Snowboarder Spencer Cordovano, a sophomore at Sierra Nevada College, recently qualified for a spot on the U.S. Junior World Cup team. The 20-year-old will be traveling to Khanty-Mansiysk, Russia, March 21-30 to compete. RN&R caught up with him on the phone as he was heading up a ski lift in Colorado.

So how do you get chosen to be on the U.S. Junior World Cup Team?

You have to qualify for events and โ€ฆ [be] born in 1988 or after. They take three people per discipline. โ€ฆ In Russia, Iโ€™ll be racing boardercross, alpine and competing in big airโ€”thatโ€™s one big jump of 50-70 feet, and you do one trick a couple times.

Your coach [Tony Carlstrom] described you as fearless. Is that needed to be a good snowboarder?

Definitely, you get in the gate with three other people in boardercross, and youโ€™re on a course that at its widest point is 15 meters, and you get up to speeds of like 50. Iโ€™m not really fearless, you just have to make up confidence and, usually, it works out for you.

Have you ever been to Russia?

No. I figure this will be my only chance to go. It gives me an excuse to learn about their history so I donโ€™t look like an idiot when I go. And I hear the Russian women are kind of cute.

How did you get into snowboarding?

I grew up in a mountain town in Hailey, Idaho, a suburb of Sun Valley. Itโ€™s a really outdoorsy place, and thereโ€™s a huge mountain that brings skiers to the valley. Iโ€™ve been on competitive teams since the sixth grade. โ€ฆ I started skiing when I was 3 and switched to snowboarding in fifth grade. I started out as regular snowboarding, and then I switched to goofy [left-footed].

What does snowboarding have that skiing doesnโ€™t?

Snowboarding is a blank slate; skiing has been going on forever. Snowboarding has been in its infancy. In the last five years, itโ€™s blown up out of control. Snowboarding has a lot more creativity. โ€ฆ And we have half as many edges on our snowboards as skiers. Snowboarding had a negative connotation among skiers, but thatโ€™s gone out the window now. Itโ€™s become developed, and now itโ€™s getting respect as a sport.

Your competition calendar looks pretty full.

Yeah, Iโ€™ve been to two week-long contests already. Iโ€™m at a week-long contest right now, and Iโ€™m on the road from Feb. 25-April 7. During that time, Iโ€™ll be going to Sunday River, Maine for college nationals. Thatโ€™s where all the colleges in the country compete against each other. โ€ฆ Our team has won best overall for the last two years.

Youโ€™re coach says youโ€™re the best rider theyโ€™ve ever had at SNC.

Itโ€™s definitely a compliment. I like to hear that. It gives me a drive to keep that status up while Iโ€™m here. Last year I won best individual at the college nationals; Iโ€™d like to do that all my four years at SNC.

Where are you right now?

Iโ€™m at Copper Mountain, Colorado, at the Chevrolet Revolution tour, and I am currently going down the run.

On your cell phone?

This is how I do my interviews, you know; Iโ€™m a busy man with snowboarding. Right now, Iโ€™m doing big-air training and about to hit a 50-foot tabletop.

Sounds like I should let you go. Is there anything you want to add?

My general outlook on snowboarding is to drink champagne in the victory lane.

Youโ€™re not 21 yet.

When you win, you get champagne โ€ฆ

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