Luuka Jones has really white teeth. I know this because
she’s usually smiling. Some would say she has plenty of reasons to smile, not
least because she already has her Olympic entry confirmed. Luuka’s result at
the 2011 World Championships in Bratislava
secured her the spot for New Zealand
back in September.
Plus, despite being short of a slalom coach, Luuka is
considerably faster since her last Olympics in 2008. ‘I guess I just changed my
perspective on what hard training was,’ reflects Luuka. ‘I just wanted to get
better hard out so I’ve just been training my arse off basically,’ she
summarises in characteristic Kiwi fashion. This was aided by her collaboration
with Jane Borren from Waiariki Academy of Sport. ‘It was the first major input
I’d had… I increased my workload in the gym, starting getting proper training
programs, and monitoring my training. I think that made a lot of difference.’
All the same, slalom is a very small discipline in New
Zealand so sport specific coaching is hard
to come by. ‘They’re sport scientists at the end of the day so it worries me a
bit,’ says Luuka of the Waiariki team. ‘I’m always watching other paddlers and
what they’re doing… I’m always looking at how to improve and I have to do it
myself. I don’t have someone telling me how I can get better or someone on the
bank so I have to be really conscious of how I do things.’
But it sounds like the main disadvantage is the effort of
finding perpetual motivation. ‘Someone said to me the other day,’ comments
Luuka, ‘you can’t underestimate the stress of having to think. And it’s so
true. Just waking up in the morning and going to training and having to set
your own course and having to think about whether you’re going hard enough or
whether you’re in the right zone. Just having to always think: during training,
after training, travelling, everything.’
Four years of motivating yourself and second-guessing your
decisions takes its toll. Understandably, Luuka finds it hardest at races. ‘I
get disappointed in myself really easily actually because when you don’t have a
coach there you don’t have someone to say, ‘that was alright - we just need to
work on this.’ [Instead] it’s like, ‘I’ve finished the race and I didn’t get
the result I’d hoped. I have to go and analyse the video by myself and work it
out. It’s hard.’
The mega-watt smile has faded a bit.
‘Internally, I’ve run out of minerals. I’ve used all my
minerals up training for the last three years getting to where I am now. I
think I need to find something else to progress further, I think the coaching
is what I need.’
Thanks to some funding, in six weeks time, coaching is
exactly what Luuka’s going to get. In April, Luuka will fly to London
to train at the Olympic venue and be coached by Andrew Raspin (a.k.a. Kidda).
‘It’s the longest period that I’ll ever have been coached and I’m so excited.’
She certainly sounds it: ‘I am so amped. You’re working with someone you trust
and it’s more of a team effort, you’re not just out there on your own, you can
work together.’
Advice and feedback don’t seem to be her main concern. She
hasn’t mentioned video reviews or split timings. Luuka is well known in the
slalom community for her outgoing and friendly manner so it makes sense that she
seems most excited about having some company: ‘I just think having someone else
to do it with, having someone who cares, who is at the river, who is basically
in it with me…. I think that would help a lot.’
Of course, Luuka isn’t the only paddler to be in this lonely
dilemma, and she won’t be the last, but that shouldn’t detract from how tough
training alone can be. She’s got seven more weeks to go until Kidda can take
over some of the thinking.
She just has to keep smiling until then.
I think she can.

There are 3 Kiwis I personaly know, who could give you very good coaching Luuka. I am sure you would be up to trust at least one of them... Think about it after you are back from Europe. Good luck girl!
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