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Thread: NY Times Freeskiing Article

  1. #1
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    NY Times Freeskiing Article

    The Slopes’ New Renegades? Skiers

    December 28, 2003
    By GWEN KILVERT

    MAMMOTH, Calif.

    ON a blustery day in mid-December, Chris Benchetler and his
    friends were trudging forward in line for the Thunder Bound
    Express chairlift at Mammoth Mountain in the eastern
    Sierras of California.

    Wearing oversize jackets and pants so voluminous that
    waistlines and inseams were mere suggestions, and headed
    for a terrain park where they looked forward to careering
    in and out of half-pipes, they were the very models of
    snowboard culture. Except for one thing: they were there to
    ski.

    Mr. Benchetler, 17, and his friends are in the forefront of
    a growing trend in snow sports known as freeskiing or
    "new-school skiing," which is breathing new and lucrative
    life into the struggling ski industry. Using skis known as
    twin-tips, which are designed so skiers can move backward
    and forward down mountains, freeskiers borrow both the
    creative moves of snowboarding, using obstacles like rails
    and stumps for tricks, and, more important, something of
    its renegade image.

    "The level of skiing is almost equal with snowboarding
    now," said Mr. Benchetler, who has been freeskiing for five
    years and sports shoulder-length hair that curls up under
    his hat and goggles. "And the style of clothing and even
    the graphics on skis are cool now," he added.

    In the six years since the first pair of twin-tip skis were
    introduced by Salomon, new-school skiers have been
    reclaiming status and mountain space lost to snowboarders.
    Resort managers and ski instructors from Whistler-Blackcomb
    in British Columbia to Stratton Mountain in Vermont say
    they are transforming the scene on the slopes.

    "There are more and more young skiers in our terrain park
    each year," said Oren Tanzer the terrain park manager at
    Mammoth. "Skiing was in decline, and now there are almost
    just as many of them out there as snowboarders."

    According to SnowSports Industries America, a national
    trade group, the number of twin-tip skis sold (usually for
    more than $500 a pair), shot up 65 percent last season to
    23,000 over the previous winter. "We are starting to see a
    lot of these freeski brands get traction with customers 30
    years old and under," said Ira Rosh, the divisional
    merchandise manager of Paragon Sports, the largest sporting
    goods store in Manhattan. "Twin-tip ski and freeski apparel
    sales are already stronger than last year."

    Freeskiing has also spawned its own magazines, like
    Freeskier and Freeze. "We have seen more change in the ski
    industry in the past 12 months than we have in the past 20
    years," said Brad Fayfield, the editor and publisher of
    Freeskier, whose circulation has increased to 100,000 since
    2002. "If our magazine's growth is an indicator, then the
    ski industry is in for an epic ride."

    And freeskiing is fast gaining legitimacy as a competitive
    sport. Last year, it was included in world cup competition
    for the first time. And the sport is aiming for an
    invitation to the 2010 Olympic Games.

    It has been a long time coming for Mike Douglas, known as
    the godfather of new-school skiing. In 1997, Mr. Douglas, a
    Canadian freestyle skier, was coaching the Canadian
    Freestyle Ski team when he and four of his skiers began
    doing tricks in snowboarders' half-pipes. (Not to be
    confused with freeskiing, freestyle skiing is an Olympic
    sport involving acrobatic jumping and mogul skiing.) But
    the Canadians' single-tipped skis kept them from pushing as
    far as they wanted to go.

    At the time, ski manufacturers were focusing much of their
    energies on snowboarding, which for years had been gaining
    ground on skiing. Between 1993 and 1998 the number of
    alpine skiers had dropped by 13 percent as the number of
    snowboarders doubled. (Since then, skiing participation has
    continued to drop, from 10.5 million in 1997 to 7.4 million
    in 2003, while the number of snowboarders surged by more
    than 50 percent, from 3.7 million to 5.6 million, mostly
    among those under 24.)

    Ski loyalists, meanwhile, who wanted to depart from the
    standard downhill and mogul trails, were barred from the
    half-pipes and jumps in what were then called snowboard
    parks. Not surprisingly, the rapport between snowboarders
    and skiers was tense. "We had become the ugly stepchild of
    the new action-sports scene," Mr. Douglas said.

    Afraid that the evolution of skiing might come to a
    permanent halt, in August, 1997, Mr. Douglas put together a
    video documenting the moves he and his friends had
    perfected on skis and drafted a proposal for the
    construction of a fatter, softer ski that could withstand
    landings, with a turned-up tip in both the front and back
    for skiing and landing backwards. (Twin-tip skis are 151 to
    181 centimeters long, 60 to 71 inches.) After sending the
    package to every major ski company, only Salomon, a company
    known for its trendsetting innovations, wanted in.

    The result was the Teneighty, the first twin-tip ski, which
    reached the market in February 1998 and officially started
    the freeski movement. "The Teneighty was not just a leap in
    technology," said Hal Thomson, the communications manager
    of Salomon North America, "but a cultural movement that may
    be the biggest evolution ever in skiing."

    Within a year, competing ski and snowboard makers began
    producing twin-tips of their own, and both Freeze and
    Freeskiing magazines were started. It was not until last
    January, however, that new-school skiing gained wide-scale
    notice and respect, when a French freeskier named Candide
    Thovex sailed more than 20 feet off the ground in the
    half-pipe competition at the 2003 Winter X Games. To
    indicate just what a feat that was, ESPN compared his run
    with that of Shaun White, the snowboard superpipe gold
    medalist.

    At times, Mr. Thovex had soared a full four feet higher out
    of the half-pipe. "The minute Candide dropped in, you knew
    he was taking skiing to a new place," said Salema Masekela,
    the events commentator and a snowboarder. "I have never
    seen anyone go that big in the pipe."

    Skiing's new highs have attracted both alpine skiers and
    snowboarders. Many of the early converts were people like
    Justin Todd, 22, a skier all his life. Since new-school
    skiing didn't really exist at his local mountain in
    Montana, he didn't see his first pair of twin-tips until he
    saw freeskiing in a video four years ago.

    "Freeskiing is just more fun," said Mr. Todd, who moved to
    California to have better access to the terrain park at
    Mammoth. "I am not getting burnt out by it because there
    are always new tricks to be done. At Mammoth, a skier not
    on twin-tip skis is likely an adult."

    In lesser numbers, snowboarders have been swapping their
    boards for skis. Craig Coker, 19, who began snowboarding
    when he was 6, took up freeskiing after watching it in the
    1999 Winter X Games. "I liked that skiing felt so
    different," said Mr. Coker, who also now lives near Mammoth
    Mountain. "And that I didn't need to change the way I
    dressed or leave the park."

    Even professional snowboarders have been stepping onto
    skis. Mr. Thomson of Salomon said the company has received
    a surprising number of requests for skis this season from
    its professional snowboard team. "When you spend as many
    days of the year snowboarding as I do, it's fun to mix it
    up," one of the athletes, Jason Ford, said. "You change the
    platform you're on, and the mountain changes too."

    And so have lift-line politics. Skiers and snowboarders now
    huddle together, their clothes almost indistinguishable,
    their iPods loaded with the same music. "Freeskiers share
    the same lifestyle, culture and reason for being on the
    hill as snowboarders," Mr. Fayfield said.

    In short, it is now the thing your parents don't do. "It's
    become the counterculture," said Finlay Torrance, Mammoth's
    sports school manager. "I am seeing kids who are 10, an age
    when they typically take up snowboarding, graduating from
    our ski school wanting to keep skiing."

    Freeskiing's next generation is now one-upping the
    jaw-dropping moves pioneered by people like Mr. Douglas,
    both in terrain parks and in the backcountry, where they
    are launching themselves over 120-foot gaps: just wider
    than the wingspan of a 727 plane. All this before they are
    old enough to drink.

    Beginning Jan. 27 in Aspen, Colo., spectators for the 2004
    Winter X Games can expect to see the caliber of freeskiing
    leap ahead once more. "People are going to be blown away by
    the freeskiers this year," said Mr. Fayfield, who has been
    charting the moves of the sport's newest stars in his
    magazine. And for the first time, the games will be
    broadcast live, on ESPN.

    Skiers are certainly embracing new tribal bragging rights.
    The ski maker Line has made "I am a Skier" T-shirts.

    "Ten years ago a kid would be embarrassed to be a skier,"
    said Jason Levinthal, the company's founder and president,
    who began building twin-tip skis in his garage in 1995.
    "The T-shirt is a way of saying I am proud to be a skier."

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
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    Re: NY Times Freeskiing Article

    Originally posted by road trip
    [I]
    "Ten years ago a kid would be embarrassed to be a skier,"
    said Jason Levinthal, the company's founder and president,
    who began building twin-tip skis in his garage in 1995.
    Waste your time, read my crap, at:
    One Gear, Two Planks

  3. #3
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    Go

    Didn't Line begin by building snowlerblades? Kinda ballsy saying that kids were embarrased to be skiers, bwaaahhhaaaa.
    ________
    CRF150
    Last edited by hardrider; 01-24-2011 at 10:49 PM.

  4. #4
    Blurred Elevens Guest
    In comparison to most gapic stories, that one was written pretty well, except the huge contrast of quoting Levinthal AFTER making this statement.

    "(Twin-tip skis are 151 to
    181 centimeters long, 60 to 71 inches.)"

    So what the fuck are my LINE DRAGON 193's??!!!!!

    All in all, not too bad though for some gaper writer in New Yawk.

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