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Olympics’ Vermont Showdown: Hannah Teter v. Kelly Clark

Monday, February 15th, 2010

teter_v_clark

Of course, Kelly Clark and Hannah Teter don’t consider themselves enemies, or even foes. You’ll regularly see them high-fiving and hugging each other at the bottom of the pipe during competition, and, along with Gretchen Bleiler and Torah Bright, they continue to push each other and the sport.

But someone must win at this Thursday’s Ladies Superpipe throwdown in Vancouver. Both girls are fierce competitors and, rest assured, they want that gold. Here’s an grom-sized summary of each girl’s strengths and background as they prepare for the biggest competition of the year.

Hannah Teter (Belmont, VT)

hanna_swimsuit

It was cold out, so Hannah wore a scarf at her SI swimsuit shoot.

It was cold out, so Hannah wore a scarf at her SI swimsuit shoot.

The Skinny: Depending on how you look at it, Hannah comes to the 2010 Olympics with either a huge leg-up and or a big disadvantage — she is the defending gold medalist. On the one hand, Hannah can find solace in knowing she is the best female halfpipe rider on the planet. But, dang man, that’s some pressure. That can play with your head when you’re about to drop in. Can she handle it?

Recent History: Hannah’s last four years aren’t quite as impressive as Kelly’s, but she won some big-time superpipe comps at the Burton Australian Open and the Boreal Grand Prix. She took second at the Dew Tour at Mount Snow last year.

Off-Snow: Hannah Teter is a giver, all the way. She manages her own charity called Hannah’s Gold and, through maple syrup sales and a personalized Ben and Jerry’s ice cream flavor, she is raising funds for a clean water project in Kirindon, Kenya. She donates all her contest win money to charity. She stays active in the media, and if you haven’t heard yet, she left little to the imagination in the latest Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue.

Kelly Clark (West Dover, VT)

Kelly Clark goes big, then goes home (and counts her dozens and dozens of medals).

Kelly Clark goes big, then goes home (and counts her dozens and dozens of medals).

The Skinny: “Redemption” is a word you’ll hear spewed by Olympic commentators nonstop the next few weeks, but Kelly truly has a score to settle. In Torino four years ago, on the last hit of her second run, she pushed the envelope and fell while attempting a 900. An easier 720 would have landed her a medal spot, but in subsequent interviews she insisted she had no regrets. No one will deny that Kelly has the most amplitude of any female in the sport, but she must land her tricks clean if she expects to take the podium.

Recent History: Kelly’s last four years have been nothing short of phenomenal. The girl simply kills it. She took first place at last year’s Dew Tour at Mount Snow, plus the Dew Cup. She owned the Grand Prixs of the last few years. She took silver at the 2008 and 2010 X Games. The list is loooong. Consistency is her M.O.

Off-Snow: Kelly Clark keeps her private life just that. You will not find her in any swimsuit issues or on late-night television shows. But you will find her training incessantly at her home mountain, Mammoth, or in New Zealand in the off-season. After a dark period in her life before the last Olympics, Kelly found God, and you’ll now see a “Jesus, I can not hide my love” sticker next to her Burton sticker.

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-Luke

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Ross Powers talks Olympics past and present

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010
On this day, February 10, in the year 1979, a child was born in Londonderry, Vermont. His parents did not know it at the time, but this child would become the greatest snowboarder in the world.
Happy birthday, Ross Powers.
Here we are, 31 years removed from that fateful winter day. Ross is a household name in Vermont, almost as recognizable as the word “snowboarding” itself. How’s that?
Well, the dude took bronze in the halfpipe at snowboarding’s Olympic debut in Nagano in 1998. Then he won gold in at the 2002 Olympics. He has a superpipe and boardercross course named after him at Okemo. And tomorrow he’s headed to Vancouver to represent America at the 2010 Winter Games.
I caught up with Ross while he was chillin’ at his home in Londonderry, Vermont, earlier this week. Mainly we chatted about the upcoming Olympics, but in the end, the whole conversation boiled down to his answer when I asked, “Any last words before heading to Vancouver?”
“Nah, not really? I’m just still lovin’ snowboarding.”
RideVermont: What was it like in Nagano in 1998 at the first-ever Olympic halfpipe competition?
Ross: We were out at a separate mountain where there were no other events going on, so it kind of felt like a regular World Cup. We competed in the rain I remember… and back then halfpipes were a lot smaller. But I didn’t realize how big the Olympics were until I came home. I couldn’t even go into town [without being approached by fans] and everyone from my whole life was getting in touch with me. It changes your life.
RideVermont: For over a decade, you’ve been killing it in halfpipe competitions. But your heading to Vancouver on Thursday as an alternate in the Boardercross event. How did this change-over come about?
Birthday Boy Ross: I went to the ‘o6 Olympics as the alternate in halfpipe and I watched the snowboardcross while I was there. I watched my buddy Seth Wescott win it and he said, “Dude, you’ve gotta get into this.” We grew up racing together and he thought I’d have a good chance. The next year I was competing at the X-Games [in boardercross] and took it from there.
RideVermont: What does it mean, exactly, that you’re an “alternate”?
Ross the Boss: If someone gets hurt they bring me in last minute and I compete.
RideVermont: At 31, are you the eldest snowboarder on the boardercross team?
Big Ross: Most of the guys are about my age. Seth Wescott is a few years older than me. Nate Holland is just a little bit older than me. This year we had Shaun Palmer give it a really good run… and he’s 41.
RideVermont: Get outta here, Shaun Palmer is still racing?
R-Dawg: Yeah he finished right behind me. In snowboardcross, the say your prime age is low 30s. So I guess I’m just coming into my prime.
RideVermont: So which is more enjoyable for you, halfpipe or boardercross.
A rolling stone gathers no Ross: I love ‘em both. Halfpipe is my roots and I’ve had so much fun and a great career and met so many friends. With halfpipe, it’s just you, you’re out there by yourself and it’s up to the judges [to determine a winner]. With boardercross, first one down wins, so I like boardercross in that way. But they’re both great. Halfpipe’s awesome, and the stuff people are doing now, it’s just unbelievable.
As we continued talking, the conversation moved over to the current state of competitve halfpipe riding. In ‘02, Ross won Olympic gold with two McTwists and two 720s with grabs. This year, Shaun White might throw three double cork 1260s in a single run.
“Shaun has put in his time,” said Ross. Simple as that.
Whereas the double cork is the game-changer this season, Ross remembered back to ‘02, where his amplitude out of the pipe was what impressed the judges the most. That, and his backside 360 to switch McTwist, a difficult and technical combo, were good enough to be best in the world.
And if you think the double cork is brand new, think again. Ross reminded me that Mike Michalchuk, a Canadian opponent at the ‘02 Olympics, was routinely working a double backflip and a double “Michalchuk”, a backflip with a 540-degree rotation, into his runs. “So it’s kinda suprised me that it, [the double cork], didn’t catch on sooner,” said Ross. “But the style and the height these kids are bringing to doubles now… watching them at X-Games I was blown away, and I can’t wait to see them do it again in Vancouver.”
Post-Olympics, Ross says he definitely wants to be at Stratton next month for the US Open, but he might “have to do some boardercrossin’.” He hasn’t competed in pipe in a few years, but it’s not out of the question for him to throw on a bib and give the US Open pipe a whirl.
The Big Show
Ross will be hitting the media circuit in Vancouver as a reporter for Yahoo sports. Look out for his blogs, video blogs and other coverage.

On this day, February 10, in the year 1979, a child was born in Londonderry, Vermont. His parents did not know it at the time, but this kid would become the greatest snowboarder in the world.

Happy birthday, Ross Powers.

Here we are, 31 years removed from that fateful winter day. Ross is a household name in Vermont, almost as recognizable as the word “snowboarding” itself. How’s that?

Well, the dude took bronze in the halfpipe at snowboarding’s Olympic debut in Nagano in 1998. Then he won gold at the 2002 Olympics. He has a superpipe and boardercross course named after him at Okemo. And tomorrow he’s headed to Vancouver to represent America at the 2010 Winter Games.

Ross Powers at Okemo with daughter, Victoria.

Ross Powers at Okemo with daughter, Victoria.

I caught up with Ross while he was chillin’ at his home in Londonderry, Vermont, earlier this week. Mainly we chatted about the upcoming Olympics, but in the end, the whole conversation boiled down to his answer when I asked, “Any last words before heading to Vancouver?”

“Nah, not really? I’m just still lovin’ snowboarding.”

—–

RideVermont: What was it like in Nagano in 1998 at the first-ever Olympic halfpipe competition?

Ross: We were out at a separate mountain where there were no other events going on, so it kind of felt like a regular World Cup. We competed in the rain I remember… and back then halfpipes were a lot smaller. But I didn’t realize how big the Olympics were until I came home. I couldn’t even go into town [without being approached by fans] and everyone from my whole life was getting in touch with me. It changes your life.

RideVermont: For over a decade, you’ve been killing it in halfpipe competitions. But your heading to Vancouver on Thursday as an alternate in the Boardercross event. How did this change-over come about?

Birthday Boy Ross: I went to the ‘o6 Olympics as the alternate in halfpipe and I watched the snowboardcross while I was there. I watched my buddy Seth Wescott win it and he said, “Dude, you’ve gotta get into this.” We grew up racing together and he thought I’d have a good chance. The next year I was competing at the X-Games [in boardercross] and took it from there.

RideVermont: What does it mean, exactly, that you’re an “alternate” at the 2010 Olympics?

Ross the Boss: If someone gets hurt they bring me in last minute and I compete.

RideVermont: At 31, are you the eldest snowboarder on the boardercross team?

Big Ross: Most of the guys are about my age. Seth Wescott is a few years older than me. Nate Holland is just a little bit older than me. This year we had Shaun Palmer give it a really good run… and he’s 41.

RideVermont: Get outta here, Shaun Palmer is still racing?

R-Dawg: Yeah he finished right behind me. In snowboardcross, the say your prime age is low 30s. So I guess I’m just coming into my prime.

RideVermont: So which is more enjoyable for you, halfpipe or boardercross?

A rolling stone gathers no Ross: I love ‘em both. Halfpipe is my roots and I’ve had so much fun and a great career and met so many friends. With halfpipe, it’s just you, you’re out there by yourself and it’s up to the judges [to determine a winner]. With boardercross, first one down wins, so I like boardercross in that way. But they’re both great. Halfpipe’s awesome, and the stuff people are doing now, it’s just unbelievable.

—–

As we continued talking, the conversation moved over to the current state of competitve halfpipe riding compared to a decade or so ago. In ‘02, Ross won Olympic gold with two McTwists and two 720s with grabs. This year, Shaun White might throw three double cork 1260s in a single run.

“Shaun has put in his time,” said Ross. Simple as that.

Whereas the double cork is the game-changer this season, Ross remembered back to ‘02, where his amplitude out of the pipe was what impressed the judges the most. That, and his backside 360 to switch McTwist, a difficult and technical combo, were good enough to be best in the world.

And if you think the double cork is brand new, think again. Ross reminded me that Mike Michalchuk, a Canadian opponent at the ‘02 Olympics, was routinely working a double backflip and a double “Michalchuk”, a backflip with a 540-degree rotation, into his runs. “So it’s kinda suprised me that it, [the double cork], didn’t catch on sooner,” said Ross. “But the style and the height these kids are bringing to doubles now… watching them at X-Games I was blown away, and I can’t wait to see them do it again in Vancouver.”

Post-Olympics, Ross says he definitely wants to be at Stratton next month for the US Open, but he might “have to do some boardercrossin’.” He hasn’t competed in pipe in a few years, but it’s not out of the question for him to throw on a bib and give the US Open pipe a whirl.

Ross will be hitting the media circuit in Vancouver as a reporter for Yahoo sports. Look out for his blogs, video blogs and other coverage.

Good luck, USA. Sweep that podium.

-Luke

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