In some ways, Shaun White's next trip to the Winter Olympics might be the toughest.
Retired for four years and now trying to shape his sport from outside of the halfpipe he once commanded, White says he fully expects his upcoming trip to Italy — the country where he won the first of his three gold medals — to be an emotional ride, maybe with some unexpected turns.
''I think my big goal is to get Snoop (Dogg) on a snowboard,'' he said, in a nod both to the appearances he could be making with the rapper-turned-Olympics aficionado on NBC telecasts, and the new world he's entering now that his days of competitive riding are over.
In an interview with The Associated Press, White discussed the leadership role he's taken in action sports through his year-old Snow League halfpipe tour, how life feels being single again and his thoughts about being a spectator at the Olympics for the first time since 2002.
''I'm going to try to hold it together, but yeah, it will be an emotional day,'' he said of the men's halfpipe final, scheduled for Feb. 13.
White relishes a chance to shape the sport's future
During his heyday, White was the first rider who made no apologies for aggressively trying to win in a sport that felt more concerned with being laid-back. In much the way he reconfigured that part of snowboarding's narrative over his 20-plus years in the halfpipe, he wants to leverage his influence in retirement by stamping a new blueprint on its future.
His new league is reimagining what a halfpipe contest can be. Instead of the traditional way of judges evaluating runs and letting the highest score win, it introduced an elimination bracket in which judges pick winners of best-of-three, one-on-one showdowns. Riders have to drop into the pipe from opposite sides on their first two runs — harder than it sounds, even for the best.