
On the final day of the inaugural Aspen/Snowmass Open, beautiful, sunny weather appeared again for the second day of the run making for a great day in the Superpipe.
After the two Semifinal heats in the morning, the Finals field of 10 was set take off in the pipe. With temperatures ranging around 40 degrees F and a glaring sun baking the left side of the 525-ft. long Superpipe, skiers were presented with a fast wall on the right and a soft, forgiving wall on the left. Despite the changing pipe conditions, skiers did not disappoint as they all boosted high out of the ditch and threw technical spins and even a few switch tricks near the bottom.
Leading the charge, though, was the high-flying Matt Philippi, who earned himself a 1st place finish in the inaugural event. Philippi's second of two runs saw him throw the highest 900 of the day, a huge alley-oop, a clean 1080, and a switch 540 to cap it off for the best pipe run of the day.
Philippi narrowly defeated the local boy, Peter Olenick, who ended up in 2nd place capping off a great weekend for him. Olenick's first run included a 900, 540, and 1080 in consecutive fashion. All his tricks were super clean and included stylie grabs, but he did not have as much amplitude as Philippi.
"It would have been nice to come out with two wins," said Olenick alluding to his Slopestyle victory the day before, "but I skied really well today and had fun."
The other skier matching Philippi's amplitude was 3rd place finisher, Brent Abrams. After barely making it into the Finals, Abrams excited the crowd with big airs and one of the best 1080s of the day at the bottom of the pipe.
An added highlight that generated the most excitement of the event was Scott Hibbert's double back flip attempt at the bottom of the pipe. Hibbert sketched out on the landing of his 2 nd trick up top in the pipe, so he proceeded to stir the crowd by skiing all the way down the pipe and attempting a double back flip but coming up short by decking the pipe with his chin—yes, his chin. He skied away though with a smile on his face as the thrilled crowd cheered in appreciation for his stimulating attempt. -John Stifter

Unlike the cloudy, snowy conditions that caused the Winter X Games Slopestyle to be cancelled at Buttermilk Mountain in Aspen, CO, the Aspen/Snowmass Slopestyle hosted on the same course as the X Games was held under blue, sunny skies. The inaugural Aspen/Snowmass Open presented by Nissan is billed as a Slopestyle/Superpipe event open to amateurs, and skiers are able to ski on the exact same courses built for the X Games two weeks earlier.
Led by X Gamers Sammy Carlson, Derek Spong, and Aspen native Peter Olenick, the Aspen/Snowmass Slopestyle Finals event got off to a fast start from the first skier, 15-year-old Alex Godbout, who ended up earning a 3 rd place finish.
"This is definitely my best finish of the year," said Godbout, a native from Quebec.
And then another youngster, 15-year-old Wanaka, New Zealand native Jossi Wells, threw an impressive switch truck driver 540 off the 55-ft. Channel Gap and a switch mute 900 off the 65-ft. Last Chance Kicker to earn 2 nd place.
"I'm so stoked right now," said the miniature-framed Wells in his Kiwi accent. "This is so sweet to finish 2nd."
But the day belonged to Olenick of nearby Carbondale, CO. Peter earned himself his first podium of the short season with an impressive display of Slopestyle skills ranging from his hard-charging rail attempts up top with the 21-ft. flat-to-down and 4-ft. high flat rail and then the XChange box down low. The XChange box is a unique feature to the course as it offers to different options: a 14-ft up to 15-ft. gap to 14-ft. down or a 14-ft. up to 14-ft. flat to 14-ft. down. Olenick, like nearly every skier of the event, elected to hit the up to gap to down and executed it perfectly with a clean exit heading into the Last Chance Kicker.
"We had way better weather than the X Games, so it was nice to actually be able ski the course," said Olenick. "It was a sick comp."
Unfortunately, the experienced youngsters, Carlson and Spong, both crashed on the Last Chance Kicker leaving them off the podium.
Congrats though goes out to the local Olenick and his aggressive, charging approach to the course, and the two foreign 15-year-olds, Godbout and Wells. -John Stifter
Podium:
Peter Olenick
Jossi Wells
Alex Godbout

