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Debunking the Double Cork, Today’s Trick to Watch
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February 17th, 2010Olympics, SnowboardingIt is the infamous trick that has been all the rage this Olympic season – the double cork 1080. And with a successful two days of snowboardcross behind us, it is the trick everyone will be watching out for over the next two days. Today, the men’s Olympic halfpipe competition is scheduled to go down … hopefully, if Canada can get its pipe in order! Vancouver and Cypress Mountain, the resort playing host to this year’s halfpipe comp., have been seeing dismal weather the past couple of days, as it rained all day yesterday and continued through the night. Obviously, not ideal conditions for a halfpipe competition. As of now, the men’s halfpipe prelim round, which was originally set to commence at 1:05p.m. PT, is being rescheduled in hopes that better pipe conditions are on the near horizon. The women’s pip comp. is still scheduled for tomorrow. But enough about event timing; we’re talking double corks!
A double cork, first performed and perfected by snowboard icon Shaun White, is somewhat similar to a backflip in theory, however, to the viewer, the similarities are slim. A trick is deemed a double cork 1080 when a rider completes two off-axis backflip rotations, throwing the shoulder down and tucking, while also doing three and a half rotations. The double cork is a true testiment to how far the sport of snowboarding has come since the Olympic Games just four years ago.
The double cork is also one of the most dangerous tricks on the roster today. Unlike spins or grabs, or even backflips and mistys, the double cork is unforgiving, and if you make one small error in your landing or over/under-rotate the slightest bit, the landing is not fun. And the double cork has already developed somewhat of a dangerous reputation, as Burton rider and Olympic hopeful Kevin Pearce was hospitalized back in December attempting to perfect the trick in practice.
US Olympians like Shaun White (seriously, what can’t he do?) and Louie Vito (perhaps his summer perfecting pirouettes paid off?) have the double cork down pretty solid, and have even been throwing back-to-back double corks into their routines. Though the double cork is rumored to be the “must have” trick today, I don’t think it will completely break anyone’s run, as long as they’re going really big and have a solid, near perfect run otherwise.
On the women’s side of things, though, no woman has yet to throw down a double cork in competition, but rumors are circulating the web that Australian snowboard superstar Torah Bright just might be the first female to attempt it. If, in fact, she does, and successfully lands, it would be safe to say that she could almost guarentee herself a shiny Gold to take home to fans. Though she has yet to throw the trick in competition, personally, I think if anyone can do it, Torah can.
The double cork is really one of those “seeing is believing” tricks, though. Watch the double cork in action below, as Shaun White performs the holy grail of tricks seamlessly and effortlessly, to really get a sense of its full effect. Maybe this video will demonstrate why there’s so much hype around the double cork this season. Or you can watch them live today during the men’s Olympic halfpipe event!
Tags: 2010 Olympic Games, Cypress, Double Cork, halfpipe, Kevin Pearce, Olympics, Shaun White, Torah Bright, Vancouver
One Response to “Debunking the Double Cork, Today’s Trick to Watch”
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[...] morning we talked a little bit about the double cork and why they’re really this season’s “must have” trick, and that mantra proved to be true [...]
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