Guernsey Press

Fear no longer a factor for freestyle skier James Woods ahead of third Olympics

The 30-year-old says he was “scared of everything” as a shy kid growing up in Sheffield.

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From a self-confessed scaredy-cat to a freestyle superstar intent on taming one of the toughest courses in Olympic history, James Woods has no intention of calling time on his swashbuckling career.

Fear is no longer a factor for the free-spirited 30-year-old, who will take part in his third Games in Beijing, 5,000 miles from his cautious early steps at the Sheffield Ski Village.

“I don’t get scared,” grinned Woods as he surveyed the death-slide drop at the end of the slopestyle course high in the Zhangjikou mountains, upon which he is expected to challenge for a medal next week.

Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games – February 1st
James Woods spoke to the media ahead of his first practice run in Zhangjikou (Andrew Milligan/PA)

“It’s about how you frame it and deal with it. For me now, bigger is always better. I haven’t had a real good eyeball yet but this course is rad, it’s extreme, and I’m buzzing on it.”

A former world champion and X Games gold medallist, Woods travels the world in pursuit of his passion, barely having time to drop his bags back in his native country, arriving in Beijing from Nicaragua where he had spent his summer surfing and spear-fishing.

Sochi Winter Olympic Games – Day 6
James Woods finished fifth at his first Winter Olympics in Sochi in 2014 (Mike Egerton/PA)

“I never want to stop skiing,” Woods said. “My body has never felt better – I’ve dealt with a few injuries in the past and I truly believe I’ve come back stronger and in a much better place.”

Woods finished fifth on his Olympic debut in Sochi in 2014, when he was hampered by a hip injury, and went one step closer to a medal in Pyeongchang four years ago, where he was fourth.

Woods added: “I don’t compete for any other reason than to win – that’s why I compete and that’s why I do these things.

“The day I don’t think I can win is the day I stop competing. I am here for business, but if that is the way free-skiing is defined, that I’m happy-go-lucky, then I’m fine with that.

“I always refer to it as an art form more than a sport. It’s not about how quickly you get over the line, or how many times you get the ball in the goal. You can only put your best out there, then it’s up to the judges to decide.”

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