TASKS 2
Reading Task 1. You are going to read a magazine article about a young sports person. Сhoose the correct answer A, B, C or D.
Wakeboarding
Knowing that Tom Finch, a junior champion in the relatively new sport of wakeboarding, had won so many competitions, I was more than a little taken aback to see how slight he was. Wakeboarding, you see, involves being pulled along at high speed behind a power boat, rather like in water skiing, then launching yourself into the air to perform a series of complicated tricks, as in skateboarding or snowboarding, Now, that is a feat you'd think required big bones and bulging muscles. But Tom is just 1,44 small and weighs 38 kilos.
'I hurt my forearms at first, but now I guess I'm used to it, Tom told me. At 14 years old, Tom has been practicing the sport for just two years, but has already found competing in his age group almost 100 easy. He didn't say that, of course. Maybe because he didn't want to seem bigheaded, especially with his Dad sitting just a few meters away, or maybe because he just doesn't think it's important. 'I wakeboard because it's fun,' he told me with a smile, 'and scary!' He knows he's good though and one look at his results confirms that this is justified. Yet when Tom started, the organizers tried to persuade him not to enter his first competition, thinking he'd be upset when he came last.
Tom won by a mile and silenced them all. So, what makes him so good? Perhaps putting on a wetsuit, whatever the weather, and practicing for al least two hours everyday. For that is what Tom does. He also buys and studies every new wakeboarding video and spends hours working on every new trick, finding new ways to twist and turn his small body. He's also not afraid to take advice from people better than him. 'I wouldn’t be where I am without my trainer,' Tom says. 'II lakes so much longer to learn without him; he can spot what I'm doing wrong in a second and put me right. He gives me lots of tips on some of the real technical details too.' Although the sport is still relatively unknown compared lo surfing and snowboarding, which everyone's heard of. Tom reckons its on the up. 'Everyone at school is well aware of it, trying it and loving it,' he says. He's not wrong either. Even on the rainy, windy day that I met him, there's a queue of eager bodies in wetsuits getting into the freezing water at the watersports centre near London where Tom trains. It will take a few years until the overall standard reaches that of the USA though. Tom told me that everything is twice as last, twice as big there, which makes it really scary and dangerous. Tom knows no fear though and wants one day to be a professional. He might only be 1,44m tall, but let's not forget that the professionals were all fourteen-year olds at one time
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