Mute
grab. Rodeo 900 Indy Grab. Misty-Flip 720. 900 Lu Kang. This
is the language of the Freeskier.
Hot
dog skiing of the 1970s has begun a new life as Freeskiing.
Often referred to as New School, Freeride, Park Skiing or Slopestyle,
Freeskiing boasts of innovative young skiers who quest for something
more extreme and radical than the norm.
This
new movement is characterized by the energy that, until recently,
was found only in sports like snowboarding, inline skating,
skateboarding and BMX bike riding.
Skiing,
which has been in decline since the birth of snowboarding, is
suddenly cool again.
You will find Freeskiers in the terrain parks that almost every
ski resort in North America has created over the last 2 years.
The terrain includes booters, rails, tabletops, quarterpipes,
halfpipes, and of course, big air jumps.
The
concept is very simple; achieve maximum airtime and execute
as many tricks as possible. The atmosphere is adrenalin inducing
and the style very acrobatic, including spins of 360 degrees
to 1080 degrees, off-axis front and back flips, taking off and
landing switch (backwards), helicopters, grabs and extensions
that are showcased in an astonishing show of skill.
The
moves are by their very nature the true meaning of freestyle
and tricks are as individual as the skier.
The focus on freeskiing began in the early '90s when names like
Wendy Fisher, Kristen Ulmer, Seth Morrison, and Trevor Peterson
were the face of skiing, skiing unimaginable lines down steep
chutes with inclines at as much as 50 degrees.
This
new form of 'extreme skiing', as it was labelled, was the beginning
of the move back to freeskiing and once again doing big air
jumps.
This
skiing exists today as 'Big Mountain' competitions, an integral
part of Freeskiing. North American ski resorts had long banned
most jumping as it was considered out of control skiing, (there
are always too many lawyers lurking), but the rules began to
loosen as formerly out-of-bounds terrain was opened for skiing
and glade or tree skiing became more popular.
In
the mid-90's, off in the Laurentian mountains of Quebec, 3 young
Quebecois, having reached the provincial freestyle team, were
often looking for new challenges after a day spent mogul training.
The tricks that Vinnie Dorion, J.F. Cusson, and J.P. Auclair
created have revolutionized skiing in ways that the ski industry
could not have imagined; this was truly a grass roots change.
They
were innovators as they scoffed at the boundaries policies using
the halfpipes that were dedicated to snowboarders at that time.
As they improved, these freeskiers began to get a lot of attention.
After hanging out with two other Canadians they met in British
Columbia, Shane Szocs and Mike Douglas, the New Canadian Air
Force was born, together with the phrase 'New School of Skiing.'
Freeskiing was broadcast into homes all over the world with
Jonny Moseley's gold medal winning mogul performance at the
1998 Nagano Winter Olympics that included a mute grab.
Many
of the up and coming Canadian freeskiers also hail from Quebec.
The so named 3 Phils, Philippe Larose, Philippe Belanger and
Philippe Dion all come from Lac Beauport and were impressive
last year in competition.
Philippe
Belanger had an excellent year in 2001, placing 2nd in the Red
Bull Huckfest Big Air and 3rd in the U.S. Open Big Air at Vail,
Colorado. Don't count out the original New Canadian Air Force
though; Vinnie Dorian won the 2001 World Skiing Invitational
Orage Big Air at Whistler, B.C. in April and the 2001 Freeze
U.S. Open Slopestyle at Vail Colorado.
Another
up and comer to watch is 17-year-old David Crichton who won
the 2001 World Skiing Invitational Slopestyle at Whistler's
Telus World Ski & Snowboard Festival.
Not
to be outdone, however, Canada's West is also producing some
excellent skiers. The 2001 World Tour Big Mountain Freeskiing
champions, Aleisha Cline and Hugo Harrison, are both from British
Columbia.
Freeskiing slopestyle and big air competitions have traditionally
been a guys domain, but there are up and coming female skiers.
Sarah Burke, from Midland, Ontario placed first in the 2000
Whistler Open Women's Big Air competition, and placed 18th in
the 2001 World Skiing Invitational Slopestyle at Whistler while
competing as the only woman against the men.
Change has come hard and fast.
Mike
Douglas, one of the fathers of Freeskiing (the New School),
and his friend Steve Fearing helped the team from Salomon design
the first twin tip ski called the Salomon Teneighty that was
released in the fall of 1999.
All
the major ski manufacturers now have various twin tip configurations
in their ski line-up. The Head Mad Trix System ski features
a twin tip construction that allows for the binding to be reversed
for a big mountain setting and a big air setting. Salomon has
developed the Pocket Rocket, a combination of big mountain ski
and trick ski. Atomic debuts the Freezone Rodeo for the park
and big air and the Freezone Loop designed for the halfpipe.
Ski
clothing has also evolved to have a more freeride look and a
greater emphasis on practicality including waterproof, breathable
and crash resistant fabrics (learning all those tricks comes
with a little pain).
Innovative companies like Orage from Quebec have devoted their
entire line to freeride clothing and sponsored the Orage Big
Air at Whistler, B.C. last April. The mainstream companies such
as Descente, Helly Hansen, and Spyder also offer freeride lines
of clothing in a move away from the high fashion and racing
look.
Ski
helmet sales have increased dramatically in the past year, as
concussions tend to knock you out of the competition.
As
free and innocent as its beginnings were, nothing with this
much hype stays undiscovered for long. Corporate sponsorship
has found its way into the core of Freeskiing.
Large
corporations sponsor the Gravity Games and The X-Games, and
these competitions have proven to be very popular with spectators,
so now, all of the top skiers have ski sponsors and clothing
sponsors.
Competitions are offering larger prize purses to attract the
best skiers; even skiers need to make a living! There will be
at least 20 competitions at the major ski resorts in 2001-2002.
Where there are people and media hype, there are products to
be sold and the "lifestyle" is important.
The
International Freeskiers Association (IFSA) is the governing
body that sanctions all the events. This is somewhat of a paradox,
the very rules, regulations and limitations that skiers were
trying to escape are now enforced, through regulated, judged
competitions such as Big Mountain (who can ski the steepest,
gnarliest line with the biggest air and live to tell about it),
Big Air (the bigger the better!), Slopestyle, Skiercross (imagine
5 ski racers through a marked course in a terrain park), and
Quarterpipe.
The
excitement of the guts and the glory fascinate the spectators:
who will be next to be dragged off in the toboggan?
Will
Freeskiing go the way of the hot doggers of the 1970s? It could
if lawyers got in the way, however, Freeskiing has a liberating
effect on ski culture, it is evident in the equipment we buy,
the clothes we wear and the way we view skiing.
Skiing
has undergone a revolution in the past 5 years and will continue
to evolve. Anyone who has cut first tracks in boot top powder
on a sunny, -10 degrees Celsius day be it at a 100 metre hill
or a 1000 metre mountain will understand the freedom of skiing.
Once
all the hype of the Freeskiing is gone, the basic premise of
why we ski will remain, and we can thank the Freeskiing movement
for revitalizing skiing and reminding us of the fun and freedom
we enjoy on the slopes.
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