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Alex Bilodeau returns to JMSB, fresh of a gold-medal performance in Sochi

You can say Alexandre Bilodeau is Concordia’s most decorated student when he returned to JMSB on Friday afternoon, in front of a crowd of cameras, fellow students, and young children waiting for a chance to talk to one of Canada’s most famous athletes.

The two-time Olympic Gold medalist and Concordia accounting student just came back from his third Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia, which saw him go where no other free-style skier had ever gone before. He became the first moguls skier to win back-to-back gold medals at the Olympics. Bilodeau won his first gold medal at the Olympic Games in Vancouver in 2010, becoming the first Canadian to win a Gold medal on home soil.

On Friday, it was a homecoming of sort for Bilodeau, as a press conference in the atrium of the JMSB building was held to honour the Olympian back to Concordia. He began his studies at Concordia in September 2010, right after the Games in Vancouver. He’s been here part-time ever since, while juggling his training, getting ready for upcoming World Cup events, and eventually, the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi.

Bilodeau almost never went to Sochi, as he contemplated retirement in 2010.

“After Vancouver, I thought, maybe I should retire and finish my studies and move on with my life,” he said. “But [I thought] I was going to retreat not trying to defend my medal. It’s never been done in my sport.”

But going through two Olympic games hasn’t been an easy ride for Bilodeau.

“It was a very hard four years, there were a lot of ups and downs. [Balancing school and training], its something that’s very difficult, obviously,” Bilodeau said. “We’re always three weeks on snow and three weeks off snow [during training camps]. [When you get home,] it’s 9 p.m. It’s so easy to lay down in your bed and watch a television show but at one point you need to open your accounting books. But it’s a discipline that will pay off later on.

“[But] I’m not perfect, sometimes I do watch a TV show,” he added with a laugh.

Bilodeau will be the first to tell you that he couldn’t have won two Olympic goals without his close friends and family, as well as his trainers, coaches, and his teachers at JMSB for helping him with school, even if he wasn’t around much over the last four years.

“No one could pretend to win an Olympic gold alone. I put myself in a position to succeed in Vancouver and I had the right people around me. I’m very grateful for my whole team.”

The press conference concluded with an open session, where people could ask questions and take pictures with Bilodeau and his two gold medals.

 

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Concordia weighs in on the recently-named Canadian Olympic hockey roster

Canada has just unveiled its men’s hockey roster for the upcoming Winter Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia. Many experts have had their say about who should have been on the team and who should have been left out. But what do Concordia students think of the players Hockey Canada is sending out to represent their country?

One of the biggest questions coming into the selection process was the debate over whether or not Montreal Canadiens defenceman P.K. Subban should be on the team. There’s no doubt his hockey skills are good enough to make the team. After all, he is the defending Norris trophy champion as best defenceman in the NHL. The controversy hides in his exuberance and colourful personality, which were considered by some to be detrimental to his chances of making the team.

“Definitely, P.K. Subban should have been a lock to make this team,” says Daniele Iannarone. “I think the media made too big a deal over his selection for no reason, but Yzerman recognized his talent and that’s why he’s there.”

With so many good Canadian players to choose from, Steve Yzerman and his staff had to narrow it down to a 25-man roster. This, of course, opens the door to the debate as to who should be on the team and who could have been passed over.

“I think Giroux, St-Louis and maybe Mike Richards should have made the team. I would remove Marleau,” adds Iannarone.

“I’m shocked that Joe Thornton didn’t make the team,” says Matthew Shanahan. “He’s one of the better passers in the game right now.”

Another topic of conversation was the debate over who should be considered the number one goaltender between Mike Smith, Roberto Luongo and Carey Price.

“I think Luongo will start, but if he doesn’t play well from the beginning, you’ll see Price come in and lead the team,” Iannarone says.

“I think Carey Price is our best goalie. With Luongo, you’re not sure what you’re going to get from him,” says Bryce Crawford.

Julian McKenzie adds, “Price should start because he’s the better goalie this year, rather than Luongo starting because he has the Olympic experience.”

This overwhelming support for Price may have something to do with a certain bias towards the two Montreal Canadiens that will be going to Sochi. But bias or not and with all this controversy put aside, not many doubt that Canada has a solid chance of returning home with some hardware.

“They built the team so that it can win, rather than just picking the biggest names around the NHL,” says Evan Gill. “Guys like Rick Nash aren’t having the best year, but they’ve won before, so that’s why they’re on the team. Anyone can win, but I think we have the best chance.”

“I think overall Canada is a good team, but it will be tough to beat the Russians,” says Crawford. “It should make for an interesting tournament.”

What was four years of speculation has finally come to an end, and now the entire nation can focus on cheering the Canadian squad as they try to become repeat gold-medalists, this time on enemy ice.

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Canadian Olympian looks back at historic moment in Vancouver

At the bottom of the ski hill, sitting on the couch, Alexandre Bilodeau’s hands are clenched to his face as he looks up anxiously at the big screen. The last skier is making his final run down Cypress Mountain, and Bilodeau is just waiting and waiting. Finally, France native Guilbaut Colas’ run is over, and fate is left in the judge’s hands.

Press photo

Sixth place, reads the jumbotron. That’s where Colas would finish in the standings, with a score of 25.74 points.

Jolting up from the couch in celebration, a victory party for Bilodeau was underway at the foot of the mountain, while history was being made.

“I knew [Colas] didn’t have the run to win. But I couldn’t believe it still, until I looked at the board and [he finished] number six, and I’m like ‘I’m first, I won the Olympic Games.’ I couldn’t believe it,” recalled Alexandre Bilodeau. “Everybody trains [for]  four years, or all their lives, for that day, and I’m the only one [who] really worked out that day.”

The 26-year-old Rosèmere, Quebec native won Canada’s first of 14 gold medals at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympic Games that day, and became the first Canadian athlete to win gold at any Canadian Olympic Games held on home soil.

“To be in the Olympics is an amazing experience, but having that chance to compete on home soil is something that not many people [get to do],” said Bilodeau. “I was fortunate to have one of the best performances of my life at the right moment. There’s no word to explain that… it’s amazing. It will stay with me all my life.”

The freestyle skier, who will be competing in his third and final Olympic Games in Sochi, Russia, this coming February, said there isn’t anything that can top that gold medal win in Vancouver.

“Whatever the result will be in Sochi, even if I win, it’s not going to be the same,” said Bilodeau. “The experience in Vancouver was out of this world.”

Bilodeau attributes a lot of that gold medal win to his brother, Frédéric, who suffers from cerebral palsy.

“He’s my everyday inspiration. He has dreams in life, and most of his dreams are not realistic. He doesn’t have the ability to make it happen,” he said. “I need to go after my dreams. I don’t need to realize them, but I at least need to try [because] he lives his dream through me,[and] through my sister.

“To have him on the front stage with me in Vancouver, it was amazing to see his joy, to see how proud he was. It’s crazy how my mom drove me when I was a kid, to all these mountains, to all these competitions, and he was always in the car, waiting for me. He has done as much work as my mom to get me where I am now. He was a big part of that medal.”

As a kid, Bilodeau both skied and played hockey, but at the age of eight, hockey was out of the picture and everything was about skiing.

After watching Jean-Luc Brassard, another Quebec freestyle skier win a gold medal at the 1994 Olympics, Bilodeau was hooked on freestyle skiing.

He eventually chose to focus on moguls which is a branch of freestyle skiing.

In 2006, Bilodeau became the youngest man to win a World Cup event in Federation Internationale de Ski (FIS) history at Mont Gabriel in St. Sauveur, QC. He won five gold medals during the 2008-2009 World Cup season and has now won three gold medals in a row, heading into the Sochi Winter Olympic Games in February.

Despite all of his success in skiing, Bilodeau said that hockey is his “favourite sport for all time,” and like many Montrealers, he cheers for the Habs.

Bilodeau is also a student at Concordia, studying accounting at the John Molson School of Business (JMSB).

He said he chose Concordia because Judith Woodsworth, a former President of Concordia, was the first to convince him that JMSB was the best fit. Although Bilodeau is Francophone, he decided to study school in English because he felt that being fluent in English was important for the business world.

“[JMSB] is an amazing school, great people there, great teachers that helped through these four years,” he said. “It hasn’t been an easy four years for me, always travelling, not there for the mid-term, not there for the final. This December, I wasn’t there for the whole period of the finals and I went to write an exam [in my teacher’s office] close to Christmas.”

Bilodeau added that with his hectic travel schedule during his competitive season, which falls from December until the end of March, he often doesn’t get to travel around and see many of the countries he visits. He will be leaving for Sochi on Feb. 1 after another competition in Norway. So, who will he be cheering for when he gets there?

“Team Canada,” he said with a laugh, adding that he’ll be attending some of their hockey games when he can. He’ll also be cheering for good friend and fellow skier, Erik Guay.

“I wish him the best, he deserves it,” Bilodeau said. “It’s amazing to live the Olympics with people you grew up with.”

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