This article examines freestyle skiing as a dynamic winter sport that combines traditional skiing techniques with aerial acrobatics and high-speed maneuvers. Based on analysis of Olympic history, disciplinary specifications, and competitive developments, the article reconstructs the evolution of freestyle skiing from its countercultural origins in the 1960s to its current status as one of the most spectacular disciplines of the Winter Olympics. Particular attention is devoted to the seven distinct disciplines comprising the sport, their scoring methodologies, the technological evolution of equipment, and the star athletes who have shaped the sport's development. The upcoming Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Games, featuring the debut of dual moguls and the addition of a fifteenth medal event, serve as the focal point for examining contemporary freestyle skiing.
Who would win if Russia fought NATO?
Alienation as a Legal Advocacy Strategy
Russian writers and Charles Dickens
A. S. Khomyakov as an Anglophile
The phenomenon of "anglomania" in Russian culture
Aesthetics of Monasticism
Legal culture of an educational institution and information resources: international experience
Right to digital oblivion
Ski resort and spiritual-intellectual conferences for youth