Trust at 100km/h: how Bluetooth bond helps skier Neil Simpson see his way to glory

A picture


Neil Simpson and his guide Robert Poth won silver at the Winter Paralympics on Tuesday, the first medal for Great Britain at these Games.But to watch the athletes in visually impaired alpine skiing descend the slopes of the Dolomites at speeds of up to 100km/h is to be strongly reminded that everyone needs at least another medal, just for being brave enough to do it in the first place.Talk to the 23-year-old Simpson, however, and the concept of taking one’s life into one’s hands doesn’t come into the equation.Born with the condition nystagmus, which causes involuntary eye movements, he has been skiing since he was four, first on the dry slopes in Aberdeen, then at the Glenshee resort, before competing in national competition aged 16.“I think it’s something that’s never really fazed me”, he says.

“It’s just a really fun sport to participate in.”Simpson learned to ski alongside his brother Andrew, who also acted as his sole guide for many years, including during the Beijing Games four years ago when the pair returned with Britain’s only gold medal in the VI super-G.They both received MBEs in the queen’s birthday honours that year, suggesting Her Majesty understood the scale of their achievement.When Andrew broke a leg a year later, Poth joined the team and he will be Simpson’s guide in their two remaining events, which look increasingly like Britain’s best prospects for further success.Poth effectively acts as Simpson’s eyes on the course, feeding information to his partner via a Bluetooth headset.

“I’m just giving as much detail as possible to him, on different combinations, delays, the terrain.” Poth says.“The guide is always relaying information and Neil is the one who’s judging the distance [between the pair].It’s constant chat and Neil was managing the distance on that front, telling me to go, go, go or slow down.We try to keep as close as possible and if we can do that, it puts us in the best position possible.

”Simpson says the past three years have been a process of building better understanding between himself and Poth, particularly given the bond he has always had with his brother.“I think it’s about being adaptable and growing the relationship over time,” he says.“But it’s also growing the language that we’ll be using to communicate and being very set in how we’re going to operate when we’re skiing.I’d say that’s the key thing.”If information is key, so is the process.

The Games began with a chastening result as Simpson ceded his downhill title after a fourth-place finish.Next came the super-G and fourth place again.But Simpson seemed to lose no confidence, saying he saw enough in that second event – effectively a speed slalom – that if he could iron out “a few mistakes” he could come again.That he and Poth did, with a field-leading time in the slalom half of the combine that pulled them into medal position.The slalom and the giant slalom now remain and hope is building that they are hitting form in this event at just the right time.

“The performance was really good and that breeds confidence for the races to come,” Simpson says.“I think if we can focus on how we were skiing and try and replicate that for the giant slalom and slalom to come, then we should be in a good place.”ParalympicsGB came into this Games with low-key ambitions, setting an informal medal target of just two to five – they won six at Beijing in 2022 – and an emphasis on athletes achieving their own personal bests.This reflects not only the relative experience of the current crop of athletes but the growing strength of winter Paralympic competition.There are a record number of athletes and nations competing at Milano Cortina and Simpson and Poth find themselves in one of the strongest fields, with the local hero Giacomo Bertagnolli claiming gold in the combine and one half of Austria’s indomitable Aigner siblings, Johannes, winning the other two visually impaired events so far.

Now Simpson and Poth have set the bar in the slalom and that competition looks set to go up a notch when racing resumes on Friday.“I wouldn’t say there’s mind games,” Simpson says of his rivals.“We’re all competitive and it’s a really tight field, but that just pushes everyone on, it makes us perform to the best of our abilities.So it’s really nice to be a part of that and to be pushing for podiums in that group, it means a lot.”In Paralympic sport camaraderie is everywhere and the human side of sporting achievement never far from view.

Poth, unlike Simpson, has admitted to feeling the tension this week and said his feeling on winning silver on Tuesday was mainly one of relief.That, he says, was less to do with his own ambitions, though, and more the obligation he felt to his partner.“I think it’s just knowing the level of skier Neil is and what he deserves, to be honest,” Poth says.Now the pair have the chance to go out and get it.
businessSee all
A picture

British fintech Revolut gets full banking licence

Revolut can finally launch as a fully fledged UK bank after a five-year wait for regulatory approval.The fintech said it had received the all-clear from the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) for a full banking licence, allowing it to offer accounts for retail and business customers.It will start introducing current accounts to a small number of new customers within days, the group said.The move follows Revolut being granted a UK banking licence – with “restrictions” – in 2024, having first lodged its application in 2021.Revolut bosses were said to have grown frustrated with UK regulators, who had been slow to grant a full licence allowing it to hold customer deposits and branch out into more lucrative products such as loans and mortgages

A picture

CMA to investigate heating oil suppliers over ‘blatant profiteering’ from Iran war

Heating oil suppliers are to be investigated by the competition watchdog after accusations that firms are “blatantly profiteering” from the conflict in the Middle East by doubling the prices they charge to households.The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said it had received “a number of concerning reports” in recent days from consumers reliant on heating oil about suppliers’ behaviour at a time of rising wholesale costs.About 1.7m households in the UK, mostly in rural areas that are not connected to the mains gas network, rely on heating oil to warm their homes, cook food and provide hot water.The CMA will look into consumer complaints about existing orders being cancelled, with customers then offered new quotes at significantly higher prices, and price increases for automated deliveries to customers that are triggered when the fuel in an oil tank drops to a certain level

A picture

World’s energy watchdog orders emergency release of 400m barrels of oil to curb prices – as it happened

It’s official: the International Energy Agency has ordered the largest release of government oil reserves in its history to help calm the oil price shock triggered by the US-Israeli attacks on Iran.The world’s energy watchdog said its 32 members had agreed unanimously to release about 400m barrels of emergency crude, a third of the group’s total government stockpiles and more than double the IEA’s previous biggest release.The emergency intervention far outstrips the 2022 release of 182m barrels of oil by IEA countries after Russia’s full-scale invasion of UkraineThe body’s executive director, Fatih Birol, sad: “Oil markets are global so the response to major disruptions needs to be global too. Energy security is the founding mandate of the IEA, and I am pleased that IEA members are showing strong solidarity in taking decisive action together.”The IEA said the emergency stocks would be made available to the global market, which has lost around 15m barrels of crude a day because of a block on trade via the strait of Hormuz, over a timeframe appropriate to the national circumstances of each member, bolstered by supplementary emergency measures from some countries

A picture

IEA orders largest ever release of stockpiled oil to reduce crude price

The International Energy Agency has ordered the largest release of government oil reserves in its history to help calm the oil price shock triggered by the US-Israeli attacks on Iran.The world’s energy watchdog said its 32 members had agreed unanimously to release about 400m barrels of emergency crude, a third of the group’s total government stockpiles and more than double the IEA’s previous biggest release.The emergency intervention far outstrips the 2022 release of 182m barrels of oil by IEA countries after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.The body’s executive director, Fatih Birol, said: “Oil markets are global so the response to major disruptions needs to be global, too. Energy security is the founding mandate of the IEA, and I am pleased that IEA members are showing strong solidarity in taking decisive action together

A picture

Labor must stop juicing house prices and make buying a home the Australian dream – not negatively gearing one | Greg Jericho

As uncertainty hits everywhere, the Australian housing market continues its usual path upwards.Less than two months ago, I let rip at the IMF for titling its latest World Economic Outlook as “Global Economy: Steady amid Divergent Forces” despite the fact a clueless fool sits in the White House ready to unleash chaos should his blood sugar levels fall too low.If the graph does not display click hereI can’t wait for the IMF’s April update, which will no doubt tell us that the forces remain “divergent” if steady.The war in Iran makes it rather impossible to say what will happen in the economy over the next six months – aside from gas companies profiting off human misery:If the graph does not display click hereBut there is, admittedly, one other constant in our economy: government policy that juices demand for housing will increase house prices and reduce affordability:If the graph does not display click hereOn Tuesday the latest dwelling price figures revealed that, in a shock to no one, the first home buyer 5% guarantee has caused dwelling prices to soar.In the December quarter, the average price of dwellings across Australia rose 2

A picture

Porsche to cut more jobs after costly reversal of electric car strategy

Porsche is to cut more jobs after profits were largely cancelled out by a costly writedown on reversing its electric car strategy, as the luxury manufacturer also battled a prolonged sales slump in China.The German carmaker appointed a new chief executive, Michael Leiters, on 1 January after four profit warnings last year that also contributed to it tumbling out of Germany’s DAX stock index.“The streamlining of the company needs to be sharpened and this will lead to further job reductions,” said Leiters on Wednesday. Porsche employs about 40,000 people and has previously said it would make about 3,900 job cuts by 2030.“We will streamline our management structure, reduce hierarchies and cut back on bureaucracy,” said Leiters, adding that more details would come in the autumn