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Big Air Snowboarding Looks to Thrill on Olympics Debut


A snowboarder jumps during a training session on the Stubai glacier in Mutterberg, Austria, Nov. 3, 2017.
A snowboarder jumps during a training session on the Stubai glacier in Mutterberg, Austria, Nov. 3, 2017.

The newest Olympic sport should prove to be a crowd pleaser straight away.

Big air snowboarding makes its Olympic debut in Pyeongchang, bringing tricks, thrills and danger to the slopes.

Big air has been an FIS Snowboarding World Championship event since 2003 and has been at the X Games for far long, yet 2018 will marks its entry onto the Olympic stage.

The event is the extreme version of slopestyle, an Olympic discipline that itself only debuted in 2014.

Athletes send themselves down one huge ramp and look to perform the highest-scoring individual trick possible.

FILE - Snowboarders compete during the men's Snowboard-Cross eighth-finals at the FIS Snowboard World Championships in Stoneham, Quebec, Jan. 26, 2013.
FILE - Snowboarders compete during the men's Snowboard-Cross eighth-finals at the FIS Snowboard World Championships in Stoneham, Quebec, Jan. 26, 2013.

Pyeongchang will have the world's biggest big air ramp standing at 49 meters with a maximum slope angle of 40 degrees, giving athletes more time in the air to show off their latest tricks.

Many of the snowboarders who compete in the slopestyle will also try their hand at the big air event, giving them two chances at clinching an Olympic medal.

Canadian pair Mark McMorris and Max Parrot are widely touted as the favorites in the men's competition. They were first and second in last year's FIS Big Air rankings and have 11 X Games gold medals between them.

Both athletes are known for bringing out a new trick in major competitions and so snowboarding fans should be expecting something special on the huge ramp in Pyeongchang.

Silver medalist Max Parrot from Canada at the X Games Men's Big Air Snowboard finals, Hafjell, Norway, March 11, 2017.
Silver medalist Max Parrot from Canada at the X Games Men's Big Air Snowboard finals, Hafjell, Norway, March 11, 2017.

However, such daredevil stunts come with major risks. McMorris himself has suffered two major injuries in recent years; a broken femur in 2016 and then several severe injuries including a collapsed lung in a March 2017 incident.

Although McMorris has made a full recovery to compete in Pyeongchang, if he is to show any sign of nerves on the ramp there will be a host of other top snowboarders looking to take the inaugural big air gold.

Norwegians Staale Sandbech and Marcus Kleveland clinched podium spots at last year's World Championships while 18-year-old Chris Corning is the hottest young prospect coming out of Team USA.

In the women's competition, another American teenager Hailey Langland will look to add an Olympics gold to her X Games Big air gold.

The 17-year-old will have to hold off competition from compatriots Julia Marino and 2014 slopestyle Olympic champion Jamie Anderson as well as surprise British candidate Katie Ormerod, who will be looking to clinch her country's second ever Olympic medal on the snow.

Gold medalist Anna Gasser of Austria reacts during the medal ceremony for Women's Big Air at the FIS Snowboarding and Freestyle Skiing World Championships, Sierra Nevada, Spain, March 17, 2017.
Gold medalist Anna Gasser of Austria reacts during the medal ceremony for Women's Big Air at the FIS Snowboarding and Freestyle Skiing World Championships, Sierra Nevada, Spain, March 17, 2017.

However, the favorite looks to be Austrian Anna Gasser. Gasser qualified in first place for the slopestyle final in Sochi only to fall during both runs and finish in tenth place.

The 26-year-old has rebounded from this disappointment to win big air gold at the 2017 World Championships and won the 2017 World Cup.

Whoever emerges victorious with a place on the podium in Pyeongchang, the fans are guaranteed to be winners of the event as the big air looks to shine on Olympics debut.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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