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Aerial Team Makes Summer Splash

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
October, 14 2020
Kaila Kuhn
Kaila Kuhn jumps at the UOP during the last block of aerial training (U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

The aerial skiers of the U.S. Freestyle Ski Team took their last flights off of the water ramps on October 3, marking the end of their domestic training period. 

Each summer the Spence Eccles Freestyle Pool at Official Training Site Utah Olympic Park (UOP) becomes the aerial athletes’ second home, and this summer was no exception. Thanks to the efforts of the UOP and U.S. Ski & Snowboard staff, athletes had consistent access to world-class training even during a worldwide pandemic. 

“Four months ago, summer 2020 was a big question mark,” said Head Aerials Coach Vladimir (Vlad) Lebedev. “Fortunately we were able to run an almost-full summer program. Overall the team did really well, everyone had a lot of success.”

After several months of national and local lockdowns earlier this spring, athletes had a renewed appreciation for access to training opportunities. With COVID-19 protocols in place, athletes were able to get back to work.

Three-time Olympian and World Champion Ashley Caldwell had one of her most successful summer training periods in recent years. Ashley is known for pushing the boundaries of sport, being the only American woman currently to compete the triple - a historically male-dominated jump. Ashley did not compete triples during the 2019-2020 season, but was back training them this summer, which is all part of her plan as she prepares for her fourth Olympics in 2022. 
 


“I’ve gone into comp season without training on water multiple times,” said Ashley. “It’s not very fun, it’s actually quite scary. Being able to train triples this summer increases my confidence dramatically going into the winter season. Taking a year off competing triples was hard for me, so I am excited to get back to it and live up to the athlete I have tried to be my entire career.” 

World Cup winner Chris Lillis added a quintuple twisting triple backflip to his repertoire, ending the summer as the athlete with the team’s most difficult trick. “Chris actually learned two quints,” explained Vlad. “But we decided to focus on the double full full double full because he felt more confident on that one.” 

“There is a very big difference between training quints than my quad twists,” said Chris. “It’s an upgrade in skill and focus. The trick is extremely hard, there are very few people who do it on snow. I’m mentally preparing to join that group. No American has competed a quint on snow since Speedy in the 2010 Olympics. I have a lot of work to do before I throw it in season. The biggest thing I did to get prepared is that I did 100 on water. I worked every day.

“With COVID-19 this season [and the world being so uncertain] I’m not exactly sure where I’m going to throw it,” he added. “It will be whenever I am ready. My goal is to train it on snow and get it to the point where I am ready to compete and win events with it.”

 

 

Many athletes also took the summer prep period as an opportunity to add new tricks to their arsenals. Current top-ranked American woman Megan Nick added two new tricks to her bag: a full double dull and a double full full, also known as the two Millers. Winter Vinecki also learned a double full full. Eric Loughran brought a full full double full into his repertoire. Justin Schoenefeld trained quints this summer but decided to focus on his quads for the 2020-2021 season. He brought a full full double full into his program, which he will bring to snow this November. 

“Considering we have World Champs this year, [having three quads] puts me at advantage,” explained Justin. “This will only be my third winter doing triples and didn't seem like it was going to happen for me to get five twists on snow this year, especially the way it was going on water. Vlad and I weren’t  sure if it was the right quint twist for me, so I will experiment next summer some more.” 

 

 

Quinn Dehlinger, who made his U.S. Ski Team debut last season, started jumping off of the triple. “Quinn had a great summer,” said Vlad. “He got in a lot of numbers, upped his DD and the quality overall of his jumps looks really nice. He did qualify some triples to bring to snow, so he may compete those later this year, but it isn’t necessary at this early stage of his career. The gap between doubles and triples is large and usually two or three years.”

Megan Smallhouse and Kaila Kuhn, who also made their U.S. Ski Team debuts last season, focused on their doubles, and worked hard all summer on the ramps and tramps to prepare for 2020-2021. “Despite facing some challenges due to COVID-19, our team was still able to have a great summer of training,” said Kaila. “I, along with my teammates, have been working on perfecting our jumps for snow while staying diligent about the COVID-19 protocols in order to maintain a safe training environment. I’m very happy with the improvements I’ve made in my jumping this summer and I’m excited to take my jumps to snow!”

Madison Varmette had another successful summer and used her spring quarantine to focus on her at-home fitness. This summer marked Dani Loeb’s first with the Team after being nominated this spring. 

Although athletes are no longer hucking themselves into the pool, they are hard at work on dry land for the month of October focusing on strength and conditioning. The team will then set off for Finland to train on snow ahead of their scheduled World Cup opener in Ruka. This will be the first time in recent memory that Aerials has traveled out of the country to train on snow. 

“With the world the way it is right now and all of the unknowns there’s stress but I’m excited to jump [on snow],” said Justin. “I haven’t done any traveling for training in my career, so I'm excited to do that.” 

“I’m looking forward to getting back out on the competition circuit,” added Chris. “The whole team in general proved we have a lot of hungry dogs that want to podium, that want medals, that want to win. I’m looking forward to competing for those spots. Hopefully this season we’ll be taking home more medals than ever before.”

 

Follow the U.S. Aerials Freestyle Ski Team on social media

Instagram: @usskiteam

Facebook: @usskiandsnowboard

Twitter: @usskiteam

Moguls Wraps Domestic Summer Training

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
October, 9 2020
Alex Lewis
Alex Lewis converses with Head Coach Matt Gnoza during training at the UOP (U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

Cooler morning temperatures and the appearance of dry suits on the water ramps signaled the final domestic training period in Park City, Utah for The U.S. Moguls Freestyle Team. 

The final camp, which ran from September 19 - October 2, provided athletes an upgraded Snowflex surface on the moguls-specific jump at the Spence Eccles Freestyle Pool at Official Training Site Utah Olympic Park (UOP). Head Coach Matt Gnoza noted that all of the athletes said it allowed them to have a more realistic stance and takeoff. “This camp was all about taking skills to the steeper inrun, with quicker transitioning,” he explained. “It’s a more realistic mogul jump. Jumps on snow are steeper and quicker than the single [at the UOP]. With the addition of the Snowflex surface, it’s even more realistic as to what an athlete would expect in competition. It is a really good improvement to our training facilities.”

 

 

The last 12 days of water ramping capped off an atypical, yet productive, summer for the athletes of the U.S. Moguls Team. Due to the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic, Moguls shifted their programming to focus on domestic training opportunities, and spent longer periods of time at the UOP than usual. “We worked through 12 days of ramping per camp as opposed to eight,” noted Matt. “In the end it allowed the athletes a little bit more time to fine tune some of their skills. In the past our prep structure moved quicker for progressions to get ready for snow.”

Tess Johnson, the youngest American to medal at a Freestyle World Championships, took this summer as an opportunity to shift her mindset and noted that it was her best and most fun training period ever. “The UOP’s new mogul jump made our training variable and realistic, and I think I was smiling after every jump despite the freezing water in early October. I focused on finally moving away from my stock 360, backflip run, and am stoked to say that I have four new tricks ready for snow and competition. It was the first summer I made substantial progress on my cork 7 and I even made up a new trick that no one else does and is my personal favorite (you’ll have to tune in this year to see it)! In years past I’ve always thought of water ramping as a weak point of mine, and so it was never very fun. This year I actively changed my attitude and approach, and it really paid off.” 

Training provided consistency during a time when the world is anything but. Jesse Andringa, who returned to snow following shoulder surgery this spring, reflected on the mental aspect of his prep period. “This summer was difficult for me with several setbacks to training -  with my shoulder surgery rehab, and also bruised lungs from a crash where I was spitting up blood, to COVID-19 and all of the other issues in the world - but my coaches and sports psych helped me stay focused and I ended up having a hoot of a time.” 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

@idoneusa @usskiteam

A post shared by Jesse Andringa (@jesse_bare) on

 

Moguls has the month of October “off,” during which they will spend time with their families at home while training remotely before heading over to Europe to begin their World Cup season. “The month break is one, because the UOP will close the pool, but also, we found out because of the imposed local and state quarantines earlier this summer and travel restrictions, that our group is intrinsically motivated,” explained Matt. Athletes remained hungry and focused even without access to gyms or face-to-face time with coaches. “If they had to lift sandbags, they lifted sandbags. Brad [Wilson] made his own weight equipment out of cement and pipes. That attitude will carry forward. We’ll watch the leaves fall and when winter comes, we’ll be ready.”

The team is set to depart for Scandinavia in early November, which will mean a considerable learning curve in getting back up to World Cup skiing snuff. “We’ll be able to build into our season as the Scandinavian resorts build into their winter,” said Matt. “As they start making snow, we’ll ski flat trails. By the time we’re ready for a single jump, they’ll be able to make one. Then they’ll focus on prepping their courses and we’ll be focused on getting ready to ski top to bottoms.”

One thing is for certain, there will be snow to ski on, as many Scandinavian resorts practice snow storage. The moguls skiers of the U.S. Ski Team haven’t seen snow since July during their only summer on-snow training camp and the anticipation is at an all-time high. 

“[This summer] I was mainly focused on challenging my jumps to be ready for every circumstance that I would face on snow,” said Kai Owens, who made her World Cup debut last season. “I am super excited to see my tricks progress, and test the consistency of them on snow!”

Follow the U.S. Moguls Freestyle Ski Team on social media:

Instagram: @usskiteam
Facebook: @usskiandsnowboard
Twitter: @usskiteam

To support the U.S. Moguls Freestyle Ski Team, please click here for more information. 

Shiffrin's Return on Hold, As She Announces Tweaked Back

By Megan Harrod
October, 9 2020
Mikaela Shiffrin Sits Out Soelden

It's been eight months since two-time Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin has stepped in the FIS Ski World Cup start gate. The World Cup opener at Soelden, Austria on Oct. 17th was set to be her return to competition, but on Friday Mikaela announced on social media that she will sit the season opener out due to a tweaked back.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

As most of you probably know (if you don’t then mark your calendars now!) the @fisalpine World Cup opener at Soelden is just over one week from today 🥳🥳... but much to my disappointment, I will not be able to start this year🤦‍♀️. After tweaking my back skiing last week, I have been advised to sit Soelden out to let my back heal so I can race the rest of the season. Having started in Soelden for the last eight years straight, this feels...really frustrating and strange (for lack of better words). Luckily, this injury will heal and I will be back in the start soon... (and I can’t wait😏). While this is a bummer to not be racing myself, I am super psyched to watch my teammates compete. They are looking strong, fast, and fired up 🤟🤟. I’ll be cheering as loud as I can for our US women and men next weekend and I hope you will be too! I want to thank everyone, from my sponsors to the media, to the fans, the U.S. Ski Team staff and my teammates, and especially my hometown community, family and friends, for your support in this whole process and for helping me get back out there doing the sport I love. YA’LL... this is HAPPENING. With all the uncertainty throughout this year, we are only ONE WEEK (and a day) away from the start of the World Cup season and that is something to be really excited about🥳🥳. Okay, maybe my countdown has been delayed, but the big countdown is ON and I can’t wait for it to start. I’m wishing the best to everyone racing in Soelden, and I’ll see you all soon👍👍. (📸: Dad🤍)

A post shared by Mikaela Shiffrin ⛷💨 (@mikaelashiffrin) on

Next up, Mikaela will plan to head back to the States to rest and recover, and her return to competition is TBD, but as she says "Luckily, this injury will heal and I will be back in the start soon... (and I can't wait.)." 

FIS Confirms 2020-21 World Cup Calendars; Freestyle, Freeski, and Snowboard Competition Set to Return to American Venues

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
October, 9 2020
U.S. Ski & Snowboard

The International Ski Federation (FIS) confirmed the 2020-21 World Cup Calendars across all disciplines during the FIS Autumn Meetings, which took place online September 23 - October 9. The 2020-21 alpine, cross country, freestyle, freeski, snowboard, nordic combined and ski jumping calendars are live and available online at fis-ski.com

Freestyle, freeski, and snowboard World Cup competition are set to return to the United States for the 2020-21 season. Three American venues are scheduled to host 22 starts between genders, with freeski and snowboard competitions at Copper Mountain, Colo., and Mammoth Mountain Ski Area, Calif., and freestyle competitions at Deer Valley Resort, Utah. Previously announced, the FIS Alpine World Cup tour will remain in Europe this season. 

The 2020-21 competition season will look different than in years past due to the ongoing global COVID-19 pandemic. U.S. Ski & Snowboard is working closely with its resort partners and local health authorities to provide competition environments that adhere to required guidelines. 

“The impacts of COVID-19 have been felt across the global sports world, and after having our 2019-20 season cut short, we are especially fortunate to have the opportunity to host events on home snow this season,” said U.S. Ski & Snowboard President and CEO Tiger Shaw. “We are grateful to our resort partners in their commitment to providing world-class freestyle, freeski and snowboard competition, and highlighting the talents of our amazing athletes. We have seen success in other sports resuming and are learning from them. COVID-19 has challenged us to be more nimble in our planning, and while we can definitely say what we are doing one week from now, we understand circumstances may change months from now. We are working closely with FIS, our resort partners and local health authorities to plan what these events will look like, and look forward to sharing that information when available.”

The 2020-21 Land Rover U.S. Grand Prix is expected to celebrate its 25th anniversary this year with snowboard and freeski slopestyle and halfpipe competition returning to Copper Mountain, Colo., in December and Mammoth Mountain, Calif., in February.

As is tradition, the first halfpipe World Cup is scheduled from Dec. 16-19 at Copper Mountain, Colo. pending local and state approvals. To encourage social distancing, there will not be spectator zones for the halfpipe competitions at Copper Mountain this season and fans are encouraged to tune in to watch or stream on NBC properties. 

The second annual Visa Big Air presented by Land Rover is also planned for Copper Mountain the weekend of Dec.17-19, pending local and state approvals, and is scheduled to feature both freeski and snowboard World Cup big air competition. The 2020 edition of the Visa Big Air will benefit from natural snow conditions and Woodward Copper’s jump building expertise. Copper Mountain has proved itself as a world-class big air venue and even hosted an Olympic qualifier in the lead up to the 2018 Olympic Winter Games PyeongChang. To encourage social distancing, there will not be spectator zones for the big air competitions at Copper Mountain this season and fans are encouraged to tune in to watch or stream on NBC properties.

From Feb. 3-6, the Grand Prix is positioned to return to the park and pipe mecca that is Mammoth Mountain, Calif. and the famed Unbound Terrain Parks for slopestyle and halfpipe competition, pending local and state approvals. U.S. Ski & Snowboard athletes Chloe Kim, Maddie Mastro, Judd Henkes, Toby Miller, Dusty Henricksen, Sonora Alba, and Carly Margulies all call Mammoth Mountain home and year after year look forward to competing on home snow. 

The FIS Freestyle World Cup is set to return for its 23rd year at Deer Valley Resort on the storied White Owl and Champion courses, pending local and state approvals. The 2021 Intermountain Healthcare Freestyle International is planned for February 4-6, with moguls Feb. 4, aerials Feb. 5, and dual moguls Feb. 6. Competitions will take place during the day, a notable change from what are historically night events under the lights. To encourage social distancing, there will not be spectator zones for the freestyle competitions at Deer Valley this season and fans are encouraged to tune in to watch or stream on NBC properties. 

U.S. Ski & Snowboard recognizes that COVID-19 has impacted different parts of the country in different ways and with different timing, and therefore specific event information will be forthcoming as each local organizing committee works through its specific protocols. All events are contingent on local and state health department approvals based on existing and future COVID-19 rules and regulations. FIS, U.S. Ski & Snowboard, local organizing committees, and host venues are taking a unified approach consistent with guidance from federal, state, and local health authorities. 

2020-21 FIS World Cup Calendars

Helpful Resources

Wintersteiger Returns to Copper to Support the U.S. Ski Team & Fall Race Camps

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
October, 9 2020
U.S. Alpine Ski Team
Wintersteiger, official supplier to U.S. Ski & Snowboard and exclusive tuning partner for the Center for Excellence, will again be offering equipment support at the U.S. Ski Team Speed Center at official training site Copper Mountain, Colo. (Max Hall - U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

Salt Lake City, Utah - Wintersteiger, official supplier to U.S. Ski & Snowboard and exclusive tuning partner for the Center for Excellence, will again be offering equipment support at the U.S. Ski Team Speed Center at official training site Copper Mountain, Colo. during the fall training block this year. Wintersteiger’s World Cup dominance and support of the U.S. Ski Team make them the obvious machine tuning choice for both the Land Rover U.S. Alpine Ski Team and any race programs training at Copper Mountain.

Wintersteiger returns to Copper Mountain with Racing Technician Mike Beers and Swix Alpine Director Graham Lonetto to offer a full complement of services: ski evaluation, new ski prep, stone grinding, ceramic disc edging, and Wax Future cycling. These technicians will have a complete range of state-of-the-art tuning equipment, including a Scout Plus. The Wintersteiger Scout offers the highest caliber ceramic disc finishing for the most precise tuning of side and base edges as well as World Cup proven grinds to ensure the smoothest, fastest base possible.

Last season during the month of November, hundreds of skis were evaluated and, as a result, many of those skis were tuned by professional technicians onsite. “It was an amazing service for our up-and-coming athletes, many of whom have not received this type of ski preparation before," offered Alpine Director Jesse Hunt. “For 2020, we are excited to continue and grow our partnership with Wintersteiger and Swix at Copper and beyond.”

The temporary shop in Copper will supplement Wintersteiger’s established partner locations in Colorado that are using the same machinery and processes found in factory race rooms around the world. With the ultimate goal of minimizing equipment as a variable in the racing success equation, it is critical that the machines local shops utilize are as serious as the athletes they service. 

More information on location, services, and timing will be available on the US Ski Team, Wintersteiger, and Swix social media pages.  To schedule service at Copper, please contact Mike Beers – mike.beers@wintersteiger.com

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With four decades of experience and more than 30,000 ski tuning machines sold worldwideincluding 1500 automated ski tuning machinesWintersteiger is the global market leader in racing service solutions. The Austrian, German, and US Ski Teams as well as ski manufacturers Atomic, Fischer, Head, Rossignol, and Salomon rely on the highest-quality results provided by Wintersteiger ski tuning machines to achieve competition success.

Shiffrin Featured Among Sport Legends in Sport's Illustrated's "The Unrelenting" Issue

By Megan Harrod
October, 8 2020
Mikaela Shiffrin
Two-time Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin was featured among female sport legends in Sports Illustrated's recently launched "The Unrelenting" issue. (Thomas Lovelock - Sports Illustrated)

Two-time Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin was featured among female sports legends in Sports Illustrated's recently launched "The Unrelenting" issue, introducing their list of "the most powerful, most influential and most outstanding women in sports right now—the game-changers who are speaking out, setting the bar and making a difference." 

As Sports Illustrated states, 

“Everyone thinks women should be thrilled when we get crumbs, and I want women to have the cake, the icing and the cherry on top, too.”

Those were the words famously spoken by tennis legend Billie Jean King in 1970 as she led a crusade calling for female players to earn equal prize money. Throughout her career and in the decades since that proclamation, King has championed equality and social justice and her efforts have created opportunities for both women and the LGBTQ community—and at age 76, she’s still charging on.

That’s why King kicks off The Unrelenting, Sports Illustrated’s list celebrating the women in sports who are powerful, persistent and purposeful in their pursuits—for athletic greatness, gender equality, social justice and more. Women who are innovating, influencing and inspiring. Women who are showing up, speaking out, setting the bar and making a difference, both inside and outside of competition.

From athletes and activists, to executives, coaches and more, the group of honorees is diverse and spans a variety of sports and fields, but all of the women share a common thread: They’re all changing the game.

Athletes and game-changers like Serena Williams, Naomi Osaka, Megan Rapinoe, Simone Biles, Allyson Felix, and beyond, were mentioned in the article, and Mikaela posted on Twitter Wednesday that she's honored to be featured among them. 

Back in February, Mikaela did a shoot with Sports Illustrated for their March cover. It was February 1st, 2020—an unusually warm day in Alpe Cimbra, Trentino, Italy, home of the official European training base for the Land Rover U.S. Alpine Ski Team. Olympic and World Champion and FIS Ski World Cup overall leader Mikaela Shiffrin was there to begin a training block, but she was also there to achieve yet another career-first: become the first Olympic athlete in this sport era to receive a solo Sports Illustrated cover outside of an Olympic year.

The evening of that shoot, Mikaela and her mother Eileen received a call that would change their lives forever and bring their world to a screeching halt. Mikaela's father Jeff had been in an accident. They traveled back to Colorado on the first flight they could, to spend their last hours with their beloved father and husband. Greg Bishop, from Sports Illustrated, wrote a beautiful piece for the cover issue

Throughout the last several months, Mikaela has announced her involvement as a Kindness Wins Champion with Kindness Wins, auctioned off gear to help those affected by COVID in her home state of Colorado, wrote songs dedicated to Barilla factory works in Italy to help them keep their spirits up, played music, spoke out against social injustice on social media, helped to launch the Jeff Shiffrin Athlete Resiliency Fund, in her father's honor—a fund created to help bridge the funding gap created as a result of COVID-19 setbacks for all athletes across all U.S. Ski & Snowboard sports, and more. Fast forward to Sports Illustrated's "The Unrelenting" issue, just released. 

The youngest slalom champion in Olympic history; the youngest skier to earn 50 World Cup race wins; the first skier—of any gender—to earn $1 million in prize money in a single season; the girl who for years has worn an ABFTTB (“Always Be Faster Than the Boys”) decal  on her helmet: It’s no secret that Shiffrin dominates her sport like no other athlete. After her father’s unexpected death in February and cancellations due to the coronavirus, the 25-year-old has confronted the many challenges of 2020 head on. With a changed perspective, Shiffrin is using her platform to make a difference, developing a more powerful, outspoken voice on racism and social justice and creating the Jeff Shiffrin Athlete Resiliency Fund, in honor of her father, to help athletes who have been impacted by the pandemic.

Read the full article on si.com.

Maubet Bjornsen Taking Strategic Approach to 2020-21 Season

By Tom Horrocks
October, 7 2020
Sadie
"I have shaped a plan that will entail a different path than normal for competing on the World Cup circuit this season." - Sadie Maube Bjornsen.

Sadie Maubet Bjornsen has learned quite a bit during the past nine seasons on the FIS Cross Country World Cup circuit, including the glamorous, and not so glamorous, side of living out of a suitcase for months at a time while competing throughout Europe.

Over the past nine years, she has also scored World Cup points (top 30) at more than 150 races, in addition to a dozen podium results. So it’s safe to say the World Cup school of hard knocks has taught her quite a bit. Now, she is taking that knowledge to the next level as she’ll apply a more strategic, tactical approach to the 2020-21 season. 

“I have shaped a plan that will entail a different path than normal for competing on the World Cup circuit this season. I will spend more time at home in Alaska preparing for the season, which includes missing Period One (late November through December events) of the World Cup season.”
- Two-time Olympian Sadie Maubet Bjornsen

This year, the 2021 FIS Cross Country World Championships take place in late February - a couple of weeks later than in the past. World Championships events are Sadie’s number one goal for the season, and she knows that competing at the World Cup level for a full three months before World Championships would be a challenge to prepare her body and mind to compete at her fullest potential.

“Between the challenges we are facing with COVID-19 right now, and some persistent overuse injuries I have been working through during the summer and fall training, this plan will provide me the extra months to get my body in the place it needs to be for the World Championships,” she said. “I will certainly miss some of my favorite races of the year, but am confident this balanced approach will allow me to perform at my best at the World Championships.”

As she enters her 10th year of competing at the highest level of the sport and eyeing the potential of competing in her third Olympic Winter Games, this new strategy will also provide her the opportunity to enjoy more family time, including time with her husband Jo, and keeping a promise that she made to herself last season - spending the holidays at home with her family. 

“I have to look at the sustainability of that type of lifestyle,” she said of competing and traveling for months on end throughout Europe. “Also, when you’re 30 years old, your family starts meaning a lot to you, and spending time with them is important. I haven’t enjoyed Christmas with my family in nine years, so I’m looking forward to enjoying the holidays with them.”

When Sadie returns to Europe, she will be based out of France with Jo, and while racing she will continue her studies for the CPA exam and working towards her Master’s Degree in business. When this past season was cut short due to COVID-19, she put her accounting degree to good use, working at the CPA firm - which she admits helped her to avoid a potential midlife crisis.

“It’s been really nice because when I get injured, it's really hard not to get bummed out about it because our jobs depend on our bodies and being healthy,” she said. “Plus, (working) allows me some time to see a different perspective and having to learn and be OK with not knowing and asking questions. But, I’m also looking forward to getting back to racing and rejoining my teammates in Europe.”

Second-Annual Live Like Sam Day Marks Renewed Focus on Mental Health

By Andrew Gauthier
October, 7 2020
LLS

Live Like Sam Day, created in partnership with U.S. Ski & Snowboard and Live Like Sam Foundation, is coming up Saturday, Oct. 10. For this year’s second-annual celebration, the organization is not only honoring the legacy of the late internationally-ranked freeskiing champion, Sam Jackenthal, but is celebrating the nonprofit’s renewed focus on providing educational programming and mental wellness initiatives for youth communities.

 

 

On Oct. 10, 2015, the Park City community came together for Sam Jackenthal’s Celebration of Life following his sudden passing during a tragic skiing accident in Australia. While his death left behind a huge hole in the hearts of his fellow Parkites, his father, Ron Jackenthal, was determined to honor his legacy of love, kindness, community, and self-compassion by giving back to youth in need. In 2019, the Live Like Sam Foundation officially launched, getting support from partners all over the nation, including U.S. Ski & Snowboard, USASA, Vail Resorts, Woodward Camp, and many more.

Since the organization’s founding, Live Like Sam has provided more than $100,000 in merit and needs-based scholarships to deserving youth who exemplify the Live Like Sam core values of character, athletics, responsibility, and education. U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s core values of integrity, passion, fun, team, excellence, and grit closely align with Live Like Sam’s mission, making the partnership between the two organizations a perfect fit.

“I am very excited to have such a great partnership with Live Like Sam and we are looking forward to what future collaboration will bring,” said U.S. Ski & Snowboard Director of Sport Education Gareth Trayner. “The mental health and wellbeing of our athletes, coaches and members is of critical importance to us and we are always looking for ways to better resource and support our communities. The incredible wealth of material that Live like Sam is producing will play a pivotal role as we move forward in building the next generation of lifelong lovers of sport."

As Live Like Sam looks to the future, the organization has big plans to help youth communities gain access to mental wellness resources so they can become emotionally, socially, and mentally fit for adulthood. Part of the foundation’s renewed focus includes a commitment to develop educational programming that aims to destigmatize mental wellness and help youth communities strengthen their coping mechanisms through practicing self-compassion.

“We’re not an organization focused on loss, we’re an organization focused on life,” explains Ron. “Sam is so full of life: Even after his passing, he is still making a positive impact on people’s lives. Our goal is to help others live a positive, compassionate life like Sam’s, and part of that means creating the tools and resources for them to do exactly that.”

On Oct. 10, Live Like Sam invites everyone to celebrate Live Like Sam Day either online or by attending the live event at Utah Olympic Park from 6:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m MDT. The day encourages people to put self-compassion and kindness first by performing acts of self-love and random acts of kindness. For those participating online, the organization has provided a list of self-compassion and random acts of kindness activities that people can use as a source of inspiration to celebrate the day. You can get involved by posting about your celebration online using #LiveLikeSamDay. Live Like Sam is also hosting a silent auction online for those unable to attend the live event in-person. The silent auction features more than 50 auction items valued at more than $50,000, and all proceeds collected will go towards furthering the Live Like Sam mission to champion mental wellness in youth communities. Learn more about the Live Like Sam Foundation by visiting www.livelikesam.org.
 

Shiffrin and Resiliency Fund Featured in the New York Times

By Megan Harrod
October, 6 2020
Mikaela Shiffrin

On September 21, two-time Olympic champion and Land Rover ambassador Mikaela Shiffrin announced the Jeff Shiffrin Athlete Resiliency Fund, in honor of her father who tragically passed away on February 2, 2020. Several international publications, including The New York Times, featured the launch of the Jeff Shiffrin Athlete Resiliency Fund.

A longtime friend of U.S. Ski & Snowboard, and esteemed journalist Bill Pennington, wrote an exclusive about Mikaela, the fund, finding her voice and speaking out on social media, as well as her return to competition amidst all of the unknowns associated with COVID-19 and beyond. 

Bill wrote, 

Usually at this time of year, Mikaela Shiffrin, the seven-time Olympic and world ski champion, is building the mental fortitude to dominate another ski racing season.

But the last several months have staggered and changed Shiffrin, 25. In February, while she was competing in Europe, her father, Jeff, died in an accident at home in Colorado. After taking a six-week break from competition, Shiffrin decided to return to racing only to have the season’s final events canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic, denying her a last chance to defend her multiple World Cup titles.

Returning to Colorado, Shiffrin — in a first — found a more potent voice on social media in support of calls for racial justice. Many of her followers, used to cheerful workout or dance videos, mounted a bitter backlash. Shiffrin’s response: “Wanna ‘Unfollow?’ I’ll see you to the door.”

The Jeff Shiffrin Athlete Resiliency Fund campaign will benefit ALL athletes across ALL sports at U.S. Ski & Snowboard. Bill continued, 

The Jeff Shiffrin Athlete Resiliency Fund, launched by U.S. Ski and Snowboard, the governing body for several Olympic winter sports, is meant to assist athletes in multiple sports whose training was cut short this year or whose travel expenses have skyrocketed in the pandemic. The fund was started by six families with a history of making winter sports donations who offered to match contributions raised through the website up to $1.5 million.

New safety guidelines and travel restrictions have ballooned the cost of transporting roughly 175 American winter sports athletes around the globe.

Tiger Shaw, the U.S. Ski and Snowboard president and chief executive, said coronavirus testing protocols alone would add $1 million to his budget. A mandated quarantine for a single team arriving in Europe from the United States might mean the added expense of housing and feeding 45 athletes and staff for 14 additional days. Adding to the fiscal strain, the organization’s biggest fund-raising events cannot be held as usual because of social distancing practices.

“We don’t want any of our athletes to feel at a disadvantage heading to the Olympics, which are coming up fast,” Shiffrin said. “We want the fund to bring awareness to how much resiliency is out there right now because everybody has conquered so much this year. Obviously, on a personal level, I feel that.”

Read the full piece on NYTimes.com.

Beyond the New York Times, Mikaela made several appearances on other media outlets to announce the new fund, including the following:

TODAY Show
Rich Eisen Show
On Her Turf
MSN
Yahoo News
Olympic Channel

Rad Camp Goes Off in Austria

By Andrew Gauthier
October, 2 2020
Canyoneering
U.S. Snowboard Team takes to Austria for a canyoneering experience. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

The U.S. Snowboardcross Team took to the mountains of Austria for their annual team cohesion camp or “Rad Camp” from Sept 16-30. Rad Camp is a series of cross-training activities that lets the riders test their skills, develop a strong team culture, as well as have a ton of fun. 

“To be competitive in snowboarding, an athlete has to be able to spend a lot of time outside of their comfort zone," said U.S. Snowboardcross Team Head Coach Peter Foley. “I like to find activities that the athletes might not be as familiar with so that they build up more experience facing uncomfortable situations and finding success in those areas. I feel like this prepares them for when it comes time to face the competitive pressures and straight-up gnarliness of doing what they do at the highest level of their sport.”

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Peter Foley (@peterfoleyusa) on

 

U.S. Snowboardcross Pro Team member Hagen Kearney shared the importance of being in the right headspace before strapping into his board.

“Rad Camp was awesome,” said Hagen. “I feel like whenever we do action sport related activities together and get out of our comfort zones, it helps us be in a better mental state going into training on snow. “

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Some from the canyoneering trip

A post shared by Anna Miller (@annamillersbx) on

 

In addition to the mental aspect, Peter feels strongly about the physical training benefits related to off-snow activities, especially as it relates to the other gravity-driven sports. This time around the team took on mountain biking, cable park wakeboarding, canyoneering, and hiking. 

“We did a bunch of mountain biking, which we feel is super valuable as another training aid,” said Peter. “For the athletes to be negotiating varied terrain, bank turns, jumps, doubles, etc. at speed is a huge benefit. Given the amount of time they can spend in an actual boardercross course during a year is very limited, it’s especially crucial we experience these elements as much as possible. The team also engaged in various activities including a really cool day of hiking in some high Austrian peaks, as well as spent an amazing day canyoneering,”

 

 

One new component of Rad Camp this year was the cross-team collaboration that took place at Area 47, the largest outdoor adventure park in Austria located in Ötztal-Bahnhof. Riders across the snowboardcross and the slopestyle teams tackled the cable park, where professional wakeboarder and U.S. Snowboard Rookie Team member Fynn-Bullock Womble put on a clinic. 

“We had a super fun day where we teamed up with the slopestyle crew for a session of wakeboarding in a cable park,” said Peter.  “It was really cool for the two groups to session it together. Fynn Bullock-Womble is insanely good, so it was rad for everyone to get to ride with him.”

U.S. Snowboard Slopestyle Pro Team member Dusty Henricksen has fully enjoyed getting a taste of Rad Camp and infusing cross-training into his regiment. 

“It's been a blast hanging out with the team out here in Austria,” said Dusty. “We’ve been playing games of S-K-A-T-E in the parking lot to pass some time. We've been able to snowboard Hintertux, hit the Banger Park airbags, and go to Area 47, which has every outdoor activity you could imagine. We even had an insane day at the cable park with the snowboardcross team where everyone was ripping.”

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Lindsey Jacobellis (@lindseyjacobellis) on

 

Following Rad Camp, Peter and the team settled into Saas-Fee, Switzerland, for a long training block. They are aiming for 16 days of on-course training. Stay tuned for more news from Saas-Fee camp across U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s social media channels. 


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