Posts Tagged ttr world tour

Current TTR tour leader Marko Grilic rider profile

Source: TTR World Tour

Newly re-emerged on the competition scene, Marko Grilc a.k.a “Grilo”, is no one hit wonder, but a familiar face in the snowboard world since a decade. Introduced to the wonders of snowboarding by his brother at the age of 7, he quickly picked up the skills. He soon began competing, claiming early success winning himself four Youth World Championships. Shortly afterwards he was snatched up by one of the leading snowboarding brands, Burton, who have in the past 10 years nursed him on his way to success and given him the opportunity to design his own board for four years, as well as work on clothing designs.

The friendly and outgoing Grilc has successfully been focusing on filming for many years now and has kept away from the competitive snowboarding scene. His impeccable style and floaty airs in the backcountry and parks all around the world have been captured in some standout video parts for Pirate Productions, Standard Films, Blank Paper Productions and Burton.

In season 2008/2009, upon his return to competitions, Marko claimed a World No. 32 placement on the Swatch TTR Tour and rode for the Slovene team finishing 2nd in the overall ranking in FIS Big Air. He began his 2009/2010 season in the Southern Hemisphere, bagging some good TTR results such as the 3rd place at the 3Star Boost Mobile Sho Sho, which lead for him to jump up into TTR World No. 4 after the first Northern Hemisphere event, the 4Star Horsefeathers Pleasure Jam.

At the first 6Star event of season 2009/10, the Billabong Air & Style/II, Marko landed a switch backside double corked 1080 in the super finals, which in the delight of 11.500 viewers, earned him the coveted Ring of Glory. This bumped him up to the Swatch TTR Tour lead, for the first time in his career, and gave him an invite to the 6Star Oakley Arctic Challenge and the 6Star O’Neill Evolution. “This is the best day of my life by far. I never even thought that this could happen. I am just very stoked” said the overwhelmed Grilc after the prize giving. “I went to Australia and New Zealand and then today I am number one. I don’t even know what to say. It came out of fun and pleasure and now I am here and I am stoked.”

Stemming from Ljublijana in Slovenia Marko is somewhat of a national hero, and upon winning the Air & Style his phone filled with congratulation messages. The season 09/10 is looking bright for this experienced rider, and we are happy to see him back on the TTR Tour with a motivation to take over the top spot.

INTERVIEW WITH MARKO AFTER HIS WIN AT 6STAR BILLABONG AIR & STYLE (December 2009)

1. How did you get into snowboarding?
I have been shredding since 18 years now. I got into snowboarding through skating and my brother got me into that.

2. Explain the addictiveness of snowboarding? Why do you choose to snowboard?

I love to do sports and be in the mountains, it gives me the freedom I need in my life and the people and lifestyle are a perfect match to my personality. For me, I get a lot of happiness out of the day while doing this.

3. How would you describe the difference of feeling, between riding powder, winning competitions, getting a cover shot or feature article or profile and stomping a new trick? What stands out for you?
For me there is a good side to everything. I think riding pow or learning a new trick is the essence of why I snowboard. The happiness I got in the beginning is still the same. When you get a nice picture or win a contest it is more of a reward for your hard work. Feels more like the work side of snowboarding, which is also good.

4. Which way do you surf and/or skate? How have these other board sports influenced your snowboarding?
I do everything regular, I think surfing gives me the right vacation time activity. It is really fun and makes you strong, and the way I do it you don’t really get hurt just like that. I mean, I ride mellow waves, heh. Not that I am good.

5. How has snowboarding changed since you first started?
Well, in all those years it went from just crazy times to serious. From a sport full of people who are just having fun snowboarding to a main stream sport followed by a huge industry. I think the spirit is still here, it changed a bit but it will never go away.

6. Progression in snowboarding is taking off. Why do you think it has risen so much and so fast? Should it just continue into massive spins and flips? Do you think pros are sacrificing style, spinning big to win?
I just think that is the evolution of the sport. That moment had to come. Snowboarding reached the limit in some parts, such as size of jumps. So the next step is the tricks we do. So double flips are here but it will progress in other ways also.  I think if there is no style doing your tricks you shouldn’t even do it.

7. What does the TTR World Tour mean to snowboarding? Where do you think it’s going? What does it mean to the sport and to snowboarders?
I think it is super important to have an organization such as the TTR, it keeps snowboarding true to what it is and doesn’t let it get ruined by the ski influenced competitions. I think in the next couple of years snowboarding will go into competitions a lot. Most of the pros are going to have to do contests full time because of the exposure they can get.

8. Who do you love to shred with? Who do you love to compete with?
I love to shred with my yugo friends from back home and with all the Burton homies. I know them all very well, so I know when they do some new trick or when they stomp a cool trick. I know when they are stocked so I can be happy with them.

9. What is the first contest you won? How long have you been riding in contests?
I rode a lot of contest when I was little, it meant a lot to me back than to compete. But then I kind of lost it because I started seeing new challenges in the backcountry. But now I am back to competing. So I guess I am just so old that my thinking has changed a couple of times. Heheh!

10. What specific techniques do you use when riding in a competition? Do you wax your board a certain way? Do you spin a certain way? Do you map out your runs before hand?
I try to have fun cause then I ride the best. I try to do my tricks as the jump feels. I try not to let other people influence my feelings.

11. How does filming fit into your competitive schedule? Is it difficult to film and compete in the same season? Which do you prefer and why? Any goals with filming or magazine coverage?
I try to do something every day, so when I have time I go filming. I think it is good for your mind to change it up a bit. I like to do both and I hope I get to film a part this season also.

12. Who is currently the most stylish rider in your eyes? Who is killing it right now?
I think Mikkel Bang, Gigi Rüf, Scotty Lago and Danny Davis… are on top of their game when it comes to making riding look good.

13. As current TTR Tour leader, you are in a good position for the rest of the season. How would you feel and what would you do if you won the tour? What does it mean to you?
I think I have to ride really good to be in that spot at the end of the season, it is not just one contest. You need to be riding really good through out the whole year so I will just try to have fun and do my best. If I win I would be very surprised and stocked at the same time…

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TTR World Tour Event Stylewars Returns to Falls Creek Australia August 24-28

August 24-28, 2009

stylewars-logo-07-1

Falls Creek Resort, Australia.

Australia’s premier on-snow festival and 4-Star TTR World Tour Snowboarding Event is back for 2009 in its winter home of Falls Creek, Victoria. The event will again showcase daily the very best in freestyle snowboarding action combined with nightly top shelf music acts open for all of the public.

Past Stylewars festivals have featured moments that have both taken the professional snowboarding world by storm as well as the music media. Ranging from the biggest snowboarding jump ever built in competition anywhere on the planet, to live music acts like The Presets, Airbourne, Katalyst, Bliss N Eso, Scribe and The Galvatrons.

This snowboarding event will again feature a three-day event over a four-day competition window, with two hours of daily continuous jam format action on a massive featured course designed specifically for the event. Also included in the Stylewars event is the night street rail jam event under lights, known as ‘28 Stairs’ held in the Village bowl outside The Frying Pan. This is a highlight of the week’s action as it aligns both the snowboarding action and the music crowds, and the party continues for everyone long into the night.

Event organiser Richard Hegarty says, “The event this year will be a lot more focused on the local snowboarding community. Due to the global recession, athletes who want to venture to Australia from Europe and the US are finding the travel costs a lot harder to afford in 2009. That won’t stop them all, however, as Stylewars has become known globally as the best progressive slopestyle event on the TTR World Snowboarding Tour and the confirmed athlete list is growing daily.”

TTR logo

Last year’s Stylewars winner, Charles Reid from Quebec, Canada, claimed, “Stylewars is the best format event on the tour. After three days you are pretty tired, but you really get to try your best tricks and have fun riding the park. You get pushed by your friends to try harder tricks and the level gets pushed each day, for sure.”

Stylewars is just as focused on putting on the biggest party of the year for the public in Falls Creek, as well as putting on the best quality competition. Every night of the four-day event will see the bars bouncing, so book in the dates and reserve your accommodation soon!

This year’s music line up includes some of the world’s best hip hop crews, soul musicians and turntablists featuring Koolism, Steve Spacek, Ru C.L and Katalyst with Space Invadas, Mr Rex and S1 as well as Motley and the Australian DMC champion DJ Perplex. More headliners to be announced! Check the website for the schedule and updates.

Music venues will be The Man and The Frying Pan.

Stylewars 2009 is proudly brought to you by Red Bull, Corona and Falls Creek.

http://www.myspace.com/spaceinvadasoul

http://www.myspace.com/supermotley

http://www.myspace.com/perplexdj

http://www.myspace.com/koolismcrew

http://www.myspace.com/rucl

www.fallscreek.com.au

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Is snowboarding ageless?

 


At 62 years of age Dick Schulze competes at Burton Global Opens series 2009
We asked some questions to The Swatch TTR World Snowboard Tours Oldest competitor        

Dick, what is your age?

62        

When did you start snowboarding?

1998

What makes you a snow addict? 

I wish I knew the answer to this one. Once when I was at the start gate in a big air contest, staring downhill at that huge kicker and scared sh**less, a thought popped into my head: Why couldn’t it have been tiddly winks? I have just finished reading the book Bodies in Motion by Steven L. Thompson, which tries to answer the question of why motorbike riders get addicted to motorbikes. I suffer from that addiction too. Maybe it has to do with speed: with a GPS receiver I have clocked myself on a snowboard at 103 kph, and on my motorbike I have gone over 160 kph. But it’s more than speed: there is something incredibly sensuous about snowboarding. When you ski, you think of conquering the mountain, but on a snowboard you are dancing with the mountain. Maybe it’s both the speed and the sensuality that have me hooked.

on a snowboard you are dancing with the mountain

What wise words of wisdom have you got for young snowboarders?

Oh, I could mount my soapbox and orate for hours on this topic! But I will just say this: you only get one body so take good care of it – eat well, get heaps of exercise, and don’t smoke! Live with passion – life is too short to waste it not doing what you love, so find a profession that excites you and throw yourself into it.

Where is your favourite snow resort?

Anywhere the powder is deep and the slopes are steep. I think the best ones are in the Rocky Mountains – Crested Butte, Beaver Creek, Aspen, Jackson, Park City, to name a few, and in the Sierras – Mammoth, Squaw, and in the backcountry of New Zealand.

What type of riding do you prefer?

Oh, number one choice is half a meter of fresh powder on steep slopes in the trees at places like Squaw or Northstar. But a competitive snowboarder is who I am – it’s what I am – my favorite events are boardercross and half pipe.

Have you been to a UK indoor snow dome?

I lived in Uxbridge for about a year, but that was in my presnowboarding days – 1950 to be exact, when I was four years old and snowboarding had not been invented yet. I have not been to the UK since then (except a one-day business trip to Bristol nearly 12 years ago). In Singapore I have been to Snow City, a small snow dome. If I return to the UK, yes I would go to a snow dome.

Your top 3 healthy addictions?

Are you implying I have some unhealthy ones?!? After snowboarding, it would have to be motorcycling, flying, and taking my grandsons rock climbing. And I really like skateboarding but I totally suck at it!

Where do you see the sport and lifestyle of snowboarding in the future, say, 10 years or so?

Snowsports of all kinds will continue to be popular and will become more so after the world economy sputters back to life. Snowboarding will become more and more mainstream, and at the elite end it will become more and more competitive — it will be harder for a young rider to become a pro. Ski resorts will move north to escape global warming – think northern tiers of Russia and China.

If you have anything else to say, just add it here.

Well, a huge thank-you to my sponsors Base Snowsports and Snowpark Skifield (both of New Zealand) and to all my many snowboard coaches and mentors.

 

TTR World Tour

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