Erik Guay (file photo: Pentaphoto/Alpine Canada)

Guay Set to Return

Lake Louise (AB), Canada – Former world downhill champion Erik Guay is set to make his return from injury at the Lake Louise Alpine Ski World Cup later this month as Canadian racers try to make the most of home snow advantage and punch their tickets to the 2014 Sochi Olympic Winter Games.

Guay, of Mont-Tremblant, Quebec, has made a swift recovery from knee surgery and is one of five Canadian Cowboys who could be pushing for the podium in the first men’s World Cup downhill and super G races of the 2013-14 season, which will be held Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 at the picturesque Lake Louise ski resort west of Calgary. With qualification for nomination to Canada’s Olympic team up for grabs, there’s a lot on the line for perennial contenders Guay, Manuel Osborne-Paradis and Jan Hudec – all of whom have previously been on the podium at Lake Louise – as well as talented youngsters including Ben Thomsen and Morgan Pridy.

Erik Guay (file photo: Pentaphoto/Alpine Canada)
Erik Guay (file photo: Pentaphoto/Alpine Canada)

“My knee feels really good and the plan is to start in Lake Louise,” said Guay, who has 19 career World Cup podiums – one short of the Canadian record for men set by Crazy Canuck legend Steve Podborksi. “The skiing is there already. With only a few days of super G training I was back in the times and competitive. I think that comes from experience, but I know I still have some work to do. When you are coming back from injury it always depends on how your body reacts but my knee feels solid. My back has been bothering me but I am managing it and as long as it doesn’t flare up I will start in Lake Louise.”

Guay, who won the super G Crystal Globe in 2010 and has been agonizingly close to a first Olympic medal, with a fourth-place finish in 2006 and two fifths in 2010, had surgery in July after originally injuring his knee in May. Guay, whose wife Karen is expecting their third child in March, had two World Cup podiums last season and can all but secure his spot for Sochi with a top-10 finish. Qualification for nomination to Canada’s Olympic team is dependent on two top-12 results, including at least one from the first half of this season. Canadian racers can also qualify with a single top-five result from the 2013-14 season.

The Canadian men’s speed team will train at Nakiska Ski Area in Alberta next week.

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