Update on Shane McConkey's accident from filmer Scott McGaffney and friend JT Holmes who were on site the day the accident happened.
March 26, 2009
MSP Films painfully announces the loss one of the most innovative,
gifted, entertaining and inspirational figures in the history of
skiing. Shane McConkey, 38, died while performing a ski BASE jump off
the Saspardoi cliff in the Dolomite Mountains in Italy while filming
with MSP for a Red Bull ski BASE project.
J.T. Holmes, a close friend and long-time jump partner of McConkey
who had jumped the 600 meter cliff moments before Shane, said McConkey
performed a double backflip from the cliff and planned to release his
skis and then fly in his wingsuit, a stunt he's executed a number of
times. But when both skis failed to release upon tugging on straps
leashed to his legs, McConkey went into an upside down position as he
manually attempted to release his bindings. Because throwing a chute
while inverted poses the likelihood of the canopy and lines becoming
entangled in the skis, McConkey used valuable seconds to focus on
removing both skis and succeeded. He quickly turned into a classic,
face down BASE jumping position to throw his pilot chute (which pulls
out the main canopy), but after 12 seconds of freefall he struck snow
immediately before there was time to react. He was likely killed upon
impact.
Shane McConkey is survived by his wife, Sherry, 3 1/2 year-old daughter Ayla, and his parents Jim and Glenn.
McConkey’s passing leaves an entire industry reeling from the news.
He starred in 15 MSP movies including the heralded “There’s Something
About McConkey” and was honored as “The People’s Choice” for Male Skier
of the Year three years in a row. As one of the most versatile skiers
in the history of the sport, in his 17-year professional freeskiing
career McConkey won everything from mogul tour events to big mountain
competitions to skiercross races to big air events.
One of the most forward thinking individuals in the sport, in the
mid 1990s, McConkey singlehandedly convinced the ski world to get on
fat skis to ski mountains faster and more easily and--seeing that
skiing powder is more akin to floating on water--he proceeded to
convince his ski sponsor, Volant, to produce a reverse sidecut, reverse
camber ski he dubbed the Spatula that flew in the face of decades of
ski design. Knowing the ski would be scoffed at by the industry
establishment, McConkey illustrated his point by mounting a pair of
1970's jumping waterskis and shredding a massive British Columbia peak
with ease in MSP’s film, “Focused,” and inadvertently gave rise to a
functional sliding turn now fondly referred to as a “McConkey Turn.”
Today, nearly every reputable ski manufacturer produces a reverse
sidecut, reverse cambered ski born from the Spatula.
In the latter stages of his career, McConkey discovered BASE jumping
and quickly became the forefather of ski BASE jumping, seeing potential
to ski lines never thought possible. His ski BASE feats included a
quadruple backflip off of a 400’ cliff and culminated in a classic
ode-to-James Bond chase scene in the film, “Seven Sunny Days.”
But beyond a hard charging, cliff hucking, trick-inventing,
mind-blowing skier and BASE jumper, McConkey was a constant
entertainer. Countless magazine articles and film segments revealed a
man who enjoyed the lighter side of life. When a season was cut short
in 1997 by a knee injury, McConkey gave birth to Saucerboy, a
saucer-riding, Jack Daniels swilling character who brought hilarity to
an otherwise serious ski film industry as he appeared in several MSP
films. McConkey's comedic, fun-loving personality was ever-present on
screen and off. His positive, seize-the-day demeanor affected anyone
who had the fortune of meeting him.
At 38 years old, McConkey had just turned in one of his finer
performances of a lifetime in the film, “Claim,” revealing that age and
a career filled with injury had done nothing to slow him down. As he
said emphatically in the film, “I’m Shane McConkey, dammit, and I’m not
done yet.” Shane McConkey was an incredible influential figure in two
distinct sports, and he was a brother for the MSP Films crew and
thousands of people whose lives he touched. His loss will be felt the
world over as he leaves a void that simply can never be filled. As one
fan put it, “It feels like Superman died.” He basically did.