Poster: A snowHead
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@speed098, we will go and find some terrain next month and you can show me how it's done. Which skis will you be bringing ?
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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8611 wrote: |
...Check out this go pro offering, powder I know, but the best skiing is actually when he's on the piste.
https://vimeo.com/34963263
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Got to say I think those muppets with gopro need a good talking to. I was getting concerned with their abuse of piste safety then my jaw dropped that they left the two collision incidents in the film !
Its morons like this that I want off the mountain, and preferably put in charge of a mcdonalds floor mop for the rest of their careers.
When will these gopro idiots learn that we can all see which way they are looking...and it certainly isn't looking out for other mountain users.
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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lampbus wrote: |
8611 wrote: |
...Check out this go pro offering, powder I know, but the best skiing is actually when he's on the piste.
https://vimeo.com/34963263
.... |
Got to say I think those muppets with gopro need a good talking to. I was getting concerned with their abuse of piste safety then my jaw dropped that they left the two collision incidents in the film !
Its morons like this that I want off the mountain, and preferably put in charge of a mcdonalds floor mop for the rest of their careers.
When will these gopro idiots learn that we can all see which way they are looking...and it certainly isn't looking out for other mountain users. |
You mean the one incident from 2 angles where he gets run into from behind!? In what world was that his fault?
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lampbus wrote: |
8611 wrote: |
...Check out this go pro offering, powder I know, but the best skiing is actually when he's on the piste.
https://vimeo.com/34963263
.... |
Got to say I think those muppets with gopro need a good talking to. I was getting concerned with their abuse of piste safety then my jaw dropped that they left the two collision incidents in the film !
Its morons like this that I want off the mountain, and preferably put in charge of a mcdonalds floor mop for the rest of their careers.
When will these gopro idiots learn that we can all see which way they are looking...and it certainly isn't looking out for other mountain users. |
Sorry, what?!
It was one collision, shown from different angles. They didn't cause the collision, the dude hit THEM from behind.
Where was the 'abuse of piste safety??!!' I didn't see any...
Also I assume you do know who Julien Regnier is?
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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Ok, I see now it is the same incident from 2 angles. Both angles show what a complete twits the goproers are.
Having performed a trick he enters a narrow piste at 1:06, swinging completely across its width. Both skiers fail to look to see if a faster skier is there (which is likely - it is a flattish part where other skiers would be expected to be maintaining a bit of pace)
Then at 1:13, having drifted to the hard right of the piste, he slows and makes a sudden switch across to hit his jump - again without any check that you or I may be cruising past.
They also fail to have a spotter for the landing. You or I could be there.
There is a cut, then he enters the lower narrow piste on it's right (at 1:24 and heads directly across to the left side of the piste forcing the skier on the piste to collide. He leaves no space for the skier in black to go.
Why ? Because all thy are interested in is hitting the feature, then looking for the next one. You & I never even enter their tiny minds.
Both of these are directly against the FIS rules 1, 2, 5 and 6. ( http://snowheads.com/ski-forum/viewtopic.php?p=2003923 )
The skier who collided with goprofool1 was obliged to apply rule 4, but in reality, where was he expected to go ? He had the snowploughing skier to avoid, and this idiot just joins the piste and forces him across to the left.
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I don't care who Julien Regnier is he skis like an fool and I don't want him anywhere near me on or off piste thank you.
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lampbus wrote: |
I don't care who Julien Regnier is he skis like an fool and I don't want him anywhere near me on or off piste thank you. |
I think you're safe – he's unlikely to be skiing the grumpy old man zone
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lampbus wrote: |
I don't care who Julien Regnier is he skis like an fool and I don't want him anywhere near me on or off piste thank you. |
Where does he ski like a fool though? I don't see anything where they're not in full control. As you'd expect from one of the best skiers in the world...
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You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
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Also, around 1:58 he takes a stupid line down the bumpy piste cutting directly in front two 'less accomplished' skiers - there were a few rules broken there.
Judging by this video, they are examples of skiers who are all arrogance and have only narrow understanding and skills.
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@clarky999, but he is not in control...if he was, he would have never collided with the other slope user !
Would you step, totally sober, balanced and in control directly into the path of a bus and claim it was all the bus driver's fault ?
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snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
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And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
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Maybe he was guilty of not looking enough when joining the piste, but the guy behind him should have seen him coming a mile off. Anyhow, I am sure there's another thread for grumpy old people who think young people are hooligans, this one is about grumpy old people who think there should be more mincey short turns in freeride comps
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lampbus wrote: |
@clarky999, but he is not in control...if he was, he would have never collided with the other slope user !
Would you step, totally sober, balanced and in control directly into the path of a bus and claim it was all the bus driver's fault ? |
Er, he didn't collide with them. He difted towards the side of the piste - as the downhill skier that's his prerogative. A less skilled skier came too fast form behind and hit him. I assume you're familiar with the bit of the FIS code thingy which says downhill skier has right of way?
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You know it makes sense.
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@Zero_G,
But actually, I am happy if he want's to go and kill himself on an Alaskan peak, so long as he isn't in Val Thorens for the EoSB on or off piste, where I won't be grumpy. Or old.
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Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
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Poster: A snowHead
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@clarky999, the downhill skier has right of way, but like stepping in front of a bus, NEEDS to apply rule 1...that is why there is a rule 1, which comes first.
'Drifted' ? he crossed the piste in under 3 seconds ! If he had simply glanced, like he was obliged to by a whole load of rules + any sense, he would have known the skier was there and provided a bit more room. FFS he is a pro, he doesn't need a whole piste - he is in control right ?
Think how you would react as the approaching skier in black. You would see this chap joining the piste, possibly admired the backflip. You think he is going to ski on down the right, possibly stop to join his following mate...so you continue to ski to the right, giving him some room. But the idiot just keeps coming across. faced with a drop to the left you cant turn anywhere - it's all over in 3 seconds.
Consideration for other skiers is paramount rule 1. Why cut in front of other skiers when you can drop past behind them - or even better on the 40 metres of slope off the the left where there is no one. That would demonstrate proper control, not buzzing less experienced skiers for thrills.
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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@speed098, I see you are a Volkl fan. So am I
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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lampbus wrote: |
@clarky999, the downhill skier has right of way, but like stepping in front of a bus, NEEDS to apply rule 1...that is why there is a rule 1, which comes first.
'Drifted' ? he crossed the piste in under 3 seconds ! If he had simply glanced, like he was obliged to by a whole load of rules + any sense, he would have known the skier was there and provided a bit more room. FFS he is a pro, he doesn't need a whole piste - he is in control right ?
Think how you would react as the approaching skier in black. You would see this chap joining the piste, possibly admired the backflip. You think he is going to ski on down the right, possibly stop to join his following mate...so you continue to ski to the right, giving him some room. But the idiot just keeps coming across. faced with a drop to the left you cant turn anywhere - it's all over in 3 seconds.
Consideration for other skiers is paramount rule 1. Why cut in front of other skiers when you can drop past behind them - or even better on the 40 metres of slope off the the left where there is no one. That would demonstrate proper control, not buzzing less experienced skiers for thrills. |
It was a narrow piste - a cat track... How slow would you have to be going to take longer than 3 secs? And yes, he was going sideways, so drifted.
A pedestrian stepping in front of a bus doesn't have priority. Stupid analogy.
As the approaching skier. You give someone room and they keep coming across and you run out of room? Stop. Simples. Same applies if it's a beginner snowploughing drifting across in front of you. Can't do a hockey stop that quickly and in time on a flat cat track? You're skiing too fast for your skills.
Yes, he could have looked first. But the skier behind should have been able to avoid him. It wasn't exactly high speed.
He's skiing fall line moguls. That's how you do it. How close he is is exaggereated by the camera. He didn't cut them up - they didn't have to take any action to avoid a collision. Equally not 'buzzing' in my book. You think he wouldn't have been able to hop over another mogul to the left if he actually had got too close to someone?
Last edited by Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see? on Sun 22-03-15 20:31; edited 1 time in total
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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But I have better things to do tonight than argue about whether someone who skis better than anyone on this forum can negotiate some bumpy pistes without endangering others
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Pedestrian=idiotgoprolout; Bus=skier on piste. The bus analogy is perfect - if idiot skis into the road, in control, and didn't look out for the bus, then it is the idiot's fault when the bus hits him.
The priority rule only applies if both skier and idiot are aware of each other and can apply the rule. But the first rule applies first.
If the skier had been forced over the edge and crashed, who would be at fault ? the idiot for joining the piste and crossing it in 3 seconds (sideways or not) forcing him with nowhere to go?
(It is still illegal to kill people with buses even if the bus has priority!)
WRT the mougls - I am not questioning his ability to control his skis - I am questioning his ability to ski. Skiing is more than just being able to ski the zipper line. Other skiers can get intimidated by idiots crossing in front of them like that. It spoils their day. It makes them hesitate when they are trying with all their effort to make the turns. It is nice to think of them when we plan our lines...
Remember - beginner skiers (we all were once -even this goprofool) don't know how to tell the difference between a world cup pro and a baggy blur rushing towards them out of control. They feel out of control, and tend to assume everyone else is. (except perhaps teenagers - who always feel in control and are of course expert skiers even in their first week).
I have seen people going slowly, make some very unexpected changes of direction (and not just bladers). Why risk it when there is an acre of empty piste to the left? Especially if you are a skier who can get over there with no effort ? He is an inconsiderate moron.
If he did this much wrong in a five minute video, I do wonder what he is doing wrong the rest of the time.
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@clarky999, there are some fairly good skiers on this forum who don't cause accidents.
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The takeaway I've got from this thread is to never watch videos of skiing with lampbus lest the entire thing gets ruined by whinging about a minor ding from years ago.
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You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
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@meh, good guess, but no cigar. My ACL was entirely unconnected due to hitting a buried fence post off piste. Never had a collision with another skier except once when carving and we were both on alternate 'tacks' and came together gently at the 'apex' of our turns - one of those tings.
I just see so many near misses and foolish things on the mountain and in youtube gopro vids...and everyone claims it isn't their fault...and often they are due to the gopromoron concentrating so much on hitting the terrain feature that all consideration for safety is forgotten. Hck, we are human with specially developed systems to focus our attention like that. It just needs a little awareness to add a glance uphill.
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snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
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I've skied with Giulia...she is nicknamed The Giulinator in our family...simply awsome
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And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
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@Zero_G, absolutely agree with you there, that's fabulous skiing, thanks for posting.
Has been great to read all the posts to my original question, many thanks, I've learnt a lot. In particular I take on board what people say about conditions and the difference between live competition and edited video/ film footage.
@geeo & @pam w, I think my use of the word aesthic in the original post was perhaps not the best, I'm was never looking for pretty ballet style skiing here, is it is after all extreme skiing we are talking about, and even this 'grumpy old man' isn't so dumb as to think that's a walk in the park . I guess it was more about looking for strong control and measured technique in the turns in between all the big hits and for that as a spectator I realise I prefer the type of shorter linked turns that Giulia is doing to the more high speed balls out approach of other freeriders, but that's just me, it's not meant a criticism, just a personal preference. Both require great skill. It would be fascinating to see how Candide would ski those couloirs in the Dolomites?!!
@jimmer, I particularly appreciate your input as someone who is out there 'doing it' (as I'm sure a few others of you are). As I always said I'm doing this discussion from the 'comfort of the armchair' so it was always going to be a bit contentious. All the best to you in your competition efforts.
Last edited by And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports. on Mon 23-03-15 12:13; edited 4 times in total
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The haters will always find some reason to call other people "idiots"; I think that says more about them than anything else.
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You know it makes sense.
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@philwig, I assume that is a reference to me...I don't hate this chap Julien, I have never met him and in a couple of interviews I found on youtube he came over as OK.
(If it wasn't directed at me, then oops, am I a narcissist ? or perhaps just over sensitive)
If it was - what do you think it says about me ? (beyond the cliche).
Am I bitter and twisted ? - possibly - I do wish I could do backflips and ski powder like he does in his video. Actually, I have never done a backflip or front flip - but I could land them as well as he did in a couple of competitions - total out of control wipeouts. We all have failings. I admire people who do these things, who film descents in spectacular mountain locations.
But they are just people, not gods. They get stuff wrong and to point it out where they are putting other people at risk, does not detract from the great things they do elsewhere.
To hold them in awe is OK, but to assume they can do no wrong, be in total control all the time is naive.
Last edited by You know it makes sense. on Mon 23-03-15 13:53; edited 1 time in total
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Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
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I've just watched the Julien Regnier clip. When you are skiing off piste, entering and exiting pistes you have a particular reponsibility to piste skiers. In this we have a narrow liason piste where skiers don't have that much room to turn. Chris? traverses across looking for his next line without being aware of other piste users. He narrows down the lane the other skier has and doesn't leave him enough room to turn. It is like being on a three lane motorway and someone cutting in front of you.
Yes, there is fault on both sides, you should always be able to avoid a skier in front but an experienced skier should take a bit more care.
Last edited by Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name: on Mon 23-03-15 15:07; edited 1 time in total
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Poster: A snowHead
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davidof wrote: |
I've just watched the Julien Regnier clip. When you are skiing off piste, entering and exiting pistes you have a particular reponsibility to piste skiers. |
I understand that a few years ago in Val d'Isere a local instructor re-entered the piste with a jump that landed on an unseen child and killed them. I'm afraid what's shown in the clip looks asinine to me on a public piste that absolutely anybody could be on, no matter how good the skiers.
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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Quote: |
I've just watched the Julien Regnier clip. When you are skiing off piste, entering and exiting pistes you have a particular reponsibility to piste skiers. In this we have a narrow liason piste where skiers don't have that much room to turn. Chris? traverses across looking for his next line without being aware of other piste users. He narrows down the lane the other skier has and doesn't leave him enough room to turn. It is like being on a three lane motorway and someone cutting in front of you.
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Yeah, that's what I thought when I watched it. Didn't see much of a problem on the mogul field but thought the way he entered the cat track was a bit embarrassing really. I'm a bit surprised it stayed in the edit - what was he trying to say?
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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jedster wrote: |
I'm a bit surprised it stayed in the edit - what was he trying to say? |
Warts and all? Maybe for people like us to think about how we ski ourselves and to watch out for fast moving people on the pistes who can't stop?
There doesn't seem to have been any harm done.
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The Alaskan stop is about to start with prime conditions. Should be pretty amazing.
Also lampbus I wasn't meaning to talk about something that happened to you.
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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[quote="8611"][quote="stevomcd"]
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I don't know how anyone could look at that and look at Candide skiing and think they were better back then. |
I don't think anyone's saying they were better in 1990, indeed I think the current crop of athletes are in a completely different league, and they have taken the sport to a whole new level. But some of us aren't sure whether the new level is as aesthetically pleasing!
Personally I'd like to see them ski less demanding routes in better control, and that in turn will probably prolong their life expectancy!
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meh wrote: |
The Alaskan stop is about to start with prime conditions. Should be pretty amazing. |
Should be, but once again it's just not... at least for me. :? It's amazing looking face, but it's really not amazing looking skiing. It's extreme, hats off for that, but definitely it doesn't look nice. FWT looks for me more like "lets just make it as crazy as possible over as many rocks and cliffs as possible, and lets add some straight line down, and we have winner". It certainly looks crazy, but definitely not beautiful for me.
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It's on now.
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Though the FWT stage was great, love the contrast between 1st place Rodney, all cliffs and tricks, more new school big mountain, and 2nd place Heitz who should have well and truly shown any doubters on here that a big face can be skied with great speed and style! Big respect for the aggression shown by Heitz. Still miss Candide on the FWT though.
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You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
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Managed to catch the mens snowboard and about half the mens skiers, and try as I might I still ended up feeling like @primoz, though can't say for certain if I saw the runs of Rodney and Heitz so I'm still leaving the door open to understand what others such as @Pumba are seeing.
I guess what I don't get is the all out emphasis on speed and size of jumps. Seeing someone mainline a massive powder field just doesn't do it for me, infact I would even go so far as to say it's a waste of a bloody good mountain!
Yes, its daring, yes it's gnarly and yes there is no doubt that these people are risking their lives. But is it wonderful to watch? I'm not sure. I like to see speed and I like to see big drops but I also want to marvel at magnificent control and grace of strength in skiing technique, technique where the skier is in control of the mountain rather than the mountain being in control of the skier - the sort of technique we see in Giulia Monego above and many other riders.
A great rock guitar solo is great because the solo comes in parts throughout the song. But it's the whole song we love, not just the solo(s). We get excited because the song sets the scene and the solo takes us to new heights within it. Listening to the solos on their own would become tedious for most, as indeed would the song without the solos - both are less than the sum of the parts and thats where I feel the FWT is at the moment. It's got all the cray solos, the high points, but not much of the heart and soul around it, not much of the grace in between those crazy bits.
But I'll keep watching because despite these observations, I genuinely like it as a sport, I think it has enormous potential and because I also believe there is someone out there who will bring those separate parts together and take it to the next stage. It's a young sport and constantly evolving, however it's possible that the over emphasis on speed and drops could limit it's evolution as there is only so fast and so high you can go, and I think a wider audience will tire of that route.
I hope it does evolve beyond these narrow criteria because it has the potential as a spectator sport to really wow, to make people go ooh and of course to make people go aaahhh. And that would mean, in real time, a new blizzard of aaahhhs* every year, an annual show that really was the pinnacle of all-round skiing and snowboarding technique.
Think that's me done for now. Probably better retire to bed before the replies start coming in!!
*replace said title of film with which ever ski movie really floats your boat, the one that makes you just want to get out there and ski/snowboard - because it's that feeling we are all trying to connect with.
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Pdsmark wrote: |
A great rock guitar solo is great because the solo comes in parts throughout the song. But it's the whole song we love, not just the solo(s). We get excited because the song sets the scene and the solo takes us to new heights within it. Listening to the solos on their own would become tedious for most, as indeed would the song without the solos - both are less than the sum of the parts and thats where I feel the FWT is at the moment. It's got all the cray solos, the high points, but not much of the heart and soul around it, not much of the grace in between those crazy bits. |
I think that's just the nature of competition, rather than anything specific to freeriding. Most racing is fairly ugly too (slalom is the exception), and most freestyle comps, with incredibly fast rotations and the spin to win emphasis - a huge drawn out 360 is more stylish than a 12-whatever it is, but without competitions to constantly raise the bar, the sport would grow stale.
Watch something like Afterglow for a recent example of the skiing that (I think you) want to watch. Films tell stories, comps will always be all about tho highlights. Nature of the beast.
Also worth noting is the commentary from today's even - a lot of emphasis on how much the judges value control, and some small errors like backslaps were heavily penalised on runs that I thought were a lot more spectacular than some of the higher scoring runs.
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