|
Your First Tournament
How to find it:
If you know anyone who skis tournaments,
they can point you in the right direction. If not, go to TournamentWaterSki.com
and view the tournaments in your area.
The US is divided into 5 regions. They are the Eastern, Southern, Midwest,
South Central and Western regions. Pretty much New England and the east coast
is Eastern, Florida area and the southeast US is the Southern, Middle America
is the Midwest, from Texas east along the gulf coast is the South Central and
anything in Colorado, Oregon, Washington, Arizona, California and Hawaii is
Western.
Select your area and view the tournaments in that region. The announcement
will give you the dates, times, order of events, cost and where to mail your
entry.
You can also go to USAWaterski.org for tournament information, download an
entry form and become a member.
Don’t forget to join USAWaterSki because it’s
required to enter a sanctioned tournament. There is also the INT League.
These are new skier
friendly tournaments and can be accessed at Intleague.com.
How to enter:
For AWSA tournaments, go to USAWaterski.org to join and then
download the entry form. Mail it to the tournament sponsor along with your
entry fee and
a copy of your USAWater Ski membership card if you have it.
For INT League tournaments, go to Intleague.com
Most tournaments have no eligibility requirements, so anyone can enter. If
you have never skied a tournament before, enter the novice division. If there
is no novice division, enter your regular age group. Regional, National and
Professional tournaments have pre-qualification requirements so these would
should not be your first tournament.
What to bring:
You will need to bring your ski, vest, gloves and a regulation
handle. You might want to bring some food, soft drinks, water, a chair, sunglasses
and
your cell phone (you’ll need to call your friends and tell them how well
you did).
What you need to know:
Water skiers are mostly a friendly and helpful group.
Anyone will answer your questions and help you if they can.
The tournament sponsors will provide the rope but generally
not the 5’ handle.
If you need soap to get into your bindings, it is normally provided as well.
Be there on time – they will not wait for you. Check the running order
well in advance and see who the 5 skiers are who will go just before you. Ask
around if you don’t know them so you will be ready when it’s your
turn.
Just before you ski, the driver or judge will ask for your
perfect pass settings, starting rope length and speed. If you don’t know the perfect pass settings,
tell them your weight and then “normal - zero”. This setting is
the usual one used and since you don’t know what it is anyway, it won’t
feel any different from your normal skiing.
Tournaments use one boat but use two ski ropes. One is used for the current
skier and the other is for the next skier. The dock starter will attach your
handle to the 2nd rope while the skier prior to you is skiing. When the boat
returns to pull you, the 2nd rope will be given to the boat crew for your ride.
While you are driving to the tournament select a starting
speed and rope length. Hopefully, you have been through a course before and
have an idea of what you
can make. If you don’t have any idea. Start at the minimum speed and
longest line length allowed in your division. The boat judge or dock starter
can tell you what that is.
So after giving the crew your settings, weight, rope length
and starting speed you will ease into the water and slosh the soap out of
your binding. The driver
will tighten the rope and ask if you are ready. Don’t be a “Fred” and
yell something dumb. Just tell them “Alright” or “OK” when
asked if you are ready.
You get a second chance if you fall getting up, so don’t
stress about it. Once you go through the slalom course starting gates though,
your second
chance has ended.
After going through the start gates, around the outside of all six buoys and
through the end gate, the boat will stop at the other end of the lake. The
driver usually indicates when you should swing out (normally to the right).
The driver will swiftly stop the boat and you will coast to a stop. The judge
will radio in your score and advise what comes next (faster speed or shorter
rope). Remember if you fall getting up now, your ride is over (ok stress about
it now).
This will continue until you fall or miss a buoy. If you
fall, the boat will not come back for you. You must swim to the side of the
lake promptly because
the next skier will be coming out soon. If you miss a buoy but don’t
fall, just stay inside the wake while you ride back to the starting dock and
drop. Staying inside the wake is a courtesy to the next skier (the water will
not be bumpy).
A friendly wave to the boat crew is a nice gesture too.
Unfortunately, you will probably now be hooked on skiing
and can’t wait
for the next tournament. Be sure to go to TournametWaterSki.com to see your
results.
|