The Ride Snowboards Team – New Year, New Faces

Ride Snowboards Pro Team 2013

Another year is upon us and as with every new season comes change. This year we see Ride legends and hall of famer’s Mikey Leblanc retiring from the main stream and Darrell Mathes departs the Ride team to continue on his own path as one of today’s most respected shredders.

The Ride pro team however, lives on stronger then ever with the likes of Jake Blauvelt who is recognized today as one the best big mountain freestylers and maybe one of the most respected snowboarders of the decade. Try out his Berzerker pro model and you will never want to ride another board again. You can witness Jake’s high-flying deep pow slashing action in his web series and film “Jake Blauvelt’s Naturally.”

Hana Beaman, the queen of the Ride team, continues to slaughter everything she points her board towards. Hana has played a major role in development of our ladies hard goods and outerwear. To be specific, Hana’s signature Cappel outerwear that is set to debut in the fall of 2013.  Look for Hana to continue with her P.S. web series and a follow up to last years’ production, “Intervals”, the best women’s snowboarding film of the year.

Hailing from Quebec, Alex Cantin brings us a flavor and style original to the Ride team. A very well rounded snowboarder blessed with raw urban skate influenced style, Alex is best known for his video parts from Sugarshack and Videograss productions. This year Alex has joined forces with his original crew of friends to produce the film “Déjà Vu”. Alex has developed signature Ride outerwear for the 1314 season that matches not only his style, but performance.

Seattle’s own Austin Hironaka has grown up under the shadow of Ride headquarters. Austin may be one of the most stylish members of the team and may be what he is best known for… Style! You may not find Austin in a major contest or dropping the biggest lines in AK, but you can put Austin in any situation and he almost always walks away as the MVP. Austin will be looking good in some freshly designed signature Ride outerwear this season while filming with Transworld films.

Marco Feichtner represents our European presence, Austria to be specific. Marco has stacked a long list of standout parts with the Pirates Film crew and continues on a warpath of powder kickers, pillow lines and cliffs. Marco holds nothing back and his trusty board, the Wild Life, will surely be seen pillaging a powder line near you.

Matt Ladley is the newest addition to our pro ranks and brings transition skills to the table. A halfpipe specialist and member of the U.S. Olympic team, Matt is the future of halfpipe snowboarding. Matt truly lives the motto on his board, the Buckwild, “I’m having more fun than you!” – couldn’t be more fitting!

Rounding out the 2013 Pro team roster we have Sebastien Toutant who broke out on the scene at the young age of 13 and has continued to break down what was thought to be the impossible every season since. Eight years later at the age of 21, Seb continues to set the bar extremely high! Voted #3 by Snowboarder magazines top 50 riders under 21, Seb has a very long, very bright future ahead of him.

Ride Rookie Pro Team

With arguably the most talented and diverse pro team in Ride history, we’re always looking towards the future and with that comes our Rookie team. You won’t have to look too far for such rookie standouts who lead the charge like 16 year old Yuki Kadono the winner of the 2012 Beijing Air & Style.  The list goes on – Seamus O’connor, Jessika Jensen, and Brandon Davis to name a few of our future super stars that have set a pace to join the long list of Ride team legends.

Ride International Pro Team

It’s the unique blend of our pro team, rookie pro team, and international pro team that keep us true to our goal of rider driven product for all abilities and styles.

So please take a moment and let us introduce you to the 2013 Ride pro team. Keep in touch! We will have plenty of news, image and video updates from throughout the season!

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Men’s Journal Magazine: Ride DH2 – Best For The Park

DH2 in Mens Journal

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read about the DH2 in Men’s Journal Magazine

 

 

 

 

#SEASONISNEAR Contest Grandprize Machete Snowboard Winner – Taylor

Congrats to Taylor from Colorado aka Taylor_mang on Instagram for winning the overall #SEASONISNEAR Contest. I saw the board got to his house yesterday and this morning he emailed me 2 photos of him with his new Machete 155. It was a tough choice choosing the winner to the contest with so many good photos in the running. Taylor’s photo below, impressed us with how hard he was working to shred the early season and with the beauty of the scenery in his shots. Once again congrats Taylor and to everyone who participated.

Check the stream of #SEASONISNEAR photos in realtime…

Season is near winner with RIde Machete

Season is near winner with RIde Machete

Taylor’s Winning Photo:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Taylor won this Ride 2013 Machete 155cm Snowboard:
2013 Ride Machete Snowboard

Ride x SpaceKnuckle Package Giveaway

ride 1213 dh 1531 197x540 Ride x SpaceKnuckle Package Giveaway

Post from Rad Collector:

 

Ride and artist SpaceKnuckle have teamed up for a collab that puts pixelated imagery on Rides 15k Newport jacket, twin cambered DH board, Stellar Glove and Battery board bag. We’re ready to ride this winter and want you to be prepared for the mountain so we’re giving away the entire package to one lucky reader. To enter the contest you must to live in U.S. and like both Ride Snowboards and Radcollector on FB. Head to our FB page for more info and hit the jump to see the gear.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ride 1213 stellar glove spaceknuckle Ride x SpaceKnuckle Package Giveaway

ride 1213 newport jacket spaceknuckle print 360x540 Ride x SpaceKnuckle Package Giveaway

ride 1213 blackened board bag spaceknuckle1 Ride x SpaceKnuckle Package Giveaway

Yuki Kadono – Winner of the Air & Style Beijing – BS triple cork 1440 – Snowboard Mag

2012 Oakley Shaun White Air & Style Podium (L-R): Peetu Piiroinen, Yuki Kadono, Stale Sandbech

16 year old Yuki Kadono (JPN) wins the Oakley Shaun White Air & Style Beijing competition in the Olympic Bird’s Nest stadium,

followed by Peetu Piiroinen (FIN) and Ståle Sandbech (NOR).

The youngest winner of Air & Style since Shaun White, Yuki Kadono, received the coveted Air & Style Ring of Glory and 1,000 World Snowboard Tour Ranking points, and was so happy he could hardly believe it. ‘It is like a dream, I still cannot believe it’, was Yuki’s concise summary of today’s events at the press conference.

His winning run scoring 97.67 points was a Backside Triple Cork 1440 Mute Grab in his third run of the Superfinal. Yuki also took home the RedBull Airtime award. It was Ståle Sandbech’s second time in third place, and even though he hoped for more, he was still very happy with his podium result, adding: ‘the Podium is always a nice place to be.’

For second placed Air & Style veteran Peetu Piiroinen, Yuki’s win came as no surprise. ‘Already in summer I knew we would be watching out for Yuki this season. I congratulate him on his win.’

More clear favorites failed to reach the podium tonight. Reigning Big Air World Champion Seppe Smits didn’t make it into round 3, losing his head to head battle with Austrian Mathias Weissenbacher, who surprised by making it into the finals with a steady Backside Double Rodeo 1080 Indy.

Roope Tonteri (FIN) is currently leading the Big Air ranking; dropping in today was all he needed to secure his number one position. Yuki Kadono made it into the top 10 of the Overall ranking with his win today and secured a 16th position on the Big Air ranking. Ståle Sandbech will follow Roope closely, now ranking 2nd on the Big Air list.

The battle for the World Snowboard Tour Big Air Title will have 2 more chapters on the 6Star level, with the O’Neill Evolution from 15-19 of January in Davos, Switzerland following and finally the World Snowboard Tour Big Air crowning taking place at the 20th anniversary of the Billabong Air & Style in Innsbruck-Tirol, the final Big Air event of the season 2012-2013.

- Snowboard Magazine

 

Ride DH Snowboard

Jake Blauvelt’s Signature Snowboard – Berzerker

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jake Blauvelt is all over the Internet. With help from Friday Productions, Blauvelt has been releasing a ton of footage on the web for a couple seasons now, most notably with his 2011 web-series project “Jake Blauvelt: Naturally.”

After his end-of-series full-part dropped last fall, however, the online Blauvelt feed went a little quiet. Now, with the release of the halfway-mark teaser for his new two-year movie project “Naturally,” we see why.

This “Naturally” go-round will be a lot like the last: Blauvelt will be riding with his homies at a bunch of exotic locales, in all the best conditions, and it all will be documented with the best cameras (Cineflex and RED) and by some of the best cameramen around (Gabe Langlois of Brain Farm and Greg Martin of Friday Productions). What makes it different is the order that things will be released. First, there will be a movie, and the behind-the-scenes webisodes will follow.

It’s Blauvelt’s biggest project yet. We rang him up to ask a little more about how he assembled the perfect shred crew and what it’s like to embrace the web-based movie model.

ESPN.com: This new flick has a pretty stacked cast. John and Eric Jackson, Kazu Kokubo and Terje Haakonsen? Seems perfect.

Jake Blauvelt: For sure. You’re never really sure who you’ll be able to secure, because everyone’s got their other sponsor obligations and what not, but it’s unbelievable to have all those guys filming for the movie. It’s a dream come true.

2013 Ride Berzerker Snowboard

Does it trip you out to be filming with Terje?

Oh, yeah. And it’s funny — you know normally whenever I ride with Terje, we always just go heli in the Whistler area. That’s been the past four years now, so now it’s kinda, like, “normal.” [Laughs] But then it isn’t normal at all. It’s a trip.

Getting up to a higher snowboard level … you want to live that snowboarder dream of party all night and then wake up early and go shred pow. And maybe some people can do that, but in listening to my body, I’ve realized I can’t. What you put into your body helps you to shred harder, it really does.

It’s just so cool how you can learn something new from him every time. Just the way he approaches the mountain, the boards he’s riding. He’s always tweaking stuff, like bindings, boots, boards. He’s always on the phone with JG and Doyle at Burton working on stuff, which is really cool to see. You just kind of sit back and observe when you’re around him, see what he does, because the way that he does it is the right way.

Looks like you got around last winter. Is there a single moment of the season that’s really burned into you brain as “the best”?

Japan was really fun with E-Jack, just cruising. I’ve been to Japan the last three years riding pow and this year it was just crazy amounts. Every day it’d just stack back up. And it’s not really stressful down there. It’s pretty low impact and there’s always so much powder. That was a really memorable trip — lots of hot springs and good food and good riding.

And then Last Frontier Heli — up in northern British Columbia, right next to the Alaskan border — was another amazing trip. We didn’t hit the snow very good, but just to see the terrain up there was really eye-opening. We’ve already got our spot reserved to go back this winter. We’ll go a little further out, to see what it really has to offer. I think we just saw the tip of the iceberg up there.

Jake Blauvelt

Photo: Scott Serfas Whatever Jake Blauvelt just got dropped off on top of here probably doesn’t suck.

You’ve embraced the web-based video approach, while a lot of riders are still hesitant about it. What swayed you? Do you think web-releases can drop with the same weight as a full-part — say an opener or an ender — in a DVD?

I don’t know … I was skeptical at first about dedicating a whole season to the web. Sometimes it just seems so disposable, unlike a hard-copy DVD. But, Greg Martin, who I work with, is real up to date with all that, and I think it really just has to do with the partnership you have. We had one with TransWorld and they promoted it really heavily. So I think as long as you’ve got a good partnership for your webisodes, that’s key.

And then, also … how do I word it … Making sure it’s not super-diluted. I think maybe if everyone was doing web-based content then it might get diluted, but I guess I thought [in 2011] that not many people were, so it was a way for me to break out of the mold and stand out.

But at the same time now I’m kind of over that. I felt like I was almost too much in the spotlight, just putting out content here and there, and it wasn’t all super A-grade. So now I just want to kind of go off the radar and only put out A-grade footage.

I think it’s just about doing a little bit of each. No way is right or wrong — it’s just finding a good balance with both.

And you’ve decided not to have any energy drink sponsors involved.

I guess the reason for that is pretty straight forward. What the energy drinks do for their riders is awesome, in a sense, because they give them the money to go pursue their dreams — like Travis [Rice] with his movies and contests. But I felt like we had plenty of budget between the sponsors so we didn’t need to go and grab money from an energy drink, which I don’t really believe in or feel comfortable promoting. It’s not healthy for kids, or anyone really. None of those guys [sponsored riders] really drink that stuff.


Photo: Scott Serfas – Just a mellow pow slash from one of the mellowest guys in snowboarding.

For me it’s mainly just water, maybe a little coconut water. So it would be kinda like this false advertisement. But I can see why people do it, and I don’t blame them for doing it. It’s just staying true to what everyone in the “Naturally” project believes in.

You’re clearly health-conscious. You’re good about what you eat, you do yoga. Is this your Vermont upbringing or is it because your riding demands it?

I was lucky enough to grow up in the woods in Vermont and my family, especially my mom, was a super health nut, eating out of the garden all summer, and always planting stuff for the winter. So that was just my way of life, and I feel fortunate enough to be raised like that. I think that helped me.

And then, getting up to a higher snowboard level, it’s like … you want to live that snowboarder dream of party all night and then wake up early and go shred pow. And maybe some people can do that, but in listening to my body, I’ve realized I can’t. I can’t drink a bunch of beer and then go ride the way I want the next day.

It’s also, seeing guys that I look up to … I never met Craig [Kelly], but seeing his documentary and talking to Terje about him, about how he lived — and seeing how Terje lives, Nicolas [Müller], Gigi [Rüf] and Travis [Rice] are all the same way. All those guys are really health conscious and it really shows in their riding.

What you put into your body helps you to shred harder, it really does. So, yeah, it was seeing how those guys have done it, and then that paired together with how I was raised. It just seems like the natural way to do it.

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