I don't know if it was so much that it was unsteezy, I mean as I recall people were holding their grabs and stomping them pretty clean. In my opinion, it was more the fact that almost all of the riders were doing the same trick, which was switch 10 mute. I think people were kinda pissed and calling it spin to win, because other riders were actually being original and doing different tricks and throwing in different grabs that made for tricks that were just as sick, if not sicker, than a switch 10 mute. I remember a big air contest where probably 25 guys were doing switch 10 mutes and Lolo Farve was doing switch cork 7 nose mutes to the bottom of the landing and just stomping. And Charles Gagnier was doing switch misty 10's instead of an upright 10, and if I recall correctly no one seemed to care about that including the judges. If you need to have one specific trick to win a contest, then it really is starting to go the way of ariels from the standpoint of everyone doing a very similar trick and everyone knowing what to expect from everyone else. What I love about big contests, is the opportunity for originality and improvisation to occur on the spot. All of a sudden someone figures out a new axis, or adds a different grab, or does something on the spot to take it to the next level. I just wish that judges could see past double flips in a sense and realize that there are tricks out there that are just as difficult as a dub flip/cork.