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Behind the US Open,
"De-Marginalized" |
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2005 Snowboarding Championships
in Stratton, Vermont |
By George Davis - With over a quarter
million dollars in prizes (cash, cars, etc.), it's abundantly clear
that the US Open Snowboarding Championships are about more than just
fierce competition and a gathering of the tribes. This event
represents the pinnacle of professional sports marketing, the
meticulous alchemy of athletics, entertainment and commercialism.
Across its 23-year history—from humble conception as the National
Snowboarding Championships to the spectacular US Open of today—the
"Super Bowl" of snowboarding has evolved beyond anyone's wildest
expectations or predictions. While it's always easier to judge from
whence we've come than to understand the present or presage the
future, my outsider's perspective permitted a glimpse into
snowboarding not often paraded across the covers of the industry
glossies.
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Airborne
above the mondo half pipe. (Photo by George Davis)
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Burton, Stratton and a host of promotional and organizational partners
put on one hell of a spectacle! Period. Everything is bigger and "badder"
than you can anticipate. From the increasingly posh venue (owner/operator
Intrawest has been making improvements to the Stratton Mountain Resort at a
dizzying rate) to the splashy productions of high profile sponsors, from the
carefully choreographed media output to the entertainment quotient
(underground hip-hop phenomenon, Talib Kweli, dropped in for a "surprise
performance" after the Rail Jam awards ceremony), the US Open has traveled
far from its funky grassroots origins.
Commentators and advertisers often evoke those simple,
fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants roots when snowboarding equipment and apparel
were improvised, and the only "rider lifestyle" was a shared passion for
snow surfing instead of skiing. By definition those pioneers competed and
innovated at the periphery of the winter sports industry.
Of course, time and success changed all that. Today, as evidenced at the
US Open and dozens of publications and websites dedicated to the sport,
snowboarding has swung from the margin to the mainstream. Snowboarding is
quite literally eclipsing skiing as the hip, glam and only cool winter
mountain sport and lifestyle. But its success presents some complicated
challenges.
Those early days profoundly influenced snowboarding culture. It was
alternative in every sense. In fact, it was so alternative, that it was
close to a decade before most people even realized it existed. Many ski
mountains banned it or limited access which inevitably pitted snowboarders
against skiers and exclusive skier-centric mountains. Struggling for turf,
snowboarders were perceived as rebellious as they sought to subvert the
norms, the restrictions, the stereotypes. Due in part to this renegade
reputation—and in part to the generally risk-averse nature of large
corporations—snowboarding was not initially embraced by the ski industry
titans. Instead, dozens of small upstarts began designing and producing
snowboarding equipment and apparel to accommodate and propel this fledgling
movement.
So the snowboarding culture was born: alternative, rebellious, blatantly
subversive and decidedly un-corporate. This formula proved to be, well,
highly effective, especially for selling snowboarding to the young
generation already grappling with many of the same issues. Despite the
maturation of the industry and the eagerness of more conventional ski
industry companies to join in, this early established culture persevered,
due in part to recognition by savvy marketing gurus that it was a highly
effective sales niche.
Today, with the snowboarding industry booming and the un-corporate
startups becoming seasoned, mainstream conglomerates (or else being gobbled
up by other seasoned, mainstream conglomerates) it strikes an ironic chord
to witness a snowboarding industry struggling to define itself as ever more
alternative, more rebellious and more subversive. As the industry inevitably
grows more and more corporate, more and more conventional, great effort goes
into contriving a sort of ersatz funkiness hearkening back to the grassroots
days of yore.
What do I mean? Am I implying that the inevitable byproduct of the
industry's image-conscious marketing is that snowboarding is becoming a
caricature of itself?
No. My depth of experience is sufficiently shallow that any such sweeping
observations elude me. Yet I can't help but have the impression that
snowboarding is concluding its innocent and experimental youth and entering
an awkward adolescence, conflicted between spontaneity and rebellion and a
more conservative, more calculated adulthood.
After a quarter century has snowboarding become conventional or
is it simply coming of age? Let me share several indicative
anecdotes garnered from my week at Stratton.
Chatting over lunch in the Sun Bowl Lodge, Burton's in-house legal
council began discussing the recent acquisition of Four Star
Distribution's snowboarding brands:
Forum Snowboards, Jeenyus Snowboards
Jeenyus Snowboards, Foursquare Outerwear
Foursquare Outerwear
and Special Blend Outerwear. He was grumbling about the challenge
and inconvenience of absorption. Apparently it was taking a vast
amount of work to get these little companies up to the sort of
corporate muster mandated by Burton which involves good transparent
bookkeeping, verifiable records and enforceable contracts with
manufacturers, sponsored riders, etc.
I laughed and asked if the haphazard business practices he was
struggling to overcome weren't endemic to the industry. He
acknowledged my point but was quick to assure me that times are
changing. The sloppy bookkeeping and accounting practices tolerated
in the past are no longer acceptable as mergers and acquisitions
render more conventional corporate frameworks, emphasizing
transparency and accountability.
Another anecdote comes from a conversation I overheard between
Hannah Teeter and Abe Teeter following the Halfpipe competition.
Hannah announced to her brother that he'd won the $5,000 Nintendo DS
Best Trick award for his frontside inverted 9. "Yes!" he shouted and
pumped the air with his fist. "That's great because I'm totally
broke." It reminded me of the sort of excitement voiced by a waiter
or bartender after receiving a particularly good tip. Is
snowboarding just a job?
Perhaps even more telling is the emergence of The Collection, a
cooperative of top tier professional snowboarders including Ross
Powers, Kelly Clark, Gretchen Bleiler, Andy Finch and Luke Mitrani.
"[The Collection is] a group of five top snowboarders who banded
together at the 2004 Open to create the sport's first
rider-controlled team. Since then, the Collection has hired a coach,
physical therapists and a team manager to make travel arrangements
and haul gear to events. The riders also share expenses during the
week of an event by staying together in a rented house." (www.nytimes.com) |
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