Spring Massive Results.....

Adam Delorme won slope think run was sw7, sw10, zero

Think Everly Goman? something like that won pipe

Keri Herman won women's pipe

...that is all I know
 
This was on the Summit Daily's website:

Massive slopestylers leave no risk untaken

function createQString(s) {

return escape(s);

}

var Heading = "Massive%20slopestylers%20leave%20no%20risk%20untaken";

var tempTitle = createQString(Heading);

var Title = "&t="+tempTitle;

Local talents strut their stuff in famous Freeway park at Breckenridge





spacer.gif
















Click to Enlarge





Browse and Buy

Summit Daily Photos







Adam

Delorme, a member of the Breckenridge Freeride Team, soars out of the

quarterpipe on his way to winning the Spring Massive slopestyle event

on Peak 8 Saturday.

Summit Daily/Mark Fox





spacer.gif


Begin Banner Code



End Banner Code



Feed Box







Get Sports Feeds







End Feed Box



//

/graphics/spacer.gif





More From Sports



< p b s : newslist image=0 category="#CATEGORY#" useobjects=1 objectclass=14 leadin=0 days=365 count=8 priosort>



//







By DEVON O’NEIL

summit daily news

April 14, 2007

spacer.gif


BRECKENRIDGE — The annual Spring Massive freestyle

competitions at Breckenridge are considered launching pad events, good

ways to get noticed.

After taking third at last year’s Massive

slopestyle contest, Everly Gohman took the whole “getting noticed”

thing a step further on Saturday. The 20-year-old Breck local

catapulted off the third and final hit of the famous Freeway Terrain

Park into a double backflip — and stuck the landing.

Nobody in the crowd seemed to know what to say. The announcers said it was the first they’d ever heard of at this event.

Afterward,

in typical fashion for a park that houses too much talent for industry

sponsors ever to cover entirely, Gohman explained his stunning display.

“I

just learned it not too long ago — I just tried it one day and I landed

it, and I’ve been doing ’em ever since,” said the Minnesota native,

whose winter generally consists of “scraping by, just trying to ski as

much pow as I can.”

“It’s just pretty scary when you go into the second flip,” he said.

Gohman’s

daring maneuver epitomized the Spring Massive tradition, wherein

no-name locals as well as bigger-name pros compete side by side for a

three-day purse of $10,300. The vibe stays low-key. Risks are taken.

Sometimes they pay off.

More than anything, though, the

slopestyle and superpipe (which is set for today) competitions offer

every skier and rider an opportunity to exhibit what they’ve worked on

all season.

For some that can be a simple 360. For others, it

might be a switch 1080, like that which Breck Freeride Team skier Adam

Delorme landed to highlight a seemless second run, the only trip

through the park good enough to trump Gohman’s.

Here’s how he

described the $600 winning run: “I came into the top rail, regular on,

blindside two-seven up, to switch, came into jump one switch, did a

switch corked seven with a high safety on the right ski, coming into

two did a switch 10, leaning safety, and off three I’m trying this new

trick, it’s a cork zero spin, trying to get a little corked with it,

grabbing up high safety on the left ski as well. Then came down on the

quarterpipe and just tried to go big.”

The 23-year-old

Fat-ypus-sponsored skier succeeded, too, soaring at least a dozen feet

off the lip where others struggled to even clear it.

Gohman took second followed by Luke Nutting in third.

On

the snowboard side, a local 18-year-old, Breck’s Madison Ellsworth,

strung together a clean, balanced run that was just enough to top Eric

Willett’s effort.

Ellsworth, a Copper Freeride Team member and

winner of this year’s Aspen Open slopestyle crown, attributed his

triumphant run to his ability to stay focused. Despite overshooting his

first landing off the big jump line, he still put together a clean

repertoire of tricks that included a backside 720 off the final kicker.

“I

got a little mixed up, actually,” said Ellsworth, who is getting his

GED instead of finishing high school to give him more time on the snow.

“I wasn’t really supposed to do the run that I did, but it turned out

fine.”

Yet another local teenage ripper and Breck Freeride Team

member, Colby Adams, emerged victorious in the women’s ski division,

with Breck’s Keri Herman and Jenn Hirsch rounding out that podium.

In

the women’s snowboard category, 22-year-old Czech Republic native and

current Evergreen resident Eva Cameron won the $300 victor’s check,

despite an ominous beginning to her day.

“I was so hungover in

the morning that I could not even get nervous,” the four-time Czech

slopestyle national champ said. “My only worry was to keep my stomach

calm.”

Brodie Waring and Tori Koski took second and third in that division, respectively.

In all, 80 athletes competed, some as young as 11 and 12.

 
Back
Top