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Nordic Combined

Brabec Strikes Silver at 2024 FIS Nordic Junior World Ski Championships

By USA Nordic
February, 9 2024
alexa brabec
Alexa Brebec skis to silver in the Junior World Champs. (USA Nordic)

Alexa Brabec brought home the first-ever medal in women’s nordic combined for the United States at Junior World Championships, striking silver in the HS102/5k in Planica, Slovenia. Kai McKinnon was able to record a top 10 finish as well, placing sixth overall in her first-ever Junior Worlds appearance.

On the hill, Brabec jumped to the 10th position, putting together an 86.5 meter jump for 97.1 points, +1:08 behind first place for the 5k race. McKinnon jumped to 15th, as she went 79.5 meters for 94.3 points. Ella Wilson finished 29th, going 71.0 meters for 73.7 points, with Haley Brabec rounding things off in 30th, jumping to 71.0 meters for 68.4 points.

In the 5k, Brabec skied up to fourth place after 1.25k, before sliding into first place after 3.75k, just +0.7 seconds in front of Finland’s Minja Korhonen. Brabec crossed the finish line in second overall, +1.5 seconds behind Korhonen to bring home the silver medal for the United States.

“Unbelievably proud of Alexa and Kai,” said Ski Jumping and Nordic Combined Sport Director Anders Johnson. “Alexa has been on a roll the past few weeks building into the Junior World Championships and really fought hard for her silver medal today. And with Kai right behind her in sixth place, it shows how strong our women’s nordic combined team is at the moment.”

Haley Brabec finished the 5k in 26th place, with Wilson right behind in 27th.

Results
HS102/5km

2024 Alpine, Nordic Combined, Ski Jumping, Ski Cross Youth Olympic Games Nominations Released 

By Sierra Ryder
December, 20 2023
alpine ski racer

Updated roster below as of Dec. 23, 2023, including alpine, ski jumping, nordic combined and ski cross teams. The previously sent out press release was incomplete. 

U.S. Ski & Snowboard formally nominated the Youth Olympic Winter Games (YOG) alpine, nordic combined, ski jumping and ski cross teams slated to compete Jan. 19 - Feb. 1, 2024 in Gangwon Province, South Korea. The four teams are in addition to the cross country, freestyle, snowboard and freeski teams, which were nominated earlier in the fall.

The 2024 Youth Olympic Games, held every four years, will welcome more than 1,900 athletes from more than 80 National Olympic Committees to the home of the 2018 Olympic Winter Games in PyeongChang. Historically, the Youth Olympic Games was created by the former president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Jacques Rogge with a mission to bring together the world’s best young athletes and educate and inspire the next generation of Olympians.

At the 2020 Youth Olympic Games in Lausanne, Switzerland, 96 athletes across 16 sports represented the United States. The games helped catapult the careers of many national team athletes, including 2023 world champion and alpine skier River Radamus, who found success at the Youth Olympic Games in 2016, winning three gold medals. 

“I am very impressed by this group of alpine skiers set to represent the U.S. in Gangwon,” said Anouk Patty, U.S. Ski & Snowboard Chief of Sport. “These alpine skiers have an incredible opportunity with the Youth Olympic Games to put their alpine ski racing to the test among international competitors.” 

There will be five alpine events at the Games including a slalom, giant slalom, super-G, alpine combined and mixed team parallel. Ski cross will feature men's and women's individual ski cross, as well as a mixed team ski cross. 

“We are thrilled to announce this talented group of U18 athletes and look forward to seeing them compete on the Youth Olympic stage," said Alpine Development Director Chip Knight. "It’s going to be an exceptional experience for them, and we hope they can bring home some medals too!” 

The ski jumping and nordic combined teams also show great promise this year. A majority of the nordic combined team will be getting their first taste of international experience and will put their talents to the test on the international stage after a strong season of domestic results. 

“This year’s team is strong and I’m looking forward to seeing how they perform in South Korea," said Ski Jumping and Nordic Combined Sport Director Anders Johnson. "Gangwon should be a very exciting event, and I’m looking forward to watching our athletes perform their best and represent our country.”

Nordic combined will include a men’s and women’s individual 4k and 6k race, a mixed team 4x3.3k relay, mixed team normal hill and men’s and women’s individual normal hill. The ski jumping schedule will include individual and mixed team events. 

Full nominations for alpine, nordic combined, ski jumping and ski cross are below. The full roster for cross country, freestyle, snowboard and freeski can be viewed here. The United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee will officially name the teams in January.  

2024 U.S. Youth Olympic Games Team
(hometown; club; birthdate)

ALPINE

Women

  • Annika Hunt (East Burke, VT; Burke Mountain Academy; 11/30/2006)
  • Christina Winchell (Stowe, VT; Mount Mansfield Academy; 1/31/2006)
  • Nicole Begue (Miami Beach, FL; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 12/19/2006)
  • Named, but cannot attend due to injury: Stella Buchheister (Carbondale, CO; Team Summit; 8/20/2006)

Men

  • Stewart Bruce (Avon, CO; Ski & Snowboard Club Vail; 2/2/2006)
  • Jevin Palmquist (Eagan, MN; Team Summit; 3/6/2007)
  • Alternate: Jack Schrady (Truckee, CA; Sugar Bowl Ski Team & Academy; 3/9/2006)

Alpine Staff

  • Sam Damon – U.S. Ski & Snowboard Eastern Region Director
  • Doug Elsey – Team Summit
  • Scott Houser – Ski & Snowboard Club Vail
  • Jillian Barile - Mount Mansfield Academy 

 

SKI JUMPING

WOMEN

  • Estella Hassrick (Madison, WI; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club / U.S. Ski Jumping Team development team; 5/21/2006) 
  • Josie Johnson (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard / U.S. Ski Jumping Team; 10/3/2006)

MEN

  • Jason Colby (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club / U.S. Ski Jumping Team development team; 3/30/2006)
  • Sawyer Graves (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 9/30/2008)

SKI JUMPING STAFF

  • Karl Denney - Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club

 

NORDIC COMBINED

WOMEN

  • Kai McKinnon (Lake Placid, NY; New York Ski Educational Foundation / U.S. Nordic Combined Team development team; 5/6/2008)
  • Ella Wilson (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 3/4/2008)

MEN

  • Anders Giese (Wilmette, IL; Norge Ski Club; 8/6/2008)
  • Arthur Tirone (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 2/8/2008)

NORDIC COMBINED STAFF

  • Michael Ward - Park City Ski & Snowboard / U.S. Nordic Combined Team domestic coach
     

SKI CROSS

WOMEN

  • Morgan Shute (Allendale, NJ; Carrabassett Valley Academy; 9/13/2006)
  • Maggie Swain (Kingfield, ME; Carrabassett Valley Academy; 7/10/2006)

MEN

  • Walker Robinson (Frisco, CO; Team Summit; 6/27/2006)
  • Aiden England (Truckee, CA; Team Palisades Tahoe; 8/11/2006)

SKI CROSS STAFF

  • Rodney Robinson - Team Summit
  • Michael Phelan - Carrabassett Valley Academy

HOW TO WATCH
A live stream of the YOG will be at https://olympics.com/en/gangwon-2024/ starting with the Opening Ceremony. 

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
For the full schedule of events, visit https://olympics.com/en/gangwon-2024/schedule.

2023-24 U.S. Nordic Combined Team Announced

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
October, 24 2023
Annika Malacinski skiing during a nordic combined event

U.S. Ski & Snowboard officially announced the 12 athletes that were named to the U.S. Nordic Combined Team for the 2023-24 season.

Our nordic combined athletes have been working very hard this summer, adjusting to a new staff, new training programs and an overall new philosophy,” said U.S. Ski & Snowboard Ski Jumping and Nordic Combined Sport Director Anders Johnson. “With any major changes, it takes some time to find your footing, and our athletes have stayed determined and motivated through the process. I feel very confident that this new system will produce some great results.”

Two-time Olympian and four-time World Championships team member Ben Loomis, as well as 2022 Olympian and 2023 World Championships team member Stephen Schumann return to lead the men’s nordic combined team for the 2023-24 season. Women’s nordic combined will be led by two-time World Championships team member Annika Malacinski, who is the only athlete to be named to the U.S. Nordic Combined A Team.

The 2023-24 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup season is scheduled to kick off with men’s nordic combined competitions in Ruka, Finland from Nov. 23-26 and women in Lillehammer, Norway Nov. 30-Dec. 3. The World Cup season will then wrap up for both men’s and women’s nordic combined in Trondheim, Norway, as athletes will compete from March 15-17.

2023-24 U.S. Nordic Combined Team

(Hometown; Club; College/University; Birthdate)

A TEAM

Women

Annika Malacinski (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; Colorado Mountain College; 05/09/2001)

B TEAM

Women

Alexa Brabec (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; University of Utah; 10/08/2004)

Men

Ben Loomis (Eau Claire, WI; Flying Eagles Ski Club; DeVry University; 06/09/1998)
Carter Brubaker (Anchorage, AK; Nordic Skiing Association of Anchorage; Arizona State University; 12/21/2003)
Niklas Malacinski (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; Colorado Mountain College; 12/07/2003)
Stephen Schumann (Park City, UT; Park City Ski & Snowboard; Arizona State University; 03/14/2000)

C TEAM

Men

Grant Andrews (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; University of Utah; 12/03/1997)

D TEAM

Women

Eva Minotto (Steamboat Springs, CO; Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club; 05/05/2008)
Kai McKinnon (Lake Placid, NY; New York Ski Educational Foundation; 05/06/2008)

Men

Caleb Zuckerman (Norwich, VT; Ford Sayre Ski Club; 11/01/2005)
Elias Oswald (Anchorage, AK; Nordic Skiing Association of Anchorage; 9/10/2007)
Skyler Amy (Anchorage, AK; Alaska Winter Stars/Team AK Ski Jumping; 11/19/2005)

2023-24 Nordic Combined Coaches & Staff

Chief of Sport: Anouk Patty
Nordic Combined Program Director: Anders Johnson
Nordic Combined Head Coach: Truls Johansen
Nordic Combined Jumping Coach: Christian Ingebrigtsen
Nordic Combined Assistant Coach: Michael Ward
Nordic Combined Press Officer: Riley Elliott 

2023-24 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup Schedule

Follow the U.S. Nordic Combined Team

Instagram: @usskiteam, @usanordic
Facebook: @usskiandsnowboard, @USANordic
TikTok: @usskiandsnowboardteam, @usanordic
Twitter / X: @usskiteam, @usanordic
Threads @usskiteam

Nordic Combined Youth Olympic Games

The Youth Olympic Games (YOG) is an international multi-discipline event for athletes between 15 and 18 years of age, organized by the International Olympic Committee. It is hosted every 4 years, in the middle of the Winter Olympic Games cycle. The next Winter Youth Olympic Games will be held in 2028 in Italy at many of the 2026 Olympic venues. Qualification pathways will be posted here once determined by the FIS, IOC and local organizers.

U.S. National Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame Announces 2023 Class

By U.S. Ski & Snowboard
September, 29 2023
shannon bahrke
Shannon Bahrke celebrates winning a bronze medal at the Winter Olympic Winter Games Vancouver 2010 (Getty Images - Kevork Djansezian)

The U.S. National Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame and Museum, not affiliated with U.S. Ski & Snowboard, announced its eight member Hall of Fame Class of 2023. The class will be inducted at the Snowsports History Celebration in March, which will be held in Park City, Utah.

The class is headlined by two-time Olympic medalist freestyle moguls skier Shannon Bahrke, snowboarding pioneer Jeff Brushie and Olympic champion Billy Demong.

The mission of the U.S. National Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame and Museum is to honor and celebrate the athletes, pioneers and visionaries of the United States who have significantly enriched the global sports of skiing and snowboarding, and to showcase their stories and historic memorabilia in a national museum located at the birthplace of organized skiing in America, Ishpeming, Michigan.

The 2023 inductees are listed below, with courtesy to the U.S. Ski & Snowboard Hall of Fame.  

Ross Anderson – (Albuquerque, New Mexico) A Native American speed skier, Ross Anderson holds the record as the fastest American on skis, hitting a speed of 154.060 mph in 2006 at Les Arcs, France. A native of Durango, Colorado, he grew up as a ski racer and ski jumper, discovering speed skiing in 1994. He became one of the top athletes on the U.S. Speed Skiing Team, winning bronze at the 2005 World Championships and is an eight-time national champion.

shannon bahrke - 2010 olympics

Shannon Bahrke – (Reno, Nevada) Lake Tahoe native Shannon Bahrke is one of only five women to win multiple Olympic medals. Known for her pink hair and as the exuberant face of moguls skiing, Bahrke won Olympic silver at the 2002 Olympic Winter Games, then came back from injuries to win Olympic bronze in 2010. In a 12-year career with the U.S. Ski Team, Bahrke won the 2003 World Cup title, claimed 27 World Cup podiums with seven victories and earned six U.S. titles. She competed in three Olympics and was on six World Championship teams.

Jeff Brushie – (Burlington, Vermont) Vermont’s Jeff Brushie had one of the greatest and most successful contest careers for any American snowboarder. In an era before the X Games and Olympics, he thrilled millions of fans around the globe and became the most commercially successful pro snowboarder of his generation. He won over 20 major contest wins including three world championship titles. In the 1990s, his crossover appeal to mainstream media on MTV and ESPN was America’s first real look into snowboarding style and culture, also serving as a role model for future stars including Shaun White.

 billy demong

Billy Demong – (Vermontville, New York) As an athlete and a team leader, Olympic champion Billy Demong won the first gold medal by an American nordic skier, inspiring Team USA to an unprecedented four medals at the 2010 Vancouver Olympic Winter Games. He grew up in the Olympic region of Lake Placid, inspired by the culture emanating from the 1980 Games. In an international racing career that spanned 16 seasons, he won Olympic gold and silver, four World Championship medals including one gold and earned 21 World Cup podiums with nine wins.

Jake & Dave Moe – (Seattle, Washington) Skiing was just entering a dynamic phase of growth in 1971 when Jake and David Moe introduced the world to POWDER Magazine. Under the mantra “Powder to the People,” the brothers offered a new, more independent look at the sport with the photos and words on their pages, literally changing the direction of skiing, pushing skiers to discover their own independence on the mountain. As publisher and editor, the Moe brothers had a knack for finding the wordsmiths and photographers to tell the story of skiing in a new way. The magazine continued its mission with continual publication for nearly a half-century.

Les Otten – (New York, New York) Resort developer Les Otten had a profound impact on the entire industry as an innovator and visionary. He parlayed a college gig as a ski instructor to build a career in the industry, eventually owning nine ski areas and building American Ski Company into a publicly traded resort leader. Otten’s hallmark was finding ways to do things better. He innovated teaching techniques to make sport entry easier, focused on quality for snow making and was one of the first to recognize the benefits of shaped skis. Never satisfied with the status quo, his pioneering efforts transformed the industry of today. 

Mike Porter – (California) In a career that spanned a half century, Mike Porter left an indelible mark as one of the world’s most influential ski educators. He served the PSIA National Alpine Team as both a member and later its longest standing head coach. Porter was also one of the founders of the American Teaching System. Through his long-time leadership, he became a key mover in bringing global recognition to the PSIA-AASI worldwide, overseeing much of the U.S. content presented every four years at Interski. With his in-depth research on ski racing, he also served a pivotal role in bringing coaches and instructors together.

hank kashiwa

Hank Kashiwa – (New York, New York) After winning the 1975 World Pro Skiing Championship, Olympic ski racer Hank Kashiwa parlayed his success and passion for skiing into a thriving career as an entrepreneur in the ski industry. Together with brother Bucky, he founded Volant which went on to become the largest American ski manufacturer with its innovative stainless-steel cap. After the sale of Volant to Atomic, he went on to help lead marketing efforts for Montana’s Yellowstone Club as the world’s first private ski and golf community. which now boasts 875 families in its private membership.