How do you prepare on the spot – when you’re standing at the top of a big line and getting ready to drop in?
Fabi: It’s more like meditating than anything I guess. Stop, look at the venue, and have everything in my mind, going through the run in my head. You have to be prepared beforehand, to know where you have to go, so there’s no things on top like maybe it’s a wrong decision or maybe I’m at the wrong place. If it’s well planned out, you don’t get that nervous… Well, you’re always nervous if you ski something big, but the second you drop in it’s all gone.
Do you do much preparation at the start of the season – lots of fitness training, or time in the gym?
Fabi: Yeah, but not lots of time. I have in Fall some really tight plans, and for maybe one or two months I’m often in the gym, but otherwise I’m just hiking in the mountains. Go running, jump around in the forest, just do it outside more or less. And then have one time frame where I have to be in the gym, to really activate everything, and get some confidence, and some muscles haha, to stomp cliffs.
Is there anything specific you do in the gym? Do you concentrate on your legs, or more of an all around workout?
Fabi: Everything really, but I think even more core than legs, because that’s the most important [part] of your whole body. There’s no point in pushing the legs and getting hurt somewhere else… So I do a lot of core, but yeah, otherwise especially legs. But the whole body has to work together. I think that’s important.
Your skiing is getting pretty insane these days. What does your Mum think of it all?
Fabi: My Mum? Haha. It was hard in the beginning: she didn’t like it that much when I was jumping, and sometimes she almost got a heart attack when I skiing with her and jumping off cliffs, but now it’s almost normal. She’s getting used to it, and she trusts me, I guess. So yeah, it’s all right haha.
Have you ever had any ‘oh shit’ moments on the mountain, where something’s gone wrong?
Fabi: Yeah. Yeah, it happens from time to time. One time I fell down a face because a small [slab] went off, and sloughed me down. There would have been a 100m cliff below me, but I stopped a bit above it. Well, a good bit above it, but while falling I was like, ‘fuck, that’s it.’ One other time I had a big avalanche, but I just skied out of it in the last second. I think I didn’t go skiing for 5 days afterwards, like thinking about if I should do it again ever, but then… I started again haha.
There have been quite a few accidents and deaths in skiing this year, like JP [Auclair] and Andreas [Fransson]. Do you think there’s any problem in how people are approaching the sport, or if there’s anything we can do differently to make it safer?
Fabi: Not really, there’s always a risk in the mountains. I think Andreas was one of the best skiers in the world, especially with risk management: he was my idol in that kind of thing, so I never thought anything would happen to him, but you always have this last risk on the mountain. Being professional it’s obvious that you get out there more, but it doesn’t mean that it gets you killed; it’s just you’re more out there and the chance is a little bit bigger. Everybody knows when you go out on the mountain you have to think about consequences. I think it’s just part of the sport, but the industry is working a lot towards it with all the avalanche equipment, like the airbags, and I think it’s going in a good direction.
What would you prefer: super deep powder or a steeper face with less good snow but more cliffs?
Fabi: I would go for the steep face. If it’s 20cm [deep] and soft underneath it’s perfect. Then I don’t need a metre of powder. It would be too risky.
If you could only ski one mountain or resort for the rest of your life, where would it be?
Fabi: One mountain or resort? Hmmm hahahaha. One single mountain? I don’t know man. I think that would not be an option for me haha, I would fight and go somewhere else. I just want to have different places. I couldn’t do that, no. If I really had to, it would probably be Pitztal, as a valley.
If we could send you to anywhere in the world to ski tomorrow – any trip, with no budget restrictions – where would you go?
Fabi: Hmm. Think I would check all the snow forecast sites, and see where the most snow is, and then decide. If it’s good everywhere then maybe I would go to Alaska and ski some big stuff. If there’s no budget problems I would go with a helicopter, and maybe hike afterwards. I think in Alaska it’s ok to have a helicopter from time to time haha.
If you could invent a new piece of ski equipment or technology, what would it be?
Fabi: Hmm. I thought about a teleporter, but it’s… If only I have it, I would get it. If everyone has it then everything just gets too crazy… Even for me I think you would just get too used to teleporting, but it’s cool to have a journey to go on. If you want to ski in Iran, you have to take a plane and you have to take a car and a long road, and then you’re more satisfied when you get there than if you’re just pushing a button. I think the search makes it better. So I’m not sure what I would get haha.