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Canadian skier Nik Zoricic died of head injuries sustained from a crash while racing Saturday at a World Cup Ski Cross event in Grindelwald, Switzerland.

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3 experienced skiers die in Washington avalanche, 4th dies in separate incidentupdated: Mon Feb 20 2012 21:06:00

The close-knit community of backcountry skiing was in mourning Monday, a day after an avalanche in Washington state killed a prominent judge in the extreme sport plus two other experienced skiers.

Vonn clinches fifth downhill title in Sochiupdated: Sat Feb 18 2012 12:19:00

Lindsey Vonn from the U.S. has won her fifth consecutive women's World Cup downhill title after finishing third at Saturday's alpine skiing event in Sochi, Russia.

SI.com: Nick Zaccardi: Comcast/NBC's plan for the London '12 broadcast; more Olympic notesupdated: Thu Jun 09 2011 21:35:00

Comcast/NBC will remain the U.S. Olympic network in 2014, 2016, 2018 and 2020. But for now, it's time to focus on 2012.

BASE jumpers take plungeupdated: Thu Feb 24 2011 10:21:00

BASE jumpers took the plunge in 2010 during the "New River Gorge Bridge Day Festival" in West Virginia.

SI.com: Tim Layden: It's Ligety's time again, even if his timing isn't greatupdated: Fri Feb 18 2011 19:27:00

Skiers understand the capricious nature of fame in a sport that is largely hidden from public view for years at a time. It's all about timing. (And back stories, too, but that's another matter. And sometimes it's about timing and back stories together). You can win all the races you like, on any mountainside in the world, but unless you win at the Olympics, you are anonymous. Ted Ligety knows all about this.

Five of Asia's top ski resortsupdated: Mon Jan 03 2011 07:42:00

Want to pile through chest-deep powder in Japan? Find massive air in China? Here's the guide to Asia's downhill thrills.

Five exhilarating ski destinationsupdated: Thu Dec 16 2010 11:01:00

Lots of people may be cursing the early arrival of winter this year, but the blast of snow is translating into a blast for skiers and snowboarders.

SI.com: Brian Cazeneuve: U.S. skiing doesn't take any time off; more Olympic notesupdated: Tue Dec 07 2010 17:31:00

So much for the idea that Lindsey Vonn and the rest of the U.S. ski team would have a down season in the post-Olympic year. Vonn and fellow Olympic champ Ted Ligety both earned decisive victories in World Cup events as the Cup tour made its annual fall pass through North America. Vonn captured the Super G race in Lake Louise, Alberta on Sunday, while Ligety won the giant slalom event on the Birds of Prey course in Beaver Creek, Colo. It marked the first time since 2006 that two U.S. alpine skiers had won World Cup events on the same day.

Vonn crashes outupdated: Sun Feb 28 2010 02:49:00

Lindsey Vonn's Olympics come to an end. Alex Thomas wraps up Friday's competition.

SI.com: Richard Deitsch: Daily Olympic Briefing, Feb. 28updated: Sat Feb 27 2010 20:55:00

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- All of Canada is holding its breath for the result of today's men's cross-country 50km mass start.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Miller's slate clean after Vancouver Olympicsupdated: Sat Feb 27 2010 20:09:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- Here was a familiar scene: Bode Miller standing benignly on skis at the side of race course, poles dragging in the snow, a look of vague disappointment on his face. He is wearing a racing helmet and speed suit, but he is as still as the pine trees behind him and the plastic gates that line the mountainside, all dressed up with no place to go.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Vonn 'happy' with Olympics as she prepares for life after Vancouverupdated: Fri Feb 26 2010 23:04:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- As massive, wet snowflakes fell on the Creekside alpine racing stadium Friday afternoon, Lindsey Vonn worked an adoring crowd. Autographs here, photos there, always a smile. The hood was pulled up on her white, U.S. Ski team jacket and a hat was yanked down to the top of her eyebrows, but there was no mistaking who was beneath the down and wool. You cannot cover up stardom.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Mancuso sets record straight on Vonnupdated: Thu Feb 25 2010 22:25:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- Running downhill through the Olympic Alpine Games, with two events left to ski (women's slalom Friday and men's slalom Saturday):

SI.com: Tim Layden: Vonn's crash derails unlucky teammate Mancusoupdated: Thu Feb 25 2010 00:59:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- Measure these odds: Julia Mancuso is prepared to push out of the start house in the first of two runs of the Olympic giant slalom on Wednesday morning. She is skier No. 18, and at this point in the competition -- bib numbers 16 through 30 -- the racers are sent off every 60 seconds, a shorter interval than originally planned, to hurry the race in bad weather. For the fastest racers, the run takes a little more than 1:15. This means that when one skier is approaching the final pitch of the course, another is starting. Two racers on course at the same time.

Ski resort has 'a lot of heart, no attitude'updated: Wed Feb 24 2010 20:07:00

Talk about being 21st-century pioneers.

Tips for bump skiingupdated: Wed Feb 24 2010 20:07:00

Olympic medalist Nelson Carmichael has some tips on how to bump ski.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Mancuso ready to step into spotlight in giant slalomupdated: Tue Feb 23 2010 23:33:00

WHISTLER, B.C. -- For the first time in a week, it was snowing Tuesday afternoon in the mountains around Whistler. At least it was trying to snow, as dense, wet flakes turned occasionally to rain and then back again to snow, soaking spectators who were leaving the alpine racing stadium after Carlo Janka's victory for Switzerland in the men's giant slalom. It was a return to the conditions that had postponed the start of ski racing for two days at the beginning of the Games, but it was something else, too: Mancuso Weather.

SI.com: Richard Deitsch: Daily Olympic Briefing, Feb. 23updated: Tue Feb 23 2010 13:09:00

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- No man has ever won four Alpine skiing medals at a single Olympics, but Bode Miller is a threat to make history today in the men's giant slalom. Medals will also be handed out in biathlon, Nordic combined, women's ski cross and the men's speedskating.

Ohno makes Olympic historyupdated: Tue Feb 23 2010 04:26:00

Apolo Anton Ohno becomes the most decorated American Winter Olympian. Alex Thomas reports.

People.com: 5 Things to Know About Alpine Skier Andrew Weibrechtupdated: Mon Feb 22 2010 09:10:00

The bronze medalist hits the slopes - and the books

SI.com: Phil Taylor: Gold medal proves Bode has finally come full circleupdated: Sun Feb 21 2010 20:05:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- Bode Miller woke up on Sunday morning feeling "pretty whipped," as he put it. His crash a few days earlier, during a downhill training run for the men's super combined, had left him not so much sore as out of alignment. "I flew 35 feet through the air and landed on my hip," he said. "I'm fine, but it kind of feels like I'm crooked."

SI.com: Richard Deitsch: Daily Olympic Briefing, Feb. 20updated: Sat Feb 20 2010 12:07:00

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- Forget the NFL, and apologies to baseball:

SI.com: Tim Layden: Mancuso thriving in Vonn's shadowupdated: Thu Feb 18 2010 23:07:00

WHISTLER, B.C. -- The truth? It's tempting to say that we - those of us disseminate our words through magazines, websites, newspapers and television -- missed on Julia Mancuso. That we spent the better part of a year hyping Lindsey Vonn as the star-in-waiting of the 2010 Olympics and cruelly overlooked Mancuso, whose giant slalom gold from Turin in 2006 gave her one more Olympic medal than Vonn had won in two trips to the Games.

Record day for U.S.updated: Thu Feb 18 2010 19:10:00

Vonn, White and Davis all win gold for the U.S. in Vancouver. CNN's Alex Thomas reports.

People.com: Lindsey Vonn Wins Gold in Women's Downhill Ski Eventupdated: Thu Feb 18 2010 11:50:00

The skiing champ proves that her injured shin won't get in the way of her dreams

SI.com: Tim Layden: Full package: Lindsay Vonn is a fierce competitor and down to earthupdated: Thu Feb 18 2010 09:35:00

Eight months before the Vancouver Games, Lindsey Vonn skis the Olympic downhill in her mind. She is in a subterranean workout room at the Red Bull soccer club's training center in Salzburg, Austria, balanced with each foot on a nylon slack line suspended three feet off the pebbled orange rubber floor. She is crouched in an aerodynamic tuck, her hands thrust out in front of her chin. Trainer Oliver Saringer speaks gently into her right ear: You're on the downhill course at ­Whistler .... Vonn closes her eyes and begins shifting her weight rhythmically from one foot to the other as if executing high-speed turns on a Canadian mountainside more than 5,000 miles away.

More medals for U.S.updated: Wed Feb 17 2010 16:20:00

Bode Miller and Seth Wescott collect medals for the U.S. CNN's Alex Thomas reports.

SI.com: Phil Taylor: What's the skinny on abnormally lean ski jumpers?updated: Tue Feb 16 2010 23:39:00

It's a familiar story -- we look at the athletes' bodies and they seem unusual somehow. We think about what lengths they might have gone to in order to achieve such an abnormal build. Whatever it is they did, we wonder: Is it natural? Is it healthy?

SI.com: Tim Layden: Miller's Olympic bronze the product of stealth rehab after surgeryupdated: Tue Feb 16 2010 19:41:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- Bode Miller's record-breaking bronze medal in Wednesday's Olympic downhill was even more impressive than it initially appeared. Hours after the race, Miller's uncle, Mike Kenney, who is also a coach with the U.S. Ski Team, told SI.com that Miller had undergone arthroscopic knee surgery shortly after Christmas, barely seven weeks before Monday's race. Miller's agent, Lowell Taub, confirmed the surgery in an email exchange on Tuesday.

Cheese saves the Games?updated: Tue Feb 16 2010 11:21:00

Skier Lindsey Vonn is using an Austrian cheese to help heal the shin injury she suffered while at the Winter Games.

People.com: Meet America's First Gold Medalist: Hannah Kearneyupdated: Mon Feb 15 2010 13:51:00

The Vermont-based mogul skiing champ has been on the slopes since she was 2

SI.com: Michael Farber: Bilodeau gives Canada reason to cheerupdated: Mon Feb 15 2010 02:22:00

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- The long national nightmare ended at precisely 6:18 p.m. PDT on a soothing Sunday when a scoreboard at the bottom of Cypress Mountain flashed the final standings. Canada exhaled. The man who brought such relief is preternaturally upbeat fellow named Alexandre Bilodeau, a moguls skier who bumped his way down a 250-meter course and into the sporting history of his country.

SI.com: Brian Cazenueve: Olympians give their all in sport and philanthropyupdated: Sun Feb 14 2010 23:50:00

It's fitting that Valentine's Day, a day when people lead with their hearts, fell during the Vancouver Games. Olympians bring the same dedication to training and competing as they do to supporting their communities and the causes that inspire them. Here are some examples.

SI.com: Richard Deitsch: Daily Olympic briefing, Feb. 14updated: Sun Feb 14 2010 14:43:00

VANCOUVER, British Columbia -- The third day of Olympic competitions falls on Valentine's Day, and no one can use a bigger hug than Canada following a tough Saturday in which the host country failed to end its home-gold medal drought. It's unlikely the Canadians will win a medal today (though they have a shot in men's moguls), but Sunday holds major promise for the U.S. in Nordic combined. Medals will also be awarded in the biathlon sprint, men's singles luge and women's speedskating. The highlights:

SI.com: David Epstein: El Nino's return part of weather issues hampering Gamesupdated: Sat Feb 13 2010 16:22:00

The last time it visited was four years ago, and right now it's embracing Vancouver. It's not the Olympic spirit, it's El Niño, the weather phenomenon that is helping to give Olympic organizers headaches by bringing warm air and rain from the South Pacific. The fog might be manna from heaven for American skier Lindsey Vonn, though, who wanted a few more days of cancelled training and races to let her bruised shin heal.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Whistler weather creates Alpine waiting gameupdated: Fri Feb 12 2010 22:35:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- Alpine skiers are great waiters. Not that kind of waiter (although sometimes that kind, too, because if you're not at the highest level of the sport, like Lindsey Vonn and Bode Miller, you sometimes need another job, too; but that's a different discussion). Waiters. As in: They are very experienced at waiting.

Ghanaian snow leopardupdated: Fri Feb 12 2010 15:40:00

CNN' Ayesha Durgahee catches up with Ghanian ski racer who qualified for 2010 Winter Olympics.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Previewing Alpine skiing competition at Vancouverupdated: Fri Feb 12 2010 12:45:00

SI.com's writers will preview each event from the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Here's Tim Layden's look ahead to Alpine skiing.

Why the Olympics matterupdated: Fri Feb 12 2010 11:41:00

Athletes from 97 nations will march in Vancouver tonight at the Opening Ceremony of the XXI Winter Olympic Games. Turn on your TV. Watch and cheer.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Vonn given gift from weather godsupdated: Fri Feb 12 2010 02:36:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- At just before noon on Thursday, Thomas Vonn was sitting in a mountainside media center talking to two reporters, waiting out a snow delay in what would be the first official Olympic training session for his wife, Lindsey. A voice crackled from Vonn's portable radio, the type that ski racing coaches wear to communicate from various points on and around the mountains.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Vonn's Olympics threatened by shin injuryupdated: Fri Feb 12 2010 01:21:00

WHISTLER, British Columbia -- Look at it this way: Ski racers are generally injured so often that half their careers are spent in some combination of pain-management and rehabilitation. And even by those standards Lindsey Vonn is an outlier, with a long and colorful medical history that has alternately compromised her career and elevated her personal mythology. She has a scar somewhere to match every title she's won.

SI.com: The Bonus: Inside the mayhem of the newest Olympic sport -- ski crossupdated: Thu Feb 11 2010 15:45:00

The starts are crucial in the regulated mayhem of ski cross, the newest Olympic sport. Sometimes the whole race is right there at the outset. A few seconds, the top of the world. You can feel the tension even during a practice run like the one early last December when Casey Puckett and Daron Rahlves were settling into the stalls of a steel gate at the top of a training course at the Telluride Ski Resort. The Olympic qualifying races were just three weeks away and the Vancouver games themselves were looming in less than two months. The snow that had been falling over southwest Colorado for most of the day was erasing the blue dye lines meant to help the racers gauge the contours of the course, which featured a tricky array of banked turns, rollers, jumps and the deep U-shaped trenches right below the gate known as wu-tangs.

SI.com: David Epstein: Previewing Nordic combined competition in Vancouverupdated: Wed Feb 10 2010 11:27:00

SI.com's writers will preview each event from the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Here's David Epstein's look ahead to Nordic combined.

SI.com: Sarah Kwak: Preview freestyle skiing competition in Vancouverupdated: Wed Feb 10 2010 10:52:00

SI.com's writers will preview each event from the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Here's Sarah Kwak's look ahead to freestyle skiing, broken down into the event's three disciplines: aerials, moguls and the brand-new ski cross.

Visiting the Olympicsupdated: Wed Feb 10 2010 06:29:00

Dr. Jennifer Shu explains how to be prepared to travel to the 2010 Winter Olympics.

SI.com: Brian Cazeneuve: Support for Pearce grows, more notesupdated: Wed Jan 27 2010 13:47:00

The snowboarding community and the sports world at large have rallied around Kevin Pearce, the 22-year-old Olympic hopeful from Norwich, Vt. who suffered a brain injury during a practice run on the halfpipe last week in Utah and remains in critical condition. As of Tuesday morning, more than 14,000 people signed on to the Facebook group Well Wishes to Our Friend Kevin Pearce. The site has received notes of support from fans and fellow snowboarders, but also from many survivors of traumatic brain injuries who have described the productive lives they now lead.

SI.com: Ann Killion: Women ski jumpers left out in cold by IOCupdated: Tue Jan 26 2010 16:23:00

Jessica Jerome is exhausted. The Park City, Utah, resident wakes up early to teach ski lessons to youngsters. She's working 5 p.m. to 2 a.m. shifts at events at the Sundance Film Festival to earn some cash

SI.com: Brian Cazeneuve: Vonn's smooth ride, more notesupdated: Tue Jan 12 2010 14:17:00

She's up. She's down. She's up again. The roller coaster ride that is Lindsey Vonn's season rose to its apex again over the weekend, when the defending overall World Cup champion swept three speed races in Haus im Enstal, Austria. Vonn won downhills on Friday and Saturday and captured a Super-G race on Sunday, easing fears that a damaged left arm she'd hurt in a fall last month would impair her Olympic ambitions. The victories boosted her lead in this season's World Cup standings to a robust 192 points ahead of Germany's Maria Riesch.

Avalanches leave four dead in Swiss Alpsupdated: Mon Jan 04 2010 14:20:00

Four people died and another three were missing Monday after two avalanches in the Swiss Alps, Bern police said.

SI.com: Brian Cazeneuve: Lindsey Vonn's comeback, more Olympics notesupdated: Wed Dec 09 2009 17:43:00

What a difference a week makes for Lindsey Vonn. The U.S. alpine star had been horrible in Aspen, failing to qualify in the giant slalom and skiing off-course in the slalom. This past weekend, though, she nearly won all three races in Lake Louise, Canada. What's more, Vonn performed brilliantly under the same kind of conditions that often plague skiers in Whistler, site of the upcoming Olympics.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Bode Miller seems enthusiastic about skiing againupdated: Tue Dec 08 2009 21:13:00

The machinery is fully cranked. Cameras are aimed, stories are in process (including one in Sports Illustrated), video packages have been assembled. In just over two months, the 2010 Winter Olympic Games will unfold in Vancouver and one U.S. skier will play the role of Michael Phelps, the athlete who can win multiple gold medals over the course of the Games, while delivering eyeballs to televisions and page views to Web sites. One athlete will be charged with monetizing the Olympic entertainment enterprise.

SI.com: Brian Cazeneuve: Painful stretch for U.S. skiers, the Russian doping cloud, more Olympics notesupdated: Tue Dec 01 2009 16:56:00

The World Cup races in North America weren't kind to the hosts last weekend, as both the U.S. and Canadian alpine teams lost skiers to serious injury for the rest of the year to serious injury.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Talented Miller returns, but will he perform at his level of excellence?updated: Thu Sep 24 2009 22:43:00

From the very first words out of Bode Miller's mouth, it was apparent that this day would be different. "First of all, thank you guys for coming here,'' Miller said, opening his portion of a press conference in Los Angeles, at which he announced that he would be rejoining the U.S. Ski Team, and attempt to qualify for his fourth Olympic Games five months from now in Vancouver.

Tragedy highlights skiing risksupdated: Thu Mar 19 2009 14:00:00

The death of actress Natasha Richardson, who sustained a fatal head injury while skiing, has reignited the perennial debate around the safety of the sport.

Skiers can cut risks by wearing helmets, experts sayupdated: Thu Mar 19 2009 13:47:00

Skiers and snowboarders can cut the risk of brain injury dramatically by wearing helmets on the slopes, some experts say.

23 injured as Spain ski chairlift breaksupdated: Mon Mar 02 2009 11:27:00

A chairlift broke on Monday morning, sending skiers into the snowy hillside at a ski resort in southern Spain, according to the Sierra Nevada resort.

Alta: No glitz, no attitude, waist deep powderupdated: Wed Feb 25 2009 09:41:00

'"I had such a crush on him when I was a kid," says my friend Didi Linburn, pigtails peeking out from beneath her pink ski helmet rather than the wool pompom hat she wore as a kid. I peer into the tiny ski shop at the Alta Peruvian Lodge and catch a glimpse of a cute guy in glasses behind the counter. "No idea how old he is," she says, "but I've seen him here every winter since I was 15."

Gold-medal winners reveal snowboard favesupdated: Thu Feb 05 2009 15:09:00

The title on Chris Doyle's business card reads "mad scientist," but he's not crazy, he's just crazy about snowboarding.

Five great spots for cross-country skiingupdated: Thu Feb 05 2009 14:52:00

Cross-country skiing is less speedy -- and therefore less intimidating -- than its steep-sloped cousin, downhill skiing. It also burns more calories, as skiers glide along snowy trails and skate up inclines.

Ski resorts offering plenty of off-slope funupdated: Mon Jan 26 2009 12:14:00

Yes! No one is yelling, "Hurry up, Mom!" or tapping ski poles impatiently.

Skiers saved from dangling gondolas after tower snapsupdated: Thu Dec 18 2008 10:30:00

A group of skiers had a fortunate escape Tuesday after they were rescued from a stricken gondola that was left dangling over a freezing creek at a ski resort in Canada.

Gondola tower collapsesupdated: Wed Dec 17 2008 03:29:00

A Gondola dangles in the air after the tower snapped injuring passengers vacationing at ski resort in Canada.

Passengers saved from dangling gondolas after tower snapsupdated: Wed Dec 17 2008 03:29:00

Passengers have been rescued from a gondola dangling over a freezing creek after the tower snapped in half Tuesday at a ski resort near Whistler, British Columbia.

Expert advice: Top 9 ski tipsupdated: Mon Dec 01 2008 13:14:00

The pros weigh in on every aspect of your skiing holiday--including your socks. Even you black-diamond types might learn a thing or two.

FSB: Black Diamond's death-defying revenue climbupdated: Fri Nov 21 2008 10:38:00

For Peter Metcalf, making a small business big is a matter of doing things in proper style. For this human StairMaster, that means taking the time to climb a combined 17,500 feet of Utah peaks on his 53rd-birthday weekend, toting a fine champagne for a summit party with family and friends.

People.com: Olympic Skier Picabo Street Wedsupdated: Mon Nov 03 2008 16:45:00

The gold medalist ties the knot before 100 family and friends in Alabama

SI.com: Ben Fowlkes: Elite XC needs to clean up its actupdated: Fri Aug 22 2008 14:48:00

Dana White loves to say that running a major mixed martial arts organization isn't as easy it looks -- that's the typical self-congratulatory rhetoric we've become accustomed to from the outspoken UFC president. But White surely is the king of easy in comparison to the Elite XC, a recently tumbling promotion that has become the prodigy of making it look hard -- really hard.

SI.com: Ben Fowlkes: Reality of mainstream MMA: quantity trumps qualityupdated: Thu Jul 31 2008 12:26:00

One brief moment during Elite XC's second installment of Saturday Night Fights on CBS encapsulated the plight of the new promotion: UFC middleweight champion Anderson Silva flashed across the screen.

Review: Wii sports hit and missupdated: Tue Jun 03 2008 10:15:00

Thanks to its innovative wireless controls, family-friendly games and relatively inexpensive price tag, the Nintendo Wii is hotter than the dancing flames in Donkey Kong.

SI.com: Tim Layden: Miller, Vonn reaffirm talent with World Cup titlesupdated: Sun Mar 16 2008 12:58:00

March gets noisy around now, here in the States. Tickets to the Big Dance are punched daily, brackets are busted, NFL free agents are signing, and veterans are being released or given new life. (Good luck David Carr, and if Eli Manning goes down, I don't want to be you even for one minute). In Florida and Arizona, the regulars are playing deeper into every exhibition game as Opening Day draws near.

Skiing with an Olympianupdated: Mon Feb 25 2008 14:05:00

Tucson grandmother Sandy Maxfield is determined to get her groove back -- on skis.

Taking the kids: Family fun on the slopesupdated: Mon Feb 18 2008 11:29:00

I love it when resorts really listen to us.

Fortune: Paradise lostupdated: Wed Feb 06 2008 14:23:00

As his Gulfstream IV roared off the Bozeman, Mont., tarmac one Sunday this past December, billionaire Tim Blixseth glanced out the window and looked down at the Yellowstone Club. The homeowners in this 13,600-acre enclave include Bill Gates, News Corp.'s Peter Chernin, and Barry Sternlicht, the founder of Starwood Hotels & Resorts. The club is the world's only totally private ski and golf resort, and it is Blixseth's vision of nirvana. It is also as self-made as its founder, who grew up poor in rural Oregon and "ate Spam five days a week" when he wasn't using his father's shotgun to kill wild game for dinner. Despite this starting point, Blixseth went on to become a timber baron and smooth operator who twice persuaded President Bill Clinton and the U.S. Congress to allow him to create the club out of the Montana wilderness.

SI.com: Michael Bamberger: The true story behind Steepupdated: Wed Jan 16 2008 21:27:00

When Peter Jennings left the killing fields of Iraq in 2004 for a Swiss ski trip with his wife, he had no idea he'd never be on skis again. Death comes like a thief in the night, right? Cancer claimed the newsman the next year, but a production company he co-founded continued to make its first film, a documentary about extreme skiing called Steep.

Taking the kids: On an old-fashioned Montana ski trip updated: Tue Jan 15 2008 10:24:00

Mary Blilie had been at Big Sky Resort in Montana for just one day but had already snapped more photos of her kids than she had in a long time.

Time.com: An Interview with the Last Adventurerupdated: Sat Jan 12 2008 12:00:00

An expansive talk with Sir Edmund Hillary about his historic ascent and the life and fame that came after

People.com: Skier Jonny Moseley, Wife Welcome a Boyupdated: Tue Sep 11 2007 18:34:00

Olympic skier Jonny Moseley and his wife, Malia, have welcomed a baby boy, their spokesperson tells PEOPLE.

SI.com: Todd Martin: Elite XC looks to break through in MMA marketupdated: Mon Jul 16 2007 00:48:00

As mixed martial arts rises in popularity in the United States, many promotions are looking to get a piece of the action. With UFC possessing such an advantage in terms of recognition, visibility and market share, it will be an uphill battle for challengers.

SI.com: Bode's bumpy trail updated: Tue May 15 2007 13:32:00

The first news of last weekend was not shocking at all. After a meeting with officials of the U.S. ski team in Park City, Utah, Bode Miller had elected to separate from the team with the intention of competing independently on the World Cup Circuit. Team officials had offered Miller his customary position on the alpine team, befitting for one of the most accomplished racers in the history of the sport.

Skiing's 'Wild West' takes offupdated: Tue Mar 20 2007 11:35:00

Imagine skiing on untouched snow where chairlifts, queues and other skiers don't exist.

SI.com: The grades are inupdated: Fri Mar 16 2007 17:00:00

During one December stretch, the U.S. Ski Team scored an unprecedented nine (top-three) podium finishes in seven races over a six-day period. It was a stunning display of high-level racing by five skiers, and coming one year after a disappointing performance at the Turin Olympic Games, lent some credibility to the team's marketing slogan (or "goal," depending on who you ask): Best In the World.

Business 2.0: Head of the Packupdated: Thu Mar 15 2007 12:26:00

When American Julia Mancuso won the gold medal in the super giant slalom at the 2006 Winter Olympics, Stefan Ytterborn may have been the only Swedish skier celebrating.

SI.com: Enter the Lyon's denupdated: Tue Feb 20 2007 10:47:00

For me, ski trips are vastly important. Riding chairlifts affords me the time to solve today's universal riddles:

SI.com: Hill topperupdated: Fri Feb 16 2007 17:12:00

U.S. alpine skier Lindsey Kildow has long been burdened by her own promise. She won an international race in Italy at age 14, followed by three medals in the junior world championships. She earned a place on the 2002 Olympic team at age 17 and, six weeks after her 20th birthday, had her first World Cup victory, at a downhill in Canada in December 2004.

Five rookie ski-trip mistakesupdated: Tue Feb 06 2007 10:50:00

Making your debut on the slopes can get tricky long before you slide off the chairlift.

Business 2.0: The Porsche of ski helmetsupdated: Tue Jan 09 2007 09:54:00

When American Julia Mancuso won the gold medal in the super giant slalom at the 2006 Winter Olympics, Stefan Ytterborn may have been the only Swedish skier celebrating.

FSB: The man who made skiing hotupdated: Tue Oct 24 2006 09:36:00

Alex Cushing had mountain-sized dreams. He founded one of Tahoe's first ski resorts, Squaw Valley, with one double chairlift and a rope tow, in 1949. Eleven years later the town hosted the Winter O...

Spiritual skis give a lift on the slopesupdated: Mon Apr 03 2006 11:57:00

Just as they have done for centuries, the bells in the tiny town of Disentis, nestled in a valley beneath the Swiss Alps, call out to monks.

Helicopter gives ultimate ski-liftupdated: Fri Feb 24 2006 08:21:00

Oleg, Dmitri and Anton have come a long way from St. Petersburg, Russia.

African skier's Winter Games dreamupdated: Tue Feb 14 2006 06:16:00

Top Ghanaian skier Kwame Nkrumah-Acheampong has just bumped into a couple of gates as he tears downhill over a tricky steep slope that makes up the grand slalom course at this resort in the Italian Dolomites.

CNNMoney: Advertisers going to X-tremesupdated: Mon Feb 13 2006 12:39:00

Michelle Kwan is gone. Bode Miller failed to win even a bronze in his first event. What's a U.S. advertiser at the Winter Olympics to do?

FSB: New Winter Gear ...updated: Thu Jan 19 2006 14:55:00

Vermont Originals ski hat $33 When Tad and Jane Washburn left the advertising business to buy Vermont Originals in 2004, they also bought into a 33-year-old tradition. The Morrisville, Vt., company...

Downhill all the way: The ultimate skiing holidayupdated: Fri Jan 13 2006 04:27:00

For those who like to combine skiing with pampering, a high-octane day on the slopes with a low-key evening sipping champagne in a hot-tub, physical exertion with relentless cosseting -- for those, in short, who like their ski holidays luxurious -- then the Game Creek Chalet in Vail, Colorado, is the place for you.

It's a ski hill, a country club, a summer retreatupdated: Thu Dec 01 2005 11:39:00

When Jean-Pierre Boespflug invites you to tour the first U.S. destination ski resort built from scratch in more than two decades, it helps to pack your imagination.

Surf's up this winter at Michigan's Boyne Mountainupdated: Thu Nov 17 2005 12:23:00

The Super G at Boyne is one wild ride.

CNNMoney: Extreme ski servicesupdated: Fri Nov 04 2005 07:11:00

You've heard of extreme skiing, but how about extreme ski resorts?

Faking the slopesupdated: Fri Mar 18 2005 11:47:00

(CNN) -- The warmth of the spring sun on the winter's last snow usually signals the end of the ski season. But for some skiers in Europe and parts of Asia, it means it's time to hit the indoor runs at the local snow dome.

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