Eric Harlow Named Head Coach Of Alpine Skiing At Colby College

Eric Harlow, director of alpine programs at Sugar Bowl Academy located in Lake Tahoe, has been named the new head coach of Colby men's and women's alpine skiing. In his more than 20 years of coaching elite athletes, he has developed and led teams and individuals who have consistently excelled at junior levels, top-ranked NCAA teams, the U.S. Ski Team, and international teams. 

"Eric has made a significant, positive impact on countless athletes who have competed at the highest levels," said Vice President and Harold Alfond Director of Athletics Mike Wisecup. "He has established himself as a leader in recruiting and coaching alpine skiers competing for regional, national, and international championships. I could not be more excited to have Eric lead our alpine programs in pursuit of a NCAA championship." 

Colby alpine skiing competes at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I level. The team concluded each of the past three seasons ranked in the top 15 nationally and is well positioned to become one of the premier alpine ski programs in the country. 

A full-time staff, solid recruiting efforts, and a talented and dedicated group of skiers has produced one of the most competitive and successful programs at Colby, and in the East. Dryland training begins in September with captain's practices. On-snow taining is based at Sugarloaf/USA and begins the first weekend in November. The team holds a three day Thanksgiving camp and a five day Pre-Christmas camp. The strength of the Colby ski program lies during the month of January. During January student-athletes participate in only one class for the month giving the athletes ample time for training and racing. The mules will begin their competitive racing season at the December and January Eastern Cups followed by the six week college carnival season. The season peaks in mid-March with the NCAA Championships and the Eastern Junior Olympics and culminates with the spring Eastern Cup series. Colby skiers participate in USSA National and FIS events as academic schedules and personal goals allow.

"I'm humbled to have been selected as Colby's head coach," Harlow said. "The combination of Colby's rigorous academic program, extraordinary facilities, and deep commitment to competing at the highest levels in all areas makes this a truly unique opportunity."

Early in his career, Harlow was the women's development team coach for the U.S. Ski Team, taking talented skiers, including three-time Olympian Megan McJames, to the World Junior Championships in 2006. Later, in 2007, he joined the Stratton Mountain School in Vermont as head women's coach, where he developed multiple U.S. Ski Team athletes, including 2018 Olympian Alice Merryweather.

In 2012 Harlow became the head alpine coach for Burke Mountain Academy in Vermont, where his athletes continued to excel and progress to the U.S. Ski Team and colleges with the strongest alpine skiing programs in the country. A year later he became the Eastern Region development director of U.S. Ski and Snowboard and led the team to a Region's Cup victory at the U18 U.S. National Championships in 2015.

Most recently, at Sugar Bowl Academy, his program developed multiple NCAA athletes, several OPA Cup and World Junior Championship competitors, a U.S. Ski Team member, and a World Cup giant slalom winner, Alice Robinson of New Zealand.

Tracey Cote, Colby's head coach of Nordic skiing, is eager to begin working with Harlow to compete in the EISA and at the NCAA Championships. "Eric's experience coaching athletes at the highest level of U.S. skiing will quickly benefit our ski program," Cote said. "He is well known throughout the ski community for his creativity, work ethic, and sustained success at multiple levels." 

Harlow has a bachelor's degree in history from Colby-Sawyer College in New London, N.H., where he competed on the ski and baseball teams. He is also an alumnus of Gould Academy in Bethel, Maine. He and his wife, Catherine Blanchard, have a one-month-old daughter, Mia, and 20-month-old son, Jacques or "Jack."

"I am extremely excited to lead the Colby alpine ski programs to become the most sought after Division I program in the country," Harlow said.

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