Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

CRUISING AFTER A BAD BRUISING

- JACQUELIN MAGNAY SLOPESTYLE

AS KICKS up the backsides go, Tess Coady’s was pretty brutal. Coady, now one of Australia’s best medal chances at the Beijing Olympics, was at the time just 17, revelling in being one of the youngsters of the Pyeongchan­g winter team and her seemingly gilded snowboardi­ng career was gathering at pace.

And then in practice for her debut Olympic slopestyle competitio­n, as the high winds swirled over the icy and brutally cold course in Bokwang, the slightly built Coady was blown off the mountain and badly twisted her knee. Her anterior cruciate ligament was shot, along with her Olympic dream. Instead of enjoying the post competitio­n fun in the Olympic village, Coady was preparing for surgery and then 11 months off the snow.

“It was definitely super tough for sure,” she said, adding: “At the time I really wanted to make it as a pro, but I wasn’t there yet. I hadn’t done anything really insane with my career so I wanted to see what I could make happen.”

Coady, from St Kilda in Melbourne, had come into snowboardi­ng as she enjoyed family holidays in Mount Buller, having been a competitiv­e gymnast and having a fierce race-down-the-slopes rivalry with her older sister Lilly.

But Coady added of that dreadful injury four years ago: “I think that I might have just coasted along and never really had the kick up the arse to push my career along, so in hindsight it wasn’t a bad thing, it was something that I really needed.

“When I got back on snow I have kept pushing myself with the tricks and getting out of my comfort zone and I really hit the ground running.’’

Since then Coady has been one of Australia’s best winter athletes.

Last month she won the prestigiou­s Laax Open slopestyle competitio­n, nailing one of her newest tricks, a spectacula­r frontside double 1080.

Her high degree of difficulty tricks are at odds with the superrelax­ed riding style she has perfected – a look that resembles a casual stroll to the shops.

Over the past three years Coady has been training at Thredbo and in Absolut Park in Flachau, Austria, with her California­n coach Stan Woo. The reigning Olympic champion Anna Glasser of Austria, trains at the same resort and the two have hit it off.

“We’ve ridden together a bunch, she has always been a massive role model for me, I just love watching her ride and to have her train with us is super fun. We really feed off each other. I see her do a trick and I’m like ‘alright, I really want to try something like that now’ so we try and one up each other in the best way,’’ Coady said.

Last May Coady was able to sneak up to the water training ramp at the Geoff Henke training centre in Queensland and because of lockdown ended up there for more than a month while the aerials and moguls

teams were also training. Coady has become firm friends with them all, especially during the Covid restrictio­ns, and she said many members of the Australian Olympic team message and

support each other in every competitio­n. Aerials star Laura Peel has become a big supporter.

When Coady competes in Beijing – her first competitio­n will be slopestyle qualifying on Saturday, with finals on Sunday – she will be inspired by three-time Olympian Alex “Chumpy” Pullin, who died while spearfishi­ng on the Gold Coast in 2020. Pullin had taken Coady under his wing when she first started doing boarder cross as an 11 year old, and even though she switched discipline­s, Coady said she wanted to remember Chumpy with a smile because he was so inspiring. .

She’s also in Big Air, which starts on February 14.

 ?? ?? Tess Coady of Australia in action last month in Switzerlan­d. Picture: Thomas Lohnes/ Getty Images
Tess Coady of Australia in action last month in Switzerlan­d. Picture: Thomas Lohnes/ Getty Images

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