It’s a sad, tragic day for skiing: Shane McConkey, one of
the sport’s brightest stars of the last 20 years, was killed today in a
ski-BASE accident near Corvara, in Italy’s Dolomite Mountains.
Ski-BASE is like BASE-jumping, i.e. parachuting off fixed objected
like cliffs, buildings, and bridges, but on skis, and McConkey was one
of its best-known adherents and, indeed, pioneers. The 39-year-old Red
Bull athlete was filming with fellow skier J.T. Holmes and Matchstick
Productions in Europe and working on a project that had been brewing
for a couple of years: scouting the perfect location and preparing for
a double ski-BASE jump.
“Shane’s been working on this project for two or three years,” said
Scott Gaffney, an MSP filmmaker and close friend of McConkey’s. “It’s
where they ski-BASE off a cliff and then fly down to another patch of
snow, cut away, land, ski again, and then ski-BASE again. It’s a double
BASE all in one run. That’s what they were filming for. And naturally,
with those guys, if they aren’t working on that they’re going to be
jumping off something else.
“So he and J.T. had built a jump on top of another cliff. I think
Shane had done it the day before without a wingsuit and today he was
trying it with a wingsuit.”
Gaffney spoke with Holmes immediately after the accident. The other
ski-BASE jumper went off the cliff first, with MSP’s Steve Winter
shooting video from a helicopter and two other cinematographers
shooting nearby, and was landing when the accident occurred.
“Shane did a double backflip and then had some difficulty,” said
Gaffney. He uses these old-school Tyrolia bindings, which release
upwards, and they have straps attached that he pulls on to release the
skis. So he pulls the bindings, the skis release, and then he flies
away in the wingsuit.
“He got one ski off, but then was fighting to get the other one off.
In the whole process, he went upside down and had one ski above him,
which caused him to spiral. And then he got into a high-speed spin. He
was still fighting to get out all the way down. J.T. watched the
footage again because he wanted to know what happened. It was hard to
see, so this is speculation, but it looked like he was going for his
pilot chute. Maybe he couldn’t get to it—he’d complained before that
the wingsuit was tight. But we don’t know for sure.”
McConkey’s ski/jump route yesterday.
McConkey, from Olympic Valley, California, made his first ski-BASE
jump in 2003 and had over 700 under his belt. Just yesterday, he
completed a dramatic ski-BASE in/near the Val Scura Couloir and posted
an excited entry on Facebook and his Red Bull page,
where he posted a gripping description of the descent and jump. “We
nailed the Sassongher line!” he wrote. “This was extremely satisfying
getting to ski such a unique line.”
McConkey was one of the most charismatic skiers the sport has ever
seen, with a twisted and contagious sense of humor that seeped into
nearly everything he did. His Red Bull bio says, “Being remembered as
an athlete is nice, but I’d rather be remembered as that guy who helped
us all ski better and faster by inventing skis with rocker and reverse
sidecut shapes, and who convinced us to use fatter skis — and most
importantly, to never take yourself too seriously.”
McConkey is survived by his wife Sherry, and three-year-old daughter, Ayla.