BSP-05 Estonian kid Kelly Sildaru ready to light up freestyle ski worlds

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BSP-05

SKI-WORLD-FREESTYLE-SILDARU

Estonian kid Kelly Sildaru ready to light up freestyle ski worlds

PARK CITY, United States, Feb 6, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Fresh from winning three
medals at the Winter X-Games, Estonia’s 16-year-old freestyle ski sensation
Kelly Sildaru is looking to take the World Championships by storm this week.

The Tallinn native became the first person to leave the X-Games in Colorado
in January having won three medals in one weekend in events where the
slightest slip generally means you miss the podium.

Apart from missing her mum, the waif-like wunderkid told AFP she is
confident and focused at the Freestyle World Championships in Utah running to
February 10, saying the organisation suits her temperament.

“At the X-Games, the schedule was really tight. It won’t be that tight
here,” she said.

“I’m skiing seven days in a row or something. At the X-Games, I did four or
five days.

“It takes more time here, but it’s not so tight. It will be easier for my
body.”

Competing on skis, rather than in the equivalent events for snowboard,
Sildaru is down for the slopestyle, where a string of obstacles such as
handrails and bumps are negotiated and awarded marks by judges, and the half-
pipe, notable for its aerial acrobatics.

Sildaru’s father Tonis is both her coach and manager and accompanies his
daughter everywhere. He pulled her out of Saturday’s big air, complaining
that the ramp was too slow and the landing area dangerous.

That decision follows on from concern about her safety after Sildaru missed
her Winter Olympic debut in Pyeongchang, South Korea, last year, because of a
knee injury.

“I was really sad about that, but I tried to keep a positive vibe. I knew
that if I worked hard I’d get back on skis faster,” she said.

Sildaru tried out skis for the first time when she was two years old and it
was not long before evidence of aptitude began to emerge.

“We didn’t have a huge goal at the beginning,” said Tonis.

“Maybe when she was eight or nine, we saw that she has some potential. It
was quite early.”

If her life has sped up since then, the gifted teen says her family keeps
her grounded.

“Everything is pretty much still the same,” she says appearing to take
things in her stride.

“I’ve been travelling more, doing more different competitions. It’s always
hard to be away from home for a really long time.

“For sure, I miss my mum and my friends. But I’m pretty used to it.”

At the Aspen X-Games Sildaru thumped Olympic champion Sarah Hofflin to
storm to gold in slopestyle. In the half-pipe Canada’s Olympic champion
Cassie Sharpe went all in with a risk-laden routine that edged the Estonian
into second. Her third medal, a bronze, came in the big air.

BSS/AFP/GMR/0855 hrs