Freestyle is often one of the main reasons why people start snowboarding. Remember that, whilst extremely popular, freestyle is not for everyone. Be mindful of your students’ interests and do not push them into freestyle if they appear uncomfortable. The tricks featured in this resource are some of the fundamental tricks required to become a well-rounded freestyle snowboarder. Students will need a variety of turn sizes and shapes before learning these tricks. In some tricks, students will require the ability to flat base and ride switch, for the approach and takeoff and/or to perform or land the trick.
Frontside 180s
What, Why, How
This is often the easiest spin trick to learn, due to being able to see the entire time. It is also the foundation for any frontside spin.
Hot Tip
VIDEO: Frontside 180s with Dave Pearse
Movements & Board Performance
Rotational with Spin
The spin is led with the shoulders and arms. The lower body follows once in the air. The upper and lower body ideally align rotationally by the time the board lands.The head stays in the same position (looking in the direction of travel) throughout the entire process. As confidence grows, experiment with different timing and range of rotational movements.
Vertical
Focus on flexing and extending the ankles, knees, hips and lower spine. This is used for pop and to retract in the air. It is also necessary for flexion to absorb the landing.
Lateral
Takeoff can be from toe or heel edge, depending on the rider’s preference. Taking off from the heel edge is more natural for the rotation, but taking off from the toe edge will help increase the pop vertically as the rider can utilise their ankle joint. Landing on the opposite edge will help minimise edge catches.
Longitudinal
A centred stance is the key to taking off and landing on both feet. Students who are comfortable with an ollie will likely find pressuring the tail during takeoff slightly easier, but it is not necessary to perform the trick.
Terrain & Group Management
Once all the movements are beginning to blend, use natural terrain, banks, cat tracks or bumps to help create some extra airtime for the 180. Allow students to try both forward and switch frontside 180s, then encourage them to continue to practise the one they preferred and come back to the other one later.
Corrective Teaching
Student struggles to pop off their heel edge:
Student has trouble creating a smooth full rotation (usually the upper body rotates too far into the spin without using scissored finish in the lower body):