Freestyle Skiing
  • Olympic Debut
    Albertville 1992
More info

History of

Freestyle Skiing

Freestyle skiing combines speed, showmanship and the ability to perform aerial manoeuvres whilst skiing.

‘Hotdogging’

There are records of people performing somersaults on skis at the beginning of the 20th century in Norway, Italy and Austria, and in the early 1920s, U.S. skiers started to flip and spin. Freestyle skiing really began to take off in America during the 1960s, when social change and freedom of expression together with the advances in ski equipment led to the development of new and exciting skiing techniques. Freestyle skiing was affectionately known as ‘hotdogging’. The name seemed to perfectly capture the breathtaking mix of acrobatic tricks, jumps and sheer adrenalin rush of the sport.

Getting Recognition

Freestyle was recognised as a discipline by the International Ski Federation (FIS) in 1979. The governing body brought in new regulations in an effort to curb some of the more dangerous elements of the infant sport, and the first FIS World Cup series was staged the following year.

Freestyle Skiing spotlight

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