6 ski technique mistakes (myths) busted by Marcel Hirscher

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • ⚠️ WARNING - Don't take this video too seriously - This video is just a bit of fun, this video is NOT looking at the reason why or how he is doing these movements or the subsequent movements leading up to or after these still frames. Just looking at some still frames to have a bit of fun. The take away message is just make sure you choose movements that help you increase your "FUN" factor... Enjoy skiing and don't take it too seriously, and just try and learn what is relevant for you... No one should try skiing like Hirscher if it isn't "FUN" or "obtainable" for you on a personal level. Marcel Hirscher is definitely the best modern ski racer of our time. His skill on his skis is absolutely incredible. In this video Marcel busts all the 6 most common ski technique myths but just going freeskiing. 😂 (Once again I love this skiing and it shows great touch and flow).
    If I had to classify this turn I would call them extreme slalom turn/ski dolphins.
    My channel is a ski educational channel and sometimes things can be taken too seriously so this is a lighter look at ski technique... Enjoy skiing, enjoy the mountains and enjoy the sensations that excite you personally.
    If you are not following him on instagram here is his profile: / marcel__hirscher
    How to ski instructional videos please go to all access pass @ www.projectedproductions.com
    If you enjoy and appreciate the content I put up, you can show your support and buy me a beer here: PayPal.Me/Reilly5
    Want to ski with us? Visit:
    www.hokkaidocollective.com
    For more info on how to improve your skiing, follow the links below: www.projectedproductions.com Like us on Facebook!
    / reillymcglashanskier
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    Instagram:
    @reilly_mcglashan
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    To ski with me in the northern winter email rvmcglashan@gmail.com
    0:00 Start
    0:45 Hips over feet
    1:26 Tips in the air
    1:45 Skis in the air (off the snow)
    2:02 Balancing on the inside ski
    2:29 Hands behind your back
    2:49 Touching the inside hand on the snow
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Комментарии • 301

  • @licurgius
    @licurgius 3 года назад +70

    one of the reasons why like your analysis so much and I consider you an absolute authority about ski technique is that your are absolutely not dogmatic about what and how skiing technique should be!
    When i first saw this clip a couple weeks, man did that made me crave for snow; so much fun to see this guy rip the groomers. cheers!

  • @sucapizda
    @sucapizda 3 года назад +95

    Forgot to mention, he has nuclear powered quad muscles.

    • @richardelder256
      @richardelder256 3 года назад +5

      Remember when he was getting beat by 2 seconds at the hands of Ted Ligity and would be so knackered he could hardly breath during the podium interviews?
      The magic of the weight room!

  • @peterchapko2638
    @peterchapko2638 3 года назад +78

    Here is my take; sure” Marcel Hirscher" can do this but most skiers will have a hard time getting away with what he is doing. First, he free skis kind of (somewhat) like he is racing. Racers use the rebound from the ski to accelerate them into the next turn, this comes off the back of the ski primarily (end of turn), the more you can energize the ski in this area the better, he is still projecting his body into the apex of the new turn and if you just adjust the center of force back to where he wants it, he is still centered. He comes off the ground between turns because he gets so much rebound out of the ski and its fun, in races he keeps it more in snow contact, just like his hand position at his side, he does not do this in races much at all (his hands are out front), he is freeskiing and his balance is so good he can get away with it. Same with his banking (inside ski pressure) and when his hand touches the snow thing, in freeskiing he can get away from being more over the outside ski, I don’t think this occurs very often in a race throughout the turn as shown here. One more comment, the trick is to master "projection" moving your center of mass into the apex of the new turn while letting your skis cross underneath you and completing the previous turn simultaneously.
    I think there are a few things to keep in mind, caveats I would add; one Hirscher is an animal, it is very exhausting to ski like him, takes a lot more muscular strength to hold back "G" forces from this aft pressure build-up position. Better for a long ski day to keep more stacked, forward. Also, sometimes in GS races racers will let a hand get back then drive it into the next turn for added speed. There are often exceptions to rules but sometimes you need to be Hirscher to ski like him and break the rules but it certainly doesn’t invalidate them for the rest of us. I would also add, for most people rounder turns are more graceful and less stressful than pure race techniques. Second, just because he can skip some fundamentals in his freeskiing does not give us an excuse to get sloppy with ours. He has fully mastered the fundamentals first!

    • @wilkiegj
      @wilkiegj 3 года назад +7

      True all that you said. Plus if he is on race skis in this video, which is likely, they cannot be bought by anyone and they are designed for one thing. It is possible to ski them somewhat normally but they are a handful if they are in race tune. Also within the race dept the very best skis go to the very best racers, so he is skiing on the very best available doing what he does that virtually no one else on the planet can do. I cannot really criticize that.

    • @stevensegall3736
      @stevensegall3736 3 года назад

      @@wilkiegj if they are in fact FIS race skis he’d be handicapped by artificial geometry requirements that would make extreme edge angulation harder. Many of these broken rules are being regularly employed in the race course and be handled competently

    • @stevensegall3736
      @stevensegall3736 3 года назад +1

      Sorry hit publish too fast. These are being employed by moderately competent junior racers and can be replicated on consumer level race inspired skis.

    • @PB-sk9jn
      @PB-sk9jn 11 месяцев назад +1

      Spot on the aft tail pressure / rebound kick was all the rage in the '90's SL technique pre-carving skis.
      Hirscher is doing exactly this, but updated for the modern era.

  • @sir_bumpalot
    @sir_bumpalot 3 года назад +17

    Rebound airtime is just fun. Living on the edge, always a bit out of control. I love it.(on my level ;) )

  • @bergfex1679
    @bergfex1679 3 года назад +4

    The funny thing is that I have never heard of these technique mistakes so far. I have always watched the WC racers especially Hirscher and tried to copy his style. And I can absolutely say that it is the greatest fun to ride down the slopes with Marcels technique.

  • @mobaumeister2732
    @mobaumeister2732 3 года назад +10

    Most of the techniques he uses are for highly advanced skiers only, less experienced skiers would have a hard time trying to learn like that. I think many of the ground rules are devised to help aspiring skiers to learn basic techniques, however with increased experience and fitness skiers can develop their own styles and technique, as Marcel does.

  • @PB-sk9jn
    @PB-sk9jn 3 года назад +18

    Hirscher brings rebound for joy back into slalom, when everyone else values arc to arc and says any energy not moving forwards is wasted. I love his skiing. Power, panache, and flight when he's not redirecting his motion. Almost preferred his first three world cup seasons to late Hirscher, had more rebound and power, even if less predictable. Hirscher shows that the fastest skiing and most fun skiing can still be the same.

    • @PB-sk9jn
      @PB-sk9jn 3 года назад

      2010 Val d'Isere, sheer exuberance, watched in slow motion (0.25 speed) it's awesome how little of the distance is spent in contact with the snow (which has a certain lack of control ! but he's choosing exactly when to extend and establish that contact):
      ruclips.net/video/4iSJTZ63fYU/видео.html

    • @a.m.9466
      @a.m.9466 9 месяцев назад +1

      Great video and comments.
      A ski day isn’t complete without some snappy rebounds on the Racetigers!, just saying

  • @nickreaderphoto
    @nickreaderphoto 3 года назад +5

    How refreshing to hear a ski instructor being objective and responding to the skier they are watching and not just delivering the cliche. If Ski Instructors spend 30 years saying "Get forward" to anyone and everyone without even watching the skier, then we end up exactly in the situation i find myself in when giving level 3 courses/exams.... Experienced skiers often have locked ankles, skiers are resting on the tongue of the boot, as a result we see downsteming, we see skid break short turns. It creates excess vertical movements, this limits lateral deflection and makes speed and arcs difficult... etc etc.... I say follow this guys example and watch the individual and don't have preconceived ideas! nice video Reilly. Using video of the best in the world is the best way to make your point!

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад

      Really interesting insight. Thanks for sharing :)

  • @ErnestoRodriguezPerez
    @ErnestoRodriguezPerez 3 года назад +80

    To own the right to break the rules first you master it.... No shortcuts

    • @Osnosis
      @Osnosis 3 года назад +4

      @@busterkirkwood Yes, this video is just Marcel having fun and chilling out. He doesn't race this way, with the caveat that with bomber quads and 60-80 mph, you will find yourself pushed back at that 90 degree angle, but when they are, they are really reaching forward and squeezing the abdominals not to fall. As an expert skier, I can do things that I wouldn't teach, but that's because of all the other skills that go into being an expert.

    • @stevensegall3736
      @stevensegall3736 3 года назад +3

      He’s a little sloppy with his hand position but almost everything else he does in the race course. You won’t find a video of him skiing in ski instructor form because it isn’t actually efficient.

    • @lorenzoluizdesouza1215
      @lorenzoluizdesouza1215 3 года назад +1

      Or... It could be a sort of a pendulum momentum tactic to aid with foreafts and increase speed

  • @freeyourmind3480
    @freeyourmind3480 3 года назад +4

    You could not compare marcel hirschers ski skills with the skills from the rest pf the world. He was and he is a legend and the only guy on this planet who can skiing like no other. And he also learned skiing with the ski school metods.

  • @JayCeeEss1337
    @JayCeeEss1337 3 года назад +3

    Yesss!
    I was hoping for an analysis like this.
    I've grown to really love this style of skiing with the dropping inside hand and airborne pivots in super high performance turns

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +2

      Glad you liked it! I love this skiing too!

  • @anninadebiasi912
    @anninadebiasi912 3 года назад +6

    He's my favourite skier! Really enjoyed the video, I always loved his wild style when he raced

  • @dadou465
    @dadou465 3 года назад +2

    Absolutely love your analysis and totally correct having tought for 60 years and raced for that many I have gone through so many changes in this wonderful evolving sport and I really appreciate your getting out of the norm and saying exactly what you see bravo

  • @RichardGeresPT
    @RichardGeresPT 3 года назад +23

    That’s why I sit back in my turns! Because unknowingly, subconsciously I’m imitating Marcel’s style 😎. Great video analysis! 👍

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +3

      😂💪

    • @peterchapko2638
      @peterchapko2638 3 года назад +3

      To own the right to break the rules first you master it.... No shortcuts

    • @RichardGeresPT
      @RichardGeresPT 3 года назад +1

      @@peterchapko2638 good one! 🙌

    • @paulcook347
      @paulcook347 3 года назад +1

      Stop the music! It is distracting. Thanks for the video!

  • @danielrossi5971
    @danielrossi5971 3 года назад

    This is a super cool video! I love the lighter side of it. As much as I love the world cup analysis (please keep doing them!), sometimes it is fun to just watch and enjoy.

  • @francescogallo6481
    @francescogallo6481 3 года назад +8

    Wow that is really cool. Super fun to watch and I love the take away message of just having fun and learning what is possible for us personally. Marcel looks like he has springs in his legs.

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +2

      Yes just learn what is possible for you... Not many people can ski like Hirscher does here, and just have fun!

    • @xcubos
      @xcubos 3 года назад +1

      @@ReillyMcGlashan For me the fundamental question is whether young skiers who are starting to develop their technique should be taught the "right" fundamentals or instead let them find what works best for them even if it is unorthodox.

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +3

      @@xcubos I think that is up to the coach or instructor to help guide the student to help them learn what "is possible for them personally" as Francesco said. I will only ever teach one of my students what they need to learn to get better... I am not teaching people crazy techniques left field to throw them off (unless they are at that level and it is what they want)... Every student is different and also have different goals, but the takeaway is finding the techniques that make skiing the most enjoyable for you... If skiing a green run all day in a wedge makes you happy and you don't want to learn anything else then hey, who am I to say it's wrong... All i could do would be to encourage them to at least want to get to parallel as it is easier on the legs. 🤷‍♂️

  • @terrybarbour9760
    @terrybarbour9760 3 года назад +1

    Right on Reilly! Thank you for posting this! All dynamic skiers will leave the snow with rebound when they get energy out of the tail of the ski. Key is to be strong enough and have the timing to stay with the skis when they zing.
    Shiffrin does this in slalom also!

  • @rrajcan
    @rrajcan 3 года назад +2

    Absolutely amazing. The Marcel skiing, and Your analysis as well! Thank You!

  • @gairnmclennan5876
    @gairnmclennan5876 Год назад

    Thanks Reilly for the awesome video. Your skiing on your other videos is really impressive, the flow and power is fantastic.

  • @MadelnMachines
    @MadelnMachines 3 года назад +4

    I'm a ski instructor and a reasonably advanced skier (not expert). I love when the skis leave the snow due to rebound - it's awesome. I'm also forever get told by trainers that I get into the backseat at the end of the turn. All ski racers do it though. I like the point that you're making - good skiing is a very subjective thing.

    • @urbanrunoff
      @urbanrunoff 3 года назад

      when i ski a FIS SL ski i end up in the backseat at the end of a turn a lot too . could it be that those skis are just too stiff for their length for "fun" skiing. (and Hirscher is a big dude too)

    • @stevensegall3736
      @stevensegall3736 3 года назад +1

      It isn’t really that subjective. His style is optimized for getting down a set course as quickly as possible.

  • @richallsopp9313
    @richallsopp9313 3 года назад +7

    Your content has been getting better and better recently! I love this video, Marcel makes it look so stylish in a way that many high end instructors look accurate but I confined

  • @minolumix07123
    @minolumix07123 3 года назад +2

    It`s always a pleasure to watch your content! Thank you

  • @InspirationalSkiing
    @InspirationalSkiing 3 года назад +5

    I love this video, Reilly! Marcels skiing is absolutely outstanding in the gates and it is such a pleasure to watch him free ski - AND to hear your awesome analysis and take on ski technique. I very much agree with the points you are making in this video. Your videos - and the videos from Projected Production - has been a great source of learning and inspiration to me for a long time, keep them coming! /Janus

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +2

      Thanks mate! I appreciate the comment. You are making some great stuff too!

    • @InspirationalSkiing
      @InspirationalSkiing 3 года назад

      @@ReillyMcGlashan Thanks, mate!

  • @qualityservice5840
    @qualityservice5840 3 года назад

    Skiing is an art, as long as the brush is handled by Marcel on the easel, I think he is best able to highlight these mistakes. There are frequent and many who think they are coaches, do not know how to correct them due to lack of professionalism.
    All the admiration, I watched you and I regret that you no longer delight us with that beautiful dance on skis.
    Thanks

  • @asterixve
    @asterixve 3 года назад +2

    Great video, great analysis and, more rare, right approach fr a ski instructior about recreational skiing, although of the highest standard. No pure dogmas, but fluidity, dynamism, fun and freedom as key elements of free skiing

  • @idealphotography8215
    @idealphotography8215 3 года назад

    I love this! in #5 (hand behind the back) I think it's not just an aesthetic choice but part of early counter rotation.

  • @danielrossi5971
    @danielrossi5971 3 года назад

    This is a super cool video! I love the lighter side of it. As much as I love the world cup analysis (please keep doing them!), somethimes it is fun to just watch and enjoy.

  • @andymuirhead8092
    @andymuirhead8092 3 года назад

    Really enjoyed this video.....Marcel rips down that slope .... so good and great analysis Reilly.

  • @fredskitraining
    @fredskitraining 2 года назад

    Very interesting! Your explanation show how is a objective approche. Function versus Form . 👍🏼

  • @SnowCampsEurope
    @SnowCampsEurope 3 года назад

    This is one of your best vids fella. Nice job.

  • @Marius_Quast
    @Marius_Quast 3 года назад +3

    niiiice! great work, Reilly. Keep it up.

  • @PaulJurczak
    @PaulJurczak 3 года назад +1

    Going far to the backseat with about 90 degrees knee bent to initiate the turn was one of the techniques I was taught in the 70s. Of course these were skidded turns on straight skis, but some of the dynamics probably translates to aggressive carved slalom turns.

  • @cranny1321
    @cranny1321 9 месяцев назад

    I really liked your video. I have been watching lots of videos of Candide Thovex and he always looks like he is also in the back seat but has more control and balance than any free skier I've ever seen

  • @ANBTMPS2
    @ANBTMPS2 3 года назад

    you sound obsessed with this new compact transition thing lmao keep up the good work

  • @kevwong63
    @kevwong63 3 года назад +1

    Well said. I imagine instructors teach based on what will give the student the highest probability of progress in the shortest time for their particular ability.

  • @cantstoptommy7077
    @cantstoptommy7077 3 года назад

    Reilly, time for a vid of you skiing like this! would love to see you skiing on the edge like Marcel was there. (as in he was hucking it and was close to losing it a few times!)

  • @jason1232003
    @jason1232003 3 года назад +1

    Love it! If it feels right...just do it!!!

  • @northernguy8860
    @northernguy8860 3 года назад +1

    One of the tell-tale signs of a great skier is the ability to see their ski bases (during turn initiation) when you're standing uphill of them. It takes early and full commitment to the new edge, launching your skis laterally and your body mass down the fall line, trusting those skis will engage and hold.

  • @johnklaus9111
    @johnklaus9111 4 месяца назад

    i tried this transition last time i went skiing and it is amazingly secure
    feeling. works better on harder surfaces. if you recant the hill to align with his centripetal acceleration vector, you'd see his mass is over his center.
    the pop isn't a pop in this sense and he's popping because he's shortening the ski radius instead of riding it around.
    I was blown away by how stable this technique is!!!

  • @alfredreisenberger2298
    @alfredreisenberger2298 3 года назад

    Thx for pointing this out. Really interesting. Seems Mark has done too much racing.😂

  • @williamspostoronnim9845
    @williamspostoronnim9845 3 года назад +1

    One cannot but be surprised, on the one hand, and one cannot be surprised, on the other, that the champion Hirscher, who apparently has no equal, and is not expected in the near future, can do anything. Including what is considered "errors". Perfectly owning the ice sports track, he can afford even more in free riding on "velveteen". For example, tie hands behind back, sit on the backs of the skis, lie with hips on the snow, ride upon the inside ski, stand on his own head, etc. etc. And everything will do for him! He is, in fact, a circus performer. In one word - a champion!
    Thanks for video!
    Нельзя не удивляться, с одной стороны, и нельзя удивляться, с другой, что чемпион Хиршер, равному которому, видимо, нет, и в ближайшем будущем не предвидится, может всё. В том числе и то, что считается «ошибками». Отлично владея ледяной спортивной трассой, он в свободном катании на «вельвете» может позволить себе ещё большее. Например, завязать руки за спиной, сесть на задники лыж, лечь бедром на снег, идти на внутренней лыже, встать на голову, и т.д. и т.п. И всё ему сойдёт! Он, по сути, циркач. Одним словом - чемпион!
    Спасибо за показ!

    • @stevebag3720
      @stevebag3720 3 года назад +1

      He skis like this on iced World Cup courses too!

  • @rickschnellmann9331
    @rickschnellmann9331 3 года назад +1

    The pivot he's doing allows the aft transition and launch from the snow to work. With the pivot, fore pressure is achieved at initiation, because the pivot changes fore/aft relationship of the CM to the feet. Without a pivot, fore pressure comes post initiation.

  • @peteyndebs
    @peteyndebs 3 года назад +1

    Thank goodness for you Reilly being prepared to put it out there. Spot on analysis.

  • @kuladeeluxe
    @kuladeeluxe 3 года назад

    Cool Reilly. Hope you get more footage of Hersher having fun

  • @zbqb84a
    @zbqb84a 3 года назад

    Such an excellent video and great analysis.

  • @karlo407
    @karlo407 3 года назад

    Would love to see an instructional video on what needs to be done to successfully perform those turns, inclined, on the inside ski, hand back ;)

  • @FreeFloFloss
    @FreeFloFloss 3 года назад

    Busted!!!😁 I always teach openly!! These are high end pro turns!!

  • @denis-uo6ew
    @denis-uo6ew 3 года назад

    Très belle vidéo et super analyse

  • @andreaskriegner7983
    @andreaskriegner7983 3 года назад +3

    The 'arm behind the back' thing you talked about, I have hardly ever seen that beeing taught or mentioned. Yet many great (GS) skiers use it when enough time..Hirscher, Pinturault, Zubcic, Kranjec,..

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +1

      yes it definitely does happen

    • @TheZaratustra1989
      @TheZaratustra1989 3 года назад +1

      @@ReillyMcGlashan it happen just because these movements are customisations of personal skiing styles, known as unbalanced movement to increase momentum at the end of the turn, increasing speed. You can teach these movements just to really high skilled skiers, otherwise a intermediate/high skilled skier will crash for sure. A skilled ski instructor teaching to a person, let say just for 3 hours, can't even mention about this stuff, is just way more important to teach to gain more control. If someone is interested to learn this stuff is way better to join a ski team or at least take a proper amount of ski lessons. Racing skiing and slope skiing are completely different things.

  • @benjaminkirk2073
    @benjaminkirk2073 3 года назад

    I think a lot of the reason he is able to accomplish this is modern equipment. Straight and early parabolic skis required skiers to be more on top of their skis and maintain a forward stance. Failure to do so could lock your tails in a turn if carving and be far more work if sliding turns. Modern equipment seems to require skiers to have a more neutral stance -- driving with your shins is not as necessary as it used to be. I agree with some of the other posters who feel he didn't learn to ski "properly." However, it is interesting to watch someone ski at such a high level doing it all "wrong." Thanks for posting this, it's really interesting.

  • @christianlow6006
    @christianlow6006 3 года назад +3

    Enjoyed the video. Clearly here Hirscher is having fun and more or less just "fooling around" in this freeski run. The way many of us do. Certainly even he would admit that he is making a few fundamental "mistakes" that would absolutely not be his preference in a pure race situation. Like the occasion when he accidently gets twisted around to the right with arms behind him while turning left. As it says in the disclaimerd, on't take this skiing seriously. Agree just enjoy it and have fun out there.

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад

      Thanks for reading the disclaimer! I am glad you can see it is just a little bit of fun this video... Nothing to be taken seriously, just some entertainment and watching a master at work on the hill

    • @stevensegall3736
      @stevensegall3736 3 года назад +1

      He does most of these things in the race course too. The way he transitions knee bend and edge contact, getting back seat. It’s maybe even a little more stylized here but he’s taking what’s fast in the race course to free skiing. I’d anything I think he’s pointing out that some of the ski instructor stuff is becoming over stylized and not functional.

  • @wallstreetoneil
    @wallstreetoneil 3 года назад +3

    Great video! I grew up competing in many sports & tennis comes to mind as teachers would teach you proper strokes but competition forced you to find different grips & speed-generating techniques to hit harder & with more spin to order to compete. I've come to skiing later in life & have watched adult instructors in groups become obsessed with minuscule technical skiing details standing on the side of runs, as I ski past them over & over - I sometimes just laugh. Marcel's wiki page is insane - but the instructors would hate his skiing - awesome!

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +1

      He's a super athlete for sure as well.

    • @stevebag3720
      @stevebag3720 3 года назад +1

      Can I just add that most ski instructors are not in any sense great or even good skiers, in my opinion that is.

    • @youtube-nutzer2895
      @youtube-nutzer2895 3 года назад +1

      @@stevebag3720 glad i live in austria, all ski instructors i know are insane skiers. even the "young" ones are really good one of which is a friend of mine, (hes 21). another good friend is a snowboard instructor (22), and hes really really good aswell. sad to hear youve had bad experience with instructors.

    • @jamesdunn9714
      @jamesdunn9714 3 года назад

      @@stevebag3720 It depends. Many are very, very good indeed.

  • @CC-mc4em
    @CC-mc4em 3 года назад +2

    Incredible skiing by a world class athlete, amazing quad strength, balance and technique. Pretty sure I would be on my backside!

  • @doctornrsfnly
    @doctornrsfnly 3 года назад +2

    Whoa! What a great video!
    Any theories as to how Hirscher was able to keep his very unique (and very FAST!) style intact in the context of a notoriously regimented Austrian national ski team???
    Great endorsement for findinga style that fits your body, equipment and skill level... thanks for the super video!

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +3

      I think the saying goes "if it ain't broke don't fix it" 😂... He is an innovator in line choice on this new equipment... The fast people realise and accept the movements, the right people will be able to incorporate some of this into their skiing. Albeit the "right" person.

    • @doctornrsfnly
      @doctornrsfnly 3 года назад +2

      @@ReillyMcGlashan fair enough :-) I guess that the man's results do all his talking for him! Thanks for the great videos!

    • @stevebag3720
      @stevebag3720 3 года назад +2

      The clock!!! Many skiers look great but you need to be fearless and fast.

  • @realskier
    @realskier 3 года назад +1

    Great skiing flow (coordination) and superior balance (fore-aft, lateral, edge) can help compensate or even overcome technical shortcomings. It really depends on your set objective for the run. A multi-talented World Cup champion such as Hirscher MUST be adaptable in order to have had such dominant success in the sport.

  • @Dewdman42
    @Dewdman42 3 года назад +1

    regarding the ski "tips" coming off the snow (more then the tails), this is not an error, its indicative that he is engaging certain muscles, including dorsiflexion and foot pullback, which contribute to maintaining balance as he proceeds past transition into the belly of the turn. I agree though, its a common mis-diagnosis to label that observation as skier error.

  • @edwardjosephbrennan
    @edwardjosephbrennan 2 года назад

    Tried applying this technique today, on opening day at sugarbush...it works! when you can get it right...on SL Skis that are tuned to the hilt.

  • @oscarpreisler5590
    @oscarpreisler5590 3 года назад +2

    Love your stuff man, as a first year FIS racer its interesting to see all these different techniques and how going fast in ski racing does not always mean the best technique.

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад

      Glad you enjoyed! and good luck with your first year FIS. 😊

  • @beno8983
    @beno8983 3 года назад +5

    I think they key thing is the relaxation, his body moves naturally with the skis and gradient because he is so relaxed. If you sit back like a stick that don’t mean you are the next Marcel. I guess the key is instructors give what’s needed to learn, a bit like driving, once you have learnt and a long as you ski enough it’s about unlearning what actually stops natural movement.

  • @profpat70
    @profpat70 3 года назад +1

    Brilliant!

  • @Assaulting16
    @Assaulting16 Год назад +1

    think the points in this video are completely valid and true... However, Marcel is top 1% of skiers (probably) he is able to perform these turns incredibly well ignoring all of the 'myths'. Teaching people how to turn a basic parallel turn, the "myths" are to assist that they achieve that quickly and building good habits. yes they could achieve it doing these things demonstrated in the video eventually but its more to aid teaching rather than to tell them false tips! not taking seriously but to put in perspective we can indeed bust these technique mistakes with a top level skier. Maybe not with a newbie! great video! 👍

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  Год назад +1

      I agree! I would never teach beginner or intermediates or even people "starting" to be able to go into the advanced realm of skiing what hirscher is doing.... it is just a fun lighthearted video...

  • @igy6468
    @igy6468 3 года назад +17

    ,Yess and yess it's all about having FUUNN... 👌🙌💪💪💪

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +3

      Yes that is what is is all about... 😊

    • @miltiadischeimonidis
      @miltiadischeimonidis 3 года назад +2

      @@ReillyMcGlashan We Like you even more when you 're funny!!! Keep us funny and informed...

  • @cswalker21
    @cswalker21 3 года назад +1

    Hand drags are cool if you are in balance. I think the reason most coaches excoriate their athletes for doing them is that they try to take a shortcut and lean in to achieve a hand drag, and put too much weight on the inside ski.

  • @vicinvesta8349
    @vicinvesta8349 3 года назад +1

    I have a feeling that before you could copy Marcel's technique you have to master proper skiing first. Marcel has iron quads. He can backseat all day long. A novice skier will just get tired after a couple of turns and start piling up mistakes until balance is upset leading to a stop or a fall

  • @davidgdgdg
    @davidgdgdg 2 года назад

    How wonderfully refreshing 👍🙏🏻

  • @bojanninkovic707
    @bojanninkovic707 3 года назад +1

    Kudos for this video 👍

  • @huseinmahmutovic7822
    @huseinmahmutovic7822 3 года назад +1

    This is Marcel, he is flying rocket

  • @gatticusfpv3174
    @gatticusfpv3174 3 года назад +2

    Ah yes I fought very hard with my coaches about pretty much all these points. Like don't sit there and tell me to have a straight femur when you know damn well there's a ton of extension and contraction of the legs in proper ski racing. WHEN the femur is vertical is far more important.
    The only point I'd add is that airing out the tips can in the right snow conditions lead you to having a very NOT fun time. There were a few training days I had where the entire team just could not figure out the snow conditions. It was like skiing on little frozen ball bearings even on our fully prepped slalom course. You couldn't build early edge pressure without everything slipping away. But if you made sure you had really strong consistent cuff pressure through the transition you'd be fine. Letting the tips rise up was enough to disturb the forward pressure enough to cause slideage. So the trick was simply doing the compact "Marcel" transition like normal but while adding just a bit more dorsiflexion and arching of the back to keep the tips firmly on the ground through the transition.

  • @rafaburdzy449
    @rafaburdzy449 3 года назад +8

    Yes, NUMBER ONE IN SKIING JUST HAVE FUN !! IF YOU DON'T HAVE FUN WHAT IS A POINT OF SKIING !! : )

  • @spritenews5358
    @spritenews5358 24 дня назад

    What Marcel Hirscher can get away with physically far exceeds what even excellent recreational skiers can.
    Even for very good recreational skiers, the advice to stay stacked and out of the back seat is excellent advice. I’m a very experienced skier but not particularly strong in my lower body. Some of my ski buddies are exceptional athletes, incredible skiers in all conditions, and very strong in the lower body. All of them will tell you getting in the back seat is the quickest way to fry your quads and your ski day earlier than you want.

  • @alessandraurbancich6194
    @alessandraurbancich6194 3 года назад

    Great video!

  • @k9aussie898
    @k9aussie898 3 года назад +4

    Cool video 😎

  • @blaisebrochard199
    @blaisebrochard199 3 года назад +1

    Do you have a similar video on very hard snow?

  • @ostojamartrix
    @ostojamartrix 3 года назад +1

    Great CH... Make a video about Goat, Janica.

  • @markfoster2530
    @markfoster2530 3 года назад

    Enjoyed your this video it’s a great break down of the body in motion. Fun to watch such a dynamic skier!!!!
    If I were to help improve the average skier these are definitely tell tail sighs to look for of an off balanced skier. Mind you we are watching a “superhero” athlete top in his field,on cutting edge equipment, on perfectly groomed snow., on what appears to be blue terrain. I guess what im trying to say is it’s not reality. I ski in the northeast of New England and we get ICE, hard pack, polished porcelain and it’s critical to be on the whole ski with the body properly balanced. With that said there is nothing like taking a deep side cut slalom ski that has a fresh tune and ripping it out in the early morning on fresh corduroy. Popping from turn to turn.

    • @Matt-cc1jv
      @Matt-cc1jv Месяц назад

      By pushing myself to ski faster and to turn quicker, my completely unskischooled body learned a ski technique that worked in nearly all snow conditions (this was back in the 60's and 70's). That technique is a whole lot like what Marcel is doing in this video. You are correct though, the one condition it doesn't work in is on polished, porcelain like, glare ice. There you need to be centered over the skis because you never know when even your sharp edges won't hold a carved turn and suddenly let go into a sideways skid (or into a spin-out if you are too far forward, or too far back).
      I love my slalom racing skis for their excellent edge grip on most ice, and for their great carving ability (I managed two carve two circles on frozen spring slush with one momentum on them (twice in three tries). On the first try my cell phone started ringing and in trying to answer it, I stalled out at the top of the second circle). This was at an early freestyle skiers reunion at Park City in 2014, at the age of 68. Those racing skis are way too springy to use at high speed through moguls though, because that springy rebound throws you much higher up into the air, after being bent way down into a trough in the moguls (rebounding upwards results in much harder and a much less accurately placed landing). What you want in moguls is to stay as low a possible, your butt just missing the mogul top and your head sometimes almost between your knees. That keeps your skis on the snow as much as possible for better control.
      Slalom ski rebound is great on a rutted slalom course because the rebound then springs you back and forth, from rut to rut, and through the gates much quicker. With far less springy skis, this sitting back technique also works best in moguls, as well. Your skis and feet fend off the bumps ahead and it is much easier to recover from being too far back than it is from being too far forward.
      Sitting back in powder lets your skis ramp up in it and then porpoise up out and dive back in to the powder with each turn. Carving turns is easy when sitting back because with more pressure on the ski tails they resist skidding sideways.

  • @chopin4321
    @chopin4321 Год назад

    yes.. way to go.. so free.. authentic.. this is music.. he is dancing.. so free.. so joyful.. all ski instructors should imitate and teach this.. technique limits people.. spirit brings technique.. without spirit technique is artificial.. goes against you.. just like playing the piano... love this video.. liberates... thanks

  • @waynewilliams839
    @waynewilliams839 Год назад

    Thank you!!

  • @FDIMoot
    @FDIMoot 3 года назад +1

    OK, not taking too seriously, but this is racing technique (sitting on tails for acceleration, high-speed, centifugal forces allowing even requiring leaning in, etc) on a groomed & grippy slope, as opposed to efficient sking for bumps, steeps, powder, ice ... :-)

  • @TheRockerxx69
    @TheRockerxx69 3 года назад +1

    He can do all of it !!!! He can.

  • @valera.bukovel
    @valera.bukovel 3 года назад

    Good video!

  • @dj_617
    @dj_617 3 года назад +6

    I make all these mistakes. That does not make me Hirscher unfortunately. Thanks Reilly, this skiing was fun to watch and so was your video.

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +2

      Maybe you are Hirscher!

    • @dj_617
      @dj_617 3 года назад +1

      Only insofar that we both have Dutch blood.

  • @davidodonnell8742
    @davidodonnell8742 2 года назад

    now that's neat!

  • @i3bufitt
    @i3bufitt 3 года назад

    Great video. I am thinking that his inclination (as opposed to angulation) at the apex and his going on the inside ski (also at the apex) is probably due to the fact that he is trained to go out as far as possible (in particular with the inside ski) to pass the gates. This might not be the ideal way of skiing for a non-racer. In this sense there is not necessarily a contradiction with the common wisdom that it is (in general) not a good idea to go on the inside ski.

  • @jakobwerle9374
    @jakobwerle9374 3 года назад

    Many things you pointed out are not happening for reasons that you described. I would love to have a deeper conversation about this.

  • @riccapatrol
    @riccapatrol 3 года назад

    FANTASTIC VIDEO 👏👏👏👏

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад

      Glad you enjoyed it

    • @riccapatrol
      @riccapatrol 3 года назад

      @@ReillyMcGlashan Absolutely just used this video in my ski coaching this morning lol

  • @rommeltoes
    @rommeltoes 3 года назад +1

    Awesome video, Reilly! Totally agree. But to keep it real-- Marcel can make any mistake look good!
    Great skiers make technique work for them. Average skiers are slaves to technique...

  • @expatinasia
    @expatinasia 3 года назад +6

    I loved this.
    I would love to see Hirscher put on a fake beard and set up a few hidden cameras and take a group lesson at one of the more well known resorts and simply like this to see how the teachers would correct him.

  • @wailwailwail412
    @wailwailwail412 Год назад

    A ski trainer a I had told me once: "race training fu#ks up your skiing". Seeing this video reminded me that quote. Technical skiing and competitive skiing seek two different goals. In a race, the fastest time wins. Of course there are fundamentals behind. But that's the ultimate goal of ski racing. I don't agree with that quote, but I understand it now.

  • @Landwy1
    @Landwy1 3 года назад

    Over the years I've tended to use longer skis than other skiers. To get a shorter radius turn I've had to really pressure the skis into a rebound that hopefully had that energy throwing my body mass down the hill rather than upward. I've always been a dynamic skier. Well I'm now at that age where I don't have as much flexibility nor strength. I've gone to women's length skis (i.e. 188cm GS versus 193cm for men). There is an old saying in ski racing that strength equals speed. This means being able to pressure (bend) the skis which is camber that can be used to accelerate by directing a forward rebound.
    Unfortunately, I don't have as much leg strength nor flexibility to drop my hip to near the snow level as I once had. Alice Robinson squats a bunch of 150 kg reps every day. She just destroys GS events with her power.. Fortunately for Shiffrin, and Vlhova, she (Robinson) doesn't have a technical mastery as they have.

  • @stevebag3720
    @stevebag3720 3 года назад +3

    When I watch this short video it looks like Marcel is letting his feet fly out from under him side to side rather than a toppling type movement. Any thoughts?

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад +4

      toppling is just "overbalance or cause to overbalance and fall" he ends up on the inside ski a lot so this to me is an aggressive topple... No doubt his skis are redirecting across the hill which aids in toppling, they are both interlinked.

    • @pongtang3
      @pongtang3 3 года назад

      He finds himself on the inside ski because he is losing control through the release of the turn, he extends off the tail causing the outside ski to rebound across his entire body, shooting him up and out of the turn. I am a big supporter in fun, dynamic movement when learning to ski. Maybe he can focus on his leg angulation of the outside ski. That should help him stay on that outside ski.

    • @gregorydavid5894
      @gregorydavid5894 3 года назад

      @@pongtang3 I don't think you qualify to give Marcel advice

  • @erikwoodward1268
    @erikwoodward1268 3 года назад

    Where do I acquire that hat? Oh yea, those are some bad ass turns!

  • @richardelder256
    @richardelder256 3 года назад

    I spent a couple of days at a master's race camp being coached by a guy who had skied with Bode Miller when he was a young teenager. His comment: "That kid has never started a turn with his pressure on the ski tips in his life!"
    The first time I saw Bode race at a Nor Am he was skiing on K2 recreational shaped skis ---- completely different from anybody else's equipment.

  • @jagers4xford471
    @jagers4xford471 3 года назад

    Yes, that's how Marcel Hirscher skis... And I ski like I ski and Ted skis like he skis. I agree, we all ski differently. I don't recommend people try to duplicate their hero's technique, but, a little technical thievery can go along way. In Dynamic Steering we encourage whole body participation. Park n riders need not apply. I liked your video, thanks...

  • @davidbeazer9799
    @davidbeazer9799 3 года назад

    “Back seat” looks like the only way to have this super flexed super amazing transition. He transitions from a more commonly accepted position through the back seat to a more commonly accepted position. He’s the best at this and it took a ton of practice. No technique is necessarily wrong, it depends on what you’re trying to do! If you’re standing up in transition your legs have nowhere to go without relying too much on inclining.

    • @fredhughes4115
      @fredhughes4115 2 года назад

      I think it's important to note that while Hirscher is in the "back seat" the skis are not loaded (ie. under pressure). By the time the skis load up he is standing back in the middle.

    • @davidbeazer9799
      @davidbeazer9799 2 года назад

      @@fredhughes4115 Excellent Point!

    • @gairnmclennan5876
      @gairnmclennan5876 Год назад

      Yes Fred I'm with you. The knees bend to lift the ski's off the snow, so his weight is slammed down as he gets deep into the next turn. He is getting enough rebound from the ski's to jump across to the next turn.

  • @olivierrenassia1104
    @olivierrenassia1104 3 года назад

    As you say all depends on the skier ... heavy doubt about lambda skier having skills to recover from any of the turns MH is doing there ... your analysis is great ... as usual, however im not sure you mentioned the different phases of the turn the « mistake » was made ...
    Which to me defines if it’s a mistake or not ...thanks anyway 💪🤙

  • @lucavicentini9464
    @lucavicentini9464 3 года назад

    By staying flexed in the transition he extends the exterior leg in the apex of the bend, thus balancing the power on both edges, flexing the skis and generating the energy for the bounce back and new transition... I think!

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад

      yes from this low position he extends fast straight after this. His tangental angle of the path of his COM relative to the path of his skis though is interesting... This leaves him on the inside ski the top part of the turn.

  • @magnificoas388
    @magnificoas388 3 года назад

    Nice free skiing of H ! Lots of angle and rebound here. Skis in the air (your point 3) is not a mistake since it is just a wanted result. The mistake would be if H didnt control. But he does control these rebounds by retracting in transition, that is why his hips are not over feet (your point 1). Btw "hips over feet in transition" is not a rule at all, the rule is "staying low, hips forward as possible" (meaning if you have rebound you have to control it by retracting and at the same time not going back seat too much).

    • @ReillyMcGlashan
      @ReillyMcGlashan  3 года назад

      none of these are my rules... but you hear them from various organisations around the world as things to never do... I don't follow the rules... Rules should only ever be created based on the desired result... Peoples desired results are all personal so this means their rules to accomplish their result will vary. Some people want to just ski green runs and be parallel and carving big angles is not their goal, so standing up and being in a more vertical position with hips over their feet will be useful for them (where that "rule" might be valid). I am not a rule guy.

    • @magnificoas388
      @magnificoas388 3 года назад

      @@ReillyMcGlashan ahah you should be :) The main thing is to understand the principles beyond the rules...and actually the principle here is not "standing up" but "going forward".

  • @florianredecsy4997
    @florianredecsy4997 3 года назад +3

    01:19 green Jacket is what’s been told. For me that was always out of balance. Way to far forward. My background is icehockey and obviously a lot of inline skating in summer. If going downhill on skates and do green type you would land on your face every time. If you watch quick turns in hockey they are like Marcel Hirscher. In speed skating you try to have your belly button more or less over the middle of the feet not like the green way over the toes.

  • @AccordionJoe1
    @AccordionJoe1 3 года назад +1

    What passes for skiing these days is coming down the mountain out of control, skis wide apart, arms flailing, slam banging from one mogul to the next. I am 80 and have emulated the grace and beauty of the late Stein Ericksen since I was fresh out of college. People continually come up to me and say they wish they could ski like I do -- feet close together, poles out to the side, reverse shoulder movement, and one smooth turn after another. ps -- I ski on 200 cm narrow skis, not a pair of 165 cm boards that are as wide as water skis.

    • @ianholmquist8492
      @ianholmquist8492 3 года назад +3

      Wow that's a lot of big talk. I thought skiing was about having fun. It is after all the most elegant form of travel ever devised by man. Why the need to bash other people if you are so godlike and good?

    • @ArcFixer
      @ArcFixer 3 года назад

      Hi, Joseph. Old Park City local here. Kudos for still getting out there and getting after it.
      I knew Stein. I shanked a lot of golf balls into his back yard when he lived on the golf course back in the 80s. I worked in his ski shop at Deer Valley off and on during the last twelve years. He was as Gracious to me and everyone else as he was Graceful on skis.
      Trashing other skiers is not Stein's Way. That's as far off track as you can get. Attaching yourself to Stein's reputation then trashing other skiers contrary to everything he believed in is a disgrace.
      I suggest you put more effort into emulating Stein's Gracious Spirit and less emphasis on your ability to mimic his technique.
      I never wanted to ski like Stein. But I've always tried to ski with his amazing Grace and his Gracious Spirit. That's taken my skiing further than I ever thought it would go.
      Be content with your own skiing and the compliments that come with it. Sounds like you're still skiing pretty good and having fun.
      That’s good enough for the girls I go with. :)
      .

  • @zelenizub2036
    @zelenizub2036 3 года назад +6

    Sad thing is he never learned how to ski property. Lets imagine how good he would be if he knew how to do it...