Kuwait Times

Maui snowboarde­r eyes Olympics in South Korea

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On the island where Lyon Farrell comes from, they cherish the golden sand and hanging 10. In the place where he’d love to land next winter, he’ll need a snowboard, not a surfboard, and will get more mileage out of a backside 1260 than riding waves. Farrell is that rarest of birds an elite snowboarde­r who hails from, of all places, Maui. It certainly makes for quite an icebreaker when he shows up at contests. “I definitely get some funny looks,” Farrell said with a laug h. “It’s the last place you’d hear that a snowboarde­r is from.”

His goal is to end up at the Olympics in South Korea next February, the most unlikely of destinatio­ns for an 18-year-old who grew up skateboard­ing and surfing. “At first, it’s a bit of a shock, in a way, when you hear he’s from Hawaii. For me, I only see what I see in front of me and I see an incredibly driven athlete,” US snowboardi­ng coach Mike Jankowski said of Farrell, who is part of the rookie slopestyle roster. “We’ve seen some amazing snowboarde­rs and skiers come from many unlikely places. “It won’t surprise me to see him get to the top. He’s got what it takes.”

Different level

It’s easy to see where he gets his talent: His father, Campbell Farrell, is a big-wave surfer who’s good friends with surfing icon Laird Hamilton (important because Hamilton’s brother is Lyon, the inspiratio­n behind Farrell’s first name). His mother, Angela Cochran, is a renowned wind-surfer who captured a gold medal at the Summer X Games in 1995. Turns out, Farrell’s first love was skateboard­ing, which was only enhanced by meeting Shaun White at a skate park. A 10-year-old Farrell watched in fascinatio­n as White honed a new trick.

“I was blown away by just even being in his presence,” Farrell recounted. “Because I was the kid that watched him all the time on TV.” Farrell wanted to follow White’s footsteps into the realm of skateboard­ing. But after he went to a contest in California, he quickly realized it was a totally different level. “That hit me hard,” said Farrell, a homeschool­ed high school senior whose family relocated to Hawaii when he was an infant. “It made me realize how hard it would be to become one of better skateboard­ers in the world.”

Surfing was really nothing more than a hobby (although, he was extremely good). And being a wind-surfer, like mom, was out of the question because, “there was too much gear and we had to drag it all over the beach.” His family took frequent trips to New Zealand, where his dad was from. While there, they would typically squeeze in some skiing. During one visit, his brother tried snowboardi­ng and it looked so fun that Farrell decided to give it a go as well.

This is how good he became: When he was around 13, an instructor who happened to be in New Zealand from Colorado spotted Farrell and invited him to Breckenrid­ge for some pointers. He jumped at the chance and, accompanie­d by his mom, went there for three weeks. He’s been going back to the mountain ever since. In between trips, Farrell mimics the snowboardi­ng moves he learns on his skateboard or while he’s surfing . It’s the best he can do in, well, paradise.

Quick study

“Most of the (snowboardi­ng) transition features, they relate pretty well to surfing. But it’s so hard, because surfing relies so much on wind,” Farrell said. He’s proven to be a quick study, perfecting three different versions of 1080s in no time. “I caught up to all these kids who had been snowboardi­ng forever,” said Farrell , who’s sponsored by Red Bull and is concentrat­ing on slopestyle - where riders negotiate a course featuring rails and jumps - over the halfpipe. “That made me think I could really do this. I could hang with these kids who have lived in the mountains their whole life.”

 ?? —AP ?? In this Feb 21, 2017, photo provided by Red Bull, Lyon Farrell poses on a beach in Waipo Valley on the island of Hawaii.
—AP In this Feb 21, 2017, photo provided by Red Bull, Lyon Farrell poses on a beach in Waipo Valley on the island of Hawaii.

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