Advertisement

New Event Already Could Be at Crossroads

Share
Times Staff Writer

Seth Wescott has high hopes as one of the stars who today will introduce to the world what some predict will become one of the most exciting sports in the Winter Olympics.

Snowboard cross is not for the faint of heart. It involves racing downhill in groups of four at speeds higher than 40 mph, in extremely close quarters on what resembles a snow-covered motocross track turned on its edge, enabling gravity to provide the horsepower.

Some of the jumps will fling competitors 50 feet down the mountain. Top finishers will cover the 3,000-foot course in about 90 seconds, their lungs and leg muscles protesting all the while.

Advertisement

The carnage factor can be significant; human contact is unavoidable and crashes will occur.

Wescott, 29, of Carrabassett Valley, Maine, is one of four U.S. entries in the 36-man field and, along with Nate Holland, 27, of Squaw Valley, Calif., is a strong contender for the gold.

Both will be charging with full will and might to achieve Olympic glory. But there’s more at stake, they say. The real winner -- or loser -- could be the sport itself.

Referred to as boardercross in the United States -- Boarder X at the Winter X Games -- this racing discipline enjoyed a healthy following in the mid-1990s until about 2002.

The Friday night boardercross series was a staple at resorts across the country. The Swatch and International Snowboarding Federation tours had broad support. But as terrain parks with halfpipes, jumps and rail features began to sprout, boardercross fell into decline.

These days the sport exists almost exclusively on the International Ski Federation (FIS) circuit, which includes World Cup competitions, and at the annual X Games.

Advertisement

The U.S. team is hoping that a good performance today will spark a revival, much in the way the medals sweep by the U.S. men’s halfpipe team in the 2002 Salt Lake City Games increased interest in that discipline.

“What we’re bringing into the Olympics this year, with the new discipline, is the opportunity to put something out there for the American public and everyone will get it,” said Wescott, the 2005 world champion. “With halfpipe, the average person watching doesn’t necessarily understand the intricacies of tricks and style factor.

“Here’s something, especially for our nation that loves NASCAR and loves motor sports ... they’re just going to see head-to-head racing and it’s going to be a live and exciting show for them so I think it’s really going to do well as far as viewership in the States is concerned, and it will put [racing] back on the map.”

Then again, it may not. Kids these days arrive at resorts with their parents and are promptly excused to spend the day in terrain parks, where snowboarding has essentially evolved into skateboarding on snow.

If they’re not zipping up and down the walls of the halfpipe, they’re leaping onto and sliding across rails and performing tricks off jumps called kickers. From this phenomenon was born slopestyle competitions, during which riders are judged for execution of routines, as athletes are during halfpipe contests.

Because of slopestyle’s growing popularity, and because it is an aesthetic pursuit that plays well before television cameras, many believe it eventually will become an Olympic sport.

Advertisement

Downhill racing on snowboards, meanwhile, has become such an afterthought among young riders that some snowboard companies have discontinued their lines of Alpine boards.

“It’s disappointing to look at the huge move toward urban snowboarding,” said Wescott, who competed in halfpipe, big-air and slopestyle contests before returning to what he calls a purer means of riding.

“It gets away from the roots and soul of the sport. To me, the sport originated in the powder in the mountains.

“When it snows now in Salt Lake City, instead of going to Snowbird to ride powder in the mountains, they’ll be going down and riding handrails in the city, and to me it just doesn’t make sense.”

Holland, winner of the snowboard cross competition two weeks ago at the Winter X Games, says U.S. and international riders have discussed breaking away from FIS and organizing a pro tour on what Holland calls “punk rock courses” designed to be more challenging and fun for spectators.

Cross riders see the Olympics as an important first step, though, and it works to their advantage, Holland says, to follow the halfpipe competition, held Sunday and Monday, with four of six medals going to U.S. men and women.

Advertisement

“They drew large crowds and lots of attention and now that snowboarders have the public’s eye, we’re going to come out and give them full action-packed racing over a gnarly course,” Holland said.

Of course there is one immediate concern and it’s pretty gnarly in itself: today’s competition, notably race favorite Xavier Delerue and his French teammates.

Said Holland: “I don’t see there being a lot of American public support if the French sweep the podium.”

Advertisement