Mykhailichenko celebrates his trick victory

Ukraine Stuns Team USA with Three-Skier Masterclass

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Ukraine Stuns Team USA with Three-Skier Masterclass

Mykhailichenko celebrates his trick victory

Image: IWWF

By Jack Burden


On an overcast Easter weekend in Córdoba, a trio of Ukrainians pulled off one of the great upsets in the history of water skiing—one that, for a moment at least, feels big enough to borrow language from beyond the sport.

Three skiers against a full American roster. David and Goliath, if you like—but the kind where David doesn’t just land the stone, he has to keep landing it, over and over again, without ever missing.

By the end of the 2026 Under-17 World Water Ski Championships, it was Ukraine—outnumbered, out-resourced, and, on paper, outmatched—standing on top. Not because the United States faltered in any obvious way, and not because something fluky intervened, but because Ukraine came remarkably close to skiing a perfect tournament.

That is what makes this result so hard to process at first glance. Team competition in tournament water skiing is built to reward depth. Nations select six athletes, count their best scores, and absorb the inevitable errors along the way. It is a system designed, almost ruthlessly, to favor nations like the United States, who traveled with 16 competitors to Argentina.

Ukraine turned up with three.

Which meant there was no cushioning at all. Every jump had to stick. Every slalom pass had to count. Every trick run had to survive that tiny moment—the one every skier knows—where balance wavers and the whole thing threatens to unravel.

They didn’t have a fourth score to discard. They barely had a bad moment to give.

To beat a U.S. team built around the generational talent of Alexia Abelson, that margin for error effectively had to disappear. And, for most of the weekend, it did.

It is easy, and often convenient, to treat results like these as self-contained—numbers on a page, detached from everything around them. But in this case, the context presses in whether you invite it or not.

Mykhailo Mykhailichenko, Ivan Zelentsov, and Mariia Popova train in Dnipro, a city less than 60 miles from the front lines of a war now entering its fifth year. Air raid sirens are not an abstraction there; they are part of the rhythm of daily life. Training is sometimes paused not because of wind or rain, but because something far more serious is coming from the skies.

Water skiing is usually a sport of margins—half a buoy, a freeze frame trick pass ending, a meter gained or lost off the ramp. For this team, it has also become something else: a space where control is possible, even if only for a few minutes at a time.

After the preliminary round, though, the story looked familiar. The United States led by 122 points—enough to matter, not enough to settle anything. A strong slalom score or one big swing in tricks could wipe it out.

And the Americans were, broadly, as good as expected. Bret Ellis topped the jump seeding with a personal best. Abelson controlled both slalom and tricks on the girls’ side. Across disciplines, the U.S. skiers were operating in that tight band just below or right on their best.

Ukraine, crucially, did not blink.

Popova broke new ground with her first 40-meter jump. Mykhailichenko followed with his first over 50 meters. In boys’ slalom, both Mykhailichenko and Zelentsov outperformed expectations, placing pressure where none was supposed to exist.

And then the event moved to tricks, where the tone of the entire competition shifted—quietly at first, and then all at once.

Popova had nearly lost her tournament in the preliminaries, an early fall leaving her scraping into the final as one of the last qualifiers. In most team scenarios, that is the sort of result you absorb and move on from. Ukraine didn’t have that luxury.

What followed felt like the pivot point of the week.

Skiing early in the final, in cold rain that made everything just a little less reliable, Popova held a run together that looked, more than once, like it might fall apart. She checked herself twice as her tip dipped underwater and kept going, long enough to post 7,210 points—a personal best and a national record.

For a brief window, it pushed Ukraine into the lead.

Only Abelson could respond, and she did what great skiers tend to do in those moments: she absorbed the pressure and produced something measured and complete. Another world title followed, secured with a run that was efficient rather than spectacular, but entirely sufficient.

Individually, it reinforced her status among the best ever at this level. In the team context, though, Ukraine had already shifted the balance.

From there, the pressure moved onto the men’s trick final, and Ukraine did more than just hold ground.

Zelentsov went first, producing 9,540 points—a leap of over 1,300 from his previous best—and suddenly the scoreboard looked different. Mykhailichenko followed by going past 10,000 for the first time in his career, a run that felt like both a breakthrough and a statement.

A Ukrainian one-two in tricks was not part of any reasonable pre-tournament script. But it was now the reality, and it left the United States chasing.

By the time the event moved into its final day, Ukraine’s lead had stretched to nearly 400 points. On paper, that still left the door open. Slalom and jump are historically American strengths, and with twice as many athletes, there were more ways to apply pressure.

Yet the competition never quite tilted back.

In girls’ slalom, Abelson again did what was required, collecting her second gold of the weekend and locking down the overall title. It was a performance of control and consistency, and in almost any other scenario it would have been central to the story. Here, it simply maintained the status quo.

In boys’ slalom, Ioannis Kousathanas produced one of the more assured performances of the week to take the win, edging the hometwon hero, Bautista Ahumada, by half a buoy. The teams gap neither collapsed nor meaningfully grew. It just sat there, stubbornly.

Which left jump, and with it, the United States’ final chance to bend the narrative back in their favor.

Jump is the simplest discipline to explain and often the hardest to predict. Speed, timing, commitment—everything compressed into a few seconds, with very little room to adjust once you are committed.

On the girls’ side, Alexia Abelson quietly underlined the success of her weekend. Backing up her personal best from the preliminary with another 10-centimeter improvement, she put the finishing touch on a comprehensive overall victory—three individual golds—and moved level with Martin Labra and Brandi Hunt as the most decorated Under-17 skiers in history.

Behind her, the event took on a more unpredictable shape. Australia’s Zarhli Reeves—comfortably the pre-event favorite, having gone beyond 45 meters this season—never quite found her rhythm. Instead, the moment belonged to Italy’s Scarlett Graham, who produced a breakthrough performance, jumping three meters (10 feet) farther than ever before across the two rounds to claim a deserved world title in one of the standout individual upsets of the championships.

The boys’ event carried far greater weight in the team standings. The Americans had the numbers in the boy’s final and the top seed in Ellis skiing last. It was, if not the perfect setup, then at least a plausible one.

Ukraine, once again, refused to cooperate.

Zelentsov opened with 52.1 meters, his first time over 50. Mykhailichenko followed, adding just enough to secure the overall title for himself. Then Kousathanas reappeared, stretching out to 52.8 meters and taking another gold, his second major intervention in the closing stages of the event.

All of which left Ellis needing something exceptional.

He produced three big jumps—each of them close to what was required, each of them just short. It was not a failure so much as the absence of a miracle. Third place, and with it, the quiet realization that the window had closed.

The final margin—7,835 points to 7,484—reads as comfortable without ever feeling that way. It was built not on American errors piling up, but on Ukraine refusing to give points away. Six of their nine scores were personal bests. Across three skiers, they assembled a set of performances that, collectively, left almost nothing on the table.

And that, more than anything, is what made the upset possible.

You can point to the numbers—the medals, the records, the overall title for Mykhailichenko—and they tell a compelling story on their own. But the lasting impression is harder to quantify.

It lives in the image of Mariia Popova holding a run together that seemed determined to unravel. In Mykhailichenko, rising to meet, and then surpass, expectations at precisely the right moment. In Ivan Zelentsov, fresh off a massive personal best, cheering louder for his teammate than for himself.

And inevitably, it lives in the broader context that never fully leaves the frame: a tiny team from a country under unimaginable pressure, finding a way, against all odds, to keep a global powerhouse at bay.

For most of the world, water skiing is a weekend hobby or a social ritual. In Córdoba, for a few extraordinary days, it became something far larger—and Ukraine passed with flying colors.

Ahumada club de esquí náutico – u17waterskiworlds

Meet the Rising Stars To Watch at the Under-17 World’s This Week

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Meet the rising stars to watch at the Under-17 World Championships this week

Ahumada club de esquí náutico – u17waterskiworlds

Image: @ahumada_esqui_nautico

By Jack Burden


The Under-17 World Championships kick off this week in Córdoba, Argentina, bringing together the world’s top junior water skiers. First held in 1986, the biennial event has long served as a launchpad for the sport’s future stars.

Ahumada Esquí Náutico will host the first World Championships ever staged in Argentina this Easter weekend, with the venue poised to deliver standout performances across all three disciplines.

Here are nine skiers to keep an eye on:

Alexia Abelson tricks at the 2025 US Water Ski National Championships

Image: @bretellisphotography

Alexia Abelson (USA)

The sole defending champion from the previous edition in Canada, the 15-year-old American arrives as the favorite in three of four events—and you’d be brave to bet against her leaving Córdoba without hardware. The younger sister of world record holder Jake Abelson, Alexia has already collected professional podiums in three disciplines, most recently finishing runner-up to Regina Jaquess in slalom at the Moomba Masters. Expect her to add another junior world title to her résumé before the weekend is out.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 1st (5@11.25m)
  • Tricks: 1st (9,100 points)
  • Jump: 7th (34.0 meters)
  • 1st Overall
@ahumada_esqui_nautico

Image: @matiasfotografia

Bautista Ahumada (ARG)

Skiing on his home lake, Ahumada enters as the favorite in boys’ tricks—the only skier with a personal best over 10,000 points—but also a genuine contender in slalom. The young Argentine has built a strong international résumé, with titles at both the U.S. Junior Masters (slalom) and Junior Moomba Masters (tricks). Backed by what should be a lively home crowd, he’ll be one to watch in both events.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 3rd (3@10.75m)
  • Tricks: 1st (10,460 points)
Ioannis Kousathanas

Image: IWWF

Ioannis Kousathanas (GRE)

The true dark horse of these championships, Kousathanas may not yet be widely known outside Europe—but he should be. The Greek teenager’s résumé is light on major international titles, built mostly on national success and European junior podiums, but he arrives in peak form. After escaping the Northern Hemisphere winter to train in Chile, he posted personal bests across all three events at the Torneo Nacional Miranda Ski last month, vaulting himself into contention as the top-ranked overall skier and a serious threat in both slalom and jump.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 2nd (4@10.75m)
  • Tricks: 4th (8,090)
  • Jump: 3rd (50.6 meters)
  • 1st Overall
Zarhli Reeves jumps at the 2026 Moomba Masters

Image: Jackson Cross Photography

Zarhli Reeves (AUS)

The only other skier in the field with a podium finish from the previous edition, Reeves is in a class of her own in girls’ jump—her personal best sitting nearly five meters clear of her nearest rival at over 45 meters. She is the clear favorite for the jump title and could push onto the slalom or overall podium if things break her way.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 5th (5@12m)
  • Jump: 1st (45.2m)
  • 2nd Overall
Миша Михайличенко

Image: @mykhailichenko.mykhailo

Mykhailo Mykhailichenko (UKR)

Emerging from a Ukraine still grappling with the effects of war, the storied Sentosa program continues to produce elite talent despite immense challenges. The latest phenom, Mykhailichenko, arrives as the reigning European Under-17 overall champion and a legitimate contender across slalom, tricks, and overall.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 5th (2@10.75m)
  • Tricks: 2nd (9,650 points)
  • Jump: 6th (45.4m)
  • 2nd Overall
Dash Krueger with family

Image: @dashkrueger

Dash Krueger (USA)

A familiar surname tops the boys’ jump rankings. Dash, son of legendary Freddy Krueger, enters as the top seed with a genuine shot at the title. Raised in Central Florida by two professional skiers, he has long been groomed for this stage—and now faces his biggest test yet as he looks to step out from his father’s considerable shadow.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Jump: 1st (51.7 meters)
Melitine Morel

Image: @melitine_m

Mélitine Morel (FRA)

One of the most well-rounded skiers in the field, Morel is a threat to reach multiple podiums—and possibly more if everything clicks. Like several Northern Hemisphere athletes, she spent the winter training in South America, posting personal bests in both slalom and tricks in Chile last month as she builds toward peak form.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 3rd (1@11.25m)
  • Tricks: 6th (5,630 points)
  • Jump: 4th (39.1 meters)
  • 3rd Overall
Dylan Wright slaloms at the 2025 Moomba Masters

Image: Water Ski Australia

Dylan Wright (AUS)

Still relatively unknown on the international stage, the Queenslander has been dominant domestically, stacking national titles and regularly running deep into 10.75m (39.5’ off). He enters as the top seed in boys’ slalom, setting up what could be one of the tightest battles of the tournament.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 1st (4@10.75m)
Bret Ellis Water Ski Jumping

Image: @bretellis_

Bret Ellis (USA)

Who better to challenge Krueger for the jump title than Ellis? In a rivalry that echoes their parents’ era, Bret—son of legendary Scot “The Rocketman” Ellis—arrives with a personal best just one foot shy of Krueger. Intriguingly, a junior world jump title eluded both Freddy Krueger and Scot Ellis in their careers, adding another layer of narrative to this showdown.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Jump: 2nd (51.4 meters)
  • 5th Overall

Champion teen waterskier Kristy Appleton from Brisbane might have been 'dead within an hour'

Kristy Appleton Survives Health Scare After Under-17 World’s Win

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Young water ski champion Kristy Appleton survives meningitis scare after Under-17 World Championship win

Champion teen waterskier Kristy Appleton from Brisbane might have been 'dead within an hour'

Image: @kristy.appleton

By Jack Burden


Kristy Appleton, the newly crowned girl’s overall champion at the Under-17 World Water Ski Championships in Calgary, Canada, had a harrowing experience following her victory after contracting a misdiagnosed case of meningitis on her journey back to Australia.

In a detailed Instagram post, Appleton recounted the terrifying ordeal that began shortly after she returned home on August 8th. She was initially told by hospital staff that she had COVID-19 and was sent home to rest. However, her condition worsened, and she was later rushed to a second hospital via ambulance after experiencing excruciating pain and near paralysis.

“I couldn’t move, the pain was so bad,” Appleton shared in her post, detailing how she felt “paralyzed” as pain coursed through her body. A doctor at the second hospital quickly administered antibiotics, a decision that Appleton credits with saving her life. “Less than an hour they said I had,” she explained, after doctors confirmed she had contracted meningococcal disease, a severe bacterial infection.

Appleton spent eight days in the hospital fighting the infection. Reflecting on the experience, she expressed gratitude for her recovery and emphasized the importance of vaccinations. She revealed that she had unknowingly not been vaccinated against the B-strain of meningococcal, the one she contracted, and urged others to ensure they are vaccinated.

Despite her brush with death, Appleton is hopeful for a full recovery, supported by her family, friends, and a strong network of well-wishers.

“I have a long journey ahead of me, but I am so, so grateful and lucky to have had so much support behind me,” she concluded.

Her resilience in the face of such a serious illness adds to her growing reputation as a rising star in water skiing. We look forward to seeing what Appleton can achieve over the coming seasons.

Jake Abelson jumps during the finals @predatorbay during the U17 world waterski championships in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

Family Affair: Second Generation Talent Dominates Under-17 World Championships

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Family Affair: Second Generation Talent Dominates Under-17 World Championships

Jake Abelson jumps during the finals @predatorbay during the U17 world waterski championships in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

Image: @johnnyhayward_photo

By Jack Burden


Turn back the clock three decades: Kyle Eade and Steffen Wild are regulars on the professional jump circuit. Russel and Jane Gay are among the best trickers in the world. Mariana Ramirez and Richard Abelson are promising juniors rising through the ranks. Now, fast forward to today, all of these world-class skiers traveled to Canada for the Under-17 World Championships, but now in very different roles.

11 of the 24 individual medals at the recently completed World Titles were taken home by these four families. Additionally, they set three world championship tournament records and, arguably, secured the team title as well, with four out of the six spots on the victorious U.S. Team filled by just two families.

Other second-generation talents included Fletcher and Daisy Green, both advancing to the trick finals; Marie-Lou Duverger, who finished fourth in girls’ overall; Samson Clunie, who narrowly missed the jump finals; and Cameron Davis, who placed fifth in girls’ overall and was part of the gold medal-winning Team USA.

The on-water action was incredible. The finals started with the Eade brothers, Jaeden and Damien, tying for the gold before having to settle things in a runoff. Training partners since day one, has there ever been a more fitting resolution to a sibling rivalry? Meanwhile, girls’ slalom was a tense battle between two South American contenders, with Peru’s Christiana De Osma narrowly edging out Chile’s Trinidad Espinal in the final.

The girls’ jump final was an incredible battle between Australia’s Kristy Appleton and Denmark’s Maise Jacobsen. Appleton threw everything she had at the ramp in one of the bravest performances of the event, willing herself further on her final attempt, which resulted in a spectacular crash upon landing. It took Jacobsen until her third and final jump and a new personal best, but ultimately, the Dane pulled ahead. Give these two fierce competitors some time to adjust to the faster boat speed and higher ramp height, and they could be the next big thing in professional jumping.

The boys’ jump final was relatively sedate after the crash reel that was the preliminary round, but it was Jake Abelson who stole the show second off the dock with a 53.3-meter (175-foot) jump to cement his overall title and set the mark for the rest of the field to chase. Tim Wild, the top seed and favorite after the withdrawal of the injured Tristan Duplan-Fribourg, tried valiantly but ultimately came up half a meter (two feet) short of Abelson’s mark.

While girls’ trick was somewhat of a foregone conclusion, with young Alexia Abelson head and shoulders above the rest of the field, boys’ tricks was a titanic struggle between the two highest-scoring trick skiers of all time, Matias Gonzalez and Jake Abelson. Both had set Under-17 World Championship records in the preliminary round and knew it would take even more in the final. The defending champion, Gonzalez, showcased his ruthless efficiency to set a score of 12,410 for Abelson to chase. A third gold medal was not to be for the American, who, despite two stand-up passes, narrowly lost his last hand trick to time and finished just behind Gonzalez.

While jump is historically the headline event to close out a World Championships, boys’ tricks was a fitting finish, coming right down to the wire. If the current crop of junior world champions is anything to go by, the future of the sport is very bright indeed.

Ahumada Esqui Nautico

Argentina to Host 2026 Under-17 World Championships | IWWF

Repost

Argentina to Host 2026 IWWF World Under 17 Waterski Championships

Ahumada Esqui Nautico

Image: @ahumada_esqui_nautico

IWWF


The Argentinian Waterski & Wakeboard Federation has been awarded the bid to host the next IWWF World Under 17 Waterski Championships in 2026 at Lago Ahumada Esquí Náutico in San Jose in Córdoba from 30th March to 5th April 2026.

The “Club Ahumada Waterski,” founded 10 years ago in Villa Dolores, has been a pillar in promoting water sports. For 8 years, the training has taken place at “Lago La Viña” in the Trasla- sierra Valley. Recently, the club built a high-performance private lake between San José and Villa Dolores, designed for skiing both day and night thanks to its advanced lighting. This lake, unique in the province of Córdoba, meets all the technical and safety requirements necessary for high-level competitions.

Read the full press release from IWWF

2024 IWWF World Under 17 Waterski Championships

2024 Under-17 World Championships Kick Off This Week | IWWF

Archived

2024 IWWF World Under 17 Waterski Championships Kick Off Today

2024 IWWF World Under 17 Waterski Championships

Image: IWWF

IWWF


The 2024 IWWF World Under 17 Waterski Championships officially commences today at Predator Bay in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

This prestigious event gathers over 100 of the world’s finest junior waterskiers from 21 countries, all vying for the coveted World Titles in various disciplines.

The Championships, running from August 1st to 4th, promise thrilling displays of talent and skill as young athletes push the boundaries of waterskiing excellence. Admission is free and spectators can look forward to an array of exhilarating performances, including slalom, tricks, and jump events, all set against the stunning backdrop of Predator Bay.

Adding to the excitement, the event will be live-streamed, allowing fans worldwide to experience the action in real time. The live stream will cover every moment of the competition, ensuring that waterski enthusiasts around the globe don’t miss a single turn, trick or jump.

Towing the competitors will be the World-Record setting Ski Nautique, renowned for its superior performance and reliability.

To read the full media release and for more information about the event, the schedule, and to access the live stream, please visit the following link:

Please click here to read the full media release on IWWF’s website.

Junior World Waterski Championships

Meet the Rising Stars To Watch at the 2024 Under-17 World’s This Week

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Meet the rising stars to watch at the Under-17 World Championships this week

Junior World Waterski Championships

Image: @tiaremirandaphotography

By Jack Burden


The Under-17 World Championships kick off this week in Calgary, Canada, highlighting the top junior water skiers in the world. This biennial event, established in 1986, has frequently been a launchpad for the sport’s future stars.

Predator Bay Water Ski Club in Calgary is set to host the first of three World Championships as part of an exclusive agreement with the IWWF. With its world-class ski lakes, previously hosting the 2009 World Championships and various professional events, the venue is poised to foster outstanding performances from all competitors.

Here are nine skiers to keep an eye on this week:

Jake Abelson at the 2023 Under-21 World Championships

Image: @fotografacamilabernal

Jake Abelson (USA)

While most fans may know world record holder Jake Abelson as a trick skier, thanks to his string of professional and elite podium placements starting in 2021, it might surprise some to learn that the American prodigy enters this World Championships as the favorite in boys’ overall. Combining his world-class trick skiing with scores deep into the 11.25m (38′ off) pass and jump scores exceeding 50 meters (164 feet), it’s evident why he is tipped to dominate the event.

The son of two elite-level skiers, this tri-citizen (U.S., Mexico, and Canada) divides his time between Arizona and New Hampshire. A multi-talented athlete, Abelson is also a level 10 gymnast. Expect him to vie for his first world title in both the overall and trick events.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 7th (4.25@11.25m)
  • Tricks: 1st (12,845 points)
  • Jump: 3rd (53.1 meters)
  • Overall: 1st
Kristy Appleton competes at the 2023 Moomba Masters

Image: @kristy.appleton

Kristy Appleton (AUS)

The Queenslander enters the World Championships as the favorite in the girl’s jump and overall categories, capable of posting highly competitive scores in slalom and trick alongside her biggest strength: jump. Incredibly consistent, Appleton has recorded more scores exceeding 40 meters (131 feet) than any other under-17 girl in the world over the past couple of seasons.

Following podium finishes in both jump and overall at the last Under-17 World Championships 18 months ago, Appleton aims to leverage that experience to claim the top spot this week.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 9th (3.25@12m)
  • Tricks: 4th (5,560 points)
  • Jump: 1st (45.3 meters)
  • Overall: 1st
Matias Gonzalez competes at the 2023 Pan American Games

Image: @mati.waterski

Matias Gonzalez (CHI)

The sole champion from the 2022 Under-17 World Championships (held in January 2023) who is young enough to return in 2024 to defend their title, Gonzalez enters these championships as one of the favorites in boy’s tricks. The Chilean formerly held the under-17 world record and ranks as the 2nd highest scoring tricker of all time.

Despite his youth, Gonzalez boasts years of experience on the professional circuit, making him a formidable competitor for the rest of the field to chase.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 8th (3.75@11.25m)
  • Tricks: 2nd (12,650 points)
Jaeden Eade at the 2022 Under 17 World Championships

Image: @tiaremiranda 

Jaeden Eade (USA)

Raised at Ski Fluid, one of the world’s leading ski schools, it’s perhaps no wonder that Jaeden Eade, the son of former professional jumper and world-class coach Kyle Eade, was destined for greatness. Eade has made his mark in the slalom event, becoming the second youngest skier to run the 10.75m (39.5′ off) pass last year (although he has since been surpassed on that list by his younger brother Damien).

In addition to his success in slalom, Eade has recently made strides in the jump event. As a result, he will challenge for a podium finish in jump as well, entering the World Championships as the favorite in the boys’ slalom event.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 1st (1.5@10.25m)
  • Jump: 4th (51.0 meters)
  • 6th Overall
Lexi Abelson competes at the 2022 Under-17 World Championships

Image: @tiaremiranda 

Alexia Abelson (USA)

The younger of the two Abelson siblings, Lexi, is an up-and-coming superstar in her own right. The American achieved podium finishes at both the Under-17 and Under-21 World Championships in 2023. She enters these championships as the favorite in girl’s tricks.

Although still only attempting single wake cuts in the jump event, the 14-year-old is a strong contender in overall by virtue of her incredible slalom and trick performances.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 3rd (2.75@11.25m)
  • Tricks: 1st (8,670 points)
  • Overall: 2nd
Tim Wild competes in jump at the 2023 German National Championships

Image: @tim.wild07

Tim Wild (GER)

The German three-eventer, now the country’s highest-scoring men’s tricker, is another second-generation talent. Tim’s father, Steffen, holds the distinction of being the first-ever junior world overall champion, securing gold at the inaugural event in Milan, Italy, in 1986.

Wild excels in slalom and jumping, with a strong chance of winning titles in either of these events. He is also a strong contender for the overall podium.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 3rd (2.5@10.75m)
  • Tricks: 6th (9,190 points)
  • Jump: 2nd (53.6 meters)
  • 3rd Overall
Christhiana De Osma competes at the 2023 Under-21 World Championships

Image: @fotografacamilabernal

Christiana De Osma (PER)

The Peruvian finished on the podium at the last Under-17 World Championships and aims to clinch the title in 2024. De Osma is capable of running 11.25 meters (38′ off), and if she can replicate her best scores into 10.75 (39.5′ off), she will have a strong chance of winning the event.

Competing in tricks as well, De Osma could challenge for an podium spot with strong performances in the weaker of her two events.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 1st (1@10.75m)
  • Tricks: 5th (5,515 points)
Denmark's Maise Jacobsen competes in jump at the 2023 European Youth Championships

Image: @tulliopicture

Maise Jacobsen (DEN)

Denmark has consistently excelled in women’s jump, with June Fladborg and Maj Jepsen being regulars on the professional circuit during the 2000s. The latest Danish up-and-comer is Maise Jacobsen, who has dominated the junior ranks in Europe for several years. She enters these World Championships as one of the favorites in girl’s jump.

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Jump: 2nd (42.5 meters)
  • Overall: 7th
Trinidad Espinal at the 2023 South American Beach Games

Image: @triniespinal

Trinidad Espinal (CHI)

The Chilean has emerged as one of the strongest slalom skiers in South America in recent seasons, clinching victory at the South American Beach Games last season and securing a podium finish at the Under-21 World Championships. Trinidad has run 12 meters (35′ off) more times than any other under-17-year-old girl over the past two seasons and has consistently posted scores deep down at 11.25m (38′ off).

Under-17 World Rankings:

  • Slalom: 2nd (0@10.75m)

American waterskier Taylor Garcia soars through the air

Quiz: Male Skiers with Multiple Junior World Titles

Quizzes

Quiz: Male skiers with multiple Junior World titles

American waterskier Taylor Garcia soars through the air

Image: Will Oliver

By RTB


4 minute play

In this quiz, you have to name the male skiers who have won more than one Under-17 World Championships title.

The list contains 17 skiers, all of whom have won at least two junior world titles since the first event in 1986. Many of these names will be familiar as current professional skiers. We have mentioned their country, along with the year of their last Junior Worlds, and number of titles.

Rhoni Barton Slalom Skiing

Quiz: Female Skiers with Multiple Junior World Titles

Quizzes

Quiz: Female skiers with multiple Junior World titles

Rhoni Barton was a multiple time junior world champion

Image: The Friday Flyer

By RTB


4 minute play

In this quiz, you have to name the female skiers who have won more than one Junior World title.

The list contains 20 skiers, all of whom have won at least two junior world titles since the first event in 1986. Many of these names will be familiar as current professional skiers. We have mentioned their country, along with the year of their last Junior Worlds, and number of titles.

Peru's Christiana De Osma competes at the San Gervasio Junior Challenge

San Gervasio to Feature “Girls Only” Cash Prize Junior Challenge

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San Gervasio to feature “girls only” cash prize Junior Challenge

Peru's Christiana De Osma competes at the San Gervasio Junior Challenge

Peru’s Christiana De Osma, current world number one, will compete at the 2024 San Gervasio Junior Challenge (image: @andrea_gilardi_fotografo)

By Jack Burden


The 10th edition of the San Gervasio ProAm, the longest-running professional event in Europe, will host the best slalom skiers in the world from July 5-7. In an exciting development, the 2024 event will feature some of the best up-and-coming female athletes in a head-to-head junior challenge.

Four of the top six ranked under-17 women in the world will travel to the event to battle it out for cash prizes sponsored by Radar Skis. Matteo Luzzeri, who organizes the event, shared the inspiration behind including the Junior Challenge, now in its 5th edition, alongside the pros: “The idea has always been to mix the future of the sport with professional skiers while skiing in a format that is rarely implemented outside professional events.”

While previous editions have featured both junior girls and boys, schedule conflicts have prevented the same high-level participation on the male side as in previous years. This prompted the organizers to prioritize showcasing some of the rising stars of the sport on the women’s side.

“We are extremely excited to host some of the very best junior girls in the world for this Junior Challenge,” shared Luzzeri. “Although we’ll miss seeing the top boys, the girls’ tournament has all the premises to be the best one yet!”

Luzzeri noted that the girls-only edition of the Junior Challenge will allow the cash prize to be doubled for these competitors. Representing four different countries, Christiana De Osma (Peru), Vittoria Saracco (Italy), Ines Sole (Belgium), and Alexia Abelson (USA) will go head-to-head in what may serve as a preview of the upcoming Under-17 World Championships in Canada early next month.

This will be the strongest field assembled in under-17 girls’ slalom so far in 2024, with the Junior Masters’ Florida-centric qualification criteria effectively excluding European juniors (four of the current top 10 live and train in Europe, compared to just two from the US).

Alongside these promising juniors, the best professional slalom skiers will chase valuable Waterski Pro Tour points as we pass the halfway point of the season. Jaimee Bull, Will Asher, and Team Syndicate are off to strong, but not yet unassailable, leads on the Tour. It will be crunch time for the other contenders to try and knock them off their perch.

The picturesque venue, Jolly Ski, located in northern Italy, is a favorite among pros and amateurs alike. The ski school is a popular training ground for some of Europe’s most promising juniors and is home to the internationally sought-out Jolly Clinics.