TRICK NAMES (bio, d-spin ect) lets clear this all up

clapp1115

Member
THIS IS WHAT THE TRICKS ARE, or what i was taught

Mysty - front flip with a rotaion.

Mysty flip is a front flip with a 180 rotaion. To spin anything higher then a 180 the rotaion is tacked on to the name

such as a mysty 540, mysty = mysty 180

Rodeo - Take the mysty definition and where it says front flip, replace it with back flip

Cork - A rotaion that is off axis with your head more faceing up hill toward your jupms take off

Bio- A rotaion that is off axis with your head more faceing down hill toward your landing area

Flat Spin- This is a non inverted trick, in this trick your skis never come over your head. The rotaion axis is around your belly button. This trick is most easly thrown in the pipe

D-Spin- is a spin that ends in back flip to landing, unlike the rodeo where the flip is done and then roation is done before landing, the d spin is the reverse.

 
does anyone actually know what a d-spin is?

As far as I knew, there was no agreed upon axis for one of those, you just used the term "d-spin" for whenever you threw something that looked messed up and noone can figure it out.
 
I'd say flat spin is more like rodeo, more exaggerated...

Heres my take on things, this is all spinning to the left...

Cork, drop your left shoulder upon take off, head uphill

Rodeo, drop your right shoulder downhill somewhat, kinda banked out spin... Ive never seen a rodeo as a backflip3, 5 whatever...

D-spin- kinda a super exaggerated cork, left shoulder down, right shoulder up almost backflipping

Bio I have no clue... it seems to be a second half of the rotation is cork head facing downhill

this is just how Ive observed the tricks being done... Im working on cork and rodeo as we speak
 
actualy a misty is more of a really corked out 5 than a front 180...a front flip 180 is called like a barney flip or somethin
 
watch a video of someone doin a misty...then watch a frontflip 180 and i bet ull be able to see a difference
 
the misty and rodeo are wrong. They're more rolls they're much harder to explain. A d-spin 7 is pretty much a 360 to backflip. Of course not full on 360 first then backflip after but kinda that Idea
 
A few years back, I made up a trick binder. It had explanations on how to do everything, and detailed pictures. I compliled all the trick tips from Freeze and the Freeze website put up a list of all the trick names or something and descriptions, it was really wrad. But yeah, so I cut everything out and put them in the binder. I had everything from cab 9s to Frontside buttered muffin nose shakes. But anyway, at the end of the binder I had a checklist of everything I had completed. It was a pretty cool little binder, it was my sanctuary. I named the binder tricks to do except I accidently labled it tricks do to. But it was a fun little thing. I highly recommend if you have no idea whats going on than you should make up a trick binder. Its good shit.
 
Yes but i was not implying, even though it might seem like it, that it was cut and dry that u flipped then rotated. In both the rodeo and the misty the flip and the rotaion are done close to if not at the same time. So a mysty is the combination of a front flip and a 180 or higher rotation
 
no misty's are not front flips with spins. they are on a completly different axis that's more of a roll than anything
 
Well ok then maybe i am wrong but then is the Xgames site wrong too? IM just wondering, being that most my flip knowledge comes from snowboarding.
 
^they have been wrong before...

pussyfooter has posted all this shit before, he knows what is what. i basically say if its not upsiddown or flat, its corked.
 
what the hell is a frontside buttured muffin nose shakes, i want to be able to do that trick jus cos of its funky name
 
one thing that i think should be corrected is with the 50/50's. if both skis are on the box or rail then yes it should be considered a 50/50 but why do people insist on calling it a 50/50 when they do it with one ski? in skateboarding when you do a 50/50 then both trucks were on the rail and its called a 5 0 when one truck is on it. it should be the fucken same for skiing.
 
I love these threads.

clapp has the basics right: a misty is a forward-flipping spin (not necessarily a "front flip with spin") and a rodeo is a backwards-flipping spin (not necessarily a "backflip with spin"). A d-spin is a corked 7 in which the skier inverts completely, which often looks sort of like a cork 3 into a backflip.
 
a 5 is a 5...a 7 is a 7 plain and simple fuck all these "rotations" especially that fag that thought he invented a rotaion when he did a 7 robio or whateve the fuck...I hate you so much.
 
its hilarious, how all threads that pretend to clear up everything just start new 3 page long discussion about dspins and MISTIES. its not MYSTY.
 
"Mysty - front flip with a rotaion.

Mysty flip is a front flip with a 180 rotaion. To spin anything higher then a 180 the rotaion is tacked on to the name"

WTF is a mysty ?? ?
 
that was a great example of a misty 5. notice how his body is parellel to the ground, but perpendicular with the face of the slope. A "roll" is a good way to put it, because his body would be in the same position if he was doing a "log-roll" type thing on the ground down the hill.
 
dspin is just a slightly off axis back full... douglass or dorien invented them when he was trying to learn back fulls, theyre pretty much the same as backfulls (backflip 360) except theyre not directly inverted straight up and down.. just a more inverted version of a cork

http://www.freezeonline.com/freeze/how_to/article/0,13122,330808,00.html

corks are uninverted spins where your head faces uphill..corks are off axis just not inverted..when you go inverted it becomes a dspin

bios are off axis spins where your head faces down hill, **not inverted, consider it the opposite of a cork

mistys can be considered frontflips with spins, IE misty 5 = front flip 180 but they usually don't appear that way..if you watch a misty the skier will throw himselfs forwards off the jump (like an off axis front flip) and rotate over his shoulders rather than straight over his head... this is what gives the misty a rolling apperance rather than an oldschool "frontflip twist" look.

a rodeo is a trick that you'll have to watch a video to figure out, it involves spinning off axis over your outside shoulder..so if you spin to the left you hit the jump drop your right shoulder and kick your feet diagonally over your head towards the left side of your body, (while looking over your left shoulder the whole time) which gives it the appearance that your spinning the end of it over your outside or left shoulder..this might not make a lot of sense if you dont kno what to look for so watch a video of one.

and flatspins are thrown similary to rodeos except you dont drop your shoulders as much, and you kick harder to the side then towards the sky, think off the spin as revolving around your stomach, you dont see them too often off jumps because most of them look like rodeos unless thrown in the pipe

hope this helps a little and watch videos of each trick to really understand them
 
I agree with clap115. I think they are the base definitions and from there there are various adaptations depending on where you ride etc.
 
who gives a shit what they are? most the people who debate this crap can't even do most if any of the tricks in the first place. if it looks sick, props. i dont give a fuck if you can throw an ugly ass rodeo that might be a misty or d-spin according to someone else
 
from another thread, because a video is worth a million words.

The D-spin is pretty much set like any cork trick, so technically, its a really really off axis cork. Heres the main ways to tell:

Cork = Skiers feet never go above the persons head.

D-spin = Skiers feet go over his head, but the feet are never directly over his/her head at any time.

Rodeo = Skiers feet end up directly above his head during the trick.

Cork 7:

http://media.nscdn.com/uploads/member/videos/1143581347bigairjay%20002.mpg

D-spin 7:

http://media.nscdn.com/uploads/member/videos/9444SundayRiverdspin.mpg

Rodeo 7:

http://media.nscdn.com/uploads/member/videos/MikeWilson-Rodeo7Critical.wmv

Misty 7:

http://media.nscdn.com/uploads/member/videos/1143670174misty 720 nice.avi

There you go, best examples I could find. All skiers are spinning left to make things comparable.
 
Those are great examples.

Dspin: Backflip spins

Cork: Off axis spin with head facing up the hill

misty: slightly off axis front flip spins

Branny: Front 180

Bio: Off axis spin with head facing down the hill

Blunt(roll): Opposite of Flatspin. You spin over your stomach

Flatspin: Set like a rodeo, but instead, you spin over your back instead of completing the full lincoln loop.

Underflip: 90frontflip90

Overflip: 90backflip90

Wilson Flip: Double underflip

Kangaroo Flip: Flatspin 3 to a Flatspin 5

Flair: Backflip180 in pipe

Mctwist: Misty 5 in pipe

THere. thats the most complete list you'll find.
 
the definitive list

by Nicole Dreon, Winter X Games Skiboarding researcher

Here is a glossary of Skiboarding terms:

# AIR OR AIRS - What it is called when riders clear jumps or obstacles.

# BANK- An obstacle that usually sticks out of the side of trail like a triangle, looks like a tabletop angled at 45 degrees.

# BEATER - Wipeout or fall.

# BOARDS - Universal term for a pair of skiboards.

# DIGGER - Similar to a beater, but usually results in an injury.

# FAKIE - Riding backwards.

# FRUIT BOOTERS - Derogatory term for skiboarders mainly used by snowboarders and alpine skiers. Also a term used by skateboarders for in-line skaters.

# GAP-It is like a tabletop without the snow in the middle. Or it is a jump that has a take-off ramp that is higher then the table below it. A gap is the distance or space between two objects.

# GRAB - Grabbing either or both boards with one or both hands. Frontside or backside.

# GRIND-Sliding on a handrail or other object.

# HIT- A jump

# HALFPIPE-Snow structure that consists of opposing walls the same height and size. Skiboarders use them to do tricks.

# JIB- When riders bonk or tap their skiboards on handrails, garbage cans, logs etc. "Jibbing" usually takes place in the terrain parks, it is derived from in-line skating.

# JOEY- Same as a poser.

# LANDING FAKIE - Landing backwards.

# LATE - Used to describe doing a trick or style late into the jump. Also known as stalled.

# LAUNCH- The moment a rider starts to execute a jump, and or the time when he is actually flying through the air.

# MINI SKIS - Alternative name for skiboarding.

# MAILBOX- Looks like a mailbox, but it is extended about 10 feet long, riders slide and grind on it.

# OBSTACLES-Jumps, hits, handrails, etc., anything a rider uses to throw tricks.

# POSER - Skiboarding wannabe. Anyone who looks and acts the part, but can't back it up in performance.

# OFF AXIS- When a rider is not straight up and down but tilted slightly to the left or the right.

# QUARTERPIPE- A halfpipe with one wall; a banked hit

# RIDER -An acceptable name for a Skiboarding athlete.

# SLIDE: What a rider does when he "slides" across a handrail or mailbox, etc.

# SKIBOARDING - Preferred name for sport.

# SKIBOARDER - One of two acceptable names for Skiboarding athletes. The other is Rider.

# SLOPESTYLE- The name of the type of course skiboarders will be competing on at Winter X 2000. It is a competition format derived from snowboarding. Should include quarter pipes, spines, tabletops, gaps, banks, handrails, mailboxes, etc. Riders are expected to utilize all of these to score maximum points.

# SNOWLERBLADER - Derogatory term for skiboarders, mainly used by snowboarders and alpine skiers.

# SPINE- Two-quarter pipes placed back to back

# SWITCH/UNNATURAL-Spinning in the opposite direction of what is natural

# STALLED - When a maneuver is intentionally started late into a jump/trick.

# TABLE TOPS- Type of jump where ramp goes up, then is flat on top, then there is a landing ramp on the other side.

# TRANSITION- The area from the bottom of a take-off ramp to the point where a rider actually initiates a jump at the end of a take-off ramp.

# TWEAKED OUT - Standing up in a jump, adding some style.

# USS - United Skiboard Series (USS) is the current skiboarding competition series.

# WSF - World Skiboarding Federation (WSF) was formed by Anywhere Sports Production (along with the USS). The WSF is the sanctioning body while the USS is the series.

Tricks

For the most part, skiboarding tricks and maneuvers have evolved from in-line skating and snowboarding. As the sport continues to progress, so does the invention and difficulty of new tricks. Moves that were considered risky like front and back flips, are now deemed elementary tricks as skiboarders test the skill limits with moves like rodeo and misty flips. What is "in" is anything off-axis, as well as grabs, grabs, and more grabs. Here are a few examples of what is popular right now, as well as standard skiboarding moves. Competitors will be judged on Execution, Difficulty, Landing, Variety, Amplitude, and Style.

Judging criteria

# Execution-How a trick is performed in its entirety. Including preparation, takeoff, initiation, apex (top of trick), release, re-entry, and landing.

# Difficulty-How hard a trick or jump is to perform. For example, approaching a jump fakie and landing fakie is more difficult than launching and landing the jump forwards.

# Landing-Clean landings, meaning no hands dragging on the ground, falling, or unsteadiness, will score higher than landings that are not clean.

# Variety-A rider who shows he is comfortable performing several different tricks and combinations will score higher than a rider who repeats his tricks.

# Amplitude-Aggressive energy and height.

# Style-riders who stall or tweak their tricks are considered to have style. Fluidity and athleticism are also considered style.

Grinds and slides

# Grinds or Slides - Both mean sliding on a rail.

# Handrails - What riders slide and grind on, looks like and is a handrail.

# 50/50 - Standard rail slide.

# Fast line - Holding up one leg while doing a 50/50.

# Backside grind - Jumping with back towards rail and sliding.

# Backslide- Grind handrail, whatever foot is downhill is up.

# Frontside grind - Jumping up facing the rail and sliding.

# Fastslide- Grind handrail, whatever foot is uphill is up.

# 270 on /270 off- Rider either does a 270 degree rotation onto or off of handrail.

# Mailbox- looks like a mailbox, but is extended about another 10 feet. Riders slide on it.

# Riders will approach handrails forwards and backwards.

Flips

# Backflip - Flipping backward off a jump.

# Frontflip- Flipping forward off a jump.

# Misty Flip - Front flip with a 180 twist. The rider either goes off the jump backwards or lands backwards. Similar to a snowboarding misty flip.

# Rodeo Flip - Going off the jump, the rider rotates to do an almost back flip with a twist, like a corkscrew.

# Side Flip 180- Rider approaches jump forward, does what looks like a cartwheel through the air, then lands backwards. Known in skiing as the Lincoln Loop; sometimes referred to as the Maheu Flip, after Serge Maheu. Also referred to as a corkscrew.

Spins

During a regular spin, a rider is totally straight up and down.

# 180 - 1/2 rotation

# 360 - 1 full rotation (commonly called a helicopter)

# 540 - 1 1/2 rotations

# 720 - 2 full rotations

# 900 - 2 1/2 rotations

# 1080 - 3 full rotations

Flatspins

# Flatspin-rider is neither totally inverted nor upright, but spinning sideways.

# Flatspin 540 - spinning sideways while completing 1 1/2 rotations and landing backwards.

# Flatspin 720 - spinning sideways while completing two full rotations and landing forward.

Bios

# Bio's- spins where rider is off axis.

# Bio 360 - Grabbing the skiboards while completing 1 full rotation.

# Bio 540 - Grabbing the skiboards while completing 1 1/2 rotations and landing backwards.

# Bio 720 - Grabbing the skiboards while completing 2 full rotations.

# Bio 900-Grabbing the skiboards while completing 2 ½ rotations and landing backwards.

Grabs

# Grab - Grabbing either or both boards with one or both hands. Frontside or backside.

# Liu Kang - Safety grab where free leg extends out to the side. Can be combined with both a misty and rodeo flip.

# Flying Fish - Similar to a Liu Kang, where either foot is brought into a 45° angle so that it hits the inner thigh of opposite leg.

# Method - Grabbing right foot with right hand.

# Mute Grab - Grab (with the right hand) over the top of left foot, and pull the feet off to the opposite side. Works with left hand on right boot, too.

# Parallel grab - Reach over knees and grab the left foot with the right hand. Works vice versa.

# Safety - Introductory grab where rider grabs the outside of either boot.

# Stale Grab - (Was called a Stale Japan, but has since been renamed.) Similar to a mute, but instead of grabbing across the body, reach behind and under the right leg and grab the left foot (originated from in-line skating)

# Stalled grab - A rider starts a 360 (or higher spin), and halfway through the turn, the rider grabs and then completes the spin.

Combinations

# Fakie Back Flip Liu Kang- Rider approaches jump fakie, does a backflip with a Liu Kang (a grab where rider extends one leg out like a karate kick and tucks other one next to body, which he grabs), then lands jump fakie.

# Britnick- A fakie backflip 180 or 360, a move Brinton Gundersen and Mike Nick did for the first time at the 1999 U.S.S. Championships at Mountain High, CA.

# Fakie Bio 900- Rider approaches jump fakie, spins 2 ½ rotations on an axis and lands forward.

# Side Flip 180- Rider approaches jump forward, does what looks like a cartwheel through the air, then lands backwards. Known in skiing as the Lincoln Loop; sometimes referred to as the Maheu Flip, after Serge Maheu.

# Flat Spin 540 - Rider approaches jump forward. His body neither goes totally inverted nor straight up--but sideways. He spins 1½ rotations and lands backwards.

# Fakie Zero Spin Rocket Air - Rider hits jump fakie, stays backwards the entire time he is in the air, extends both legs in front of him and uses one hand to grab the skiboard opposite of hand.

# Rodeo 720 Safety- Rider does a barrel roll backflip with a 360-degree rotation. During rotation he brings his knees to his chest and grabs left skiboard with left hand.

# Misty 720 Safety- Same as rodeo but with a front flip.
 
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