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Diggins, Kern Trade Running Shoes For Ski Boots

By Tom Horrocks
August, 23 2019
Julia Kern and Jessie Diggins
Julia Kern and Jessie Diggins traveled more than 20 hours to jump back on snow in New Zealand.

For most people, spending 23 hours on an airplane certainly doesn’t sound like an enjoyable experience. But it's just part of the job if you’re a winter athlete looking to escape the summer heat and humidity of Vermont and Massachusetts.

Jessie Diggins (Afton, Minn.) and Julia Kern (Waltham, Mass.), along with U.S. Cross Country Team Coach Jason Cork, recently made the trip to Snow Farm, near Wanaka, New Zealand, to jump back on snow and enjoy the area’s 55k of groomed trails. But most importantly, they were looking for a change of scenery and the unique opportunity to mix up their training regime for a few weeks. 

Following a heavy training block that included The Presidential Traverse - a 21-mile trail run that features 9,000 feet of climbing across all 10 of the mountains in the Presidential Range of the White Mountains in New Hampshire, Diggins was more than happy to trade in her running shoes for ski boots.

“It’s really incredible to be back on snow, and I’m so excited for this three-week opportunity to continue working on my technique and on-snow classic striding. There are some things you can only really improve on when you’re actually on skis and skiing on real snow, and I’m ready to take advantage of every training day this camp!”
   – Jessie Diggins

While a number of their U.S. Cross Country Ski Team teammates have donned race bibs in a number of roller ski events recently, Diggins and Kern will get their opportunity at the Merino Muster World Loppet race on August 31. In addition, they also plan to participate in a couple of the NZ Winter Games races Sept. 3-5.

“The chance to put a bib on again and practice race-day tactics, dialing in the wax and overall effort is perfect at this time of year,” Diggins added.

Diggins and Kern make the 23-hour return trip back home in September to resume their training programs prior to the next round of training camps for the U.S. Cross Country Team Oct. 7-20 in Park City, Utah, and Lake Placid, N.Y.
 

2019 SkillsQuest-Fitness Validated Testing Schedule

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
August, 21 2019
RCS
Ryan Cochran Siegle at the 2018 Xfinity Birds of Prey FIS World Cup in Beaver Creek, CO (Photo - Steven Kornreich)

U.S. Ski & Snowboard is doubling down on athlete physical fitness with its national validated physical fitness testing program, SkillsQuest-Fitness. 

SkillsQuest-Fitness is part of SkillsQuest, a cornerstone program of the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Training Systems, designed to motivate and reward athletes in working toward and improving abilities in the key areas of emphasis. 

SkillsQuest-Fitness tests eight physical properties including strength and power, coordination, speed, and aerobic fitness. It’s a holistic view of an athlete’s fitness, and through the data gathered during testing sessions and already amassed by the high performance staff, athletes have the ability to see where they stack up against peers and national team members in their sport.

Alpine athletes on the development team, National Development Group and anyone aspiring to compete in the Alpine World Junior Ski Championships will have to pass a minimum overall standard assessed by SkillsQuest-Fitness by November 1 of this year. Minimum physical fitness standards will be phased into all levels of the Alpine National Team over the next few years. 

“Physical fitness is extremely important for athletic development for athletes coming up the pipeline onto the national team,” said U.S. Ski & Snowboard Alpine Development Director Chip Knight. “We want there to be a baseline of physical conditioning that aspiring athletes have as a foundation for them to continue to move forward in our sport. Anyone who has national elite level aspiration should be targeting these SkillsQuest-Fitness events and working on their physical conditioning in the summer.”

“Research consistently shows that improved physical fitness is correlated to improved alpine ski racing performance, particularly in junior skiers,” said U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s High Performance Director Troy Taylor. “The fitter you are the more quality training you can do, the more quality training you get, the better you can improve.”

“We’re pushing fitness to support quality skill and technical development,” emphasized U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s High Performance Coordinator Calin Butterfield. “Fitter, more physically robust athletes can train for their sport with higher quality and less likelihood of injury.” 

U.S. Ski & Snowboard will offer multiple SkillsQuest-Fitness validated tests across the country before the November 1 deadline. However, these tests are not exclusive to the alpine community. Taylor encourages any ski or snowboard athletes 14 years or older to participate in the events so that they can get assessed and see where they stack up against the best in their age group, their region, or the best of the national team members. 

For more information on registering for validated SkillsQuest-Fitness testing and dates in each region, please visit our registration website.

Cardrona Big Air to Kick-Off Snowboard World Cup Season

By Andrew Gauthier
August, 20 2019
Corning New Zealand
Chris Corning at the 2018-19 Cardrona FIS Snowboard World Cup big air. (FIS Snowboard-Chad Buchholz)

U.S. Snowboard Team athletes will compete in the first FIS World Cup big air event of the season this week in Cardrona, New Zealand Aug 23-24. 

U.S. Pro Team riders Chris Corning (Silverthorne, Colo.), Luke Winkelmann (Blowing Rock, N.C.), Lyon Farrell (Haiku, Hawaii), Red Gerard (Silverthorne, Colo.), and American Storm Rowe (Jamaica, Vt.) are all scheduled to compete.

“I am excited to be back in New Zealand," said Corning. “I hope to bring home a win again. The jump is usually pretty great and if the weather holds out it should be a good contest. Being in a contest after the summer can always be more nerve-wracking than one in the middle of the season, but I’m looking forward to it.”

Big air will serve as one of the marquee events in the Winter Games NZ program, which also hosts freeski, alpine, and cross-country competitions. It has become a tradition to kick off the freeski and snowboard World Cup competition season in the southern hemisphere. Last year, on Corning’s 19th birthday, he stunned the crowd and his fellow athletes with a perfectly stomped backside quad-corked 1800 melon grab on his second run. That was the first time the trick was landed in World Cup competition. Corning’s performance earned him the top spot on the podium. His teammate and PyeongChang Olympic big air silver medalist Kyle Mack (West Bloomfield, Mich.) just missed the podium, finishing fourth. 

Corning is coming off yet another impressive season where he earned his fifth and sixth FIS Crystal Globes in March by winning the snowboard slopestyle and overall titles. He is certainly a favorite this weekend, but there are plenty of contenders ready to put up a fight including teammate and Olympic gold medalist Gerard. Gerard also had a successful season last winter taking home the gold at the 2019 Toyota U.S. Grand Prix at Mammoth Mountain, as well as at the 2019 Burton U.S. Open Slopestyle finals. In addition, first-year pro team member Luke Winkelmann is searching for his first World Cup podium. U.S. Snowboard slopestyle and Big Air Pro Team Head Coach Dave Reynolds is excited about the team he has on the ground in New Zealand. 

“We are excited to be back on snow down here in New Zealand,” said Reynolds. “We have a small, but very capable crew out here with four out of our top five ranked riders competing. We don’t get many on snow big airs (vs. scaffolding) and the crew is pumped to get the first big air of the season in the books.”

While this weekend’s original schedule called for qualifications on Saturday, Aug 24, and finals on Sunday the 25th, a winter storm front approaching means that that is all very likely to change. The one window of good weather projected for this weekend appears to be for Friday, Aug 23, when blue skies and mellow winds are expected. With this forecast in mind, organizers and officials have decided to move qualifications up to Friday. And while hopes are high that a fitting finals will be able to go down sometime between Saturday and the Monday weather day, there is the distinct possibility that those qualification results may have to stand in as official results should finals not be possible.

Don’t miss your chance to watch the first snowboard World Cup event of the season. Tune in on the Olympic Channel to catch the action live.

HOW TO WATCH
*All times EST
Subject to change

SNOWBOARD
Saturday, August 24

8:00 p.m. - World Cup men’s and women’s big air - Cardrona, New Zealand - Olympic Channel-TV & OlympicChannel.com
 

Corning Lands Quad Cork 1800

Pepi Gramshammer – The Heartbeat of Vail

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
August, 19 2019
Pepi Gramshammer

-- A special thanks to John Dakin for contributing this wonderful story about Pepi Gramshammer.

Somewhere around 8 a.m. on Saturday, August 17, the heart of Vail, Colorado skipped a beat. The air in the heart of Vail Village seemed to become lighter and a sense of calm settled over the Gasthof Gramshammer.

Austrian ski legend and Vail pioneer Pepi Gramshammer had left his beloved valley for a higher place⁠—he was 87. He is survived by his wife Sheika, daughters Kira and Sheika, and two grandsons.

Gramshammer spent the waning days of his storied life in the place he loved most⁠—Vail. His hospital room’s window looked out on Vail Mountain and the Riva Ridge ski run.  His family played video thank you messages from other ski racing legends including, Mikaela Shiffrin, Franz Klammer, Hermann Maier, and Annemarie Moser-Proell, along with celebrities Arnold Schwarzenegger and Wolfgang Puck.

Many in the Vail Valley will forever wonder what could have been or, more appropriately, what might not have been if Pepi Gramshammer had decided that he was a better cheesemaker than a ski racer.  Born in Kufstein, Austria in 1932, he was determined to make the Austrian National Ski Team following the completion of his apprenticeship making cheese.

Gramshammer began skiing at the age of ten, moving to Innsbruck as a 17-year-old and joining the Innsbruck Skiing Association to ensure himself better training opportunities.  He initially worked as a ski instructor in Igls, while also teaching skiing during the summer months on the Stevio Pass in Italy.

It would take him four years to work his way up the ranks to earn a spot on the powerful Austrian team of the 1950s, joining the likes of Toni Sailer, Anderl Molterer, Christian Pravda and Ernst Hinterseer.  Gramshammer’s first major international victory came in 1956 in a Giant Slalom in Obergurgl, Austria.

Following the conclusion of his amateur career in 1960, Gramshammer moved to the United States, settling in Sun Valley, Idaho to teach skiing with Kitzbuhel native Siegfried Engl, who served as the ski school director. He also jumped aboard the newly-created U.S. Professional Ski Tour, becoming the circuit’s top racer in 1962, sponsored by Head skis, Nordica boots and Look/Nevada bindings.

That same year, Pepi was approached with another new opportunity, a fledgling ski resort in Colorado called Vail.  Resort pioneer Dick Hauserman showed him a film about the new ski area that impressed Gramshammer enough to agree to meet with developers Pete Seibert, Morrie Shepard, and Bob Parker, following a pro race at Loveland.  The next day, the men visited the mountain and skied the Back Bowls.

Pepi credits his decision to move to Vail to Hauserman and his wife, Blanche. “It was the best move I ever made in my life,” he maintained. Initially, Gramshammer worked for the ski school, but the lion’s share of his responsibilities came in public relations and racing for Vail.  He quickly became the resort’s Ski Ambassador, showing people around the mountain.

At the conclusion of his first season, Pepi approached Hauserman with an idea—he wanted to make Vail his home. Gramshammer had always harbored a desire to operate an Austrian-style hotel and wanted to build one in his adopted home.  With the help of investors that included Howard Head, Endicott Davison, Edward Lynch, and Jack Crosby, Gasthof Gramshammer and Pepi Sports became reality.

In the summer of 1966, Gramshammer, along with fellow Austrians Erich Sailer and Anderl Molterer, founded the Red Lodge International Summer Ski Racing Camp in Red Lodge, Montana in an effort to help teach alpine ski racing techniques to American youth.  He also created training programs for adults in Vail called “Wedel Weeks”.

When President Gerald R. Ford made Vail the Western White House during ski vacations, Pepi was one of his most frequent companions, both on and off the slopes. “Don’t worry about the White House,” advised Gramshammer, “you’re skiing now”.  As a result of this friendship between the Fords and the Gramshammers, the President and Mrs. Ford returned the favor, hosting Pepi and his wife Sheika at the White House.

But perhaps the Gramshammer’s greatest contribution to the Vail Valley has come from their love of skiing and ski racing. Through the proceeds of their annual Crystal Ball, which celebrated its final chapter in 1998, over $2 million was raised and donated to ski-related organizations and programs throughout the gala’s 20-year run, with beneficiaries including the Vail Valley Foundation, the U.S. Ski Team, Ski and Snowboard Club Vail and Vail Resort’s Adaptive Ski Program. Pepi also served on the board of directors of the Vail Valley Foundation for 20 years.

Gramshammer was instrumental in helping to return World Cup ski racing to the Vail Valley in 1983, along with helping to direct the campaigns to bring the 1989, 1999 and 2015 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships to Vail and Beaver Creek. He also created the Legends of Skiing competitions in conjunction with Vail’s annual American Ski Classic, while being inducted into the Colorado Snowsports Hall of Fame in 1990.

Pepi has been fortunate enough to enjoy a very special love affair with Vail since day one. During the 1994 FIS Congress in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, he stepped to the microphone as part of the Vail/Beaver Creek World Championships presentation and laid it out for the international delegation. "I was born and raised in Austria and I am proud of that”, Gramshammer explained. “But my home is Vail, Colorado and I love that.”

Throughout his life and career, Pepi Gramshammer has truly been the heartbeat of Vail, embodying the American “can do” spirit, along with the fun that is skiing.  His love for his adopted home and for all things skiing will remain as his lasting legacy and gift to Vail. The Vail Valley, along with everyone that visits Vail and Beaver Creek each year, most certainly owes the cheesemaker a great debt of thanks.

A memorial service for family and close friends has been scheduled for Monday, August 26, at 11 a.m. at the Vail Interfaith Chapel. A reception will follow at Pepi’s. A community Celebration of Life will be hosted at the Gerald R. Ford Amphitheater in September.

In lieu of flowers, the family has requested that donations be made in Pepi’s name to the Colorado Snowsports Museum, Vail Health Hospital or the Vail Valley Foundation, targeted for World Cup ski racing.

 

Legendary Ski Racing Official Allen Church Passes

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
August, 19 2019
Allen Church (left) received the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Julius Blegen Award. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard)
Allen Church (left) received the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Julius Blegen Award in 2015. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

One of U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s most revered ski racing officials, Allen Church, 91, passed away August 17 in Albuquerque, N.M. after a long illness. Church’s career as a volunteer official spanned five decades. In 2002, he was selected to take the oath on behalf of all competition judges and officials at the 2002 Olympic Winter Games, where he served as chief of timing and scoring for alpine skiing.

Church began his career serving as an official with his home ski club in Taos, N.M. His career extended around the country and the world. With a primary focus on race timing, he became one of the world’s most knowledgeable experts and has been responsible for training thousands of other officials.

“Allen Church typified the passion we see in our volunteers that helps our sport thrive,” said U.S. Ski & Snowboard President and CEO Tiger Shaw. “While we miss Allen, his legacy will be in the thousands of officials he has impacted throughout his career.”

His professional career was as a scientist, heading the Sandia Labs in Albuquerque. He was also an actor, appearing in several cowboy westerns.

But his passion was working in alpine ski racing where served as a technical delegate from 1978 to 1995. In his career, he worked at the highest levels of the sport, including World Cup, World Championships and Olympics. He is a past recipient of some of U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s highest honors for officials, including the Westhaven Award for international technical delegates (1996), John Clair Award for service to the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Teams (2014) and the Bud and Mary Little Award for service to the Olympics and International Ski Federation (2003). He was inducted into the New Mexico Ski Hall of Fame in 2007.

In 2015, he was recognized with the organization’s highest honor, the Julius Blegen Award. “Allen’s hallmark was that he was always available at any time to help anyone in our sport,” said Paul Van Slyke. “He was a true mentor to others and largely responsible for bringing Thelma Hoessler (2019 Blegen recipient) into our sport. He taught at her first timing clinic many years ago and mentored her through many events and experiences. Allen was an icon and mentor to many of us, his patient ways and thoughtful approach was an inspiration to us all.”

Church was born in Los Alamos in 1928 where his parents ran the Los Alamos Ranch School. His mother, Peggy Pond Church, was a famous poet. He grew up skiing at Sawyer’s Hill. In the 1940s, the Manhattan Project took over the school and the family moved to Taos. Church attended both Colorado State and Colorado A&M, initially to study veterinary science but then deciding to go into acting. After serving in the Korean War, he enrolled at Stanford, earning an engineering degree, returning to his home to work at the Sandia National Laboratories. He is survived by his two daughters, Janet Harrison, and Nancy Whetstone. It was their engagement in ski racing that brought him into the sport.

The Flying Fisherman

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
August, 19 2019
Eric Loughran
Eric Loughran trains on the triple jump at the UOP (Lara Carlton - U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

Repeatedly jumping off a 14-foot tall kicker that launches him nearly 50 feet in the air while performing quadruple twisting triple backflips into a pool all summer is not everyone’s idea of a good time. But for U.S. Ski Team aerialist Eric Loughran (Pelham, N.H.), it’s not only his passion, but it’s also his job. A 2018 Olympian and U.S. Ski Team member since 2013, Loughran, a consistent top-10 World Cup finisher, landed his first podium in March at Shimao Lotus Mountain in China. All of that hang time can get to your head, but Loughran found a way to decompress: fly fishing. 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

@ericloughran sent it to the moon at @utaholympicpark || 🎥: @lobbieryon

A post shared by U.S. Ski Team (@usskiteam) on

When not launching off of kickers, Loughran is on the river.

“I tried the whole [summer] mountain bike thing, and just kept finding ways to hurt myself. I got over that. But when I went out fishing, I got to explore and started to love the adrenaline rush of hunting the fish out. It was a lot easier on my body too. I can ramp all morning and then go out in the afternoon.”
– Eric Loughran, U.S. Freestyle Ski Team

Loughran knew how to fish before moving to Utah, but it was in Park City where he learned and fell in love with fly fishing. During the summer of 2014, his second summer training at the Utah Olympic Park (UOP), a friend introduced him to the fly rod. “At first I thought it was kind of ridiculous. But then I realized that if you do everything right, it can be one of the most effective ways to go out there and fish. Fish are always snacking on flies.” He hit the water hard that summer, both on the ramps and in the rivers. “It took me a while to figure everything out. I’d think I had it dialed, and then the next day I would go out and couldn't catch anything. So I really went after it that first year,” he said.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Guess who's back..... . . . . #flyfishing #sharkonthefly #skiing #lowlifetroutbums

A post shared by Eric Loughran (@ericloughran) on

While spending time in the local fly shops Loughran was introduced to Cody Salrin and Matt Happe, fellow Park City freestyle family members and owners of Mayfly Guides, a Park City-based fly fishing guide company. Cody competed and coached aerials and Matt is married to Shannon Bahrke, Olympic silver and bronze medalist in moguls. The Mayfly Guides took Loughran under their wings and taught him how to guide people on the river. “It was cool because it was like this close freestyle fishing family. They taught me how to take people out. Cody would bring me out with clients to be an extra hand, and I would watch and learn how he did it,” Loughran added.

As Loughran’s guiding experience grew, word spread and he landed a job guiding with Trout Bum 2, another local Park City fly fishing outfitter. Now in his third summer guiding river trips, mainly on the Provo and Weber rivers, and he works with clients both through Trout Bum 2 and Mayfly Guides. 

“My favorite part about guiding is teaching people who aren’t expecting much. They might be thinking maybe they won’t have that great of a day or make a fool of themselves and then they end up catching the most fish. It’s a sport that a 12-year-old boy could do the same as a 70-year-old man. I love getting people on fish that don’t really expect it, shocking people with a catch is pretty sweet,” Loughran said.

Loughran finds the process of organizing trips both a relaxing escape from aerials as well as good stress preparation for competition. Each trip is client-dependent, on their skill set, what experience they’re looking for and specific location so Loughran works closely with his clients to make sure he’s giving them a tailor-made experience. “It’s on me to know all of the water [in the area] no matter if the client wants to go to the Provo or the Weber, or ‘out in the wild’ in the Uintas," he said. "Even when I’m not working on a trip, I’m still technically working when I’m out fishing. I’m taking mental notes about what bugs are going on. I do a lot of scouting.” 

Eventually, Loughran would like to guide internationally. As a member of the U.S. Aerials Team, he spends about a quarter of his year traveling on the World Cup circuit and has been known to bring his fly rod with him. “I started traveling with my fly rod on World Cup my first year on the tour. I fished all over the place, everyone thought I was crazy. I ended up catching fish in Switzerland and Finland.”

The aerials World Cup schedule takes the team to some far-flung locations like Belarus and China. And as navigating the cultural differences of those nations can be challenging, so can finding public water. Loughran doesn’t have a whole lot of free time to navigate the rules and regulations of places he visits in between jumping, but it’s something he continues to explore when returning to the same stops year after year. “Fishing in Belarus was something special," he said. "I’ve tried ice fishing there, which was really cold. I watched locals sitting on buckets with hand lines catching pike. I didn’t have as much success with my conventional gear.”

Although he may have looked odd traveling around the world with ski gear, a fly rod, skateboard and guitar in hand, Loughran has won over his family and teammates to his fishing world. “I get a lot of excitement watching people catch fish, especially for the first time," he said. "The thing with fly fishing is that anyone can do it. I taught my sister how to fish. Once I taught her it was a good little competition between us. I bring my teammates out all of the time too.”

Last summer Loughran was on the river almost seven days a week, as aerials fell to the back burner as he took a much-needed break after the 2018 Olympics and worked on funding his upcoming season. However, this summer he plans to refocus on aerials and spend three or four days on the river if it works out in his schedule. “I’m fortunate to travel all winter skiing and work all summer on the river. I plan to focus more on my training, especially how last season went," Loughran said. "If I give a little more attention towards aerials I can make some things happen.” 

Follow Loughran’s journey via Instagram @ericloughran

Spyder Launches New Freeski Collection

By Andrew Gauthier
August, 19 2019
Maggie Spyder
Maggie Voisin wearing the new 2019-20 Spyder Freeski Collection. (Spyder)

Spyder, a leading ski and performance brand and long-time apparel partner of U.S. Ski & Snowboard, today launches a new freeski specific collection now available to the public. Over the past two years, Spyder has been working with athletes and designers to carefully create a new freeski collection that is both impressive in appearance and from a functional standpoint. U.S. Freeski Team member Maggie Voisin (Whitefish, Mont.) has been part of the design and development process since the beginning. 

“I’m so excited to be a part of the Spyder Team and to have worked closely with everyone at Spyder to help create the new freeski collection,” said Voisin. “This new line bridges the gap between stylish and technical gear. I know everyone will love the final product!’

Spyder has been the exclusive official apparel partner of the U.S. Ski Team since 1989. In 2019, they expanded their partnership with U.S. Ski & Snowboard, bringing on the U.S. freeski and freestyle teams. Today, Spyder is back in a big way in the freeskiing space. In the early years of the sport of freeskiing in the late 90’s, and the first decade of the 2000’s, Spyder and its Venom collection sponsored some of the godfathers of skiing such as Shane McConkey, Seth Morrison, Corey Vanular, JP Auclair and Kent Kreitler, just to name a few. U.S. Freeski Team head coach Skogen Sprang was sponsored by Spyder from 2004-2009.

“Team Venom was a large part of freeskiing then,” said Sprang. “They were an awesome sponsor and I am happy to see their continued support of the sport.”

Today, Spyder has taken on a new generation of freeskiers who continue to evolve and progress the sport. Members of the Spyder freeski team include Voisin, U.S. Freeski Team alumnus Bobby Brown (Breckenridge, Colo.), American Quinn Wolferman (Missoula, Mont.), as well as a notable list of international big mountain and competitive freeskiing athletes. You can expect big things from Spyder in the coming years. Check out their new 2019-20 freeski collection at spyder.com/freeski.

###

About U.S. Ski & Snowboard
U.S. Ski & Snowboard is the Olympic National Governing Body (NGB) of ski and snowboard sports in the USA, based in Park City, Utah. Tracing its roots directly back to 1905, the organization represents nearly 200 elite skiers and snowboarders in 2018, competing in seven teams; alpine, cross country, freeski, freestyle, snowboard, nordic combined and ski jumping. In addition to the elite teams, U.S. Ski & Snowboard also provides leadership and direction for tens of thousands of young skiers and snowboarders across the USA, encouraging and supporting them in achieving excellence. By empowering national teams, clubs, coaches, parents, officials, volunteers and fans, U.S. Ski & Snowboard is committed to the progression of its sports, athlete success and the value of team. For more information, visit www.usskiandsnowboard.org

About Authentic Brands Group​
Authentic Brands Group (ABG) is a brand development, marketing, and entertainment company, which owns a portfolio of global entertainment and lifestyle brands. Headquartered in New York City, ABG manages, elevates, and builds the long-term value of more than 50 consumer brands and properties by partnering with best-in-class manufacturers, wholesalers, and retailers. Its brands have a global retail footprint in more than 100,000 points of sale across the luxury, specialty, department store, mid-tier, mass, and e-commerce channels and more than 4,950 branded freestanding stores and shop-in-shops around the world. ABG is committed to transforming brands by delivering a compelling product, content, business, and immersive brand experiences. It creates and activates original marketing strategies to drive the success of its brands across all consumer touchpoints, platforms, and emerging media. ABG’s portfolio of iconic and world-renowned brands includes Marilyn Monroe®, Mini Marilyn®, Elvis Presley®, Muhammad Ali®, Shaquille O'Neal®, Sports Illustrated®, Dr. J®, Greg Norman®, Neil Lane®, Thalia®, Michael Jackson® (managed brand), Nautica®, Aéropostale®, Juicy Couture®, Vince Camuto®, Herve Leger®, Judith Leiber®, Frederick's of Hollywood®, Nine West®, Frye®, Jones New York®, Louise et Cie®, Sole Society®, Enzo Angiolini®, CC Corso Como®, Hickey Freeman®, Hart Schaffner Marx®, Adrienne Vittadini®, Taryn Rose®, Bandolino®, Misook®, 1.STATE®, CeCe®, Chaus®, Spyder®, Tretorn®, Tapout®, Prince®, Volcom®, Airwalk®, Vision Street Wear®, Above The Rim®, Hind®, Thomasville®, Drexel®, and Henredon®. For more information, please visit authenticbrandsgroup.com.

About Global Brands Group Holding Limited 
Global Brands Group Holding Limited (SEHK Stock Code: 787) is one of the leading branded apparel, footwear and brand management companies. The Group designs develops, markets and sells products under a diverse array of owned and licensed brands and a wide range of product categories. Global Brands’ innovative design, capabilities, strong brand management focus and strategic vision enable it to create new opportunities, product categories and market expansion for brands on a global scale. In addition, the Group is the global leader in the brand management business through its joint venture, CAA-GBG Global Brand Management Group.
 

Spyder Freeski Origins

Spyder Freeski Collection

Athletes Wowed at Park City Fundraiser, More than Doubling Fundraising Efforts

By Megan Harrod
August, 14 2019
Mike Engel and Athletes
Athletes pose with host Mike Engel at his backyard fundraiser in Park City, Utah. (Claire Wiley)

Inclement weather may have cut U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s Park City, Utah-based fundraiser short, but it didn’t rain on their parade entirely, as the event - graciously hosted by Park City local Mike Engel - more than doubled their fundraising efforts over last year’s event. 

The event’s origin resulted in a relationship Engel had with the cross country team, having hosted athletes and coaches at his home when they came through for training camps. It began as a small, intimate gathering hosted in Engel’s home, and now, nine years later, it has grown into a community event drawing more than 170 attendees this year, as well as strong support from more than 30 local businesses who participated in the silent auction. 

Athletes representing all U.S. Ski & Snowboard teams were in attendance, ranging from seasoned veterans to the future of U.S. Ski & Snowboard. This included double Olympic champion and Park City local Ted Ligety, members of the gold medal-winning relay team at the 2019 FIS Junior World Cross Country Ski Championships Ben Ogden (Landgrove, Vt.) and Gus Schumacher (Anchorage, Alaska), double Junior World Alpine Ski Championships gold medalist River Radamus (Edwards, Colo.), Jaelin Kauf (Alta, Wyo.), who happens to be the fastest woman on the World Cup freestyle circuit, and many more. 

“Mike takes pride in hosting the event, and talks a lot about how other cities have pro sports teams,” noted Special Events Coordinator Elaine Minahan, “yet Park City gets the privilege of having the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Team here at home - a tradition we should be proud of as a community. He really hopes to grow the event, encouraging the community to rally around our ‘home team.’”

Nick Novak Flip
Nick Novak surprises the crowd with a back flip on cue. (Claire Wiley)


The event was emceed by U.S. Ski & Snowboard alumnus, TV personality, U.S. Ski Hall of Famer and former freestyle legend Trace Worthington. President and CEO Tiger Shaw, Chief Development Officer Trisha Worthington, and numerous other U.S. Ski & Snowboard employees were present at the casual, backyard event. Aerialist Nick Novak (Woodbridge, Va.) wowed the crowd when he did a backflip on command, Radamus shot hoops with a 15-year-old attendee, and Ligety’s (and his wife Mia) son Jax stole the show with his cuteness while Ligety spoke to the crowd about what it was like to grow up as a local community Park City Ski & Snowboard kid who came up through the ranks to Olympic champion. 

 

Ted Ligety and son Jax
Double Olympic champion Ted Ligety and son Jax pose for a picture. (Claire Wiley)


The U.S. Ski and Snowboard Foundation hosts a variety of formal and on-snow fundraising events across the country that raise over $1.7 million for the Team annually. These featured events provide the perfect opportunity to meet the athletes and hear their stories firsthand. Special events account for a significant portion of the Team's annual fund and are supported and chaired by U.S. Ski & Snowboard Trustees, private donors, individuals, and businesses.

For more information about our upcoming events across the country visit https://www.usskiandsnowboard.org/foundation/foundation-special-events

Athletes in Attendance
Alex Bowen
Cooper Cornelius
Olivia Giaccio
Johnny Hagenbuch
Breezy Johnson
Jaelin Kauf
Noel Keefe
Zak Ketterson
Ted Ligety
Novie McCabe
Alice Merryweather
Kyle Negomir
Nick Novak
Ben Ogden
River Radamus
Gus Schumacher
Jackie Wiles
Brad Wilson

To support U.S. Ski & Snowboard on their quest to become the Best in the World! 

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Men’s Alpine Takes On Timberline By Morning, Hood River By Afternoon

By Megan Harrod
August, 12 2019
Downhillers in Hood River
Current Downhillers Steven Nyman, Travis Ganong, Sam Morse and Bryce Bennett pose with alumnus downhiller legend A.J. Kitt at a barbecue hosted by Kitt's family during their recent Mt. Hood camp.

It’s been a longtime dream of recently hired men’s alpine speed team head coach Randy Pelkey to create an early prep period camp that combined time on the mountain in the morning, with SUP time on the river in the afternoon. Pelkey and the men’s alpine speed team—joined by return to snow athlete Galena Wardle (Aspen, Colo.)—recently did just that at official U.S. Ski & Snowboard training site Timberline Lodge & Ski Area in Mt. Hood, Ore.

“I thought it was a great camp,” Pelkey reflected. “I’ve had a dream about doing a camp like this where you combine the balance issues for a basics camp on Mt. Hood with the balance issues that come from balancing on a fluid, dynamic surface like water.” On-hill training consisted of a steady progression of fundamental drills and some giant slalom training, while afternoons were spent on Hood River SUPing, thanks to the help of local shop Big Winds, whose owner Steve Gates is a close friend of Pelkey. 

Gates—and Big Winds—graciously set the team up with two of the best paddlers in the world, including Fiona Wylde (who is top-five in the world) and Leif Bergstrom, who taught the athletes the paddle stroke on day 1 prior to the crew taking on the nearly eight mile downwinder from Viento to Hood River on the following day. Gates and co. taught the guys a few things about turning the board, using a smaller board to learn skills—which is a bit like going from slalom skis to downhill skis the next day. 

Men’s alpine athletes included veteran and team leader Steven Nyman (Sundance, Utah), Bryce Bennett (Squaw Valley, Calif.), Travis Ganong (Squaw Valley, Calif.), Sam Morse (Sugarloaf, Maine) and Tommy Ford (Bend, Ore.). In addition to Pelkey, they were joined by assistant coach Scotty Veenis and women's alpine speed team coach Karin Harjo, who—together with husband Pelkey call Oregon home—spend a significant amount of time on the Columbia River in the summer months. 

Crew Poses with a Fan at Hood

“The downwinder was really cool. It was really windy that day, and after a while we all got together as one pod going down the river and it was really fun. They just kept getting better and better. Again, the balance is tricky - you have to get on the front of the board to get it into the wave, and then you have to move back to ride the wave. I just think the parallels to skiing are so powerful.” Normally the eight mile downwinder takes about three hours to complete the first time they do it, but it’s no surprise that for this group of elite athletes, it only took 1.5 hours.  

On snow at Timberline, the crew focused on the fundamentals, sticking to brush gate courses for the first few days, with mostly giant slalom-type movements—slowing everything down. Pelkey had them do drills for depth and balance and patience, and then progress to drills for balance at the top of the turn, then balance at the bottom of the turn. They did this progression for two days, and Pelkey said the athletes were really into it. 

“The glacier was accommodating and great, and they gave us lane one everyday which was also awesome,” Pelkey commented on Timberline’s hospitality. “The surface froze one night, and the rest of the days the salt was great, and it worked. Four days on salted snow was enough for us. We kept it to eight gates of sections of GS and we were doing video right away. We kept going back to the balance and really basic stuff to knock the rust off.”

For the athletes, this first on-snow camp this summer is an important one as they build the progression to speed and head down to the Southern Hemisphere, to Chile and New Zealand, this month. “If you think about any elite sport,” Pelkey explained, “everything is founded in the fundamentals, and so truly—if you find an issue at a World Cup downhill at the worst possible spot—you can find a path to fix it through the fundamentals.” 

Bennett, who has worked with both Pelkey and Harjo in the past having hailed from Western Region, had nothing but great things to say about their first camp with their new head coach. For Bennett, the SUP session was a highlight, as was a visit to Viento CrossFit, where he—together with CrossFit Games competitor, coach and ski coach Karen McCadam—coached teammate and fellow big man Nyman to do muscle-ups. They also went to former World Cup downhiller and legend AJ Kitt’s house for a big barbecue one evening, in which there were about six former Olympians of various sports in attendance. 

“It was Randy’s home, so it was his chance to show us around his home,” Bennett said. We did an eight-mile downwinder SUP board session that was super fun, and also pretty challenging. We were catching wave after wave. I’ve worked with Randy in the past. I just really like him. He’s got a super mellow approach, he’s organized and we had a seamless first camp. We also had a sweet BBQ at AJ Kitt’s family with a big wave surfer Dave Kalama (who pioneered big wave surfing techniques with Laird Hamilton and other legends) and his son. It was fun to hangout, and I’m always inspired when I spend time with AJ.”  

Up next for this crew is a trip down to South America, where they’ll start by getting their feet wet with some tech training at La Parva, Chile before heading further down south to Nevados de Chillan for some speed training.

Michigan Tech To Host 2020 L.L.Bean U.S. Cross Country Championships

By Tom Horrocks
August, 12 2019
2020 XC Champs

The 2020 L.L.Bean U.S. Cross Country Championships, hosted by the Michigan Tech Huskies, return to Houghton, Mich., Jan. 2-7 with four days of classic and freestyle competition. 

"We are thrilled to bring the U.S. Cross Country Championships back to Michigan Tech," Michigan Tech Cross Country Head Coach Tom Smith said. "This will be our sixth time hosting a National Championship event at Tech, and the fifth time hosting the U.S. Cross Country Championships through the tenure of our Michigan Tech Nordic Ski Team.”

The four days of competition will award U.S. Cross Country Championship titles in freestyle sprint, freestyle individual start, classic mass start, and classic sprint races. 

“We are very excited to bring the L.L.Bean U.S. Cross Country Championships back to Michigan Tech,” said U.S. Ski & Snowboard Director of Events Eric Webster. “Michigan Tech always provides an outstanding event, and we are looking forward to four days of exciting racing for the athletes and fans."

"We boast one of the greatest race organizing committees, including astounding volunteers and Tech staff, all integral to allowing us to host this National Championship event,” Smith added. “This is a big deal for our entire community. With new trail and facility improvements, the opportunity to showcase what it is to be a Michigan Tech Nordic Husky, and an event that truly benefits our entire Keweenaw community from our Nordic Ski Team and Michigan Tech across the spectrum spanning local business and hospitality, the positive impacts this event brings are truly immeasurable!”

A full rundown of U.S. Cross Country Championships information is available at USNationals.mtu.edu. Want an up-close view of the event? Get involved as a volunteer by visiting the 2020 U.S. Cross Country Championship Volunteer Information Form.

2020 L.L.Bean U.S. Cross Country Championships
Click here for a full event schedule.

Thursday, Jan. 2 (all times CDT)
9:30 a.m. - Men’s freestyle spring qualifier
10:30 a.m. - Women’s freestyle spring qualifier
12:00 p.m. - Men and women’s freestyle sprint heats, semifinals, finals
2:30 p.m. - Junior men and women’s freestyle sprint heats, semifinals, finals

Friday, Jan. 3
9:30 a.m. - Women's 10km freestyle individual
12:30 p.m. - Men's 15km freestyle individual

Sunday, Jan. 5
9:30 .m. - Men's 30km classic mass start 
11:30 a.m. - Women's 20km classic mass start
1:00 p.m. - Junior men 10km classic mass start 
2:00 p.m. - Junior women 7.5km classic mass start

Tuesday, Jan. 7
9:30 a.m. - Women's classic sprint qualifier
10:30 a.m. - Men's classic sprint qualifier
12:00 p.m. Women and men's sprint heats, semifinals, and finals 
2:30 p.m. - Junior men and women’s sprint heats, semifinals, and finals