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"Racer's Edge" – The inside track from some of the world’s
fastest riders as printed in Transworld
Snowboarding, February
9th, 2000.
Lines and Speed
In giant slalom and slalom it’s best to go as straight
as possible between gates. Take the line that allows you to constantly
increase speed. Realistically, riders have to modify their lines
to work with the slope and the course setting – going
either straighter or rounder. Try to reduce the length of your
turns as much as you can because riding on the base rather than
the edge of the board is definitely faster. A good rider will continually
adapt his technique to the situation in order to keep a perfect
line from top to bottom, taking advantage of the slope's
pitch between gates. The line you choose also establishes a rhythm;
stick to it until the gates force you to adopt another line – what’s
called a rhythm change. – Nicolas
Conte
Looking Ahead
Looking ahead is one of the secrets of racing. Whether
you’re in a race course or freeriding on changing terrain,
speed can be slowed down in your mind by looking farther ahead.
Most people look at their feet or at the snow right in front of
them, but focusing down the course allows you to anticipate the
turns to come – your brain expects an obstacle in time for
your body to react. By lifting your head and looking two or three
gates, trees, or moguls ahead you’ll be able to charge with
more confidence and speed. – Lisa Kosglow
GS versus SL
In dual slalom my edge is only in contact, or engaged,
for a short time. It’s carve, a quick release, and then the
next turn. For slalom you need fast legs, good timing, and balance.
I train by running a lot of gates; this helps for timing the edge
change. You should also practice by freeriding with your slalom
board to control the speed and radius of turns. In GS everything
is happening slower and more smoothly. I stand tall in the beginning
of the turn, then get lower by bending my knees as the pressure
increases. Then it's a progressive release of the pressure
toward the changing of the edge. Technically, GS turns are the
most difficult – at least if the course is turny – because
it’s harder to build up progressive power during a long turn.
No risk, no fun! – Ueli Kestenholz
Speed and Tempo
The main differences between long and short turns are
speed and tempo. When making long turns your speed is faster, but
the tempo is slower – you let the speed build – than
in short turns. With longer turns balance is really important.
In short turns you have to speed up the tempo and movement. It
sometimes seems like you’re working more in short turns,
but you’re
really just speeding up the tempo and squeezing more into a smaller
place. All the skills from racing cross over to freeriding: balance,
feel for the fall-line, use of the fall-line, the timing and amount
of pressure on the edge, and the movement of your mass in relation
to the board. When racing I stay really disciplined and look for
speed. You have to keep a focused mind-set. Your mind-set is the
big difference between racing and freeriding. When I'm just
out freecarving, I relax and enjoy the feeling, flowing and mixing
it up with all the skills you'd use racing. – Mike
Jacoby
Carving and Skidding
It’s always a challenge to carve perfect turns on
ice as you would on hero corduroy. Making confident, balanced moves
and committing to stay forward over your board will definitely
help. It may seem unnatural, but sometimes you have to go against
your bodily reactions. Remember, the board's edge simply
won't hold as well in hard-snow conditions, a lighter touch
is needed. The rider who wins a race is usually the one who rails
close to 100-percent of the course. Non-railed turns are a result
of being off line: either too straight, too late, or both. It takes
a whole hell of a lot of practice to win any snowboard event these
days. Repetition ingrains good technique. Once running a course
becomes second nature and your reactions have been trained properly,
you’ll be a champion. P.S. It’s a long, focused road. – Mark
Fawcett |
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