Henrik Windstedt of Team Europe competes in Saturday's Backcountry Slopestyle at the Swatch Skiers Cup in Valle Nevado, Chile. (photo: Swatch/Maxim Balakhovskiy)

Team Europe Wins the Swatch Skiers Cup

Valle Nevado, Chile – Team Europe clinched the Swatch Skiers Cup on Saturday with a final score of 14 to 10 at the inaugural freeski competition at Valle Nevado, high in the Chilean Andes. In Saturday’s showdown on the Backcountry Slopestyle course, Team Europe held their own against the favored strength of Team Americas freestylers and it was Swede Kaj Zackrisson and his band of seven riders that held the Swatch Skiers Cup triumphantly aloft at the end of the day.

In two rounds of eight head-to-head duels, Team Americas would showcase its unrivaled freestyle strength on the two large features shaped by David Ny, and the varied natural hits, cliffs and powder landings of the Backcountry Slopestyle. The panel of three international judges awarded a single point to the winner of each man-to-man heat.

Henrik Windstedt of Team Europe competes in Saturday's Backcountry Slopestyle at the Swatch Skiers Cup in Valle Nevado, Chile. (photo: Swatch/Maxim Balakhovskiy)
Henrik Windstedt of Team Europe competes in Saturday's Backcountry Slopestyle at the Swatch Skiers Cup in Valle Nevado, Chile. (photo: Swatch/Maxim Balakhovskiy)

Coming off the Big Mountain segment of the event earlier in the week trailing 2-6, Team Americas’ riders were pressed in the Backcountry Slopestyle discipline to reverse their deficit. Powered by the talents of Canada’s Rory Bushfield and Dylan Hood of the U.S., they delivered their best. Bushfield simply stomped everything he threw, though his top run would include a 360 over the entry hip, a cork-720 off the kicker, a right-side 360 off a medium-sized drop and finish with a 180 nosetap off a rolling 10-meter drop.

Switzerland’s Nicolas Vuignier, his first-round rival, answered with one of the most stylish cab-540’s of the day. Most impressive in the first round was the explosive energy of Italian Markus Eder’s cab 900 mute and switch 540 revert.

A series of spills by Team Americas would limit their gains, though, and both teams finished the first round with an additional four points, making it 10-6 for Team Europe.

Round two would see Sweden’s Henrik Windstedt charge to the finish with solid, controlled skiing, winning a total of two points today for Team Europe. Co-founder of the event and big mountain specialist, Sverre Liliequist of Sweden, would display a whole new side with a misty 720 and a stomped backflip.

Team Americas refused to be outshined , however and equalized the round yet again with Hood’s enormous cork 720 and switch tricks around the venue.

Captain of Team Europe, Zackrisson also pushed his limits on Saturday to land both left and right 360’s – a first in his long career as a freeskier – after brief instruction from young compadre Nicolas Vuignier of Switzerland the previous day.

Team Americas’ Josh Bibby of Canada would win both his runs, but the favored talents of fellow Canadians Dana Flahr and James Heim would not shine in the showdown held Saturday.

In the end, Europe would gain enough points by the third duel in the second round to win the event. The athletes agreed that after such an experience in Chile, they would certainly support another Swatch Skiers Cup.

“I think it’s the best spirit I have ever seen in a contest,” said France’s Richard Permin.

Team Americas Captain, Mark Abma of Canada, was very impressed with the Swatch Skiers Cup inaugural.

“I think this has been a success just because of its team feel, and the camaraderie that comes from it,” said Abma. “We have so many contests these days that are individually focused, that to create a team focus is really a funky twist. These days we just need something different and [Kaj and Sverre] stepped-up to it.”

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