The Spinners, Josh Turner & Pat Metheny among headliners at Belleayre this summer... 9:51 AM
- Apr 18, 2012
Belleayre Music Festival 2012 Calendar of Events...
9:51 AM
- Apr 18, 2012
Much-Anticipated Protective Apparel Unleashed by G-Form...
9:51 AM
- Apr 18, 2012
Massimiliano Blardone signs for another two years with Dynastar and Lange...
9:50 AM
- Apr 18, 2012
A series of contract extensions at Rossignol...
9:50 AM
- Apr 18, 2012
Vail Resorts Closes Its Acquisition of Kirkwood Mountain Resort at Lake Tahoe...
9:50 AM
- Apr 18, 2012
Sugarbush Resort again offers $299 Season Pass for skiers and riders in their 20s...
9:49 AM
- Apr 18, 2012
Sugarbush Adventure Games Relaunched as Mad Triathlon and moved to May...
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- Apr 18, 2012
Sunday River Plans Annual End-of-Season Ski Mania...
11:31 AM
- Apr 11, 2012
REI Names New Senior Executives...
11:30 AM
- Apr 11, 2012
Centered Sliding - Page 1 By Todd Murchison, December 10,
2000
Snowboarding, Telemarking, Alpine Skiing, Monoskiing,
Snowdogging . . . there are many of ways to slide down the hill. Each has its own
techniques, equipment and adherents. Each of them has instructors, coaches and books
dedicated to helping people master each sport and they have each spent a lot of
research and time teaching proper stance. Well, they could have saved themselves
some trouble by just sharing information, because when it comes to stance there is not a
whole lot of difference between these sports.
"Wait a minute" you say, "thats not
true. Heck - Snowboarders stand sideways, Monoskiers have their feet locked together,
Telemarkers kneel down every turn . . . how can you claim they are the same?"
Simple those are just surface differences, the
underlying truth is the same: great athletes in every sport have learned how to use as
natural and functional a stance as possible. That stance may vary slightly depending on
what kind of toy you are sliding down the mountain on, but we all strive stand as close to
how we stand when walking and running . . . a natural stance. We can get quite good at
contorting our bodies into other positions, but when it comes down to it our bodies are
designed to really be good at walking and running. The more often you can use your body in
a way that is similar to this, the stronger, faster and better balanced you will be.