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View Full Version : At Olympics snowboarding comes of age


gerard
02-23-2006, 02:11 PM
Ashlee Brown looked resplendent in her orange checked snowboard gear as she waited by a crowded lift line at the ritzy mountain resort of Squaw Valley in the heart of northern California's booming winter sports region.

Then the attractive 10th grader flashed a smile at young man waiting in line. He smiled back and gave a nod and in instant she was sliding on her snowboard under under the rope and into the front of the line.
'Well, everyone says we're hoodlums so we might as well live up to the name,' said Brown as she rode to the top of the mountain.


That image of snowboarders as rebels of the mountain might suit the mindset of an edgy teenager, but the sport's status as the outsider in a world dominated by skiing is fast being transformed.


Nothing signalled this change more boldly than the coverage of the winter Olympics where traditional crowd favourites like ice-dancing and skiing were overshadowed by the feats of the snowboard daredevils on the halfpipe.


They also drew raves for their performances in the snowboard cross event in which four racers dash and bump down the same course, and in the snowboard slalom in which riders carve their perfect turns in tandem as they glide down the course.


'Say what you want about the snowboarders, but they have a unique sense of purpose all to themselves, and they have infused the Winter Olympics with some much needed drama,' raved critic Tim Goodman in the San Francisco Chronicle. 'On top of that, snowboard cross is a total rush. Ice dancing is dead. Long live snowboard cross.'


Marketers have quickly latched on to the chic appeal of the snow rebels. Silver medal winner Lindsey Jacobellis features in a promotion for Visa which the company continued to run even after she blew her gold medal chances by fluffing a showboat trick on the last jump of her snowboard cross race.


Another poster boy for the success of snowboarding is Shaun White, 19, the red-headed gold medal winner of the half pipe competition. He is known as 'The Flying Tomato', reportedly earns 1 million dollars a year, and owns three houses despite still living with his parents.


But despite the big money involved both still display the rules- be-damned mindset that is at the core of the snowboard lifestyle. 'I think it's silly for athletes to look at a sport as a way to get better deals and endorsements,' said Jacobellis. 'It's about the love of the sport.'


That purity of thought is gold for companies who want to pitch their brand to the coveted young demographic that they hope will become consumers for life. Another advantage is that the relative newness of the sport means that promotional costs are still low.


'Snowboarding, with no traditional sponsorship barriers, present a unique opportunity to reach an audience like never before,' says Casey Wasserman, an expert on sports marketing who has linked up sponsors such as Oakley eyewear, Red Bull energy drinks and T-Mobile with sports like BMX, wakeboarding and snowboarding.


'We like to connect with the values of the snowboarding lifestyle, such as passion and excitement, creativity and freedom,' says Anne Nenonen, senior manager of global marketing at Nokia, which sponsors a major snowboarding tournament called Leave No Trace.


Figures of the U.S. National Ski Areas Association show that snowboarders represented some 26 per cent of all visitors last season, up from 18 per cent 8 years earlier.


The high profile of this year's Olympic events is expected to raise that even further this year. 'I've never seen so many snowboarders here before,' said Rafael Alesandro, an Argentinian student who has worked as a lift operator at Northstar every year for the past four years. 'You hardly see any teenagers on skis any more. At least not any who think they're cool.'


But for people like Jason Stillman, a 26-year-old engineer who just switched from skiing to snowboarding, the hype about the snowboarding lifestyle is totally irrelevant.


'It's not about fashion, or style. It's about that floating feeling you get when you carve through a field of fresh powder,' he said at the end of a long ride down Northstar's slopes. 'How can I put it? It's the closest I'll ever get to heaven.'

SnoChica
02-23-2006, 02:51 PM
Great article.... :)

DPancoast
02-23-2006, 03:03 PM
good read. This news section looks better and better everyday!

TheDanger-Zone
02-23-2006, 03:20 PM
Great article.... :)

good read. This news section looks better and better everyday!

Ditto, I agree. Great work G. Keep it up.

funktekk
02-23-2006, 06:20 PM
That image of snowboarders as rebels of the mountain might suit the mindset of an edgy teenager, but the sport's status as the outsider in a world dominated by skiing is fast being transformed.


Were slipping people! We need to step it up with the rebel like activity. God forbid we lose are rebel status!

phillyboy
02-23-2006, 06:35 PM
Makes me wonder what the difference is between snowboarding an skateboarding in the sense of: how is it that you can have snowboard halfpipe in the olympics, but but skateboard halfpipe? They're both considered "rebelious" sports. Although it looks like they are seriously considering skateboarding in the olympics. So I guess some time in the future this same article that G just posted will be rewritten but with "skateboarding" replacing "snowboarding." But check this out: http://skateboard.about.com/od/events/a/Olympics.htm

dontxstopxme
02-24-2006, 02:11 AM
How can I put it? It's the closest I'll ever get to heaven.
amen. Now that just touched me... :')

thedude
02-26-2006, 03:01 AM
if it was me, i wouldn't have bocthed my gold medal chanecs by pullign a method grab. i would have landed that and then buttered my way through the finish line!

karen
02-26-2006, 08:35 PM
the press is finally realizing what we've known all along...all of this stuff they present as so new and different doesn't seem new to me, it's what i've always thought. so really, the olympics aren't changing what snowboarding is, they're publicizing it.

rosepose48
05-21-2006, 07:46 PM
if it was me, i wouldn't have bocthed my gold medal chanecs by pullign a method grab. i would have landed that and then buttered my way through the finish line!

Yeah no kidding.. What a lame move. Then when reporters asked her about it she was like "well.. the wind, and then there was this huge divit in the snow, and i hurt my leg blah blah blah" that wasnt exactly what she said but it was lame. She should have just been like yeah i ****ed up

rustybean
05-21-2006, 08:09 PM
'How can I put it? It's the closest I'll ever get to heaven.'

Couldn't have said it better myself.:madgrin:

southcali17
05-21-2006, 09:08 PM
reviving an old post here? lol

I think the reason skateboarding isn't in the olympics yet is because there's a million summer events not all that many winter events (in comparison). They'd want to get more winter events before more summer ones since winter doesn't get quite the turnout or press the summer games do. Personally, I like the winter games more... (girly moment:) ice is like... prettier! ice sculptures... blue... snow... it's just magical; the whole atmosphere is. the summer atmosphere = hot sticky sun and goopy sunscreen, sunglasses so you don't go blind... just my thoughts.

FearMe
05-22-2006, 04:37 PM
http://archives.cbc.ca/IDCC-1-41-1727-11917/sports/extreme_sports/

Interesting to know what they thought of us 21 years ago. If anything this will provide any oldschooler with a huge laugh.

At a lot of resorts the mix of snowboarder/skier is slowly approaching 50/50. The older skiers are dying off and the new generations coming to snow sports are snowboarding because its the new thing. With the olympics its definately put snowboarding in a positive image but for every positive piece of hype there is, someone will try to portray snowboarding as a "rebel" sport.

Corporations that even 10 years ago didn't want anything to do with snowboarding are jumping on the band wagon. Its semi funny that they mention Red Bull in that article, Red Bull is 16 years old but still relatively new to the US. They have always been behind x treme sports even if now they are a tad over kill at events. Look at events like the X games and Gravity games and see how many sponsors they have that have nothing to do with snowboarding. Its definately going to get way more corporate which blows because now all you see is kids wanting to go pro and they have no clue.

Skateboarding is the same way. Although having it in the olympics might give it more of a positive view I doubt you could do that now with all the soccer moms taking there kids in droves to the skateparks that have popped up in every small town.

With all the olympic hype this up coming season is going to be huge with beginers coming out and expect Burton to be a huge seller since the poster child won the olympics. Which is great for the industry but it sucks when you ride a chair lift with a kid thats blabbing on and on about some stupid contest and has no clue what it means to snowboard.