Vermont Magazine | Page 10

Story by Mark Aiken V ermont may be a small state, but in the world of ski racing it is a heavyweight. As it has for the past three Thanksgiving weekends, Vermont hosts the HomeLite Killington World Cup from November 29 to December 1, 2019. Forget Kitzbuhel, Lake Louise, Åre, and other famous skiing venues; the Killington event has drawn the largest and most enthusiastic—okay, let’s call it like it is…the most rocking—crowds on the entire women’s World Cup circuit. 39,000 spectators turned out for the 2018 event. One of those spectators has been sixth-grader Sofija Vanovac, 11, who races for the Mount Mansfield Ski Club and Academy (MMSCA) in Stowe. “It’s so fun,” says Sofija. “I like seeing them come down, and I like watching their technique.” Sofija’s mom, Micheline Lemay, junior program director for MMSCA, has brought her children to all three Killington World Cups. “For the kids in our club—not to mention my own kids—to see this talent, this strength, in person is an unbelievable experience,” says Micheline. Sofija’s favorite racer is Olympic gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin, who at 24 has won more than 50 World Cup races. Mikaela feels similarly about Killington. “It’s more than a World Cup race,” says the world’s best skier. “I think it sets the standard for the tour.” Mikaela often hears from children like Sofija that they want to be just like her. “That is limiting,” she says. “They should shoot to be better. Most important, they should always stay true to themselves.” In the case of Killington, Vermont, that is exactly what happened. In 2016, when the Thanksgiving weekend slot opened up on the World Cup calendar, naysayers argued that Vermont was an unlikely World Cup host; that the mountains were too small, the weather too unpredictable, and the infrastructure too underdeveloped. These doubters underestimated Yankee ingenuity, motivation, and character. 8 VERMONT MAGAZINE