Olympic Halfpipe Skiers Share Their Pre-Run Pump-up Songs

For freestyle skiers, their air pods are almost as important as the bindings on their skis

USA's Birk Irving competes in the freestyle skiing men's freeski halfpipe
Marco Bertorello/AFP via Getty Images
USA’s freestyle skier Birk Irving competes in the men’s freeski halfpipe qualification run at the at the Genting Snow Park during the Beijing Winter Olympics on Feb. 17, 2022.

Needing to rock his final Olympic halfpipe run just to qualify, Aaron Blunck proceeded to pump up the volume.

With a song called “TOES” featuring DaBaby blaring in his ears, the 25-year-old freestyle skier from Colorado struck just the right note to turn in the best run of anyone.

Music to his ears.

In a world filled with “double corks," “Japan grabs" and “backside rodeos,” it's the tunes that sync it all together for most of these competitors. To them, their air pods are almost as important as the bindings on their skis.

“If someone wants to mess with me on a competition day, they'd take away my music,” said New Zealand’s Nico Porteous, who will be one of the favorites in the final Saturday, which marks the end of the fun and games at the Genting Snow Park. “Music is so important to me. Like, the most important thing.”

For his qualifying run, Porteous went back in time, to the 1990s, to The Notorious B.I.G.’s song “Who Shot Ya?” It's the same tune Porteous was listening to when he captured bronze at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games. He’d forgotten all about it until a month ago, when it popped up on his play list at the Winter X Games.

“I put that song on and then ended up skiing the best I ever have,” Porteous said.

Before she hits the slopes, Team USA’s Jaelin Kauf has a specific routine to get her head in the game— including a song by the artist formerly known as Kanye West.

So, it remained on his list of greatest hits.

Also streaming on the pipe: MF Doom in Canadian Noah Bowman's headphones. American freeskier Alex Ferreira went with “EDM” (electronic dance music) to get stoked. His teammate, Birk Irving, pushed play on Phantogram’s “Black Out Days.”

“Music’s huge,” the 22-year-old Irving said. “It zones me out so I’m not really focused on everything. I’m just kind of going and cruising and flowing through the pipe.”

Same for Canadian freestyler Brendan MacKay, who gets into the groove with Canadian rock band Metric.

“That was pretty fast-paced,” MacKay explained of his musical choice. “Sometimes I’ll go even more fast-paced, sometimes slower. I was a bit tired (Thursday morning) so I really needed some energy from my music to get me fired up.”

About the time Metric gets cranking, MacKay finds himself absorbed in deep halfpipe thoughts.

“I don’t think I hear it much even though it’s pretty loud,” he said. “I’m fully focused on skiing, and not thinking anything else.”

For Bowman, tunes have been a “game changer.”

“The energy gets me excited because I’m a fairly laid-back guy,” Bowman said. "So I need that music to kind of hype me up. I’m typically listening to some hip-hop, because hip-hop hypes me up.”

Freestyle skiers Alex Hall, Colby Stevenson and Brita Sigourney explain what slopestyle and big air are, how tricks get their names and the best way to fall.

The rare exception may be two-time defending Olympic champion David Wise. He prefers the sound of silence.

“It’s not my vibe,” Wise said. “I’ve talked a lot about, like, mental toughness, the ability to land runs when the pressure's on, and for me, I just embrace the fact that I’m actually at a high-level contest.

“I want to hear every sound. I want to hear the crowd. I want to hear the sound my skis make. That’s just, for me, how I stay more closely tied to the reality. I totally get (using music) but that’s just not how I like to compete.”

Ferreira does. Another chart-topper for him is an up-tempo song, “Red Light, Green Light.”

“I need (music) because it just makes me feel good,” Ferreira said. “It distracts me, I guess, from all the nerves and pressures.”

Nathan Chen’s first Olympics four years ago did not go so well, but he knows he will arrive in Beijing as one of the favorites in men’s figure skating— not just because of all the hard work he has done on the ice, but because of the way he has learned to relax off of it as well.

Copyright The Associated Press
Contact Us