■ Scores, P. 34 ■ Rodeo, P. 36 ■ Rock climbing, P. 37
SPORTS&OUTDOORS
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Sports Editor Jon Mentzer ❖ 788-3444, ext. 18 ❖ sports@woodriverjournal.com
McDonald rides into Olympics Local equestrian rider competes in Hong Kong
MCDONALD AND HORSE BRETINA’S ACCOMPLISHMENTS: *1999 Equestrian of the Year by the USEF (formerly the American Horse Shows Association) *1999 United States Olympic Committee Female Equestrian Athlete of the Year. *Individual and Team Gold medals in the 1999 Pan-American Games. *2002 Team Silver medal in World Equestrian Games in Spain. *2003 World Cup Champion. *Wins at the 2004 and 2005 U.S. Grand Prix Freestyle/Championship/U.S. League Finals.
BY JON MENTZER Wood River Journal
If Valley residents didn’t already have a good reason to watch the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, they do now. They have Debbie McDonald. The Hailey INSIDE resident and local equestrian rider ■ Valley’s home Debbie McDonald to Olympians, is competing in Page 36 the individual dressage compe- ■ For a list local tition in Hong Olympians Kong. , Page 36 She’ll be riding Brentina, a 15-year-old Hanoverian mare. The journey to China hasn’t been easy. In 2004, McDonald set her sights on bringing home a team medal in the Athens Olympics and was an integral part of the U.S.A. Olympic bronze medal effort. She’s glad to have a chance at the gold in China. “It is such a tough road to get here and such a sacrifice for your family and friends,” McDonald said. This year will be one of the most hyped and anticipated games in recent memory because of the media frenzy surrounding the Beijing Olympics. But McDonald is focused on bringing home a medal. “To be able to have that feeling of standing on that podium would be more than satisfying,” she said. McDonald comes by dressage naturally. She’s a former hunter/jumper rider who switched to dressage about 15 years ago. McDonald has held the title of World Cup Dressage Champion in 2003. Her 78.89 percent in the
ELMA GARCIA/COURTESY PHOTO
Debbie McDonald and her horse Brentina. Grand Prix Freestyle earned her the combination of World Champion. She was also an important part of the U.S. team finishing second in the team competition at CDIO Aachen, where she also finished third individually. During Olympic competition, McDonald said she will be watching the Germans and the Dutch
because they’re always the ones to beat. The road to China has been physically demanding and emotionally draining, she said. McDonald has been in Germany training so she hasn’t had the pleasure of seeing her close friends and family from the Wood River Valley since January. “You train constantly to be-
come better and better and hope that you have also a little luck along the way,” said McDonald. “My biggest challenge, though, is being away from my family.” McDonald’s husband, who she said is there for her at all times, is traveling with her. McDonald would like to thank Roger Wilkinson, her shoer who travels to Europe and California with her, her groom Ruben Palomera, Juan Ruiz, Adrienne Lyle who is McDonald’s assistant and all of the veterinarians from Sawtooth Equine. “Without amazing sponsors like the Thomas family, none of this would be possible,” she said. “I am just a small part of the whole package. It takes so many people to make dreams come true.” McDonald’s admiration of the Games is clear and her appreciation of the Wood River Valley is evident. “Whether we come home with a medal or not, I can still say that I represented the U.S.A. and that is something that I will never forget or can be taken away. I just hope that no matter how all of this plays out, everyone knows how much I appreciate their support,” said McDonald.
Got tee time? New course set to open BY KAREN BOSSICK Wood River Journal
CLUBHOUSE NEXT
Sun Valley — Sun Valley’s General Manager Wally Huffman was finishing up the groundbreaking ceremony last summer for the Sun Valley Pavilion, when he paused, a big grin on his face. “If I don’t show up (for the opening), you know where I’m at,” he quipped, nodding his head to the golf greens that had just been seeded across the road. A funny thing happened on the way to the golf links, though. Huffman has been so busy overseeing the construction of the new entertainment Pavilion and a 58,000-square-foot golf clubhouse — not to mention Sun Valley’s gondola, which starts construction in less than a month—that he forgot to make a tee time. And the new White Clouds Golf Course opens Monday. “I wanted to be the first to play it, but I forgot to make a tee time. I might know somebody, though,” he winked. The White Clouds Golf Course is the first significant improvement Sun Valley has made to its
Sun Valley’s new golf clubhouse, which will also double as the Sun Valley Nordic Center in the winter, resembles Sun Valley’s massive ski lodges. It incorporates 700 tons of lava rock quarried from nearby Triumph, as well as Italian and Indian stone and various species of walnut. The three-level facility will include a grand entry, restaurant, bar, pro shop and a virtual driving range and indoor putting. It’ll also include a 10,000-square-foot terrace, outdoor fireplace and terrace bar. Outside will be a 12-acre driving range and a 52,000-square-foot, 18-hole putting course named “Sawtooths.” The course, patterned after the Himalayas putting course at Scotland’s St. Andrews, includes mounds designed to reflect the jagged Sawtooth Mountains to the north. Sun Valley’s Marketing Director Jack Sibbach said the resort will probably hold a grand opening for the clubhouse this fall, after all the work is completed.
TRAVIS GARNER/WRJ
The view from Sun Valley’s new White Cloud Nine golf course looking in the direction of the Trail Creek canyon, showing a lower section of the course and Sun Valley’s new club house. golf game in 30 years. But it certainly won’t be its last. The resort plans to open a new 58,756-square foot clubhouse on Aug. 20 — just in time for the celebrity Danny Thompson Memorial Golf Tournament. True to its name, the new golf links would be set in the clouds— if Sun Valley entertained many
clouds, that is. From its perch overlooking Sun Valley Resort, the White Clouds Golf Course offers a breathtaking 360-degree panorama that encompasses Dollar Mountain, Sun Valley’s famed Bald Mountain, the town of
See GOLF, Page 2
COUTESY PHOTO
Dick Barrymore in the 1960s with a movie camera in hand.
Well known filmmaker Barrymore dies at 74 Ski films put him into the ski hall of fame in 2000 BY SUSAN BAILEY Wood River Journal
KETCHUM—Dick Barrymore, 74, famed ski film producer, died of brain cancer at his mother’s home in Ketchum Friday, Aug. 1, with his mother and family present. Inducted into the U.S. National Ski Hall of Fame in 2000, Barrymore was known for personally narrated ski films that started with the 1960 Winter Olympics in Squaw Valley, Calif., and continued through many exotic locations with an assortment of local skiers in the frame. Blaine County residents Dave Woodham, Alan Rickers, Scott Curtis and his son Blake Barrymore, owner of Northwest Door and Mill in Carey, are among those appearing in Barrymore ski films throughout the years. In 1986, Barrymore left filmmaking for Baja California, Mexico, where he developed a rustic resort in Cabo Pulmo. After its coral reefs were made into a national marine park, Barrymore’s resort, developed in part with his son Cole, became a destination for divers and snorkelers. The Cabo Pulmo Dive Center has become a vacation destination of renown in the Baja Peninsula of Mexico. Barrymore moved to Ketchum with his wife Betsy in 1972 and was a local figure for many years before moving to Mexico. He wrote two biographies of his life as a ski film producer, including “Breaking Even.” His ski action films included “Last of the Ski Bums” and “Wild Skis.” When hot dog freestyle skiing was the rage in the 1970s, he brought it international attention through his footage. He captured powder skiing and mogul skiing in their early days as well. The family has set a private burial service for Thursday A public celebration of Barrymore’s life is planned on Oct. 21 for Barrymore’s 75th birthday with details to be announced later.
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