How some Winter Olympians, like aerial and cross-country skiers, train in summer

What do you do when you need snow to train but it’s summer? We found out.

When your sport features snow or ice and you have to train all throughout the year to be an elite athlete with hopes of making the Olympics, what do you do in the summer?

For some sports with indoor venues, it’s a fairly simple solution. However, it’s a little different if athletes need snow-covered mountains or trails to train. But as freestyle skier Winter Vinecki and biathlete Jake Brown, both first-time Olympians, explained recently to For The Win, they have relatively easy options too.

In aerial skiing, athletes launch themselves off massive jumps and execute precise maneuvers, like flips of twists, in the air before trying to stick the landing on an incline. Vinecki said when doing a double, she’s going around 55 kilometers per hour before takeoff, which is about 34 miles per hour.

To practice her moves in the summer — and to learn new ones in a safer environment — Vinecki said she and the U.S. Freestyle Ski Team rely on an aerials pool at the Utah Olympic Park, training there from about May to October.

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“All summer long, the train on water ramps into a pool,” Vinecki, a 23 year old from Gaylord, Michigan, said. “So it has our jumps that go into a pool that we land it, and it has a bubble system so it softens the landing and makes it so he can see where we’re going to land easier. So [it] helps us see while we’re flipping through the air.

“And we do hundreds and hundreds on water, climbing up to the top of the metal stairs after every jump in all of our wet gear. And so this is how we practice in a little bit safer environment so that we can do new tricks.”

Climbing up stairs in wet skiing gear over and over sounds almost as challenging as the aerials these skiers attempt. But they’re not actually wearing all the same equipment compared with skiing on snow, Vinecki explained.

They’re not wearing their snow pants or jackets; they’re wearing wetsuits “and even dry suits when it’s very early season in May when the water’s still 48 degrees and then in October, sometimes, we’ve had snow when we’re so water ramping,” she said. But the rest is fairly similar to what you get on snow.

“We have our normal boots, we have our helmets, mouthguard and our skis are very similar,” Vinecki continued. “The main difference is that it has holes cut into our skis, so that softens the impact. And so, obviously, the skis we use are different, but they’re the same brand and everything and give us the same feel.”

Winter Vinecki at Utah Olympic Park (@usskiteam // Christian Raguse)

Although practicing aerials in a pool is safer, especially when learning new tricks, messing up doesn’t exactly feel like falling on a bed of clouds.

“It doesn’t feel good if you still land on your stomach or back, but it’s at least more safe then learning on snow,” Vinecki added laughing.

For other types of skiers, like cross-country skiers, biathletes (cross-country skiing plus target shooting with rifles) or nordic combined athletes (cross-country skiing plus ski jumping), the summer training solution comes with wheels.

Specifically, roller skis. Like rollerblades but with the feel of cross-country skis.

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“They’re essentially a kind of built up shaft of ski,” Brown, a 29-year-old biathlete from St. Paul, Minnesota, said.

“Different companies make them out of different things. The most common ones are aluminum. The ones that we use are made by a Finnish company called Marwe that has a patented version that’s actually a honeycomb core — just like a cross country ski is made out of — that’s wrapped in fiberglass.”

This is the primary method for cross-country skiers training in the summer, from about May to November, Brown said. He lives in an athlete house at Craftsbury Outdoor Center in Vermont, and the property includes a biathlon range and a roller ski loop with a paved path through the woods like in cross-country skiing trails.

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And while roller skiing is not exactly the same as training on snow, it gets the job done.

“It’s hard to learn to ski on roller skis and then translate that to snow,” he continued. “But if you’re used to skiing on snow, the roller skis are a great training tool. And we can ski with pretty much identical technique to snow on roller skis, so we’re training all the same muscle groups. …

“We do all our intervals and everything on roller skis [and] distance train just like we would on snow.”

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Sports community rallies around Mikaela Shiffrin after she skis out for 2nd time in 3 days at Olympics

The sports world is sending its best to Mikaela Shiffrin.

Mikaela Shiffrin has shockingly skied out of her second event at the Beijing Olympics, the women’s slalom.

On Wednesday morning in Beijing, Shiffrin had just started her slalom run when she was disqualified after missing a gate merely five seconds in. On Monday, Shiffrin was disqualified from her giant slalom run after she wiped out at the top of the course. Shiffrin was favored in both events, as she was the reigning gold medalist in the giant slalom from 2018.

Both disqualifications are unusual from Shiffrin, who has been known as a pretty mistake-free skier in her career. These Olympics are the first that Shiffrin is without her late father, a loss that she has stated is still pretty “painful” nearly two years later.

Shiffrin will be participating in three more events in the Beijing Olympics — women’s downhill and the two women’s combined events — and will still have the chance to claim a fourth Olympic medal (or more) in her career.

The sports world has since rallied around Shiffrin, who sat devastated at the side of the course after her disqualification. Sports fans also were left fuming with NBC’s coverage of Shiffrin’s disqualification, as the broadcast spent minutes lingering on shots of her sitting on the course in disbelief.

Winter Olympics 2022: How much does it snow in Beijing?

Get ready for a lot of fake snow.

When most people think of Beijing, it’s hard to imagine “Winter Sports Destination” crossing anyone’s mind. And that’s because the Chinese capital rarely has significant snowfall, especially in the dry month of February where average temperatures are around 40 degrees.

So, why would Beijing get awarded the 2022 Winter Olympics? That’s a great question and has a lot to do with Oslo withdrawing from consideration. But let’s get back to the weather.

The average February snowfall for Beijing is less than an inch, so many of the outdoor events will take place a couple hours away from Beijing in Zhangjiakou. And the snow you’ll see on those mountains will be almost entirely artificial snow.

Aesthetically, it makes for an odd scene at a Winter Games: Ski events taking place with a backdrop of barren, dry mountains. But fake snow has its environmental concerns as well, via Quartz:

The climate in Zhangjiakou, 100 miles from Beijing, is cold, but dry. For the last four decades it has averaged a scant 7.9 mm of precipitation each winter. China’s bid for the Winter Olympics had always hinged on an army of snow machines.

China’s bid estimated that they would need 49 million gallons of water to blanket the Olympic slopes in snow. However, a geographer interviewed by Bloomberg, estimated that the country could divert as much as 2 million cubic meters (528 million gallons) of water to snow-making, further straining one of the most water-stressed regions in the country.

Fake snow can often be icier than natural snowfall, as well, so we’ll have to see if the difference noticeably impacts the competition.

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Chinese skiier Eileen Gu landed this bonkers 1620 in women’s freestyle big air to secure gold

HOW?

Physics has no hold over Eileen Gu, I am convinced.

On Monday, in the final of the Women’s Freeski Big Air event at the 2022 Beijing Olympics, Gu landed one of the more absolutely bonkers tricks at a competition. Heading into her third run of the final, needing a big trick to win gold with French skiier Tess Ledeux ahead of her, Gu laid it all out on the slope.

After landing a 1440 (four complete rotations) on her first run, Gu went full throttle with a double cork 1620 (four and a half rotations) for her third and final run, securing the gold in the process.

What an absolute monster of a trick. Not only that, this was the first 1620 Gu has landed in her career at just 18-years-old. The only other woman to land one in competition? Ledeux, who Gu passed for the gold with this trick that scored 94.50.

Gu is an American citizen, but decided to compete for China to represent her mother’s home country for these Beijing Games. Talk about a lovely — and incredibly epic — moment for Gu and her home Chinese fans!

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7 questions with Team USA Winter Olympians, including what winter sport they’d be terrified to try

Get to know some of Team USA’s athletes at the Beijing Olympics a little better with these fun and quirky questions.

Every four years, the spotlight shines brightly on Winter Olympians, as they become the sports world’s focus for a few weeks.

So ahead of the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing, For The Win asked several Team USA athletes from different Winter Olympic sports the same questions to help fans get to know them a little better.

Talking to figure skaters Karen Chen and Mariah Bell, freestyle skiers Winter Vinecki and Colby Stevenson, curler Tabitha Peterson, speedskater Erin Jackson and biathlete Jake Brown, we asked about how they train, what they eat and what other winter sports they’d want to try (or be terrified of attempting).

These answers have been condensed and edited for clarity.

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Beijing Olympics: A timeline of the United States and Canada’s women’s hockey rivalry

The rivalry between the American and Canadian women’s hockey teams can’t be beat.

There is no better rivalry in hockey than the one between the American and Canadian women’s teams.

Seriously, every time these two teams play one another — whether it be on the biggest stage in the world at the Olympics or in a friendly exhibition match — the games are always exciting, tense and fueled by pure hatred. The United States’ and Canada’s women’s hockey teams absolutely loathe each other on the ice and have made for some incredibly memorable games over the course of their history with one another.

As the competition in the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing continues — where Team USA will look to defend its gold medal over Canada from Pyeongchang — why don’t we take a stroll down memory lane between these two teams?

Here’s a full timeline of all the major moments in the United States-Canada women’s hockey rivalry.

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American ice dancers Madison Chock and Evan Bates had the most delightfully weird Olympic team free dance

Madison Chock and Evan Bates are out of this world!

You’ve never seen an ice dancing routine like this.

On Sunday night, the final events of the figure skating Team Event at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing were in full swing. Heading into the Ice Dance Free Skate, Team USA was sitting in third place behind Japan in a battle for silver. That was, until, Madison Chock and Evan Bates took to the ice for the United States in the free dance.

And folks, their routine was out of this world. Literally.

Eschewing typical figure skating norms of dancing to classical music or covers of pop songs, Chock and Bates went full outer space with an incredibly theatrical routine set to a Daft Punk medley. Even more weird — but awesome — is that in the routine, Bates is playing an astronaut and Chock… an alien.

Seriously, it was something to see.

So good! And this lift as the music swells? Just phenomenal.

Look at how happy they are after placing first too!!

It’s a performance that helped Team USA win silver in the Team Event, but we’re so looking forward to what these two can do in the individual event later in the Olympics.

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Snowboarder Julia Marino wins Team USA’s first medal of Beijing Olympics with surprise slopestyle silver

Team USA has its first medal in Beijing!

The United States has its first medal of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing thanks to Julia Marino!

On Saturday evening in the United States (Sunday in Beijing), Marino was one of two Team USA competitors looking to win gold in the final of the women’s slopestyle event in snowboarding. Alongside Marino was the reigning gold medalist from the United States in the event, Jamie Anderson, who was looking to defend her title from 2018.

While Anderson missed the podium, Marino surprised big time for Team USA, putting down a score of 87.68 in her second run of three. For awhile, Marino was sitting in the gold medal spot, until Zoi Sadowski-Synnott’s final run of the day won New Zealand its first ever gold medal in the Winter Olympics, giving Marino the silver.

Here’s Marino’s silver-winning run from the women’s slopestyle event.

What a performance! Seriously, what a run from Marino, who combined some major tricks and jumps to win the silver as Team USA’s first medal in Beijing.

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Athletes with the most Olympic medals of all time from Summer and Winter Games

A look at the all-time individual Olympic medal count.

The 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics officially began Friday with the Opening Ceremony, which means thousands of athletes from around the world have gathered for a chance to compete among the best at their sport.

The United States has dominated the total medal count with Summer and Winter Games, leading the world with 3,080 total medals before the Beijing Olympics, including a world-best 1,220 gold medals. American swimmer Michael Phelps has the most individual medals with 28, including 23 goal medals, which is also a record.

As the 2022 Winter Games, we’re taking a look at the most decorated individual Olympians of all time, per Olympedia.

RELATED: Here are the athletes with the most Winter Olympic medals of all-time

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2022 Winter Olympics: What is biathlon? Allow us to explain!

Let’s learn about biathlon, shall we?

I know what you’re thinking right now — you’ve heard of biathlon, you know it’s an event in the Winter Olympics but you don’t really know what it is.

It’s OK, don’t worry. You are not alone. I was in the same boat as you not too long ago, so I did some research to figure this whole thing out. And now I’m going to share that research with the world.

Let’s calm down with the “hero” stuff, though. I’m far from that. It was just a few searches on the internet, and I had fun doing it.

Enough chit-chat. Let’s learn about biathlon!

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