Lindsey Vonn: The Final Season Nominated for Two Emmy Awards
By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
April, 1 2020
Olympic champion, winningest female alpine ski racer of all time and Land Rover Ambassador Lindsey Vonn's HBO documentary, Lindsey Vonn: The Final Season, has been nominated for two sports Emmy awards.
Olympic champion, winningest female alpine ski racer of all time and Land Rover Ambassador Lindsey Vonn's HBO documentary, Lindsey Vonn: The Final Season, has been nominated for two sports Emmy awards.
Known as the most decorated female alpine skier of all time, Lindsey intimately recounts her final season in this feature-length documentary, with a look back at her transcendent career, from child prodigy with humble beginnings at Buck Hill, Minn. to the Olympic champion and winningest female alpine ski racer.
Teton Gravity Research, widely recognized as one of the premier documentary production companies in the outdoor action, adventure, and exploration space, had a camera crew embedded with Lindsey and the U.S. Ski Team throughout the winter months, capturing the final, intimate moments of her skiing journey.
The documentary is up for two Emmy Awards, each in good company, in the following categories:
OUTSTANDING SPORTS PROMOTIONAL ANNOUNCEMENT
2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup (All Eyes on Us) FOX/FS1/FS2/FOX Deportes
ESPN (There’s No Place Like Sports) ESPN
Lindsey Vonn: The Final Season (Trailer [Teton Gravity Research]) HBO
Pariah: The Lives and Deaths of Sonny Liston (Trailer) Showtime
Unrivaled: Earnhardt vs. Gordon ([NASCAR Productions/DLP Media Group]) FS1
OUTSTANDING CAMERA WORK
24/7 (Kelly Slater) HBO
The Dawn Wall ([Red Bull Media House/Sender Films]) Netflix
Inside the NFL (Shots Of The Year [NFL Films]) Showtime
Lindsey Vonn: The Final Season ([Teton Gravity Research]) HBO
Super Bowl LIV (Next 100 [72andSunny/Prettybird]) FOX
If you’re looking for something to watch while in quarantine, check out her powerful story on HBO, HBO On Demand, HBO GO, HBO NOW and partners’ streaming platforms.
2019-20 U.S. Freeski Team Season Highlights
By Andrew Gauthier
March, 31 2020
Maggie Voisin at the 2020 Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix freeski slopestyle finals at Mammoth Mountain, Calif. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard - Sarah Brunson)
Every winter ushers in new athletes, challenges and triumphs, and the 2019-20 competition season was no exception. The men and women of the U.S. Freeski Team found success across World Cup, Youth Olympic, and elite-level competition, once again solidifying the U.S. as a serious contender at the highest level of slopestyle, halfpipe, and big air freeskiing. The U.S. Freeski Team earned 20 FIS World Cup podiums, 12 podiums at X Games and Dew Tour, as well as five Youth Olympic Games medals.
Although 17 different athletes collected top-three finishes this season on the professional circuit, a few names rise to the top with consistently strong performances throughout the winter.
Following an impressive 2018-19 season, pro team member Alex Hall picked up right where he left off, immediately stringing together three-consecutive wins in big air at X Games Norway 2019; the Modena, Italy World Cup; and perhaps his pinnacle win of the season at the Visa Big Air presented by Land Rover in Atlanta, Ga. Alex executed a walk-off switch left double 1800 Buick to win the event and leave his legacy at SunTrust Park. He finished second overall in the FIS Big Air Cup Standings.
Alex was able to top three big air podiums before the New Year, prior to setting his sights on the slopestyle course. He went on to earn three more podiums at the debut of Dew Tour at Copper Mountain Colo. (slopestyle) as well as X Games Norway 2020 (knuckle huck and slopestyle) at Hafjell Resort. In addition, Alex also found the spotlight as the focal point of multiple film projects including Magma (filmed with teammate Hunter Hess) and Faction’s feature-length film The Collective. His well-rounded approach to freeskiing earned him the prestigious title of the 2020 Newschoolers Skier of the Year. Alex capitalized on every element of his craft including big air, slopestyle, rail-jams, film, and even the new X Games knuckle huck event.
Also excelling from the U.S. Freeski Slopestyle and Big Air Team was Colby Stevenson, who gained a new level of confidence in 2020, which materialized into numerous podiums. Colby collected top-three finishes across three different World Cup slopestyle events including Seiser Alm, Italy; Calgary, Alberta, Canada; and the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix at Mammoth Mountain, Calif. With the final World Cup slopestyle of the season in Silvaplana, Switzerland canceled due to Covid-19 precautions, Colby ended his season in second-place overall, but the top American, in the FIS Slopestyle Cup Standings. Teammates Deven Fagan, Cody LaPlante, and Nick Goepper all joined Colby in the top-10 finishing second, seventh, ninth, and 10th respectively.
Outside of World Cup competition, Colby made history at X Games Aspen 2020 by becoming the first X Games rookie to win gold in freeski slopestyle. Not only did Colby earn gold as his first X Games medal, but he doubled up by winning the inaugural ski knuckle huck event to complete his rock star X Games debut.
Other notable performances from the men of the U.S. Freeski Slopestyle and Big Air Team included rookie team athletes Deven Fagan and Cody LaPlante, each earning their first-ever World Cup podiums. Deven took third-place on home soil at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix at Mammoth Mountain, Calif. stomping a 1440 with authority on the last jump. Cody thrived in Europe rounding out the podium in third-place in Font Romeu, France, where he beat out a slew of Olympians and World Champions. Not only did Cody hold his own against an incredibly strong field, but he also did it in his first slopestyle competition back from ACL and meniscus surgery.
Speaking of comebacks, Cody wasn’t the only one to work his way back from rehab. No one did it better than Whitefish, Mont. local Maggie Voisin. Maggie decided to make her comeback from ACL surgery at the biggest event of the year: X Games Aspen. As Maggie’s fan’s and teammates watched her drop into the slopestyle course at Buttermilk Mountain, any lingering doubt that she had fully recovered quickly dissipated and her streak began. She gradually improved in every X Games competition for the remainder of the season earning bronze in Aspen slopestyle, silver in Norway’s big air, and gold in Norway’s slopestyle. However, Maggie’s post-recovery accomplishments were not limited to X Games. She also collected podiums at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix and Dew Tour. Her success was a direct result of her work ethic and drive to be back at the top of the sport. To close out the season in Norway, Maggie stomped a beautiful double cork 1260 safety as the perfect cherry on top of an amazing comeback contest season.
Also representing the women of the U.S. Freeski Slopestyle Team was Caroline Claire, who won the Seiser Alm, Italy, World Cup slopestyle. She stomped a switch double cork 900 and took home her third podium in three years at Seiser Alm.Caroline also earned the Newschoolers Breakthrough Award. The all-female segment in The Collective was named the "Ladies Choice Best Female Edit," in which Caroline had a significant part. In addition, although she did not reach the World Cup podium, rookie team member Marin Hamill finished second overall in the FIS Cup Standings, a remarkable accomplishment for the 18-year-old.
U.S. Freeski athletes continued to display their grit in the halfpipe with multiple athletes rebounding from injury. Both Olympic medalists David Wise and Brita Sigourney wasted no time finding their way back to the podium, each earning second-place at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix at Copper Mountain, Colo. David was returning from a broken femur and Brita from a tibia and fibula spiral fracture. Although on a different recovery timeline, Lyman Currier found the podium again for the first time following an ACL injury in 2014. He earned two third-place finishes at the Secret Garden, China, and Mammoth Grand Prix World Cups.
However, throughout the entire season, it was veteran Aaron Blunck who took the reins. Aaron finished in the top-three at five of the seven events he entered, displaying pure dominance and poise. Although his season was full of highlights, none compared to his winning performance at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix at Mammoth Mountain, Calif., where all three of his runs would have won the event. Head freeski judge Steele Spence described Aaron's runs as, “three of the best pipe runs of all time. They were the hardest runs and he executed them perfectly.” Aaron’s consistency would earn him the FIS Halfpipe Crystal Globe and his second X Games Aspen medal.
Alex Ferreira would earn X Games Aspen gold and became the first Aspen local to ever win back-to-back gold medals in any X Games discipline. In addition, fellow Colorado local Birk Irving also continued to prove himself as a contender, claiming podiums at the first and last halfpipe World Cups of the season. To kick off the season, Birk won the Winter Games NZ landing a never-been-done double-cork-720 that defied gravity. Birk closed out the season at the Calgary Rodeo World Cup in Canada with a third-place.
Although the 2019-20 season was cut short, fans around the world had the chance to experience the Winter Youth Olympic Games Lausanne 2020 in Switzerland, where young American freeskiers thrived and made their presence known. Combined, U.S. Freeski athletes earned five medals (two bronze, two silver, one gold). U.S. Rookie Team members Hunter Carey and Hanna Faulhaber earned second and third respectively in the halfpipe. Teammate Hunter Henderson took third in slopestyle, while pro team member Kiernan took home a gold in slopestyle and a silver in big air.
After strong performances by the rookies at the Youth Olympic Games, it’s no surprise that they also topped the NorAm Cup Standings. Hunter Henderson and Rell Harwood claimed the NorAm slopestyle and big air titles, while Hanna took home the halfpipe title.
The 2019-20 professional freeski competition season resulted in success at every level across all disciplines for U.S. athletes. There is no question as to the depth and breadth of the U.S. Freeski Team moving into the first of two Olympic selection years. The U.S. Freeski Team is primed and on track to set the tone as we take one step closer to the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympic season.
Relive all the top moments of the year with the videos below!
Alex Hall at the Visa Big Air presented by Land Rover at SunTrust Park. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard)
Alex Hall celebrating after his victory at the Visa Big Air presented by Land Rover at SunTrust Park. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard)
Andri Ragettli (left), Christian Nummedal (center), and Alex Hall (right) on the 2020 Dew Tour podium at Copper Mountain, Colo. (Dew Tour - Matt Sklar)
Alex Hall competing in men's ski slopestyle during X Games Norway 2020 (ESPN Images - Brett Wilhelm)
Johanne Killi (left), Caroline Claire (center), and Elena Gaskell (right) on the podium at the Seiser Alm slopestyle World Cup in Italy. (FIS Freeski - Mateusz Kielpinski)
Fabian Boesch (left), Birk Ruud (center), and Colby Stevenson (right) on the podium at the Seiser Alm slopestyle World Cup in Italy. (FIS Freeski - Mateusz Kielpinski)
Colby Stevenson (left), Andri Ragettli (center), and Deven Fagan (right) on the freeski slopestyle podium at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix at Mammoth Mountain, Calif. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard - Sarah Brunson)
Evan McEachran (left), Colby Stevenson (center), and Fabian Boesch (right) at the medal ceremony for Jeep Men's Ski Slopestyle during X Games Aspen 2020. (ESPN Images - Eric Lars Bakke)
Jesper Tjader (left), Mark Hendrickson (center), and Cody LaPlante (right) at the Font Romeu World Cup in France. (FIS Freeski - Chad Buchholz)
U.S Freeski Team Members Colby Stevenson (Left) and Nick Goepper (Right) stand atop the podium with Switzerland's Andri Ragettli (Center) (FIS Freeski – Chad Buchholz)
Maggie Voisin at the medal ceremony for Jeep Women's Ski Slopestyle during X Games Aspen 2020. (ESPN Images - Matt Morning)
Maggie Voisin with her slopestyle gold medal at X Games Norway 2020. (X Games Norway)
Maggie Voisin (left), Megan Oldham (center), and Johanne Killi (right) on the big air podium at X Games Norway 2020. (X Games Norway)
Maggie Voisin on the 2020 Dew Tour slopestyle podium at Copper Mountain, Colo. (Dew Tour - Bryce Kanights)
Americans Aaron Blunck (center) and David Wise (right) on the podium with Canadian Noah Bowman (left) at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix freeski finals at Copper Mountain, Colo. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard - Sarah Brunson)
Brita Sigourney (right) on the podium with Zoe Atkin (center) and Rachel Karker (left) at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix freeski finals at Copper Mountain, Colo. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard - Sarah Brunson)
Aaron Blunck at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix at Mammoth Mountain, Calif. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard - Sarah Brunson)
Americans Aaron Blunk (left) and Lyman Currier (right) on the podium with Canadian Noah Bowman (center) at the Secret Garden halfpipe finals in China. (FIS Freestyle - Buchholz)
Noah Bowman (left), Aaron Blunck (center) and Lyman Currier on the freeski halfpipe podium at the Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix at Mammoth Mountain, Calif. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard - Sarah Brunson)
Silver medallist Fanghui Li (left), Eileen Gu (center), and bronze medallist Hanna Faulhaber USA (right) on the podium during the mascot ceremony for the Freestyle Skiing Women’s Freeski Halfpipe at the Winter Youth Olympic Games, Lausanne, Switzerland. (OIS - Dylan Burns)
Noah Bowman, Birk Irving, and Aaron Blunck on the podium at the Winter Games NZ World Cup halfpipe at Cardrona Alpine Resort. (FIS Freestyle - Chad Buchholz)
Aaron Blunck (left), Alex Ferreira (center) and Brendan MacKay (right) at the medal ceremony for Men's Ski SuperPipe during X Games Aspen 2020. (ESPN Images - Eric Lars Bakke )
Melvin Moran (left), Kiernan Fagan (center), and Hunter Henderson (right) on the freeski slopestyle podium at the Winter Youth Olympic Games Lausanne 2020. (Christopher Levy)
Alex Hall celebrating his X Games Norway big air gold medal run in Oslo, Norway. (X Games Norway)
Hanna Faulhaber
Hanna grew up in a ski family, so it's no surprise she got her start in the halfpipe early. Faulhaber became an Olympian at just 17 years old, finishing 6th at the 2022 Beijing Games.
Hunter Henderson
-
Rell Harwood
Rell Harwood is a three time X Games medalist and two World Cup podiums. She started skiing when she was three years old, when her parents dropped her off at ski school to enjoy their day on the slopes.
Hunter Hess
Hunter Hess of the Stifel U.S. Freeski Team halfpipe roster is one of the most exciting athletes on the circuit. Growing up in Oregon, Hunter spent his time honing his love for skiing at Mt. Bachelor, where he developed his skills with the Mt.
Cody LaPlante
Cody grew up skiing in Truckee, California. He was two the first time his parents got him on skis at Alpine Meadows. Cody never dabbled in any other skiing discipline, he's been skiing park longer than he can remember (and wouldn't have it any other way).
Alex Hall
Alex Hall is the
Birk Irving
Winter Park native, Birk Irving, started sliding rails at age five and did his first 360 that same year. He was determined to be a freestyle skier, and when he got his first sponsor at age seven, he never looked back.
Colby Stevenson
Colby Stevenson,
Nick Goepper
Nick Goepper impressed the world after his retirement from a successful slopestyle career turned into finding a new identity in the halfpipe. After three Olympic medals in slopestyle, Goepper made the unprecedented switch into halfpipe skiing, with dreams of another Olympic medal.
Alex Ferreira
Alex Ferreira started competitive freeskiing when he was ten and his mom registered him for an aerials event without his knowledge. From there, Ferreira found halfpipe and has gone on to become one of the most decorated halfpipe skiers in history.
Aaron Blunck
Colorado native halfpipe freeskier Aaron Blunck is a three-time Olympian, who represented the U.S. at the Sochi, PyeongChang and Bejing Winter Olympic Games, finishing seventh in halfpipe skiing in all three Games.
David Wise
David Wise has been on the top of the halfpipe podium since early 2011, with a trophy case that includes the inaugural Olympic gold medal in men's ski halfpipe and a matching gold medal in halfpipe from the 2018 Games.
Hamilton Commits to at Least One More Season on World Cup
By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
March, 30 2020
Feel free to make fun of Simi Hamilton for becoming the old man who refused to hang it up. He won’t mind, as he did the same when he was younger. Of course, there is a drive behind the Aspen Olympian’s desire to keep going that is worth noting.
“I’m turning into one of those people I always kind of made fun of a little bit,” Hamilton joked. “I felt like I learned a lot of things about my body and my mind this year where I can kind of tweak a lot of things this coming training season and put in a really good next year. I’m psyched about giving it one more shot.”
Hamilton, 32, is an Aspen native and longtime fixture on the U.S. cross-country ski team. After time at Middlebury College in Vermont, Hamilton went on to compete in three Winter Olympic Games (2010, 2014, 2018) and every world championship since 2011.
Hanna grew up in a ski family, so it's no surprise she got her start in the halfpipe early. Faulhaber became an Olympian at just 17 years old, finishing 6th at the 2022 Beijing Games.
Hunter Henderson
-
Rell Harwood
Rell Harwood is a three time X Games medalist and two World Cup podiums. She started skiing when she was three years old, when her parents dropped her off at ski school to enjoy their day on the slopes.
Hunter Hess
Hunter Hess of the Stifel U.S. Freeski Team halfpipe roster is one of the most exciting athletes on the circuit. Growing up in Oregon, Hunter spent his time honing his love for skiing at Mt. Bachelor, where he developed his skills with the Mt.
Cody LaPlante
Cody grew up skiing in Truckee, California. He was two the first time his parents got him on skis at Alpine Meadows. Cody never dabbled in any other skiing discipline, he's been skiing park longer than he can remember (and wouldn't have it any other way).
Alex Hall
Alex Hall is the
Birk Irving
Winter Park native, Birk Irving, started sliding rails at age five and did his first 360 that same year. He was determined to be a freestyle skier, and when he got his first sponsor at age seven, he never looked back.
Colby Stevenson
Colby Stevenson,
Nick Goepper
Nick Goepper impressed the world after his retirement from a successful slopestyle career turned into finding a new identity in the halfpipe. After three Olympic medals in slopestyle, Goepper made the unprecedented switch into halfpipe skiing, with dreams of another Olympic medal.
Alex Ferreira
Alex Ferreira started competitive freeskiing when he was ten and his mom registered him for an aerials event without his knowledge. From there, Ferreira found halfpipe and has gone on to become one of the most decorated halfpipe skiers in history.
Aaron Blunck
Colorado native halfpipe freeskier Aaron Blunck is a three-time Olympian, who represented the U.S. at the Sochi, PyeongChang and Bejing Winter Olympic Games, finishing seventh in halfpipe skiing in all three Games.
David Wise
David Wise has been on the top of the halfpipe podium since early 2011, with a trophy case that includes the inaugural Olympic gold medal in men's ski halfpipe and a matching gold medal in halfpipe from the 2018 Games.
USASA Hosts Relief Auction To Aid Organization
By Andrew Gauthier
March, 27 2020
The United States of America Snowboard and Freeski Association (USASA) is currently hosting the 2020 USASA National Championships Relief Auction through April 8 to help bridge the financial gap created by the loss of this year's event due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The USASA National Championships traditionally serve as a key revenue source that has driven the mission and vision of the USASA for over 30 years. With the longevity and future of USASA in jeopardy, the organization is asking for community support in their time of need.
U.S. Ski & Snowboard and USASA have been working together to support freeskiing and snowboarding for more than 20 years, creating opportunities for athletes, coaches, and judges. USASA produces more than 500 events at 120 resorts through its 32 unique series that engages the culture and community of both sports. In addition to the hosting of events, USASA also provides an education structure for the development of coaches, officials and judges in the U.S. hosted through in-person clinics and social outreach. Moreover, the USASA National Championships are part of a robust pipeline that carries athletes from USASA regional events all the way up to Olympic level competition.
U.S. Ski & Snowboard relies on organizations like USASA to connect the freeski and snowboard grassroots pipeline to the elite level, thereby increasing interest, participation, and securing the future of the sports we love. The COVID-19 pandemic has had negative impacts globally on the well-being of individuals and businesses across the world. USASA is no exception to the challenging environment we all must confront in light of this unprecedented time. To view products and learn more about the auction, visit the link below.
How Shiffrin Won Without Even Stepping into the Start Gate
By Megan Harrod
March, 24 2020
After missing more than a month of competition due to the tragic passing of her father, Olympic and World Champion Mikaela Shiffrin made the decision on March 5th to return to Europe for the final FIS Ski World Cup races of the season.
On the morning of March 11th, she announced she would be stepping into the start gate in Åre, Sweden—in what would be the final three races of the 2019-20 season. Later that day, FIS announced that the Åre, Sweden race series had been cancelled, therefore ending the season. At that point, Mikaela was still in the running for the overall, giant slalom, and slalom globes...though it would have been a challenge to win all three, it was possible. But, it wasn't about globes. Or winning. For Mikaela, just getting on a plane and heading over to Europe was a victory after all she had been through.
Originally, the New York Times had planned to travel to Åre to cover Mikaela's quest for her fourth-straight overall title, but when reporter Karen Crouse boarded her flight to head to Europe, she had different goals. Her plan would be to cover Mikaela's potential return to the start gate, and the recent coronavirus outbreak. As it turns out, the coronavirus outbreak would lead to the abrupt end to the season, but Karen felt strongly about her message: that Mikaela had already won, without even stepping into the start gate. In her piece, entitled "For Mikaela Shiffrin, a Week Without Races Is a Resounding Success," Karen focused on what that return was like for Mikaela.
Without stepping in the start gate, Shiffrin had accomplished what she had traveled more than 4,000 miles to do. So she accepted with equanimity the news, on Wednesday — less than 22 hours before the start of Thursday’s parallel slalom — that the competition had been canceled in the cascading fallout from the deadly spread of the coronavirus.
As Mikaela said in the article,
If nothing else, I’m grateful that we came this far, even with the races canceled. So I got to get out there for that training session with full intentions of preparing for a race and skied with that intensity. I accomplished that, and that was all I had set out to do. It was maybe in the long term even better that I didn’t step into the start gate and have to deal with the mental challenges of knowing that the overall title was still in the cards, because the competitor in me probably would have come out and said, ‘I care about the results,’ even though that was never my focus.
One of the hardest steps in mourning is the "first one that takes you out of the house and out to face the world again. So whatever Shiffrin lost by not being able to race three times this week, she recognized that she gained infinitely more," wrote Karen.
Mikaela's 2019-20 Season In Numbers
Though many—including Mikaela herself—believed this season to be disappointing compared to last year, it was what most athletes would consider a dream season. Nothing can live up to the historic 2018-19 season Mikaela had, with 17 World Cup victories, three World Championship medals, and record-smashing performances week in and week out. Vreni Schneider's 14 victories in a season was a record that stood for 30 years. Mikaela's 17 victories in a season will be hard for anyone to break...ever. Again, not impossible. But it will be extremely difficult.
This season, Mikaela won six World cup races across four disciplines. She podiumed in 13 of 19 races. In Levi, she became the winningest slalom skier of all time, surpassing Ingemar Stenmark (40 victories) with 41 slalom victories. She finished the season with two more victories, bringing her career-win total to 43 slalom victories—tied for most discipline wins among women (Lindsey Vonn has 43 downhill victories, while Swede Ingemar Stenmark leads for the men with 46 giant slalom victories).
With her massive 1.36-second margin giant slalom win in Lienz, Austria on December 28, 2019, Mikaela made history yet again as she earned 63rd World Cup victory, surpassing Austrian Annemarie Moser-Pröll into fourth on the all-time win list behind Marcel Hirscher (67), Lindsey Vonn (82) and Ingemar Stenmark (86). Across men and women, she tied Slovakia's Petra Vlhova and France's Alexis Pinturault for most World Cup victories, with six wins.
In a near-perfect weekend in late January, with her mother and father there to witness her brilliance, Mikaela was first, fourth and first in two downhills and a super-G on a speed track she had never been down before, in Bansko, Bulgaria - amassing 250 points on the weekend. Her win tally? Career victory number 66, just one shy of Marcel Hirscher's 67 victories. Despite missing nine races due to her father's passing, Mikaela ended up second in the overall standings, second in the slalom standings (by just 20 points), third in the giant slalom standings, fifth in the downhill standings, and seventh in super-G standings. For the fourth-straight season, (again, despite missing nine races), Mikaela was the top earner in prize money on the World Cup circuit, among the men and women.
Buckle up and get excited, the 2020-21 season will be one for the ages.
Two-time Olympic gold medalist and eight-time world champion Mikaela Shiffrin began turning heads almost instantly when she finished top 15 in her first two NorAm Cup races. But the heads started spinning when she won a super combined in British Colombia two weeks later, and then ski fans and coaches went cross-eyed when she landed a World Cup podium during her rookie season–at age 16.
Team USA is returning from 2020 World Junior/ U23 Championships with 10 sparkling medals in tow and our first-ever individual Junior World Champion to boot. Absolutely insane and impressive, no doubt!! These successful results have been a dream for the US to achieve since I was just beginning skiing. But I’m worried, honestly, that our ski nation will see these medals and set increasingly high standards, and that the little victories will get overlooked.
I began my World Junior Championships racing career in 2015 in Almaty, Kazakhstan. I got 41st or 40th or something like that in my races and I left that trip feeling STOKEDDD! But as I’m looking back, I wasn’t all that motivated by results that trip. Of course, I hoped to ski well and earn a good finishing place…But when I think about that trip, I think about putting glitter on Bryan Fish’s face before the relay; I think about the lady I came across on a jog who was literally taking a poo on the sidewalk; I think about whether or not I consumed horse meat unknowingly at the hotel buffet. Those moments and memories fueled me through the next summer of training as I longed to experience more of this new lifestyle. What I didn’t fully recognize was that having low pressure for results allowed me to enjoy the trip beyond the race trails and genuinely have fun.
The following year went differently for me. I found myself worrying about qualifying for the World Juniors trip months in advance. I had new expectations and internal pressure to continue my upward trend and improve my results upon the previous year and qualify for the trip in a higher ranked position. But I didn’t even qualify. And I was devastated—embarrassed, even. I couldn’t believe I had to stand as the second alternate in front of hundreds of people who had seen me qualify for this event the year before.
Hanna grew up in a ski family, so it's no surprise she got her start in the halfpipe early. Faulhaber became an Olympian at just 17 years old, finishing 6th at the 2022 Beijing Games.
Hunter Henderson
-
Rell Harwood
Rell Harwood is a three time X Games medalist and two World Cup podiums. She started skiing when she was three years old, when her parents dropped her off at ski school to enjoy their day on the slopes.
Hunter Hess
Hunter Hess of the Stifel U.S. Freeski Team halfpipe roster is one of the most exciting athletes on the circuit. Growing up in Oregon, Hunter spent his time honing his love for skiing at Mt. Bachelor, where he developed his skills with the Mt.
Cody LaPlante
Cody grew up skiing in Truckee, California. He was two the first time his parents got him on skis at Alpine Meadows. Cody never dabbled in any other skiing discipline, he's been skiing park longer than he can remember (and wouldn't have it any other way).
Alex Hall
Alex Hall is the
Birk Irving
Winter Park native, Birk Irving, started sliding rails at age five and did his first 360 that same year. He was determined to be a freestyle skier, and when he got his first sponsor at age seven, he never looked back.
Colby Stevenson
Colby Stevenson,
Nick Goepper
Nick Goepper impressed the world after his retirement from a successful slopestyle career turned into finding a new identity in the halfpipe. After three Olympic medals in slopestyle, Goepper made the unprecedented switch into halfpipe skiing, with dreams of another Olympic medal.
Alex Ferreira
Alex Ferreira started competitive freeskiing when he was ten and his mom registered him for an aerials event without his knowledge. From there, Ferreira found halfpipe and has gone on to become one of the most decorated halfpipe skiers in history.
Aaron Blunck
Colorado native halfpipe freeskier Aaron Blunck is a three-time Olympian, who represented the U.S. at the Sochi, PyeongChang and Bejing Winter Olympic Games, finishing seventh in halfpipe skiing in all three Games.
David Wise
David Wise has been on the top of the halfpipe podium since early 2011, with a trophy case that includes the inaugural Olympic gold medal in men's ski halfpipe and a matching gold medal in halfpipe from the 2018 Games.
Olympic Champions Shiffrin and Diggins Join Forces to Give Back
By Megan Harrod
March, 23 2020
Olympic champions Mikaela Shiffrin and Jessie Diggins have joined forces with professional tennis player Madison Keys to give back to their local communities in the face of the coronavirus outbreak under the "Kindness Wins #KindnessInCrisis" Initiative.
Olympic champions Mikaela Shiffrin and Jessie Diggins have joined forces with professional tennis player Madison Keys to give back to their local communities in the face of the coronavirus outbreak with the "Kindness Wins #KindnessInCrisis" Initiative.
Kindness Wins, a nonprofit that rallies athletes and acts as a collaborative engine for kindness, is organizing an online auction for professional athletes to support relief needs in their community. The initiative matches athletes who want to help those most in need of relief during this challenging and uncertain time, with 100% of the proceeds of the auction going to the organization(s) of the athletes' choice.
Following their Instagram Live last week, Mikaela asked Jessie to get involved with the auction, in which Mikaela has decided to donate the proceeds to the Colorado Covid Relief Fund and Food Bank of the Rockies. Funds raised for the Colorado Covid Relief Fund will beused to support the needs of communities impacted by COVID-19 in both response and recovery. The fund will support work in three categories: prevention, impact, and recovery efforts. Funds raised for the Food Bank of the Rockies will be used to support anyone experiencing food insecurity due to COVID-19. The fund will support families thrive by efficiently procuring and distributing food and essentials to the hungry through our programs and partner agencies. Every $1 you give helps provide four meals.
Jessie will donate all proceeds of her auctioned items to The Sheridan Story. Funds raised will directly support the increase in food inventory and provide meals to hundreds of thousands of children increasingly facing food insecurity in the Twin Cities area and beyond. Every $100 makes it possible for 25 children to receive meals.
Hanna grew up in a ski family, so it's no surprise she got her start in the halfpipe early. Faulhaber became an Olympian at just 17 years old, finishing 6th at the 2022 Beijing Games.
Hunter Henderson
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Rell Harwood
Rell Harwood is a three time X Games medalist and two World Cup podiums. She started skiing when she was three years old, when her parents dropped her off at ski school to enjoy their day on the slopes.
Hunter Hess
Hunter Hess of the Stifel U.S. Freeski Team halfpipe roster is one of the most exciting athletes on the circuit. Growing up in Oregon, Hunter spent his time honing his love for skiing at Mt. Bachelor, where he developed his skills with the Mt.
Cody LaPlante
Cody grew up skiing in Truckee, California. He was two the first time his parents got him on skis at Alpine Meadows. Cody never dabbled in any other skiing discipline, he's been skiing park longer than he can remember (and wouldn't have it any other way).
Alex Hall
Alex Hall is the
Birk Irving
Winter Park native, Birk Irving, started sliding rails at age five and did his first 360 that same year. He was determined to be a freestyle skier, and when he got his first sponsor at age seven, he never looked back.
Colby Stevenson
Colby Stevenson,
Nick Goepper
Nick Goepper impressed the world after his retirement from a successful slopestyle career turned into finding a new identity in the halfpipe. After three Olympic medals in slopestyle, Goepper made the unprecedented switch into halfpipe skiing, with dreams of another Olympic medal.
Alex Ferreira
Alex Ferreira started competitive freeskiing when he was ten and his mom registered him for an aerials event without his knowledge. From there, Ferreira found halfpipe and has gone on to become one of the most decorated halfpipe skiers in history.
Aaron Blunck
Colorado native halfpipe freeskier Aaron Blunck is a three-time Olympian, who represented the U.S. at the Sochi, PyeongChang and Bejing Winter Olympic Games, finishing seventh in halfpipe skiing in all three Games.
David Wise
David Wise has been on the top of the halfpipe podium since early 2011, with a trophy case that includes the inaugural Olympic gold medal in men's ski halfpipe and a matching gold medal in halfpipe from the 2018 Games.
Jessie Diggins Can Smile Despite Cancellation of Minneapolis Ski Race
By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
March, 18 2020
Jessie Diggins (left), the Olympic Gold Medal winning cross country skier from Stillwater, Minn., skied with local high school skiers at Theodore Wirth Park on Tuesday morning. (Star Tribune - Brian Peterson)
There would have been no sense in letting a beautiful day go to waste. Though Tuesday’s World Cup cross-country ski races were canceled last week, Jessie Diggins showed up at Theodore Wirth Park anyway, with silver glitter on her cheeks and a smile on her face.
Were it not for the coronavirus pandemic, the Olympic gold medalist from Afton would have been facing her global rivals in a freestyle sprint. As many as 20,000 spectators were expected to line the course, clanging cowbells to welcome World Cup cross-country racing back to America after a 19-year absence. Instead, Diggins zipped around the snowy loop with a group of high school girls, to a soundtrack of clanks and bangs as workers disassembled the grandstand.
Two-time Olympic gold medalist and eight-time world champion Mikaela Shiffrin began turning heads almost instantly when she finished top 15 in her first two NorAm Cup races. But the heads started spinning when she won a super combined in British Colombia two weeks later, and then ski fans and coaches went cross-eyed when she landed a World Cup podium during her rookie season–at age 16.
The 2020 U.S. Aerials Nationals Championship podium at Bristol Mountain, N.Y. For the women: Ashley Caldwell in first, Kaila Kuhn in second, Megan Nick in third. For the men: Eric Loughran in first, Quinn Dehlinger in second, Jon Lillis in third.
After four weeks on the road competing back-to-back World Cups the U.S. Aerial Ski Team capped off their season at Bristol Mountain, N.Y. at the 2020 U.S. Freestyle Aerials National Championships.
Several athletes on the U.S. Freestyle Ski Team got their start at Bristol Mountain, including Jon and Chris Lillis. The Lillis family was instrumental in creating Mikey’s Jump, the newest American aerials site, in honor of their late youngest brother, Mikey. The event was a special homecoming for the Lillis brothers and a meaningful way to end the Team’s season.
An unseasonably warm East Coast winter made it impossible to build the triple kicker. But event organizers were still able to provide elite-level competition using just the double and single kickers. Bristol will also be the site of the 2021 Aerials Championships and the mountain looks forward to another chance to showcase its venue.
Coming off of her first podium of the World Cup season at the last aerials’ stop, Ashley Caldwell earned her fourth U.S. Nationals Championship title. “It’s really nice to come back to the States after a long season,” she said. “And this is a nice cherry on top of a medium, good season [for me]. It’s kind of tiring and exhausting to be on the road for that long, especially the places that we go. But this mountain was so excited to host this event and despite some of the odds we were facing, they hosted a good event and I'm excited to come back next year.” Ashley shared the podium with Kaila Kuhn, who came in second with her first U.S. Ski Team podium, and Megan Nick, in third.
On the men’s side Eric Loughran took the win, his first U.S. Nationals title. “It feels really good to earn this title at the end of the season,” he said. “And it’s pretty sweet to have done it on the East Coast where I’m originally from, my mom was here and that was super special. We had some warm conditions, it was a little tricky. But the resort crushed it, and I’m super excited to come back next year.” Quinn Dehlinger claimed second, his first podium appearance of his U.S. Ski Team career, and Jon Lillis came in third.
Athletes of the U.S. Aerials Team look forward to some much earned R&R and getting back to training. After all, there is no true off season in elite sports and as Ashley knows, “It’s game on until the Olympics.”
Hanna grew up in a ski family, so it's no surprise she got her start in the halfpipe early. Faulhaber became an Olympian at just 17 years old, finishing 6th at the 2022 Beijing Games.
Hunter Henderson
-
Rell Harwood
Rell Harwood is a three time X Games medalist and two World Cup podiums. She started skiing when she was three years old, when her parents dropped her off at ski school to enjoy their day on the slopes.
Hunter Hess
Hunter Hess of the Stifel U.S. Freeski Team halfpipe roster is one of the most exciting athletes on the circuit. Growing up in Oregon, Hunter spent his time honing his love for skiing at Mt. Bachelor, where he developed his skills with the Mt.
Cody LaPlante
Cody grew up skiing in Truckee, California. He was two the first time his parents got him on skis at Alpine Meadows. Cody never dabbled in any other skiing discipline, he's been skiing park longer than he can remember (and wouldn't have it any other way).
Alex Hall
Alex Hall is the
Birk Irving
Winter Park native, Birk Irving, started sliding rails at age five and did his first 360 that same year. He was determined to be a freestyle skier, and when he got his first sponsor at age seven, he never looked back.
Colby Stevenson
Colby Stevenson,
Nick Goepper
Nick Goepper impressed the world after his retirement from a successful slopestyle career turned into finding a new identity in the halfpipe. After three Olympic medals in slopestyle, Goepper made the unprecedented switch into halfpipe skiing, with dreams of another Olympic medal.
Alex Ferreira
Alex Ferreira started competitive freeskiing when he was ten and his mom registered him for an aerials event without his knowledge. From there, Ferreira found halfpipe and has gone on to become one of the most decorated halfpipe skiers in history.
Aaron Blunck
Colorado native halfpipe freeskier Aaron Blunck is a three-time Olympian, who represented the U.S. at the Sochi, PyeongChang and Bejing Winter Olympic Games, finishing seventh in halfpipe skiing in all three Games.
David Wise
David Wise has been on the top of the halfpipe podium since early 2011, with a trophy case that includes the inaugural Olympic gold medal in men's ski halfpipe and a matching gold medal in halfpipe from the 2018 Games.
Remaining Events of 2020 U.S. Junior Cross Country Championships Cancelled
By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
March, 12 2020
In support of efforts to minimize the transmission of the Coronavirus (COVID-19), U.S. Ski & Snowboard in conjunction with the local organizing committee at the Auburn Ski Club Training Center and Division Team Leaders, have made the difficult decision to cancel the remainder of the 2020 U.S. Junior National Cross Country Ski Championships.
In keeping with updated information from the State of California Department of Health and the recent recommendations from the Governor of California that non-essential gatherings of more than 250 people should be postponed, we are prioritizing the health and safety of our athletes, coaches, staff, volunteers, and spectators involved in these events. We are devastated to announce this cancelation, however, COVID-19 is a fast-evolving situation globally and we know this decision is in the best interest of our broader sport community with regards to handling the situation we are all facing.
We are grateful to the significant amount of work invested by the Organizing Committee – a volunteer group assembled with the Auburn Ski Club Training Center – who were excited to host a full week of events to the nation’s best skiers.