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Rogatkin finds redemption Cairns Slopestyle

Rogatkin finds redemption Cairns Slopestyle

After four long years, Nicholai Rogatkin is back on top. The first-ever winner of Crankworx Triple Crown of Slopestyle has endured a long drought, with his last win coming back in 2018. at Crankworx first stop in Cairns, Australia, the U.S. slopestyle was on form and back on top of the podium.

It was a big day for Canadian fans, too, with three riders finishing in the top 10 in Cairns led by Ben Thompson.

Canadians in Cairns

Three Canadians were on the start list for the Cairns slopestyle. Ben Thompson led the effort with a big fifth place finish by scoring 75.5 points. Griffin Paulson followed in seventh with 70 points. Max Langille in eighth rounded out the Canuck results, scoring 65. It is exciting to see three Canadians on a Crankworx slopestyle resutls sheet after a few years without many home-team riders on the Crankworx circuit.

Rogatkin spins for the win. Photo: Clint Trahan

Rogatkin’s redemption

Slopestyle can be a sport of highs and lows. After hitting the highest of highs, winning the Crankworx Triple Crown of Slopestyle, Nicholai Rogatkin’s been missing from the top podium step for a full four years. The dominance of Emil Johansson has pushed the U.S. rider to second at best. That ended in Cairns on Saturday.

But the road to the top wasn’t easy. After the first run, it was German Erik Fedko leading the field.

“Landing that first run felt amazing,” said Fedko opening run. “I ended up first after the first runs, so I was hyped.”

Erik Fedko in Cairns. Photo: Clint Trahan

But Rogatkin has something special in store. A series of crashes in the opening run, including one that took Emil Johansson out of competition, left the American a little unnerved and just off of the win. The veteran slopstyle rider regrouped and went back for more. Feeding off the huge Australian crowd, Rogatkin stomped a near-perfect run to take the lead.

“Me and Australia have just been a match made in heaven. I live off the crowd so much,” said 26-year-old U.S. rider. “Up there, quiet, in the zone, but I’m like ‘I gotta get down there, I gotta experience that hype, I gotta give those fans what they want to see.’ That’s why I was kind of bummed after the first run. I got a little tripped out by seeing a bunch of the guys mess up their runs. So I kept it really safe. But in the second runs I was like ‘I’ve got nothing to lose, if I want to…

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