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News News Feb 22, Ahuja, 24, is the first woman from her country to qualify for the Winter Olympics. She finished 51st Wednesday. But the result is not why she came. Fog descended on the stadium and race course as Ahuja wrapped up her first and only run. She blew a kiss into a television camera after crossing the finish line, then slung her skis over her shoulder and walked out of the finish area. I feel on top of the world. Gulmarg, the ski area that she, her sister and father frequented, featured one poma lift. You can walk faster. The disparity was immediately — painfully — clear. You started racing when you were 20 years old. That can make a difference. There are three other Indians — all men — competing at these Olympics: two in bobsled, and the other is a cross-country skier. While he swelled with pride after seeing Neha Ahuja come down the race course, the biggest moment of pride came when his daughter carried the Indian flag around the stadium in front of thousands of spectators at the opening ceremony. She said she barely remembers the ceremony because she was in such a state of awe and happiness. Oct 19, A trio of Steamboat athletes teamed up to form a new coaching business called Endurance Training Strategies, which aims to train clients in the areas of endurance, strength and nutrition. Oct 18, Oct 17, Oct 16, Oct 14, Shauna FarnellOlympics correspondent. Indian racer Neha Ahuja stands with her proud father, Colonel Ahuja, following the first run of the women's Olympic slalom event Wednesday in Sestriere. Ahuja, who finished 54th, is the first woman from India to qualify for the Winter Olympics. New Steamboat coaching business aims to provide personalized endurance training online Oct 19, A trio of Steamboat athletes teamed up to form a new coaching business called Endurance Training Strategies, which aims to train clients in the areas of endurance, strength and nutrition. Siblings bring back classic style with launch of ski and snowboard helmet company in Carbondale Oct 18, Shiffrin to skip downhills in upcoming season as she nears milestone of career wins Oct 14, Trending - News. Aspen woman tries to abduct child in restaurant, punches at staff Oct 18, Aspen cyclist severely injured after colliding with dump truck Oct 18,
On call at Olympics
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TURIN, Italy -- The protesters here certainly know what they don't like: war, globalization, capitalism, drug laws, immigrant detention centers, a high-speed train line and, inexplicably, the Olympic torch. But clarity is not the point, and on Thursday, the eve of the Winter Games, the protesters managed to generate enough worry that Olympic organizers, for the third time in recent days, diverted the path of the torch relay to avoid them. The protesters claimed victory, but the general feelings were anger and embarrassment that Italy, which had meticulously prepared for the event for a decade, was having trouble getting the torch cleanly to the Olympic stadium, where tonight it is supposed to light the cauldron and officially open the games. The problems with the torch relay are turning into a symbol for an event that is mosquito-bitten by logistical worries. These include concerns about log-jammed transportation on two-lane mountain roads and venues untested with large crowds, lagging ticket sales, already overtaxed phone lines, melting snow, increased fears about security and, as the protest showed, the potential for disruption. Fortunately for the games' organizers, attention is beginning to shift to the events, the real test of all this planning, which begin Saturday with the Nordic combined. For Americans, the interest may be especially high on the opening weekend. Daron Rahlves turned in the fastest time in the first training run Thursday for the men's downhill. The race, the first marquee event, will take place Sunday in the Alpine resort town of Sestriere. After beating his nearest competitor by more than one second, Rahlves immediately declared himself the favorite. Down the mountain, athletes, dignitaries and journalists have landed here in huge numbers and the city is finally shaping up as an Olympic stage. Workers have been rushing to put in place the finishing touches, hanging banners and installing figurines of the Olympic stick-figure mascots in the traffic circles, while construction continues on the ornate shell in the center of town where some medal ceremonies will be held. The city and nation had seemed curiously resistant to Olympic fever, but excitement seems to be growing. Crowds lined the streets inside this industrial yet graceful city, among them throngs of schoolchildren with pennants, waiting for the torch to pass. For some, given that the torch was unexpectedly rerouted by the protest at Piazza Sabotino, just outside the center, the view came as a pleasant surprise. But despite predictions of a huge last-minute buying spree, an ongoing enthusiasm deficit seems reflected in poorer-than-expected ticket sales. As of Thursday, some , tickets had been sold, just over 85 percent of those available. There were still 1, tickets unsold for the opening ceremony today, generally one of the most sought-after Olympic events. Also Thursday, the Italian Interior Ministry, while expressing confidence in the 'full efficiency' of its security plans, said nonetheless it was paying particular attention to two possible threats: First, a statement said, is a possibly increased worry about violence in the wake of protests among Muslims around the world against the cartoons of the prophet Muhammad published in European papers. Second, the ministry said, was the 'growing aggressiveness of antagonistic movements and subversive Italian groups. In recent days, these groups have forced the police to divert the torch twice: first on Sunday in the Susa Valley west of Turin, the site of protests against a high-speed train line under construction there; then on Wednesday in the town of Avigliana, west of Turin, where 1, protestors had gathered to try to block the torch. On Thursday, a contingent of the protesters set themselves up at Piazza Sabotino, armed with T-shirts against the 'Dirty Games' as well as 5-foot fake marijuana cigarettes that they carried about like the Olympic torch, in protest of harsh new drug laws in Italy. In nearly equal numbers to the protesters were riot police, with plastic shields and sticks -- not needed, it turned out, because Olympic organizers decided to reroute the torch a few streets away. The protesters had a long list of complaints against the Olympic Games: General Electric is one sponsor, and it makes engines that power American warplanes in Iraq. All of which appeared to mean nothing to the pupils at Cesare Battisti Primary School, who stood curbside for an hour with little pennants clenched in their fists. A girl named Diana, 8, whose teacher forbade her to give her last name to a stranger with a notebook, said she was sad not to see the torch. Like Turin itself, she only had one chance to be part of the Olympics. Olympics prep hitting bumps. Facebook Twitter Email.
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