Spirit mountain runs USSA comps not USASA. I wouldn’t be surprised if he got a part of the entry fee but comps aren’t very cheap, the judges get compensated, and the hill needs to be reserved. Even if he did get a cut of the USASA kids entry fees USASA has such a small presence in Midwest skiing that after all of the expenses for the comp he wouldn’t be walking away with much.
Aside fromm that I saw where you were coming from and that TAFT was one of the most fun days of skiing I had, but making a rant about how “those comp organizations don’t care about you, or skiing” in front of ~20 kids who had just finished their competition maybe an hour or two ago (some were still wearing their bibs) was pretty poor timing, not to mention the coaches who put tons of time and effort into running those comps. I would imagine it kind of felt like a “fuck you” to all of the coaches and competitors who put so much of their time and money into competing.
As for OP’s question, no it isn’t a waste. At least I didn’t think it was but you learn a lot competing like how to put a run/ line together,or how to improvise and adapt. It definitely made me a better skier and most of the “anti-comp” preachers have never skied in a competition and simply like to ride the hate wave so they can feel C O R E . So compete if you want OP, you can definitely learn a thing or two. But in the end competing isn’t for everyone and if you would rather follow your homies around with a dad-cam and film back swap to switches then power to you, there’s never a right way to ski so just ski whatever discipline floats your boat.
/macro-rant complete