Backside 360
Source: Snowboard Addiction · channel
The backside 360 is a full rotation spinning with your back toward the downhill side. It's often considered harder than frontside because more of the spin is blind. But many riders actually find the takeoff more natural because of the heel-edge approach.
The wind-up happens on your toe-side approach. You pre-wind the shoulders away from the hill so they have maximum range to unwind through the spin. At the pop, release the shoulders hard in the spin direction. The first 180 degrees is blind; the second 180 brings the landing back into view over your leading shoulder, usually around the 270-degree mark.
Where backside 3s trip people up is stalling out at 270. Your brain sees the landing appear and instinctively wants to stop rotating, but the board hasn't caught up yet, and you land diagonal or backwards. The fix is to keep your head and shoulders rotating even after you see the landing. Only at 360 do you open up and extend to stomp. Staying tight through the spin and committing past the "I can see the ground" moment is the whole trick.
Learn more here:
Video by Snowboard Addiction
Key tips
- Solid backside 180s are a prerequisite
- Commit to the full rotation. Bailing at 270 is worse than over-rotating
- Look over your leading shoulder to initiate, then keep your head turning
- The landing comes into view around 270 degrees. Spot it
- Stay compact through the spin, open up for the landing
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