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PROGRESSING THE SPORT KENT KREITLER
legendary Shane McConkey and Michael Jaquet, founder of Freeze Magazine. The trio led Boulder to become the brief epicenter of freeskiing as Kreitler and McConkey pushed one another to go bigger, and Jaquet documented their growth.
Kreitler is recognized as the first skier to style tricks with grabs, and the first to land off-axis 360s and 720s, now a mainstay in many contemporary skiing disciplines, including the Olympics.
Kreitler broke out in 1993 when he won the U.S. Extreme Skiing Championships at Crested Butte, Colo., a seminal event with then rare television coverage that launched freeskiing into prominence. Kreitler became its first big star, moving to Tahoe and launching his film career. During that career, he pioneered big mountain zones around Valdez and Cordova in Alaska, bagging numerous first descents along the way.
BY JASON BACAJ
If you’ve watched any freeskiing event in recent years, you’ve witnessed Kent Kreitler’s influence. Grabs, off-axis spins and landing backwards—all are elements that the Sun Valley resident pioneered in the sport’s formative days in the 1990s.
Kreitler was both a successful competitor and a big mountain skier whose career started with photoshoots and early extreme contests that later landed him roles filming.
The freeski pioneer’s trajectory began with a family move to Sun Valley when he was 10, where he got hooked on skiing. He discovered his passion for big mountains when he attended Colorado University in Boulder. While there, Kreitler roomed with the
“Heli time was a lot cheaper back then,” Kreitler told EBS. “We weren’t on huge budgets, but we’d make it work and we’d go out and just explore, man. It was fun.”
On film, Kreitler was one of the rare athletes who worked with multiple production companies, starring in films by Nick Nixon, Warren Miller, Teton Gravity Research and Matchstick Productions.
He was also an early ski design innovator of both twin-tip and fat skis. In particular, he helped created the K2 Poacher—the first fat-waisted twintip park ski. Plus, Kreitler had four separate promodel skis from K2 and Blizzard, a Spyder clothing line and a signature goggle from Zeal Optics after a long career with Smith.
After 15 years of professionally sending it and pushing freeskiing progress, Kreitler felt burned out.
“A lot of what I did was quite dangerous,” Kreitler said. “I kind of aged out of it to where I just didn’t want to be putting myself in those risks all the time.”
Sponsorship dollars dwindled, younger athletes were coming to the fore, and he wanted to sample what else life had. He moved to San Francisco to live in a city, did a yoga teaching course, rehabbed his body, bought property in Panama and started surfing. Within a few years, Kreitler was recharged and ready to jump back into ski town life.
“We are so lucky to live in these mountain town communities, but it’s good to check out for a while,” he said.
Kreitler moved back to Sun Valley after his hiatus in the city. These days, he's working in real estate in Idaho and also developing the Panama property. Nothing has been built on it just yet, but the project's design includes an off-grid community and a hotel.
And he still loves skiing. Kreitler said that he can be found searching for and skiing powder most winter days and watching the sport continue to progress through the likes of fellow Idaho resident “Crazy” Karl Fostvedt, who won the first-ever Kings and Queens of Corbet’s competition in Jackson Hole in 2018.
“I’m still fanatical about skiing,” Kreitler said. “I just want to ski pow. And this season, there’s so much shoulder country off of the ski area… I don’t know if it’s possible for anyone to come close to skiing as much pow as a couple of my friends and I do.”