Where Skiing is going

@koby

Member
Skiing in the last ten years has progressed incredibly fast, and today we are enjoying our sport at a level that skiing's forefathers couldn't have imagined. That level may be as high as it goes. Even now, pro skiers, snowboarders, and average skiers are getting injured all the time, and there's no sign of the injuries slowing down.
Our sport may have reached the apex of human capability. The standard of what a pro is expected to do today is insane, especially considering the park. Massive jumps and man eating rails are a must, and a pro can't get by with just hitting them; insane tricks are required of pros who want to stay at the forefront of skiing, and those tricks make what they are doing even more dangerous.
If skiing continues to evolve over the next decade as it did during this one, it will become fairly common for a professional skier to die in the line of work (hell, its not all that uncommon now, R.I.P. McConkey). The government will might have to step in and outlaw skiing competition to end the deaths, or pro skiers themselves will get so disillusioned with the danger of it that they choose to quit.
Once that happened, one of two things would happen. Over the period of time following the end of skiing competition, the average skier may finally get the time to catch up to the professional level of skiing. Once the pros are no longer competing and trying to progress, they will meld with the rest of the skiing population, who will rapidly close the gap between the former top pros and plain old really good skiers.
The other option for skiing is to go back to retro fads and slow style. Slow, styled out spins and mogul skiing could come back into vogue among younger skiers, and skiing will become a super mellow and stylish sport.
Now, I don't see this happening very soon, but if skiing continues to progress as fast as it has this past decade, something along those lines could come true, simply because the human body can't take that kind of strain.
 
whats the fun in that. everyone is pushing themselves to learn something new because as spriggs said in EDIAS theres nothing more fun than landing a new trick. this argument was made 2 years ago too and look how that turned out
 
Our sport has risks for sure, but they might not be as big as you are thinking. I would like to remind you that people have been doing Triples (and even some Quads) for the last 40 or so years. There are very little serious injuries because these people train really hard and know what they are doing. This is no different for a top level pro skier. They most likely spend hours on water ramps learning these tricks and wait till they have the right jump set ups to learn new tricks on snow. Also "going back" to moguls could lead to just as many injuries. Again the only reason you don't see serious injuries in moguls is because the people who ski them are trained and for the most part know what they are doing.
PS. I am definitely not trying to discourage anyone who wants to "go back to moguls" you will probably learn a lot about skiing and jumping.
 
The only reason any of those things would happen is if people like you constantly think and suggest such retarded things and fear people into believing it and causing it in the end. AKA wagwan outside your window everyday btw.
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skiing is a recreational sport, and competitions do get serious, but not to the point where skiers are regularly dying in them.
 
calm down. relax, and go skiing. Enjoy it. Sure it's dangerous but you have a better chance of drowning in a swimming pool than dieing from skiing. What is more likely to happen is that skiing will continue to split into the hesher, creative types, people who have really smooth style, pipe skiers, and the handful of riders who will continue to do big airs and focus more on technical tricks. If you want to see the future look at snowboarding and skateboarding. There will be a point when skiers stop making up new doubles to smother the competition and start looking at how a trick looks.
 
one of mans natural instincts is progression. itll just get a whole lot more creative before it stops getting crazier. like "dude i think im finally gonna try to nollie tail tap 450 onto that , frontside switchup hand drag, hippy killer tail grab, nose tap the end, 270 out to revert one foot then pole flip." "god bro, i nailed that last month."
 
Yeeeahh.. You have a wilde imagination there cheif. I think the future of skiing is waaay longer rails and bigger jumps.
 
I think it will go the way of freestyle motocross. Its already becoming more of a fad and fashion show then just a stoke to be doing somthing. As tricks get bigger and crazier a few will separate from the pack and just be GODs of skiing. Then the rest will dress like them and be the equivilant of "BROS." Alas the backcountry skinners and such will remain just stoked I guess but I dont consider that newschool.
 
haha interesting responses, and thanks to people who say i have a vivid imagination. Let me clarify that I love to ski, and I'm not trying to bash the sports progression. I went skiing yesterday. Also, I really hope that progression goes the way of style and technicality, because that would be dope. Finally, I don't think that Big Brother is going to come and take over freeskiing, I'm just pointing out that if our sport really did become way more crazy and dangerous, someone would do something about it.
 
Looking back, the progression of freestyle skiing has been much akin to a tidal wave of warm ice cream mixed with hundreds of dachshund's racing down a busy urban boulevard at midday. Its amusing enough that meh, you would crack a beer and sit out on your lawn chair and watch it go by.
 
this actually makes sense, i think it will go more towards protective clothing then outlawing though, they are already have spine protectors, helmets, guards etc. to help reduce life threatening injuries into less serious injuries like breaks
 
This thread is made every week and everyone thinks it's a new idea. It's been an old subject for years.
 
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