Karin Roberge Woodson |
1994
Hall of Fame Inductee
|
|
Little
did Andre and Marielle Roberge realize back in 1966 when they moved their
family from Montreal, Quebec, to San Diego, California, that they were
paving the way for a world champion water skier. Their
daughter Karin was only three then and a long way from her 1981 overall
victory in the World Water Ski Championships at England's Thorpe Water
Park. Yet
water ski competition was a natural progression for Karin, once the
Roberges learned what water skiing was all about, just as it was for her
younger brother, Carl, and younger sister, Nathalie. Karin
was born December 18, 1962 in Montreal. Her parents enjoyed
occasional snow ski outings but once they moved to San Diego their skiing
interest shifted to the water as new members of the Mission Bay Boat &
Ski Club. Karin
learned to ski when she was six but the family's real enthusiasm for the
sport came two years later when they joined other Mission Bay Skiers on a
vacation to Lake Powell in northern Arizona. The unrestricted skiing
the Roberges enjoyed there put them in mind initially to take up endurance
skiing or ski racing but they gave up that notion for safety reasons and
turned to three-event competition. With
her father's demanding work as an engineer with General Dynamics, Karin
mother became chief coach and boat driver. Practice was limited on
Mission Bay so the Roberges later joined the Wet Set Village Ski club in
Newberry springs for additional training opportunities. Karin
began winning regularly in club tournaments before the Roberge family
gained its U.S. citizenship in 1974, thus giving the children eligibility
to compete in the top tournaments sanctioned by the American Water Ski
Association. In
her first Western Regionals' in 1975, Karin swept all three events in the
Junior Girls' Division much tougher than it was among the juniors but she
advanced steadily, especially in slalom and jumping, and won the division
Nationals overall title in 1978, taking the top spot in both events along
the way. Then
it was Karin's improvement in trick skiing that proved to be her edge when
she moved into the Open Women's Division in 1979. A victory in
tricks, coupled with a third in slalom and a fourth in jumping, made her
the open overall champion on her first try. She retained her overall
title the following year with another victory in tricks and a silver medal
in slalom. Karin came back for her third and fourth Open Overall
titles in the 1983 and 1985 Nationals, again winning the tricks event in
1983. Karin's
overall skiing skills ere little less impressive in the Masters. She
won the Master Cup in 1979 and 1980. She set a world slalom record
of 4 1/2 buoys on a 12-meter line in the 1981 Masters and picked up the
tricks title in 1984. Exerting
her overall mastery against the world's best gave Karin her greatest
skiing moment in 1981 at the Thorpe Water Park World Championships, where
her silver medal in slalom and a bronze in tricks were sufficient to give
her the winning edge. Karin was an alternate on the 1983 and 1985
U.S. Teams. Moving
to Orlando, Fla., in the early Eighties, the Roberges bought property on a
nearby lake and opened a ski school where Karin worked and trained until
her marriage in 1985 to William D. Woodson. At the time of Karin's Hall of Fame induction, the Woodsons with their three children, Catherine, 8, Michael, 5, and Marie, 18 months, were living in Melbourne, Fla., where Bill was in the real estate and insurance business. |
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