Freddie Winter Returns to the Podium at Swiss Pro Slalom

At Swiss Pro, Winter’s Comeback Steals the Spotlight

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At Swiss Pro, Freddie Winter’s comeback steals the spotlight

Freddie Winter Returns to the Podium at Swiss Pro Slalom

Image: @thefredwinter

By Jack Burden


CLERMONT, FLA. — On Sunday afternoon, under the sinking Florida sun at Swiss Waterski Resort, Freddie Winter climbed back onto a professional podium for the first time since the crash that nearly ended his career.

For the outspoken Englishman, the third-place finish at the Swiss Pro Slalom wasn’t just another podium—it was a statement. Less than a year removed from a broken femur that sidelined him for most of 2024, the two-time world slalom champion reminded the waterski world that not only is he back—he’s still a threat.

“I sat in bed watching a lot of skiing in the following months wanting so bad to be back amongst it,” Winter wrote after the event. “I’ve worked as hard as I know how since to get back to where I could be competitive. Yesterday it started to feel like I can be.”

Nate Smith was, as ever, imperious. His 5 at 41 (10.25m) in the finals comfortably secured a seventh Swiss Pro title, continuing his reign as the most dominant male slalom skier of the past decade. Vaughn, in second, has picked up his strong form from 2024, delivering one of the event’s grittier performances.

Yet the buzz along the shoreline and in the digital stands—thousands tuning into The Waterski Broadcasting Company’s stream—centered on the fiery Brit. In a sport that often rewards the relentless metronome of perfection, Winter’s brand of visible, determined grind struck a different chord.

Elite slalom skiing is a sport of risk and razor-thin margins. At last June’s Monaco Slalom Cup, Freddie’s pursuit of victory ended with a violent crash into the dock. The images of him stretchered off were a stark reminder of how quickly everything can change.

Doctors predicted up to a year off the water. He gave it just over six months.

While Sunday’s result doesn’t fully reflect his ultimate ambitions, it signals clear progress. After battling through early rounds, Winter secured a place in the finals alongside some of the sport’s most consistent performers.

“I’m a work in progress and I’m happy,” he said. “I’m very happy to be competing with all these guys where I was really struggling not too long ago.”

Winter’s podium performance isn’t just about his skiing—it signals that the 2025 season is shaping up to be as fiercely competitive as 2024, if not more. With veterans like Travers, Asher, and Smith still pushing the limits, and a rising wave of new challengers, the men’s field is sharper and more crowded than ever.

With Freddie Winter back in the fold, the season just got a lot more interesting.

Tristan Duplan-Fribourg

Duplan-Fribourg Brothers Shine at First Masters Qualifier

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Duplan-Fribourg brothers shine at first Masters Qualifier

Tristan Duplan-Fribourg

“Every step of my rehabilitation has been a victory, no matter how small” (image: @tristan.duplanfribourg)

By Jack Burden


AUBURNDALE, FLA. — Tristan Duplan-Fribourg has returned to competitive water skiing in style after a life-threatening crash last season. The 17-year-old Frenchman delivered a career-best 12,090 points at the Masters Qualifying Series 1 in Auburndale, Florida, securing his spot at the 2025 Junior Masters and entering the exclusive 12,000-point club — a threshold only 13 skiers before him have crossed.

Eleven months ago, Duplan-Fribourg lay in a medically induced coma with a fractured eye socket, torn hip bone, and severe head trauma after two devastating jump crashes at the 2024 Junior Masters. Today, he is back on top of the water ski world, and more determined than ever.

“The skis, which seemed so far away a few months ago, are now under my feet. It’s an indescribable feeling — rediscovering speed, freedom, adrenaline,” Tristan shared on social media last month. “No matter how serious the fall, what always matters is the strength to get back up.”

Post-injury, he has opted to specialize in tricks and jump, no longer competing in slalom or overall — a move he describes as “full of doubts, sacrifices, and self-questioning” but one that is clearly paying dividends.

Older brother Louis, the reigning world overall champion, also impressed in Auburndale. A 69.8-meter jump (229 feet) — a personal best and new French record — punched his ticket in jump, while tricking over 12,000 points locked in qualification there as well.

The past year has tested the Duplan-Fribourg brothers. Louis rebounded from shoulder surgery to finish runner-up to Joel Poland on the WWS Overall Tour, while Pol — who recently captured the 2025 University World overall title — had his 2024 season derailed by a fractured ankle and herniated disc.

Across the weekend, several other skiers also booked their tickets to the 2025 Masters. Thomas Degasperi, Vennesa Vieke, and Paige Rini Pigozzi advanced in slalom; Patricio Font, Rini Pigozzi, and Giannina Bonnemann Mechler in tricks; and Jack Critchley, Aliaksandra Danishuesksaya, and Regina Jaquess in jump.

But it is Tristan’s comeback that lingers.

Eleven months ago, his world was hospital rooms and hard questions. This weekend, it was measured in rotations and records — and in the quiet certainty of someone who never stopped believing.

2025 Masters Water Ski Criteria

Masters Revises Qualification Criteria—A Step Forward, for Some

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Masters revises qualification criteria—A step forward, for some

2025 Masters Water Ski Criteria

2025 Masters Water Ski Criteria (image: Masters)

By Jack Burden


There’s been movement in the boardrooms of Correct Craft.

After growing discontent—and at least one shouted critique—the Masters Water Ski & Wakeboard Tournament has announced revised qualification criteria for 2025. It’s not a wholesale reform, but it is a tangible step forward.

The headline tweak? Repeat champions will no longer monopolize invitation slots. If a skier sweeps multiple qualifying events—as Ryan Dodd did in 2023 by winning all four Nautique-sanctioned tournaments—their dominance won’t cost someone else a chance. Now, when an athlete wins more than one qualifying event, the additional invitations cascade down to the next-best finishers. That’s how Will Asher, Matias Gonzalez, and Lauren Morgan—standouts over the last 12 months—have secured their tickets to Callaway Gardens without relying on a frantic last-minute qualifier.

It’s a simple adjustment—but in a system accused of favoring geography over merit, it’s a meaningful one.

And it’s already having an impact. Heading into this weekend’s first Masters Qualifier, half the spots in most professional disciplines are already spoken for. That’s a stark contrast to 2024, when as many as seven of eight invitations in some events were decided during two mid-May weekends in Central Florida. The shift gives deserving pros more breathing room—and a clearer path to one of the sport’s most prestigious stages.

But the momentum stops short.

The new rules do not extend to the Junior Masters, where qualification criteria remain virtually unchanged. The repeat champion clause? Still absent. Junior skiers must continue to rely heavily on results from these two amateur events—both held in Central Florida.

It’s a system that may reward proximity over potential. While professional athletes often live and train year-round in the Sunshine State, juniors typically don’t have that luxury—nor the freedom to miss multiple weeks of school in pursuit of a qualification score.

The result? A field that increasingly resembles a Florida state championship with a glossy title.

Imagine telling a 15-year-old phenom from Chile or France that their shot at one of the sport’s biggest youth stages depends not just on talent, but on whether their parents can bankroll a multi-week Florida tour during exam season. That’s not a qualification system—it’s a filter for privilege.

There are viable solutions. For juniors, allocating some of the invitations based on the amateur performance ranking list seems a logical fit for an amateur event. As we’ve discussed in the past, the Waterski Pro Tour standings could help shape qualification for professionals as well.

Let’s be clear: Nautique and the Masters deserve credit. The 2025 update is an overdue acknowledgment that the pandemic-era system was flawed—and that the sport’s top talent deserves better. The new rules are already producing fairer outcomes.

But they also send a second message: the old system wasn’t working.

So why stop halfway?

The Masters has always been more than just a tournament. It’s a gathering of champions, steeped in history—a flagship for the sport. But if it hopes to maintain that status in a globalized, post-pandemic era, the path to Robin Lake must be one the entire world can realistically reach.

NAUTIQUE WELCOMES WATERSKIERS ROBERT PIGOZZI AND PATO FONT TO THE TEAM

Boat Deals Dry Up: Font, Pigozzi Out at Nautique

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Font, Pigozzi quietly exit Nautique roster amid shrinking support for elite waterskiing

NAUTIQUE WELCOMES WATERSKIERS ROBERT PIGOZZI AND PATO FONT TO THE TEAM

Nautique signed the two promising juniors in 2019 (image: Nautique)

By Jack Burden


Reigning world trick champion Patricio Font and Dominican slalom skier Robert Pigozzi appear to have parted ways with Nautique Boats, marking another quiet contraction in elite waterskiing’s already narrow support structure.

Font, still firmly at the top of the trick world, shared a succinct goodbye on social media: “Thank you Nautique for the past 6 years of success and memories, it’s been real.” Pigozzi has not made a public statement regarding the change, but both names have vanished from Nautique’s athlete page.

Their departure bookends a partnership that began with hype. In 2019, Nautique signed the duo in a press release touting them as “two of the hottest waterskiers in the sport right now.” Since then, Font has cemented his place in history—becoming a two-time world champion and breaking one of the sport’s longest-standing world records—while Pigozzi’s once-blazing rise has cooled, his recent struggles a stark contrast to the swagger and dominance of the pre-pandemic years.

Font’s departure feels particularly significant—not just because of his ongoing dominance, but because it leaves a glaring void. He was the last male trick skier with a dedicated boat sponsorship, aside from MasterCraft’s Joel Poland, whose all-around excellence across all three disciplines keeps him marketable in a way few others are.

The backdrop to this is a sport under economic and cultural siege. Waterskiing, once the centerpiece of lake life, is being increasingly marginalized by the rise of wakeboarding and wakesurfing. Manufacturers have followed the money: Malibu effectively cut ties with elite skiing in 2024, terminating longtime promo manager Dennis Kelley and parting ways with Regina Jaquess and Thomas Degasperi—who quickly found refuge at Nautique.

That lifeboat is starting to feel overcrowded. With Font and Pigozzi’s apparent departures, only 14 professional skiers now hold boat sponsorships globally—eight with Nautique, six with MasterCraft. Fewer boats, fewer deals, fewer lifelines.

The waters are getting choppy. And for athletes at the sport’s summit, there’s less and less boat beneath them.

the excitement of Swiss Pro Tricks

From Backyard Records to Global Stages: The Evolution of Pro Trick Skiing

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From backyard records to global stages: The evolution of pro trick skiing

the excitement of Swiss Pro Tricks

Image: @tiaremirandaphotography 

Waterski Pro Tour


Of the athletes from each of professional waterskiing’s three disciplines, trickers have the greatest preoccupation with tournament scores. Whereas pro slalomers and jumpers are, on the whole, primarily concerned with the placement their scores bring them, a conversation with a pro tricker about their season goals will often center around breaking a certain trick point barrier, frequently the world record.

This discrepancy across events – incredibly few slalom or jump skiers consider the world record as a primary goal – is a product of the health of tricks as a professional event, or lack thereof. The total number of pro trick events in the last decade is utterly dwarfed by those of jump, and especially slalom. Often there were only two events, Moomba and Masters, in which a tricker could compete for money. In these years the professional season was finished in May. Inevitably a focus on big scores ensued, as the hard working trickers sought a reason to continue their endeavor for the rest of the year. 

Unfortunately this meant many of tricking’s most impressive feats occurred largely unseen: in events in someone or other’s backyard, with a handful of competitors and maybe the odd alligator as a ‘crowd’. Realistically these were more ‘trial’ rounds with real competition between athletes very thin on the ground. These scores might be posted on social media in grainy video at some point down the road, in the event of an approved record, but a huge majority of these performances would never be experienced by anyone much beyond the skier themselves. Indeed, presumably unless a personal best was broken the whole thing was considered a waste of time. A true shame given that pro level tricking – certainly waterskiing’s most diverse discipline – is extraordinarily impressive.

In the last years, new trick events have popped up to offer a platform to these athletes who so needed a greater, more consistent stage. This started two years ago with the first Swiss Pro Tricks, an event whose primary aim was to give tricking the front and center treatment: a full day of pure spins, flips, line-over and toeholds without any distraction from the other disciplines that often hog the limelight. Fortunately others have taken up the mantle: this summer there will be a handful of events across Europe making up a trick tour. And, even better, it is inarguable that when these athletes are given the opportunity to perform in front of the world they do so. And then some.

The Swiss Pro Tricks of 2025 not only saw the best ever scores in a pro event by both women and men but, in a confirmation that real competition brings out the best in top athletes, they each occurred exactly when it counted: in the final.

In the women’s event, across the opening two rounds there were few surprises. Erika Lang, Anna Gay and Neilly Ross, for so long the dominant trio of women’s tricking, cantered into the final with scores above 10k. Giannina Bonnemann claimed the comeback of the day, qualifying not too far behind in fourth, just eight months after bearing her first child. 

In the final itself Neilly Ross’s final flip was out of time leaving her 10,300. Anna Gay’s 10,890 second to last off the dock left her leading as Erika Lang took to the water. But, as Gay herself mentioned in an interview, Lang is a hell of a competitor. No one was surprised the when she needed to go big for her 2nd win of the year she went huge: Erika broke the 11k barrier for the first time this year in women’s skiing while setting the best ever pro event score in the process. 

Erika’s ascendency to the dominant tricker of recent times should be studied. In the decade after winning her first event in March 2013 she won a further 10 events. In the last 2 years and 2 months she has won 10 events of a possible 12. On today’s evidence no one would count against her continuing this run far into the future.

Conversely to the women’s division, men’s tricks has recently been a relative to-and-fro between a number of the experienced and up-and-comers. Pato Font’s own period of near-total dominance ended with wins from a broader pool of skiers. In the last year these have included Mati Gonzalez, Jake Abelson and Martin Labra (absent from this event due to a knee injury). 

Gonzalez was the defending champion here after his debut win at last year’s event. The start of his defence did not go to plan as a judging camera malfunction meant he had to return to the water after what would have been a good run. The subsequent fall put him at risk of missing the final if he had a substandard second qualifying round. There would have been many viewers concerned for the visibly rattled 17 year old. Not to worry though: his second round saw him top score in qualifying with 12,510 despite claiming he was trying to go “very slow” to ensure he wouldn’t repeat a fall. But the best was yet to come.

Disappointing rounds in the final from Pato Font and Jake Abelson meant there was an opportunity. Louis Duplain-Fribourg, perhaps the best tricker without a pro win, came close with 11,850. Joel Poland must have thought he’d done enough with a personal best of 12,400 – superior to his winning score at this event two years ago. But then came something special. Mati Gonzalez, proving to be an old head on young shoulders as he completed the perfect comeback arc across three rounds, brought the house down with an astonishing 12,860. Amongst his elation, even he was surprised.

2025 will see the most professional trick events in a single year in living memory. This is a huge opportunity not only for the athletes to compete where it counts – in front of the eyes of the world – but also for fans of waterskiing and beyond to really get to grips with and buy into this hitherto unheralded discipline. As for today, at the 2025 Swiss Pro Tricks, a world record was not broken. No, the intensity of the competition, the diversity of athleticism and the magnitude of multiple performances made what we saw that much greater.

In the Gray Area: DEA Agent Chad Scott and downfall of the DEA New Orleans Task Force

Chad Scott’s Story Resurfaces with #1 Bestseller

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Chad Scott’s story resurfaces with #1 bestseller

In the Gray Area: DEA Agent Chad Scott and downfall of the DEA New Orleans Task Force

Image: Amazon

By Jack Burden


A new book, In the Gray Area, has climbed to the No. 1 spot on Amazon’s Crime & Criminal Biographies chart, bringing national attention back to a name familiar to many in the waterskiing world: Chad Scott.

Co-written by former DEA supervisor James “Skip” Sewell, the book chronicles Scott’s dramatic arc from celebrated federal agent to federal inmate. Known as “The White Devil” by drug traffickers in Louisiana, Scott was once a decorated member of the DEA’s New Orleans Task Force—until his arrest and 13.5-year prison sentence turned him from lawman to defendant.

For waterskiers, Scott’s story hits closer to home. Known as both an elite level skier and tournament boat driver. He could run deep into 39 off, then hop in the boat and pull a world record. From Big Dawg victories to pulling skiers at the highest levels, Scott was a household name in competitive waterski circles.

Though now serving time at a federal prison camp, Scott remains connected to the sport and its community. In a recent statement posted on Ball of Spray , he shared his gratitude and hopes for the future: “I’m trying to stay in shape physically in hopes of returning to the water and seeing you guys on the starting dock once again… Till then, keep swerving out there and turn one for me.” His son, Tyler, says the book is more than just a recounting—it’s part of a broader effort to raise awareness and advocate for clemency.

As the book continues to top charts, it’s a reminder that Scott’s name, both in waterskiing and beyond, still sparks conversation—and that his story isn’t over yet.


Supporters of Chad Scott are encouraging purchases, shares, and reviews of In the Gray Area to amplify the story. The book is currently available on Amazon.

Swiss Pro Tricks to Open 2025 Waterski Pro Tour

Swiss Pro Tricks to Open 2025 Waterski Pro Tour

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Swiss Pro Tricks to open 2025 Waterski Pro Tour with elite lineup and historic momentum

Swiss Pro Tricks to Open 2025 Waterski Pro Tour

Image: @swissprowaterski

By Jack Burden


The Waterski Pro Tour is back—and it’s trick skiing that gets first dibs.

For the third straight year, the Swiss Pro Tricks will kick off the season, and if recent history is any guide, this Central Florida showdown won’t be easing into anything. With a field stacked top to bottom—28 of the world’s best, representing 12 countries, and featuring every world trick champion from the last decade—this is more than an opener. It’s a statement.

Trick skiing has often played third fiddle to slalom and jump. Not here. Not anymore. The Swiss Pro Tricks is tricks-only, and unapologetically so. No warm-up acts. No side stages. Just the most technical, most explosive discipline in the sport under the full glare of the spotlight.

In 2023, the tournament made history with three athletes scoring over 12,000 in the same event. In 2024, fans saw pending world records. In 2025, they may see something even rarer—consistency at the top in a discipline known for chaos.

Trick Skiing’s Renaissance Season

While details of the 2025 Waterski Pro Tour are still being finalized, one thing is already clear: this will be trick skiing’s biggest season yet. For the first time ever, four trick events will appear on the Pro Tour calendar—more than any previous year—alongside at least three additional non-tour trick events.

For a long time, tricking was underrepresented in pro waterskiing. Now, it’s starting to lead the charge.

“It’s really important for us as trickers to have events; we’ve been lacking a little bit recently,” said former Swiss Pro Tricks champion Joel Poland. “Tricking’s coming back! I’m getting goosebumps saying it.”

What’s Next on Tour?

After the dust settles in Florida, the Tour shifts gears. A six-week break allows space for the always prestigious US Masters and its contentious qualifying series. Then, it’s back to the Pro Tour with the Lake 38 ProAm in the Florida Panhandle.

Men’s slalom will draw its share of attention this season following a turbulent 2024, but all eyes—for now—are on the tricks. With the format built for livestreams and athletes who thrive on the edge of control, this discipline is custom-made for modern viewing.

The 2025 Swiss Pro Tricks opens the Waterski Pro Tour this weekend in Central Florida, and if the past is any clue, the only guarantee is greatness.

For more details visit the swissprotricks.com or waterskiprotour.com

Poland Renews Calls for Trick Score Revision

Poland Renews Push for Trick Scoring Overhaul

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Poland renews push for trick scoring overhaul

Poland Renews Calls for Trick Score Revision

Image: @mcboatcompany

By Jack Burden


Speaking at an IWWF World Waterski Council meeting earlier this year, world record holder Joel Poland called for a long-overdue overhaul of trick skiing’s point system. Citing current scoring as a barrier to innovation, Poland argued that high-difficulty tricks—like his own recently approved “Matrix” and “UFO”—aren’t making it into tournament runs because the reward doesn’t match the risk.

“The point values for high-difficulty flips are crippling trick skiing,” said Poland. One of the sport’s most creative and technically gifted athletes, he has been increasingly vocal about the need for reform. He points to discrepancies such as the “Matrix”—a frontflip with a ski-line 540—earning just 150 points more than a basic frontflip.

The Tricks Working Group, formed nearly two years ago to address point disparities, has yet to deliver a proposal. That responsibility now falls to Sergio Font, who will lead the review and deliver recommendations at the September Water Ski Council meeting.

While there is broad agreement that the current system needs revision, progress has been slow—largely due to competing interests among athletes. Council Chair Candido Moz has voiced support for reform, but the IWWF has so far deferred to the skier community, whose inability to reach consensus has stalled change.

With elite runs becoming increasingly repetitive, Poland’s push adds renewed urgency to a debate many in the sport feel is long overdue.

IWWF Nears Tow Boat Decision

Decision Looms on IWWF Tow Boat Contract

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Decision looms on IWWF tow boat contract

IWWF Nears Tow Boat Decision

The decision may set the course of the sport well into the 2030s.

By Jack Burden


A major shift in the watersports world is quietly approaching shore, as the International Waterski & Wakeboard Federation (IWWF) prepares to select its next official tow boat partner for the federation’s marquee events. Though the decision is due today, it remains unclear when the IWWF will make its choice public.

The current agreement—held by Nautique since 2016—comes to an end in December. The new contract offers a six-year term, with an option to renew for another six, and covers exclusive towing rights for all IWWF World Titled Events in Waterski, Wakesports (including Wakeboard and Wakesurf), or both. With bidding closed as of February 28 and intents of interest submitted by the end of January, the field has narrowed—and the implications are wide-reaching.

The current agreement—held by Nautique since 2016—comes to an end in December. The new contract offers a six-year term, with an option to renew for another six, and grants exclusive towing rights for all IWWF World Titled Events in Waterski, Wakesports (including Wakeboard and Wakesurf), or both. According to a report from IWWF President, José Antonio Pérez Priego, leading manufacturers were invited to submit an intent of interest by January 31, with full bids due by February 28. The IWWF Executive Board is scheduled to finalize its decision by March 15.

At the heart of the process lies a high-stakes intersection of performance, politics, and business. The winning manufacturer won’t just supply boats—they’ll also provide technical and logistical support, assist with marketing efforts, and, crucially, make a financial contribution, which remains one of the IWWF’s most significant sources of revenue.

The trio of top-tier manufacturers—Nautique, MasterCraft, and Malibu—are familiar contenders. MasterCraft served as IWWF’s partner from 2009 to 2015, before the contract passed to Nautique in a high-profile 10-year deal. Since then, Nautique boats have towed everything from Junior Worlds to the Over-35s and World Disabled Championships, becoming synonymous with the sport at the highest level.

But the landscape has shifted. Malibu, while maintaining a strong presence in the wakeboard and wakesurf scene, has visibly reduced its footprint in tournament waterskiing—no longer sponsoring athletes and appearing to take a step back from that segment of the market. Their future with the IWWF may hinge on a bid that leans toward Wakesports rather than a comprehensive package.

This raises a deeper question reverberating within industry circles: has the IWWF’s long-term approach to contracts helped or hindered the sport’s evolution?

The previous decade-long deal provided stability and vital funding, but it may have unintentionally contributed to a sense of inertia. When a single manufacturer dominates the top competitive stage for so long, it can disincentivize innovation, investment, or even participation from competitors. In a sport that already operates within a niche market, extended exclusivity may limit broader industry engagement and investment.

Still, the upside of the contract is significant. The chosen boat becomes the one that athletes train behind year-round. It shapes how they prepare and compete. It becomes not just a partner, but the platform for future world champions.

Today, the IWWF Executive Board is expected to finalize its decision. When that announcement will be made public, however, remains unknown. What is certain, however, is that the boat chosen to tow the world’s top athletes will be pulling more than just competitors—it will be pulling the sport’s future.

2025 Moomba Masters

Moomba Magic: New Champions Rise on the Yarra

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Moomba magic: New champions rise on the Yarra

2025 Moomba Masters

Image: Moomba Masters

By Jack Burden


MELBOURNE, Australia – The 64th Nautique Moomba Masters International Invitational, the longest running event in professional water skiing, delivered another electrifying spectacle on the Yarra River. With its storied history and the festival’s raucous backdrop, no event in the sport draws a bigger live audience. And with it came the unpredictability, the high drama, and a new crop of champions.

The Yarra Claims Its Victims

The Moomba Masters is as much a battle against the conditions as it is against the competition. The infamous Yarra River played its role once again, dashing the hopes of even the most seasoned skiers. The cutthroat LCQ format and brutal preliminary rounds saw big names like reigning under-21 world champion Annemarie Wroblewski and experienced duo Elizabeth and Steven Island miss out on the slalom finals. Trick skiing had its own share of heartbreak, as reigning world overall champion Louis Duplan-Fribourg, along with several other top contenders, failed to navigate their way into the finals after a string of early falls.

Trick Finals: The New Gold Standard

Finals Monday kicked off with a fireworks display in the tricks event, where the women’s showdown was another chapter in the decade-long dominance of Erika Lang, Anna Gay Hunter, and Neilly Ross. Lang, already the Moomba course record holder, set the pace by rewriting her own mark with 10,830 points in the prelims. The final was razor-close, but Lang edged out Hunter and Ross for her third consecutive Moomba Masters crown.

The men’s event was an all-out war, where 12,000-plus was the magic number. Joel Poland, returning to the Moomba Masters after a five-year absence, threw down early with a score above 12,000. Jake Abelson, already riding high from his junior competition victory and course record (12,150), stepped up to take the lead with 12,230. Reigning world champion Patricio Font stumbled in his toe pass and couldn’t claw his way back despite a monster hand pass. Then came top seed Matias Gonzalez, seemingly on the brink of victory until he opted for a wake 180 over a high-scoring risk move, handing the title to Abelson—his first professional win. It also marked the first time in history that all three podium finishers cracked the 12,000-point barrier.

Slalom: A Legend Returns and a New Star Rises

Women’s slalom delivered a storyline no scriptwriter could have crafted better. The two favorites, Whitney McClintock Rini and defending champion Regina Jaquess, had barely survived the LCQs after early-round struggles. But McClintock Rini, skiing first in the finals, set a mark that none of the remaining 7 skiers could beat, securing her tenth Moomba Masters title and cementing her status as the undisputed Queen of Moomba.

The men’s slalom final was another thriller in what has become a wildly unpredictable discipline. Nine different winners in 2024 suggested an anything-goes environment in 2025, and the final reflected just that. Sixteen-year-old Damien Eade took the early lead, before Poland—showcasing his versatility—edged further down the 10.75m line. Then came Freddie Winter, just nine months removed from a broken femur, clawing his way into contention before local hero Lucas Cornale raised the bar to three buoys. It seemed a winning score until the wily veteran Thomas Degasperi managed a piece of four ball, setting the challenge for top seed Charlie Ross. The 19-year-old Canadian skied with a composure beyond his years, securing a full four and his maiden professional title, making him the youngest Moomba Masters slalom champion since Carl Roberge in the early ‘80s.

Jump: A Changing of the Guard

While the conditions kept the scores low in slalom, the jump event was an entirely different story, with personal bests falling like dominos throughout the tournament. The absence of Jacinta Carroll, who had dominated the women’s event for over a decade, left a power vacuum that was quickly filled by Brittany Greenwood Wharton. Making her Moomba Masters debut, the American put together a gutsy performance to fend off a strong challenge from Aliaksandra Danisheuskaya and secure her first professional title.

On the men’s side, the competition was stacked, but the weekend quickly morphed into a two-man showdown between Austria’s Luca Rauchenwald, fresh off a University World’s victory, and Great Britain’s Joel Poland. Poland, already having an outstanding weekend across multiple events, continued his surge by launching a monstrous 69-meter (226-foot) leap to claim his first Moomba Masters jump title. But he wasn’t done yet. Under the Melbourne city fireworks display, he capped off the event with a dominant night jump victory, soaring 68.6 meters (225 feet) off the smaller 5.5-foot ramp, putting an emphatic exclamation point on his weekend.

Moomba Magic Lives On

The 2025 Moomba Masters was a festival of breakthroughs and unexpected turns, a reminder that on the Yarra, past records and rankings often mean little. New champions were crowned, legends continued to build their legacies, and the world’s biggest water skiing stage proved once again why it remains unmatched in drama and spectacle. As the crowds dispersed and the festival wound down, one thing was clear: the Moomba Masters remains the ultimate test of talent, nerve, and resilience.