brother Jay Morrison (middle), trained last December at the Richmond Olympic Oval, where it appears helmets are optional but sunglasses mandatory.
 Canadian speed skaters, including Fort St. John's Denny Morrison (right) and brother Jay Morrison (middle), trained last December at the Richmond Olympic Oval, where it appears helmets are optional but sunglasses mandatory.

Photograph by: Jason Payne, Province Files, The Province

When they were kids training on the outdoor oval in Fort St. John and trying their damnedest not to freeze their butts off, this was never part of the plan.

Well, maybe Denny started thinking along those lines later on. But when you're 13 years old and living in a remote outpost in northern B.C., you're not doing it for the Olympics or whatever notoriety a world-class speed skater can attain.
You're doing it because something powerful is drawing you to the ice; something that's in you and something that's in the place you live. Then, one day you look up and you're not wearing the Fort St. John Elks colours anymore. You're wearing the Maple Leaf and you're preparing for the Olympics in your home province.

Jay and Denny Morrison. From Fort St. John.

Go figure.

"We had a break in the World Cup schedule back in November and I went back and skated at the club," 25-year-old Jay said after a workout in preparation for the World Single Distance Championship at the Richmond Oval.
"It made me realize how far we've come. When you're in the middle of it, you're taking small steps and you don't realize everything that's happened. Sometimes you need that perspective." But sometimes that perspective doesn't explain it all.
Today, will mark something of a homecoming for the Morrison boys, who might have moved away from Fort St. John a few years back but never really left the town.

Denny, of course, has emerged as one of the stars of international speed skating and his ongoing duel with former training partner Shani Davis will be one of the highlights of the competition this weekend. Jay, for his part, is entered in the men's 5,000 metres and team pursuit. The brothers will be cheered on by their parents Dennis and Carol, another dozen or so supporters from the Peace Country and the 18,000 or so in Fort St. John who couldn't make the trip south.

And that's the way it's always been for the Morrisons. Whether it was an age-group competition in Dawson Creek or, now, an Olympic pre-event at the spectacular Richmond Oval, they've never had to wonder about where they're from or who's supporting them. One of Canada's archetypal sports stories concerns the young athlete from the small town who, through persistence and self-sacrifice, rises to the top of their game. Nine times out of 10, that story involves a hockey player who makes it to the NHL.

But, in this case, you can substitute the Morrison brothers for the Sutters and you have speed skating's NFB moment.
"It's a small town," said Jerry Vopicka, who coached Denny and Jay through their formative years. "Everybody knows everybody and everybody promotes everybody whether it's hockey or speed skating or the high school sports. That's just the way it is." And, hopefully, the way it will always be.
Fort St. John, which is located about 450 kilometres northeast of Prince George on the Alaska Highway, is a town with a resource-based economy, a dedicated and loyal citizenry and this inexplicable thing about speed skating.

Going back to the '60s, the undersized burg has produced a steady stream of provincial and national champions and an Olympian in Linda Johnson, who competed in Lillehammer in '94 and Nagano in '98. The dreaded outdoor oval was also in use up until 2006, and it will give way to an indoor oval -- one of three in Canada -- which is scheduled to be completed this August.

This was the incubator which produced the Morrison brothers, who were actually born in nearby Chetwynd before the family, with sister Julie, moved to the big city. The plan, originally, was to introduce both boys to skating in preparation for hockey.

Instead, the Morrisons became a speed-skating family.

"My dad never pushed me," said Denny. "He used to ask, 'Do you want to try hockey this year or are you going to stick with speed skating?' It was a no-brainer for me. I've always loved speed skating." And there was never a problem with motivation. Jay, who's older by two years, worked like a field mule and had notable success while preceding Denny to the world junior and world senior circuits.

Denny, for his part, competed at both long track and short track until his late teens when he became eligible for funding in long track. Then, in the run-up to the Turin Olympics, he just took off and he's never looked back.
"I think it helped that Jay went to Calgary [the national-team training centre] first and showed [Denny] it could be done,"said Richard Stickel, the head coach of the Fort St. John club who coached Denny in his late teens.
"Jay might be a harder worker than Denny, but Denny had the physical tools and, more importantly, he had this incredible ability to focus.
"I think that's why he never stumbled. He just kept getting better and better." Denny would win a silver in the team pursuit in Turin and has been a fixture on the World Cup podium ever since. In '07-08, he won 11 medals on the World Cup circuit, including gold in the 1,500m at the World Single Distance Championships. This year he has eight more medals.

"All these top athletes have the complete package: psychological, physical, technical," said Denny's coach, Marcel Lacroix. "He has that package, and when you put him on the line he's ready to go. He's like a dragster. When the light goes on, he goes, and it's not just once in a while. It's all the time." Jay, for his part, continues to grind it out, but if he feels any resentment towards his younger brother he does a good job of hiding it.
"It's been great to see," he said. "I'm really proud of my brother. I understand not everyone can be a world champion. I just try to do my own thing." Which is another thing that hasn't changed over the years.

"I remember them coming out for those workouts when it was 25-below," said Vopicka, laughing at the memory.
"You had to be tough to get through those. They've come a long way." But not as far as you might think.

Morrison win bronze in first day of competition at ISU World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships in Richmond

Date posted: 03/12/2009 (Richmond, BC, March 12, 2009) – Canadian speed skaters Kristina Groves and Denny Morrison put Canada on the podium today by taking a bronze each in the first day of competition at the ISU World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships held at the Richmond Olympic Oval.

The first Canadian medal win at the event came courtesy of Denny Morrison, 23, of Fort St. John, BC, who took bronze in the men’s 1,500m after posting a time of one minute, 47.05 seconds. Morrison, who is ranked seventh in World Cup rankings for this season in the distance, looked relaxed on the ice as he improved on his speed at the Richmond Olympic Oval, beating his track record of 1:47.45 set there earlier this season.

The gold in the 1,500 metres went to American Shani Davis, who is on fire after setting two world records less than a week ago at a World Cup final in Salt Lake City. His winning time today of 1:46.17 is over four seconds slower than the record he set last Friday in the distance – a difference Davis attributed to the slower, “humbling” sea level ice in Richmond. Up-and-coming 19-year-old American speed skater Trevor Marsicano placed second at 1:46.30 in his first outing at the championships.

“I’m pretty happy with the way the race went today since I came into this season with a few difficulties,” said Morrison, who won the same title last year. “I look at these two guys (Davis and Marsicano) – they beat me by almost a full second! I’ve got some work to do. But I know I always skate a better second race in a competition.”

Lucas Makowsky, 21, of Regina, SK, placed 13th with a time of 1:48.55, while teammate Steven Elm, 33, of Red Deer, AB, finished 16th with 1:49.47. Read more--->>>

Skate change has rising star on edge

By Vicki Hall, Canwest News Service March 9, 2009

Speedskater Denny Morrison has switched to new boots and skate blades as part of a well-constructed plan to shave time off his races. He says his only real job has been as a labourer in the building industry.
Photograph by: Getty Images files, Canwest News Service; Calgary HeraldSpeedskater Denny Morrison has switched to new boots and skate blades as part of a well-constructed plan to shave time off his races. He says his only real job has been as a labourer in the building industry.

Denny Morrison spends his life skating around in circles.

The training regimen for one of Canada's best medal hopes for the Vancouver 2010 Olympics is enough to make anyone dizzy. And exhausted.
But, in terms of physical exertion, the 23-year-old speedskater figures he has it good compared to his old buddies back on the construction site in Fort St. John.
"I actually loved it," he said in a recent break from training at the Calgary's Olympic Oval.
Hauling pails of back-breaking concrete up unfinished steps may seem like torture to some.
But not for Morrison who still sees himself as an underdog speeding towards the 2010 Games.
"Construction is the only real job I ever had," he says of his two-month stint before moving to Calgary to skate indoors. "I was a general labourer. I mostly poured concrete but I also did some framing, bricklaying and landscaping.

"I would love to go back and do it again."

Life as a blue-collar tradesman will have to wait for at least 11 months. Morrison's day timer is simply chalk full with the details of a construction plan designed to build an Olympic champion.
The next crucial appointment comes this week in Richmond at the world single distance championships.
Consider it the ultimate dress rehearsal for the 2010 Olympics.

"I'm still not that comfortable on my skates," said Morrison, who switched to new blades and boots in hopes of cutting valuable ticks off his time.
"I'm going into the world championships with confidence, but maybe not the same feeling I had last year.
"Everything is brand new."

On his old skates, Morrison won bronze in the 1,000 metres and gold in the 1,500 metres at the 2008 single distance championships in Japan. A week later, he shattered the world record in the 1,500 metres with a time of one minute 42.01 seconds at the ING Finale at the Olympic Oval in Calgary.
His old training partner, American Shani Davis, wrestled the record back last Friday in Salt Lake City with a time of 1:41.80. Morrison crossed the finish line in 1:42.56 and captured third place.
Davis also won the World Cup season title in the 1,500. Morrison finished seventh overall.

"New boots and blades changes the feel of everything," Morrison said. "You balance on a 1.1-mm blade. If you put your blade down just a little bit off from where you think it's going to go, it can really affect your feel and your stride.
"It's just trying to narrow it down and get that blade in the exact right spot."
Despite his recent equipment headaches, Morrison still feels like he's in the right spot.
After all, he captured seven medals this season on the World Cup circuit.

"I had my three gold medals at competitions that are going to be right over the Olympic dates of next year," he said. "Hopefully it's the same next year and I have great performances right in the middle of February."

At the tender age of 20, Morrison showed up in Turin in February 2006 with a solid chance of hitting the podium in his first Olympics. An awkward lane change led to an 11th-place finish in the 1,500 metres. He placed a disappointing 19th in the 1,000 metres.
But he still owns a silver medal from the team pursuit.
"I came into that season not even expecting to make it to the Olympics," he said. "And I ended up having medal potential. So just to get an Olympics under my belt, that was a victory in itself."
Tagged as a medal prospect for Vancouver for years, Morrison can finally see the big event in his sights.
"I still think I'm flying a bit under the radar," Morrison said of his public profile behind stars like Jeremy Wotherspoon and Cindy Klassen.
Wotherspoon is an eight-time world champion, and he figures Canadians should take notice of the rising star in their midst.

"We were pretty similar," said Wotherspoon, who will miss the Richmond event with a broken arm.
"I was consistently winning medals at World Cups probably starting when I was 20 and he's about the same. His first Olympics was when he was about 20, I was 21. They're pretty similar timelines.
"I don't know if he's going to skate for as long as I have, but he definitely has potential -- if he keeps it up -- to be seen as one of the great Canadian speedskaters of all time. Not just Canadian, but world."
Morrison calls such praise from Wotherspoon "cool." But he's not about to let his head swell or sit around brooding about the challenge before him.

"Nah," he said. "When the skating season is over, I go snowboarding. When the snow melts, I go mountain biking. And in my free time, I work on my car or build something out of wood. It keeps my mind occupied."
His car is a 1991 Dodge Stealth, a sports car designed to steal the market from Chevrolet's Corvette. It never worked.
Can Morrison steal the record back from Davis and show he is the sleekest, fastest model on ice?

Stay tuned.

Denny Morrison first in 500m at World Allround Championships

Date posted: 02/07/2009
Denny Morrison (Fort St. John, BC) skated a superb 500m race today to win for the second year in a row the first place in the distance at the World Allround Championships. Christine Nesbitt (London, ON) showed that she is one of the world's most versatile and  prolific long distance skaters by also finishing first in the 500m. Like Morrison, Nesbitt was the top skater in the 500m of the event last year as well.

“I've done lots of 500m this season and actually it was my fastest one this far. I am happy to win and I was expecting to do well. With the training, I am definitely on target for next year. I am stronger physiologically and there's been lots of improvement technically,” mentioned Morrison to news reporters in a teleconference. “I expect to do well tomorrow in the 1500m. I am more the type of middle distance skater and after a strong 500m, we're looking for a strong 1500m.” 

Continuing on his winning streak of the past few weeks, Denny Morrison won the men's 500m race thanks to a time of 35.55 seconds. Following him in second place was Norway's Havard Bakko (35.99). Poland's Konrad Niedzwiedki came in third with a time of 36.04 seconds. Also racing the 500m were veteran skater Steven Elm (Red Deer, AB) who came in 12th and young Lucas Makowsky (Regina, SK) who finished 19th.

Dutch skater Sven Kramer (6:09.74) won the men's 5000m. Havard Bakko (6:15.94) of Norway finished second and third place went to Italian skater Enrico Fabris (6:20.31). Denny Morrison was 13rd of the group. Steven Elm ended 18th while Lucas Makowsky finished 20th. Read more-->>>

Canada takes World Cup Title in Men's Team Pursuit and Denny Morrison takes silver in 1000m

Date posted: 02/01/2009

team pursuit, photo: Arno Hoogveld
 
Denny Morrison (Fort St. John, BC) earned his second individual medal in two days at the Erfurt World Cup. Skating the 1000m in 1:08.78, Morrison was only surpassed by American rival Shani Davis who finished with a time of 1:08.40. The bronze medal went to Jan Bos of The Netherlands(1:09.03).The Canadian men went on to win the team pursuit race with a time of 3:46.03. The Canadians closest rivals were the Italians (3:46.56) in second place and the Norwegians (3:48.56) in third place. Skating for Canada in the team pursuit were the Morrison brothers,  Denny and Jay, and Lucas Makowsky (Regina, SK).

“It was just a solid race,” explained Makowsky about the team pursuit race. “We came in with a specific race plan we wanted to execute. They were many teams who were dying in the end of their races and we didn't want to fall in that same position. So we skated more of a conservative race at the beginning to finish strong, and it paid off for us at the end of the day. [Winning the World Cup Title] definitely ups our confidence for the World single Championships in Richmond. With the group change we had the beginning of the year, we've been able to practice all the elements of a pursuit together. It definitely shows that our training is paying off.”
.......................
“Denny's training programme has been designed to replicate the olympic year, so I think we are on track with what we wanted to accomplish,” said National Team Coach Marcel Lacroix. “Seeing Denny and Shani skate [the 1000m] was something. They were so fast that nobody could touch these guys. They both had the fastest opening and fastest lap. The race was very close, it was an exciting one.” Read More--->>>

Morrison and Nesbitt strike gold and bronze again

Date posted: 01/25/2009

Denny Morrison (Fort St. John, BC) won the men’s 1000m for the second time in a row this weekend. This time, Morrison established a new track record with a time of 1:08.53 to take the gold. Christine Nesbitt (London, ON) also stepped on the podium in the 1000m for a second bronze medal in a row, thanks to a time of 1:15.85.

“It’s pretty cool to have a track record. Realistically each track is different.  Some are slower and some faster. I think it’s pretty special to have a track record even on the slower ones. It’s not the world record but it is still the fastest anyone has ever gone on that track”, commented Morrison after lowering the Kolomna track record.  “There’s always more space for improvement. I am looking forward to the World Single Distance Championship at the end of the season. That’s why I am skating so many competitions right now; so I can tweak things here and there.”

Following Morrison in the men’s 1000m were two skaters from the Netherlands: Stefan Groothuis and Mark Tuitert. Groothuis skated the distance in 1:08.67 and Tuitert in 1:09.09. François-Olivier Roberge (St-Nicolas, QC) finished 12th. Canadian team mates Kyle Parrott (Minnedosa, MB) and Muncef Ouardi (Montréal, QQC )came in 13th and 17th. Vincent Labrie was in the B group, where he took 11th place. Read more--->>>

Morrison wins gold in the 1000m at Kolomna World Cup

Date posted: 01/24/2009

It was under cheerful applauses that Denny Morrison (Fort St. John, BC) skated the men's 1000m in a time of 1:08.71 to take the gold medal. This win puts Morrison in second place, just behind American Shani Davis, of the World Cup standings in the 1000m. Christine Nesbitt (London, ON) added another medal for Canada when she took the bronze, also in the 1000m.

"I am satisfied about that. It's cool to win points for the standings," mentioned Morrison after his win. "There's still room to improve things. I do want to focus on my technique. I want to improve in the corners and work on my starts to gain more speed. Being focused on technical aspects of my race also helps me from being distracted by other things."

Morrison was followed in the 1000m by Stefan Groothuis of the Netherlands who raced to second place with a time of 1:08.97.  Russia's Yevgeny Lalenkov was third with a time of 1:09.02.  Kyle Parrott (Minnedosa, MB) finished in 7th place, thanks to a time of 1:09.87.  Today's performance by Parrott was only 0.12 of second slower than his personal best in the distance, 1:09.75. François Olivier Roberge (St-Nicolas, QC) came in 15th while Muncef Ourardi (Montréal, QC ) took 17th place. Read more--->>>

Denny Morrison second in 1000m at World Sprint Championships in Moscow

Date posted: 01/18/2009

On day two of the World Sprint Championships in Moscow, Denny Morrison (Fort St. John, BC) offered Canada’s best performance, finishing second in the men’s 1000m with a time of 1:08.77. American skater Shani Davis won the distance with a time of 1:08.66, and third place went to Russia’s Yevgeny Lalenkov.

“Coming in a couple of days before the races wasn’t ideal but things got a lot better today,” said Denny Morrison after today’s race. “Having a good day is a booster for sure. As I am looking forward to the World Cup next week, it’s a reminder to keep my focus on the right things. The first 1000m I skated in Richmond at the winter trials wasn’t great, then the next day because my previous race wasn’t great I had to refocus. Now, I think I have to keep reminding myself of that so I don’t waste any races.” Read more --->>>

“The ball has just started rolling...”

 

After numerous podium finishes at the World Cups last season, including two gold medals, and finishing the season as world champion and world record holder in the 1500m, expectations for the Fall World Cups were high for Denny Morrison. Not completely comfortable on new skates, however, Morrison gave a slower start to his season than might have been expected based on his previous results. At the first three World Cups of the season, in Berlin, Heerenveen and Changchun, he did not make the podium, but after some changes to his equipment, Morrison gradually managed better performances at the World Cup in Nagano and after that at the Canadian Single Distances Championships in Richmond. Confident about his equipment now, Morrison reflects on his first half of the season and looks forward to the second half. Read the whole artikel-->>>

Written for http://www.speedskating-online.com/ By Jolanda Abbes

Canadian Single Distance Championships

Date posted: 12/31/2008
Winners on the men’s side included Denny Morrison who took the 1000m and 1500m races. The BC native also won a silver medal in the 5000m and a bronze medal in the 500m.  Jamie Gregg (Edmonton, AB) won the 500m title and Lucas Makowsky took the honours in the 5000m and 10000m. 
 
“I came in this week feeling confident about my equipment compared to the World Cups this fall, which gave me a chance to focus on my technique. My openers were a lot better. To qualify in all the races for the World Cups is great as this will keep doors open for me,” noted Denny Morrison (Fort St. John, BC) when asked to reflect on his performance this week at the Richmond Olympic Oval. He continued: “It was pretty nice to have so many people at a Canadian Championship.  It’s nice to have the local support as we look forward to the Olympics.  This will definitely be an advantage for Canadian skaters during the Olympics.”

Denny Morrison steps on podium again in Nagano

Date posted: 12/14/2008
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On the men side, still in the 1000m, Morrison finished 3rd in 1 :09.23, behind American Shani Davis (1 :08.92) and Korean Lee Kyou-Hyuk (1 :09.16). Kyle Parrott (St. Albert, AB) finished 13 th, his best career result in a World Cup. Muncef Ouardi (Montreal, QC) and Philippe Riopel (Lachenaie, QC) finished 15 th and 16 th, while François-Olivier Roberge (St-Nicolas, QC) took 18 th place.

“I’m happy with my performance this weekend,” said a relieved Morrison. “I was hoping to step onto the podium. I was able to achieve all of my objectives, both technically, in the execution and in my overall comfort level. I was also able to finish within 0.31 seconds of my main rival, the American Shani Davis. I’m looking forward to the Canadian championship at the end of the month. It will be exciting skating in front of my friends and family. It will also be a good place to prepare mentally for Vancouver 2010.”
Read the whole storie...>>>

Three medals for Canada at Nagano World Cup

Date posted: 12/13/2008
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In the men’s 1000m, Morrison was second in 1:09.40, second only to American Shani Davis who took the gold in 1:09.21. François-Olivier Roberge (St-Nicolas, QC) finished in 5th place with a time of 1:10.33. Muncef Ouardi (Montréal, QC) placed 15th while Philippe Riopel (Lachenaie, QC) and Kyle Parrott (St. Albert, AB) came in 17th and 19th respectively. It was the first time of his carreer that Parrott raced in the A group.

 “It feels really good to win a medal.  The start of the season was slow because I had to adjust myself to new skates.  But I believe to have found the right balance in equipment performance to match my technique” said a very satisfied Morrison “I think things are going to improve from now on”.
Read the whole storie...>>>

Marcel Lacroix and Denny Morrison teaming up for another season – Part II

Tuesday, 14 October 2008

 

Within a week after claiming his first world title at the World Single Distances Championships in Nagano, Denny Morrison finished his season on an even higher note when he skated to a new world record in the 1500m at the ING Finale in Calgary. Exhausted after flying home from Japan he crushed the old world record and consequently will start out the new season as the reigning world champion and world record holder in the 1500m. With his coach Marcel Lacroix, Morrison looks back on that wicked week in March and looks forward to the upcoming pre-Olympic season.

By Jolanda Abbes, written for http://www.speedskating-online.com/.
Read the whole article...>>>

Marcel Lacroix and Denny Morrison teaming up for another season – Part I

 Long track speed skating coach Marcel Lacroix looks back on an extraordinary season. Several skaters on his team were very successful at the World Cups and Denny Morrison, also coached by Lacroix, managed to finish his season with a victory in the 1500m at the World Single Distances Championships in Nagano in March and on top of that he skated to a new world record in that same distance just a couple of days later at the ING Finale in Calgary. With the pre-Olympic season about to begin, Lacroix and Morrison reflect on the past season and look forward to the next, which will bring a change in the way the Canadian teams are organized, but will not break up Team Lacroix-Morrison.

 

By Jolanda Abbes, written for http://www.speedskating-online.com/.
Read the whole article...>>>

1.500 m World Championship

The page about the first World Championship title for Denny Morrison has been moved. You can still find it here: Morrison World Champion

Other articles

Here you can find the other articles about Denny Morrison.

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