Injured Bernotas gets waiver for US sliding trials

Injured Bernotas gets waiver for US sliding trials

Published Oct. 15, 2009 10:15 p.m. ET

Less than four months from the Vancouver Olympics, the U.S. skeleton team is already dealing with some significant injury issues. Eric Bernotas, the 2006 Olympian who was leading after the first day of national team trials, has been excused from the remainder of that competition with a strained right quadriceps. The U.S. Bobsled and Skeleton Federation said Bernotas will be one of the four men's sliders headed to Whistler, B.C. this month for official training on the Olympic track. Barring another injury, Bernotas will be on the World Cup roster when that season begins next month. "It gives me relief that I now have time to recuperate," Bernotas said. "But I still have to stay on top of what I need to execute, and that's not just handed to me. That's my responsibility, and my other responsibility now is getting well. It's tricky, but I realize now that I can't let my guard down. That's the challenge." He's the second prominent U.S. skeleton racer out of the team trials, a key part of the Olympic selection process. Two-time World Cup overall champion and 2006 Olympian Katie Uhlaender is still recovering from three surgeries on her left kneecap. Uhlaender shattered the kneecap in a snowmobile crash in April, then re-injured herself in another mishap two months ago. Unlike Bernotas, Uhlaender's waiver does not guarantee her a World Cup spot. "I'm a warrior, and I'm doing what I'm supposed to be doing," Uhlaender said. "I'm being the athlete my dad raised me to be, and that's to do the best not to complain, get up and do what I can. That's all I can do. There's no point in making myself sick over worry or saying 'What if?' I have what I have and I'll do what I have to do." It already has been an extremely difficult 2009 for Uhlaender. Her father - former major league outfielder Ted Uhlaender - died of cancer Feb. 12, the day she won a World Cup silver medal in Park City, Utah. She and Bernotas aren't the only two banged-up skeleton racers right now. Zach Lund has a strained hamstring, but his request for a medical waiver was denied Wednesday night, when the USBSF held a 2 1/2-hour conference call to discuss the waiver requests. He was able to race Thursday and moved into third place behind John Daly and Stokes Aitken. "It's sore, but it didn't worsen," Lund said. He missed the 2006 Turin Olympics because of a one-year suspension for a doping violation triggered by a hair-restoration drug that wasn't compliant with World Anti-Doping Agency regulations. Lund was on the track early Thursday when competition resumed at the team's Mt. Van Hoevenberg training base. The skeleton trials conclude with two more race days Oct. 23 and 24 in Park City, Utah. It's likely the three top-ranked men and women will qualify for the training days in Whistler, where they'll be joined by Bernotas and Uhlaender.

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