Freestyle

Behind the Gold: I Got This

by
Tom Kelly
2017-03-14 14:19
 

USSA columnist Tom Kelly takes a look at Ashley Caldwell's first World Championship gold medal in this week's Behind the Gold.

As her plane approached Malaga on the southern coast of Spain, Ashley Caldwell reflected on the World Cup season. It had been nearly three months since she opened defense of her World Cup aerials title in China. It wasn't a great weekend. And it had been a rugged season since.

It was time for a fresh start. The World Cup season ended a week earlier in Belarus. Now it was on to World Championships - one competition, one chance to prove that she was best in the world.

"When we showed up in Spain we were confident and ready to rip," said Caldwell. "Our coaches knew that we may not have had the results, but we had been building our training all season long."

A year earlier, Caldwell had won the crystal globe. This year the lone highlight was a hometown victory at Lake Placid in January. It was frustrating for the now 23-year-old who had broken through as the youngest Olympian (16) on the 2010 team and as the only woman on the tour regularly throwing triple flips.

But she had something else up her sleeve for Sierra Nevada, a sprawling resort with vast snowfields above the tree line nestled up a twisty-turny mountain road from Granada.

As an athlete, you want to win. But you also want to progress your sport. For years, Caldwell had been pushing her coaches on triples - higher degree of difficulty, higher points, but greater prospect for failure. But if you don't take a little risk, you're not moving forward. She was a solid triples skier - three flips and three twists - but she wanted more. She wanted to land The Daddy!

On the first day of training at Sierra Nevada, officials split sessions by jump - double kicker and triple kicker, more or less women and men. Caldwell went for the triple, training side-by-side with the men. She got into it quickly, ramping up to her higher level DD sooner than anyone.

Then she threw The Daddy. Jaws dropped on the coaches' knoll. Word spread around town. She had just landed a triple flip with four - not three - twists. It was a jump women just didn't do.

What makes The Daddy so difficult is the addition of a second twist on the second flip. It's one of the most difficult maneuvers in freestyle aerials. It's evolution dates back to the mid-80s and the early days of the sport. Canadians Yves Laroche and Jean Marc Rochon, early pioneers of the aptly-named Quebec Air Force, were among the first to perfect it. American Trace Worthington threw it to win World Championships in 1995. But these were guys! The only woman to attempt it in competition was Lydia Lassila, who closed out the 2014 Sochi competition with it, only to slap back on landing. Still, with the DD points it carries, she took bronze.

While she had done the trick many times on the water ramp at the Utah Olympic Park, this was only the second time she had tried it on snow. "It was International Women's Day," she laughed. "And I was doing bigger tricks that day than my guy teammates!"

On qualifying day, she threw a full-full-full - three flips, three twists. It's a tough trick but one she has down. She led the field.

Like any sport, freestyle aerials is competitive. But it's also built on respect. All of the coaches on the knoll knew what Caldwell and the American coaches were up to. And it was cool. "They appreciate what our coaches and I are doing," said Caldwell, "pushing triples even when we don't need them. I’m not the first one. I just want to keep the train going. Lydia (Lassila) pushed the sport and others. It has to keep happening. If I’m capable, I want to push the sport."

In her first of three jumps Friday evening, Caldwell went with a lay-full-full - three flips with two twists. At the Olympics in Sochi she opened with lay-tuck-full - not as high a DD and little room for error if you made a mistake, which she did. And her day was over. With that lesson, she stepped up the DD for World Championships. And she moved on to the next round.

Now it was go time. She ramped it up to full-full-full and nailed it, leading going into the final round. You couldn't repeat a trick. So all she had left in her portfolio was The Daddy. She was now forced into using it to go for gold - all part of the plan.

It was night time in Sierra Nevada. Caldwell stood at the top peering down into the darkness. She was the very last athlete to go. She knew precisely what to do. Her eyes drew a fix on coach Matt Saunders on the knoll. He gave her the sign. Now, the sport of freestyle aerials skiing was in her hands.

She was scared - very scared. But focused. She made her hop turn into the inrun. At that point her sound of sssssssssswoosh broke the night silence as she approached the kicker. In her mind she thought about her quads, her core, her eyes and every technical aspect of the intricate trick.

She hit the kicker, launching nearly 70 feet into the air. This was the critical moment of the jump. A week earlier in Belarus she messed it up and actually did the wrong trick. This was the moment that would determine if she would win gold or go home.

As her ID One skis hit the kicker she knew. "OMG, I actually hit the takeoff," she thought. "I got this!"

Up into the air she soared. Flip and twist. Flip and double twist. Flip and twist. It was precision. A little form break on the third flip and a landing that wasn't perfect. But she landed it. And it was golden.

Her teammates mobbed her in the finish. Then they stepped aside to watch the guys. Now, it was Jonathon Lillis' turn to take gold - motivated by Caldwell, he nailed his first major international podium.


Ashley Caldwell and Jonathon Lillis are hoisted on the shoulders of their team, celebrating a World Championships gold sweep. (Getty Images - Clive Rose)

It's been a decade now since Ashley Caldwell joined the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Association's brand new Elite Aerial Development Program in Lake Placid. She rose quickly in her newfound sport. Last week was her first medal. But she has a lot more to prove.

"I do feel proud when I’m alone up there at the top of the jump - it makes me feel badass," said Caldwell. "But I don’t want to be up there alone. Athletes need to push themselves. I don’t like to be alone.

"A part of me said, 'I can't believe the coaches let me try this,'" she laughed. "But I’m super proud of myself. I had the opportunity. But just because you had the opportunity doesn’t mean it’s going to work out. It’s very humbling."

 


 


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