Hits coming for Sladics
Bryce Alderton
Chanelle Sladics grew up in Newport Beach, where she played soccer
and field hockey for Newport Harbor High.
In those days, a hit for Sladics meant striking a ball with her
foot or a stick.
She still hits, though the term has taken on an entirely new
meaning for the 20-year-old.
Sladics is a professional snowboarder.
The “hits” now in her vocabulary refer to how many rails or jumps
she successfully masters.
Sladics, who turned professional in 2004, will join 14 other women
competitors in SG Magazine’s third annual EMU Australia Queen of the
Mountain invite event, benefiting breast cancer research, at the
Mountain High resort in Wrightwood today.
Sladics won the Pro Rail Jam title at the event last year and
placed second in the slopestyle competition.
Those accomplishments add to the growing list of feats for
Sladics, the 2002 International Snowboard Federation Halfpipe Junior
World champion who made her second appearance at the X Games in late
January. Sladics placed 12th out of 20 competitors in the
preliminaries of the women’s slopestyle. The top 10 advanced to the
finals.
In slopestyle events, riders maneuver their way through a terrain
park designed with jumps, rails, boxes and hips. Riders are to
complete the course with creativity and grace. Judges award scores
based on style, amplitude, rotation and overall impression.
Sladics bettered her X Games finish with a seventh place in the
women’s slopestyle final in the Gravity Games at Copper Mountain,
Colo., last week. She placed higher than Tara Dakides, an X Games
gold medalist in the 2000 and 2001 Big Air events.
She spends summers in Newport Beach and lives in Mammoth Lakes,
site of the last Gravity Games in 2000, in the winter.
She will spend the rest of her season focusing on a part in an all
girls snowboard video -- meant to portray the progression of women’s
snowboarding -- tentatively set for release in September.
Snowboarding officially earned Olympic status for the 1998 Games
in Nagano, Japan, has steadily gained popularity with added exposure.
Sladics also appeared on an MTV show featuring snowboarding,
surfing and skating competitions alongside stars such as Tony Hawk.
Trips to Mammoth during high school peaked her interest in the
sport.
“I was always a weekend warrior,” Sladics said. “Snowboarding was
a fun thing I did on Sundays. I would go to Mammoth on all of my
breaks.”
She played link on Newport’s field hockey team but broke her
collarbone skateboarding, cutting her senior season short.
“I was such a field hockey girl, I loved it,” Sladics said.
Once the injury healed, Sladics began entering more professional
snowboarding events. In 2002, she took third in slope style USA
Snowboarding Association’s national championships at Mammoth
Mountain.
Newport senior Ashley Gleason, a teammate of Sladics on the field
hockey team, saw her passion toward snowboarding back then.
“She would miss camps to go the USA junior Olympics,” Gleason, a
standout pitcher on the Sailors’ softball team, said She is very
athletic.”
Gleason didn’t hesitate in her answer when asked if she thought
Sladics would choose snowboarding for a profession.
“Oh yeah, she is that type of person who can do a lot of different
things.”
Sladics enrolled at UC Santa Barbara after graduating from Newport
in June 2003, but four days into the semester, Sladics switched gears
back toward the snow.
“I realized, after talking to a teacher, that it would be hard to
balance both [snowboarding and school],” Sladics said.
So she opted for snowboarding, with sponsors such as Oakley,
Billabong and Campbell’s Soup and Venue Snowboarding.
Sladics has appeared on MTV Sports’ “3-Way Threat” and is part of
the Campbell’s Soup-at-Hand team with Tara Dakides and pro
skateboarder Bucky Lasek.
Saturday marks Sladics return from a partially torn meniscus in
her right knee suffered during the Gravity Games.
The injury didn’t require surgery, but as of Wednesday, Sladics
hadn’t snowboarded in 1 1/2 weeks, a long time for one who will
compete in roughly 11 events by the time the season is done.
Just the beginning of what she hopes will be a long career in the
business.
Sladics said: “We get to travel around the world doing something
we love and get paid and marketed to do it. As long as you don’t take
it for granted, it’s one of the best jobs.”
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