Covers

Devun Walsh. Whistler Backcountry, B.C.

TransWorld SNOWboarding November 2006

Devun Walsh on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s November 2006 issue.

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Tadishi Fuse, Whistler Backcountry, B.C.

TransWorld SNOWboarding October 2006

Tadashi Fuse on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s October 2006 issue.

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Mikey LeBlanc finally lands the cover of TWS! It’s about time. He’s been punishing pavement with a battered spine for so many years now-relentlessly. The backside 180 to flat at Brighton years ago was brutal, but c’mon now-twenty-plus stairs, floating way the hell out there, to flat. Over barbed wire. Somebody has issues. And maybe that’s why we all love him … No, we’re not referring to his infamous tantrums, although those are endearing too-but rather his ability to harness rage for a leap of faith as daunting as this one. Hell yeah, Mikey. SLC, Utah.

TransWorld SNOWboarding September 2006

Mikey LeBlanc on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s September 2006 issue.

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TransWorld SNOWboarding April 2006

Donn Hore on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s April 2006 issue.

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DonnyS

TransWorld SNOWboarding March 2006

MFM on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s March 2006 issue.

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Cover shots are like a flash of lightning, they can take place at the most unlikely times and locations. A quick snap of the shutter by our resident artist Kevin Zacher and bam!-Wyatt Caldwell and Snowbowl, Arizona are on the map.

TransWorld SNOWboarding February 2006

Wyatt Caldwell on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s February 2006 issue.

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It’s an image –is-everything world, and Andreas Wiig (pronounced Wig) has the images that count-like this month’s cover shot. When Andreas first came to the Sates from Norway, he had ten words of the English and a dream. Four years later, he’s respected and liked by the best riders in the world, and he’s still as wide0eed about snowboarding as ever. His interview begins on page 142. Lake Tahoe backcountry, California.

TransWorld SNOWboarding January 2006

Andreas Wiig on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s January 2006 issue.

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Jeremy Jones lands his second TransWorld cover in tow years. Jeremy enters the limelight again via a potentially technical nightmare in Haines, Alaska. Accessing this line was a delicate life or death situation. We’re in the midst of a backcountry revival right now, thank god. Handrails have become redundant, man-even the young guns are aiming their sites towards all-mountain domination. This clearly leaves Jeremy Jones in a position of Power-after all, AK is his arena.

TransWorld SNOWboarding December 2005

Jeremy Jones on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s December 2005 issue.

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At only seventeen, Scotty Lago is one of the youngest riders ever to get a cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding. Riding at the age of six, Lago (pronounced lay-go) was sponsored by the time he was eight. He’s a teenage veteran, but he’s far from burning out. Scotty’s riding is just coming into its own- maturing at an almost adolescent pace. Late in the summer, he was riding under the tutelage of the U.S. Snowboard program in New Zealand and in Chile- evidently honing his skills for a big future. TransWorld Team Challenge. Snowmass, Coloardo.

TransWorld SNOWboarding November 2005

Scotty Lago on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s November 2005 issue.

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Last Month we asked Eddie Wall when he was last scared to death. He said, “Hitting this ledge in Finland between a second—and third-story park garage. It had a 30-plus-foot drop to dry concrete. Falling voer the edge was not even an option-it would have been the end of me for sure.” Factor in the sub-sub-zero temps, tight secrurity, and gusting corsswinds, and you’ve got one of our most potentially deadly cover shots.

TransWorld SNOWboarding October 2005

Eddie Wall on the cover of TransWorld SNOWboarding’s October 2005 issue.

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