Skiing: Engineering an Olympic feat
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/headlines.cfm?c_id=1501119
Ben Koons proves it's possible to be a high-performance athlete and have a social conscience.
Cross-country skier Ben Koons ticks most of the boxes when it comes to being a high-performance athlete.
Long hours spent training - check.
Determined goal setter - check.
Develop and implement a micro hydro-power system to provide power to Rwandan villages - check.
Whoa. Back the bus up. Without being too facetious, elite athletes with big brains and a social conscience are sighted as commonly as polar bears on the savanna.
"It helps to keep things in perspective," says the 23-year-old Koons. "Being an athlete can be quite a self-centred endeavour and it is easy to lose track of what really matters. What is more important: that 1.7 billion people live without electricity, or my shin angle and how it relates to my skate skiing? Right now I am working more on the latter, maybe after
Koons will represent
Born to a Kiwi mum, Jean, and American father Peter, Koons was raised on an Otago sheep farm in Waitati before his parents moved to
"My father moved to
A skiing scholarship to
"I have always felt like more of a Kiwi than an American though I was born with dual citizenship," he says. As if to confirm he is not a true New Englander, Koons confessed he did not follow the Boston Red Sox, has not read any Stephen King novels and would take a Speight's over a Budweiser.
"In '05 and '06 I took time off my studies at
As for the choice of Nordic over alpine skiing, Koons was left with little choice. A bad downhill crash during his second year at Otago Boys' High left him with a torn kidney and a two-week holiday in hospital.
"That put an end to my short-lived downhill racing career," Koons says. "Convenient timing really, because it is about the same time I was getting introduced to cross-country skiing."
Koons chose
"I was drawn to environmental engineering for a number of reasons," Koons said. I am interested in the environment, but also the havoc that we humans, especially engineers, have wreaked upon it. Much of today's green design goes into incremental improvements in developed western nations - ie. slightly more efficient gizmos. I think there is huge ground to be made in developing countries that have the potential to leapfrog the mistakes and inefficiencies of the industrial countries and thus alleviate poverty on a huge scale. In my limited experience, doing engineering work in
"As well as being much more pertinent, the issues, and solutions they demand, are much less cut-and-dried, have many more layers, require greater creativity, and perseverance, and have more tangible benefits."
Yes, you're still reading the sports pages.
Koons and younger brother Nils, also a promising cross-country skier and budding engineer, have a well-developed streak of adventure.
They hitchhiked across
But by far their most ambitious undertaking was cycling from
It begs the question, with all this going on, does it have an adverse effect on Koons' skiing?
"It is important to see the long-term picture," he says. "Obviously returning from
"Being an athlete also requires being a human, you cannot just be a robot about training and expect not to burn out. Well, maybe some can - Michael Phelps, perhaps - but I can't.
"Like all things, it's a balance. In skiing, everyone is looking for an edge but for the most part training is pretty standardised. Although I do plenty of text-book training I like to change it up. It's great to be standing on the start line and know that no one else in the race spent months cycling at 4000m eating only instant noodles."
When he takes to the start line in
In between times, there is a another thought tinkering away at the back of his mind.
"I like mountainbiking too," he says. "Maybe I'll give that a go after
Immediately after
He also misses "the Pacific, steak and cheese pies, Kiwi lollies, good roast lamb, fish and chips and the people".
The one thing he doesn't miss: "Hmmm, saveloys."
By Dylan Cleaver | Email Dylan
