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From Disabled World VANOC Continues Testing with Ice Sledge Hockey Sport By VANOC
VANOC continues operational testing with ice sledge hockey sport event. Tickets available at $10 for a single game or $50 for a complete 10-game package. The first international event to take place at UBC Thunderbird Arena will showcase high-performance athletes in a sport few British Columbians have witnessed — ice sledge hockey. Athletes body-check with full force, shoot pucks at 70 miles per hour and fly down the ice propelled by razor-sharp picks on the ends of their two sticks — and the sport is coming to Vancouver! As approximately 60 athletes from Canada, Germany, Japan and the USA take to the ice, the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) will test the arena’s operational readiness for ice sledge hockey in advance of the Vancouver 2010 Paralympic Winter Games. One of the fastest and most popular events at the Paralympic Winter Games, the ice sledge hockey sport event will offer the public a unique opportunity to learn more about this spectacular sport and the world-class athletes who will be competing. Single-game tickets are available for $10 each, while full-tournament packages — including tickets to all 10 games — are available at $50. (All ticket packages are subject to applicable service fees.) “It's exciting to showcase the demanding sport of sledge hockey while we test our operational readiness at UBC's Thunderbird Arena,” said Tim Gayda, VANOC’s vice president, sport. “Sledge hockey is an incredible sport whose popularity and recognition in Canada continues to grow on the strength of three medals [one gold, one silver, one bronze] by the Canadian team in the past four Paralympic Games. As we host the world's best sledge hockey players this week, we hope spectators will be wowed by this incredible sport, and that the athletes will enjoy the world-class facility they’re set to compete in.” VANOC will focus its operational testing on the following areas: ice maintenance and quality, board system, and accessibility. Field of Play VANOC’s testing of the field of play (athletes’ competition areas) will focus primarily on the ice and board system. Ice maintenance and quality will be examined, as well as the dasher board system (board system containing the ice), the Olympia ice resurfacing machine operation and the conversion of the board system from ice hockey to Paralympic field of play standards. Ice sledge hockey players are seated only a few centimetres off the ice; to view the play from within the bench a clear Plexiglas system will be installed in front of the players’ and penalty boxes. Additionally, rather than using the standard rubber matting in the bench areas, VANOC will test the building of ice in the players’ and penalty boxes for easier mobility. VANOC will test the heating, ventilating and air conditioning (HVAC) system and the capacity for this new venue to adjust the temperature, relative humidity and air flow to react to external weather conditions in order to maintain the best quality of ice for the athletes. The Father David Bauer Ice Rink, attached directly to the venue, will be the ice sledge hockey training facility at Games time. During the ice sledge hockey sport event, the rink will also be used for training and to test elevator access and flow of athletes between both rinks. Venue Operations VANOC will test general venue operations including spectator services, workforce and athlete flows, and media work areas as well as overall spectator accessibility. Accessible team buses will be used to test the athlete transportation system, while the athlete entrance will mirror Paralympic Games-time standards to test flow and equipment transport. Workforce In keeping with previous sport events, VANOC will also test its Press Operations, Timing, Scoring and Results, Medical Services and Sport Production functions. Background on Ice Sledge Hockey Ice sledge hockey follows all the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) rules, with a few small modifications. Instead of standing on skates, players sit on aluminum or steel sledges fitted with two blades. They grip two double-ended sticks, one in each hand. One end of the stick has a sharp pick that the players use to propel the sledge, the other has a curved blade to pass and shoot the puck. A team must not have more than six players on the ice while play is in progress. The object is for one team to get the puck (a hard, black rubber disc) past the other team’s goaltender and into the goal. This summer, along with Canada Hockey Place, UBC Thunderbird Arena will host the women’s hockey sport event from August 31 to September 6, 2009. For more information on the remaining sport events taking place from February to September 2009, including how to purchase tickets, please visit www.vancouver2010.com. Remaining sport events taking place from February to September 2009 include: WCF World Wheelchair Curling Championship Hockey Canada Cup – Sledge Hockey IPC Cross-Country Skiing and Biathlon World Cup Final World Junior Curling Championships IPC Alpine Skiing World Cup Finals IBU Biathlon World Cup ISU World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships Hockey Canada Cup – Women’s Hockey Location: UBC Thunderbird Arena and Canada Hockey Place, Vancouver About VANOC VANOC is responsible for the planning, organizing, financing and staging of the XXI Olympic Winter Games and the X Paralympic Winter Games in 2010. The 2010 Olympic Winter Games will be staged in Vancouver and Whistler from February 12 to 28, 2010. Vancouver and Whistler will host the 2010 Paralympic Winter Games from March 12 to 21, 2010. Visit www.vancouver2010.com. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Disabled World (www.disabled-world.com) provides a large range of worldwide health and disability information. Coming Events related to health and disability can be posted at http://disabilityevents.disabled-world.com Disabled World also operates a worldwide Disability Community at http://community.disabled-world.com © Copyright 2009 - Disabled World |