Voisin goes big in slopestyle
Whitefish Mountain Resort freestyle
skier Maggie Voisin brought home in April a national championship
in slopestyle from the USASA Nationals at Copper Mountain in
Colorado.
Competing against 15 of the best girls
in her age class from across the country, 12-year-old Voisin
overcame a tough opening run to put down a winning segment that
included two 360-degree spins and a 720-degree spin.
The Whitefish Middle School student was
the only girl to spin off of the big jumps and her final score was
the best of the day against all competitors, including boys and
girls.
She credited her coach TJ Andrews for
helping her plan the run and achieve her goal.
“I couldn’t have done it without him,”
Voisin said.
Voisin started skiing when she was 2
years old, but didn’t get serious about slopestyle until three
seasons ago. This year, she squeezed in 52 days on the snow at Big
Mountain between school and traveling to competitions.
“I finally got more style this year and
started doing more technical things,” she said.
She’s working on a 900-degree spin —
that’s 2 1/2 rotations — but says it’s tough while training at Big
Mountain’s Fish Bowl terrain park.
“I haven’t landed one yet, but our
jumps are too small to do one,” she said.
She needs to train at more progressive
parks where jumps more than 55 feet are common. Catching that much
air doesn’t scare her, either.
“Once you get used to big jumps,” she
said. “They are super floaty and fun.”
This summer she’ll be training at
Windells ski camp on Mount Hood in Oregon and at Park City, Utah.
Her goal is to join the USSA Revolution Tour next winter and
eventually make the Dew Tour and ESPN X-Games.
“There is something about skiing that
makes me connect,” she said. “I love the adrenaline, trying new
things and going out and trying to do your best. There is something
special about it that makes it important to me.”