Well, I made it back from the two-day pack national meet in Lake Placid at 2am this morning. In my travels I’ve been pretty fortunate over the 10 years that I’ve lived in, and traveled to/from Chicago. I have only once been subjected to the delays, cancellations and issues that put O’Hare International Airport in the top five in many categories of Flight Stats’ report for 2007 (click here). Check out the number of cancellations compared to other airports, yikes!!!
Anyway, after being delayed for 2-1/2 hours, on Friday morning I made it in to Albany, the end of the first leg of travel. Then proceeded to drive up to Lake Placid with fellow skater, and one of our Glen Ellyn coaches, Steve Penland. It took us nearly 4 hours to go 132 miles, as we drove through rain, then sleet, then finally snow. We reached Lake Placid at around 5:30pm. Twelve hours of travel time isn’t always a lot of fun, but it still beats going to work!
Saturday morning the competition started with temps that were around 15 degrees, and winds at about 10-20 mph. The tricky part was that during warm-ups the wind seemed to be hitting you in the face on both sides of the rink. However, by the time we got to racing it was definitely hitting you in the face on the backstretch. Here’s a few pics that I took before warm-ups started.
Both pics show the view from the end of the tunnel ramp. You walk down the tunnel from the locker rooms (which are inside the hockey rink) as you go to get on the ice. First pic shows one of the turns, and the warming hut (building on the right) - the finish line for most of the race is in front of the warming hut. The timers and officials congregate there, at the edge of the ice as the races are being contested. The second pic is looking down the backstretch, again with a vantage point from where you enter the ice before racing.

Here’s a couple of quick action shot from Senior Men’s the 1500m start, they raced right after I finished my 1500 (I needed to stand still for a minute after getting hit in the face by the wind for four laps). In the first shot you can see the officials and timers in the background (on the right hand side of the pic). The dark red cone is where the finish line was for the race, you can see the lap counter behind the gentleman to the right of the cone (click on the image to enlarge it).

In spite of the winds, there were still a couple of records set on Saturday. Some were because certain distances were never raced before (new events in some of the younger age categories), but others were just flat out good skating.
Sunday, we had better temps and less wind. The ice was fantastic for the first races of the day, and the records continued to fall. Here are a few pics from Sunday - don’t have any action shots as I was in spectator mode for a good portion of the day (I didn’t race on Sunday until the 47th race of the day, including the heats…. so I had shut my brain off for awhile…. goes back to the inability to function at certain early morning hours). First pic shows Lake Placid High School, next the entrance area when you come out of the tunnel to get on the ice (you can see the Hockey Rink behind the flagpoles), finally a view from the flagpole area.


Lastly, here are a bunch of thumbnails of pics that I took inside the 1980 hockey rink. The 1932 hockey rink is right next door, but I wasn’t in full camera-photographer mode all weekend. Those pics will have to wait for the next trip. Anyway, the ice doesn’t have that bluish tint you see in the highlights, the place was pretty much empty, and the hockey game being played had very little magnitude (to me at least) - still, pretty cool to stand there and imagine what it was like to be in those stands when the rest of us heard Al Michaels ask that famous question…. and emphatically answer by himself.
“Do you believe in miracles? YES!!!” (5 minute version)