Beaver Lake hosts state waterski tourney

Published 12:00 am Wednesday, July 7, 2004

WINTON – The Beaver Lake Ski Club will host the 2004 Sprint North Carolina State Water Ski Championships on July 10-11.

The competition will begin at 8 a.m. each day and will feature Slalom, Trick and Jump.

There will be more than 75 skiers from all over the state competing for the title of State Champion in their respective age divisions. The event will also feature many other fun activities for the entire family, including a rock climbing wall, Boat and Truck displays, ultralite flyovers and wakeboard exhibitions.

There will be organized games for the kids to enjoy and concessions on site.

Come enjoy the water and sun!

Beaver Lake is located in Gates County on Highway 13/158 about two miles north of the Chowan River Bridge at Winton.

The entrance will be clearly marked.

For more info, please call 252-338-1637 or email jvmitchell@adelphia.net.

The 2004 Sprint North Carolina State Water Ski Championship is sanctioned by USA WaterSki.

Slalom, tricks and jumping are the three events of traditional water skiing that make up the oldest and most original discipline of water skiing.

The slalom event is performed on one ski by an athlete attempting to negotiate his way around the outside of six buoys in a zigzag course without falling or missing a buoy in consecutive passes. An athlete receives one point for each buoy that he successfully rounds. The athlete who skis around the most buoys and scores the most points, wins the event.

Each athlete begins with a 23-meter (75-foot) slalom rope at the minimum boat speed for his age/gender division. Once an athlete has run enough passes to reach maximum boat speed for his division, the rope is shortened in pre-measured lengths until he misses a buoy or falls.

The tricks event (called figures outside the United States) has been described as the most technical of the three events. Beginners perform this event on two short skis, and intermediate to elite athletes perform on one short ski. An athlete attempts to perform as many tricks as he or she can during two 20-second passes. Each trick has an assigned point value and an athlete may perform each trick only once. The athlete who earns the most points wins the event.

Tricks are performed either with an athlete’s foot slipped into a strap attached to the handle, called toehold tricks, or with the handle held in the athlete’s hands.

The object of the jumping event is for an athlete to jump as far as he can. There are no style points. Just pop off of the ramp and fly!

Each athlete has three attempts to jump as far as he can. In each age/gender division, there is a set boat speed and the ramp height is set at five feet (1.5 meters) in most divisions. However, elite women jump at a ramp height of 5-1/2 feet (1.6 meters) and elite men jump at six feet (1.8 meters).

Although most jump distances for the average male and female range between 80 and 170 feet (24 and 52 meters), the Men’s world record is 236 feet (71.9 meters), which is equivalent to jumping as far as someone kicking a 78-yard field goal in football!