
Aspen - Pros
2023 Pro Team Coaches
Manny Osborne Paradis
Born in North Vancouver, British Columbia, Osborne-Paradis grew up racing for the Whistler Mountain Ski Club. His first World Cup podium came in November 2006 at the Bombardier Winterstart men's downhill in Lake Louise, Alberta, Canada. His first victory was at the downhill of Kvitfjell in March 2009. In April 2008, he joined forces with teammate Mike Janyk to start the M&M foundation that supports youth in ski racing needed bursaries, and to provide an all-expenses-paid race camp for underprivileged Canadian racers from around the country. The camp, known locally as the "Cowboys Camp", took place on Whistler Mountain. but known in the community as Mike & Manny Camp. Osborne-Paradis was a surprise bronze medalist in super-G at the 2017 World Championships, behind teammate Erik Guay and Norway's Kjetil Jansrud. Racing in bib number 26, he won the medal on his 33rd birthday. Osborne-Paradis is a four-time Olympian, and the first Canadian to win both a World Cup Super G and Downhill.
David Ketterer
David Ketterer is an alpine skier who competes internationally for Germany. He competes in alpine skiing, classification, giant slalom, slalom and super g.
Member of the german ski team since 2012
Colorado University 2016-2018, 2x NCAA Champion in 2017, North America Cup Winner Slalom 2017
German Worlcup Team Slalom 2018-2023
22nd Slalom WC Chamonix 2023
Resi Stiegler
Born and raised in Jackson, Wyoming, Stiegler is the daughter of Olympic champion Josef "Pepi" Stiegler of Austria. She began skiing at age two and racing at six at Jackson Hole. Junior Olympic and Nor-Am success while still a teenager led to a berth on the U.S. Ski Team; she made her World Cup debut at age 17 in December 2002 at a slalom in Lenzerheide, Switzerland, where she finished a remarkable eleventh. At the 2003 Junior World Championships in France, she won bronze medals in slalom and combined, to which she added a tenth-place finish in combined at the "grown-up" World Championships that year in St. Moritz, Switzerland. Through March 2016, Stiegler has 21 World Cup top-ten finishes, with one podium. She finished sixth in combined at the 2005 World Championships in Santa Caterina, Italy. Stiegler made her Olympic debut at the 2006 Torino games at age 20, placing eleventh in the combined and twelfth in the slalom. Stiegler's trademark is the tiger ears she usually wears atop her helmet. She won a well-publicized battle with the International Olympic Committee, allowing her to compete with the ears at the Torino Olympics. After a series of injuries, Stiegler made her first World Cup podium in March 2012, a runner-up finish at a slalom in Ofterschwang, Germany.
Steven Nyman
Steven Nyman is a World Cup alpine ski racer on the U.S. Ski Team. Formerly a slalom skier, he is now a speed specialist, with a main focus on downhill. Nyman made his first World Cup podium in December 2006, placing third in a downhill at the Birds of Prey course at Beaver Creek, Colorado. Fifteen days later, he won his first World Cup race, a downhill in Val Gardena, Italy. As the fastest racer at the 2010–2011 NASTAR National Championships, Nyman was the NASTAR National Pacesetter and represented the National Standard or Par Time for the 2010–2011 season. Nyman won his third World Cup downhill in December 2014, all at Val Gardena. He injured his right knee (ACL) in late January 2018 at Garmisch and missed the rest of the season, including the 2018 Olympics; he had finished third at the pre-Olympic downhill at Jeongseon two years earlier.
Megan McJames
Born in the Utah, Megan feels most at home in the mountains. Megan is a 3x Olympian and the first American skier to pioneer a path to the Olympics after being cut from the national team; an inspirational journey chronicled in her film Trailblazer.
Megan spends her time searching for adventure and is passionate about sharing her love for the natural world with her husband and daughter.
Anna Sullivan
Anna Sullivan (Goodman) was a member of the Canadian National Alpine Ski Team for 9 years (2003 – 2012) and the Canadian Olympic Team in Vancouver, 2010. Her World Cup career included 6 top 15 World Cup results, a winning world cup run in Ofterschwang, Germany, and membership on three different World Championship Teams. She also had a very successful Nor-Am and college-racing career. Anna won the U.S. Nationals slalom race in 2013, the overall Nor-Am slalom title twice, and accumulated 20 Nor-Am podiums, 10 of which were gold medals. In 2012, she co-founded “The Ski Racing Sisterhood,” a ski camp that each year empowers 32 teenage girls to bring their ski racing and personal leadership skills to an elite level.
Marco Sullivan
Marco Sullivan was born and raised in Tahoe City, CA. and spent 17 years on the US Ski Team, retiring at the end of the 2015-16 season. During that time he raced in 4 Olympics, won a World Cup downhill race, secured 3 national titles and got to live his dream. Some other accomplishments during his career include, 5 Arctic Man titles, Skier Cross World Champion title, and racing in the most World Cup Downhill’s of any American man at 105. He now resides back in Tahoe City with his fiancée Anna Goodman (current DISC pro). Marco’s hobbies include skiing, mountain biking, camping, cooking and working on his house. His newest endeavors include commentating for NBC Sports and coaching ski racing part time.
Dustin Cook
Originally from the frigid, icy slopes of Ottawa, Canada, Dustin was a ten year veteran on the World Cup circuit, capturing a Super G silver at the 2015 World Championships in Beaver Creek, along with one World Cup victory, and two World Cup podiums. He now prefers the champagne pow of Salt Lake City, Utah to icy race courses, and spends his time exploring the continent on skis and wheels.
Marie-Pier Prefontaine
Marie-Pier was on the Canadian ski team for 10 years and participated in 2 Olympics, Vancouver 2010 and Sochi 2014. Her best event was GS. Originally from St-Sauveur, Quebec Marie-Pier now live in Pemberton, BC (near Whistler) and she skis almost everyday but now prefers skiing powder. Marie-Pier skis professionally as a big mountain skier, and also coaches private ski camps and works as a ski guide on Whistler/Blackcomb.