SNOWBOARDING
winter sport that is somewhat akin to skiing and that evolved from skateboarding and surfing. Three main styles of competition exist: Alpine, freestyle, and boardercross.
Developed in the 1960s, snowboarding is believed to have originated in
the United States, where several inventors explored the idea of surfing
on the snow. The sport quickly evolved, and the early, rudimentary
boards gave way to designs that are specialized to meet the demands of
different competitions. The basic design is a board (much like an
oversized, wheel-less skateboard) to which the rider's feet are
attached with bindings. No poles are used; racers push off from
stationary posts. The size and shape of a snowboard varies according to
the intended use of the board and the size of the snowboarder. However,
the average size of a board is 150 cm (5 feet) in length and 25 cm (10
inches) in width. A board may have a deep sidecut (giving it a shape
similar to an hourglass) in order to facilitate sharper turns. A leash
connected to the snowboarder's ankle prevents the board from sliding
away after a fall.
A stiff board and plate bindings and boots are used for the Alpine events, all of which are timed and contain gates around which snowboarders must maneuver. The slalom
and giant slalom are considered technical contests because of the
tightness of the turns. The supergiant slalom (also called the super-G)
is a speed event with looser turns and a longer course.
Highly flexible boards, shell bindings, and boots are used for the freestyle
events, which take place on a half-pipe, a ramp built from snow that
resembles the bottom portion of a tube. Half-pipes vary in size;
however, they are generally 75 to 100 metres (246 to 328 feet) in
length and 10 to 18 metres (30 to 60 feet) from wall to wall. The
height of a wall ranges from 3 to 6 metres (10 to 20 feet). Not a race,
the freestyle is a series of acrobatic tricks that are rated by three
to five judges.
Flexible freestyle boots and bindings are used
with a board of medium flexibility for the boardercross contest, in
which four to six racers simultaneously navigate a downhill course
containing bumps (moguls), jumps, and other obstacles; the winner is
determined by speed.
The international governing body of snowboarding is the Fédération Internationale de Ski (FIS). The sport was first recognized by the International Olympic Committee in 1994, and its Winter Games debut occurred in 1998 at Nagano, Japan, where the men's and women's giant slalom and half-pipe were held. Snowboard cross events were added to the Olympics for the 2010 Vancouver Games,
and both parallel slalom and slopestyle (wherein snowboarders race down
a course laden with jumps and rails, off of which they do tricks that
are judged for points) became Olympic events at the 2014 Sochi (Russia) Games.





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