LIVIGNO, Italy — There might not be snowboarding at the Olympics — or snowboards at all — if it weren't for an entrepreneur named Jake Burton.
And, in what feels like more than your garden-variety twist of fate, the grandmother of one of the sport's best riders at the Milan Cortina Games played a small role. Decades ago and a world away from the mountain, she hired Burton to mow her lawn.
Defending slopestyle champion Zoi Sadowski-Synnott's grandma lived on Long Island in the 1970s and saw a flier offering ''outdoor improvement'' — everything from a complete overhaul of the backyard to a weekly lawn trimming. That business Burton ran as a teenager was one of the first flickers of an entrepreneurial spirit that ran deep and eventually created a sports behemoth — the Burton snowboard company.
''When I met him, he was pretty lonely,'' said Burton's wife and business partner, Donna Carpenter, the owner of Burton who is in Livigno for the Olympics. ''Nobody believed in him. Everyone thought he was crazy. He was working 11- 12-hour days by himself in the back of a barn. He was lonely, but he was pretty damn determined. He used to always say ‘Success is the best revenge.'''
Not long after Sadowski-Synnott signed with Burton, the families started comparing notes and the connection was made. Burton, by then known as Jake Burton Carpenter, passed away in 2019. This is the second Winter Olympics without him. But it's hard to overstate his importance in this sport.
''I only met Jake once, at a Burton U.S. Open, right after I signed with Burton,'' Sadowski-Synnott said. ''It was special. Without him, we wouldn't have snowboarding.''
Burton went from mowing lawns to New York University, where he graduated with a degree in economics, and then to Wall Street.
In the late 1970s, he gave that up and moved back to Vermont to take a gamble. He wanted to see how far the ''Snurfer,'' a pair of skis bolted together that was invented by Sherman Poppen a decade earlier, might take him.