Meet the most underrated skier in America: a humble, hard-charging guy from Michigan whose name you probably donât know, even though heâs one of the best damn skiers on the planet
WORDS âą MEGAN MICHELSON | FEATURED IMAGE âą MATTIAS FREDRIKSSON
Everyone there remembers the story a little differently. But it goes something like this: Josh Daiek was sleeping on photographer Grant Gundersonâs couch in Bellingham, Washington. It was the winter of 2012âa particularly snowy one in the Pacific Northwestâand Daiek was a fledgling pro skier with some good competition results on the Freeskiing World Tour but little in the way of name recognition or sponsorship support.
One night, the Salomon Freeski crew, including pro skiers Chris Rubens and Cody Townsend and filmers Blair Richmond and Jeff Thomas, rolled into town and were also crashing with Gunderson. Townsend knew of Daiek from Lake Tahoe, California, where they both live, but theyâd never actually met. They all stayed up late drinking whiskey.
The next morning, Daiek approached Thomas gingerly. âI was super nervous, but I was like, âCan I follow you guys around today? Donât even worry about pointing the camera at me,ââ Daiek remembers.
âSure,â Thomas responded. âWhy not?â
PHOTO: Christoffer Sjöström | LOCATION: Georgia
Townsend remembers it this way: âThere was no way we were going to kick Josh out to go ski by himself. It felt natural to invite him along to ski, hang and shoot, which is the first time that has ever happened,â Townsend says.
That morning, Daiek helped stomp the take-off to a jump atop a large cliff in the Mt. Baker backcountry. Rubens hit it first. When it was Daiekâs turn, he hiked three times farther uphill than the other athletes. He hit the jump at full throttle and launched an 80-foot backflip. It was so big he nearly went into a front flip, too. Everyone was shocked. âUh. Why donât we film you?â Thomas said. âLetâs see what youâre going to do next.â
âIt is still one of the biggest backflips I have ever witnessed,â Rubens says. Later that night, Rubens remembers looking online and seeing that Daiek was currently in the lead of the Freeskiing World Tour overall standings. Not that Daiek had said anything about that.
PHOTO: Mattias Fredriksson | LOCATION: Courmayeur, Italy
At the end of the trip, the whole crew went to the higher ups at Salomon and said, âYouâve got to sign this guy.â
âAt that time, we were looking for a few new big-mountain athletes, so the timing was right,â says Jesse Malman, who was then Salomonâs athlete manager and now works at Goal Zero. âWhen I met Josh later, he was humble, showed gratitude and already had a good rapport with our team and filmers, which is really important when filming in the backcountry.â Malman signed Daiek to the team the following winter.
Thereâs an inside joke amongst the Salomon crew that Daiek is the best skier on the team. âWhich isnât really a joke,â Townsend says. âItâs just our way of acknowledging a guy we all believe is the best skier on the team but just hasnât gotten the recognition, opportunity or stage that a lot of the other guys, including myself, have gotten.â
So who is this Josh Daiek guy and why, years after this insane backflip, do you still not know his name?
PHOTO: Christoffer Sjöström
Daiek grew up in Rochester Hills, Michigan, a working-class suburb of Detroit. His mom was a bookkeeper and his dad owned a mill that did custom woodwork. Daiek worked in his dadâs shop starting at age 12. As a kid, he was always workingâdoing yardwork, building a shed. His parents instilled in him the same hard-working ethic they had. âMy parents were very passionate about work. So even for me, it was never like, âIâm going to play with my friends,ââ he says.
Daiekâs dad was a skier and he taught his three sons and daughter to ski, too. Josh, the youngest of the four, learned to ski at age five. The family would spend a few weekends a year at Boyne Highlands, a ski area in northern Michigan, four hours from their house, that has a whopping 552 feet of vertical drop.
When Daiek was in fifth grade, the family took a ski trip to Winter Park, Colorado, where his whole outlook changed. âI remember just being jaw-dropped and so excited,â he says. He grew up reading the now-defunct Freeze Magazine and watching Seth Morrison and Shane McConkey in MSP movies. In high school, he joined the ski team, busing it to the closest ski hill, where heâd skip gate practice to sneak off to the terrain park.
During his senior year, his cousin, whoâd been living in South Lake Tahoe for a few years, invited him out to ski during his spring break. âI was like, âWait, in California? Youâve been skiing this whole time?ââ he says. He had no idea California had snow or mountains.
So Daiek and his brother flew to Tahoe for a week and hit a late-season powder day at Kirkwood. He couldnât turn through the thick snow, but still, he was hooked. Heâd saved enough money working multiple jobs in high school that he was able to move to South Lake Tahoe after graduating in 2002. He moved in with his cousin and enrolled at the local community college. âI left Michigan and was like, âI want to be like those guys from the ski movies,ââ he says.
PHOTO: Mattias Fredriksson | LOCATION: Revelstoke, BC
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He got a job doing carpentry for a guy he still works for, some 16 years later. When he first started his job, he asked his boss, DJ Bickert, if he could ski during the day and come into the shop at night. âI thought, how much work is he really going to get done after a full day of skiing?â Bickert says. âBut he would consistently get the job done. I soon learned thatâs who Josh is. He has the self-discipline and fortitude to show up. He always shows up.â
At Kirkwood, Daiek started chasing local ripper and Freeskiing World Tour competitor Craig Garbiel around the mountain. âI just started following him around one day,â Daiek says. âWe ended up becoming really good buddies. I tried to emulate his style. He was one of the sickest skiers Iâve ever seen.â
After a few years, Garbiel suggested Daiek try a big-mountain contest. So when the Freeskiing World Tour made its annual Kirkwood stop in 2005, Daiek signed up. He barely squeaked through the qualifiers, then stomped his line and won the first day of the competition, beating big names like established French pro skiers Aurelien Ducroz and Guerlain Chicherit.
âEveryone was like, âJosh who?ââ Daiek says. He ended up fifth overall in his first competition and afterward a local Rossignol rep approached him and said, âWould you like some skis?â Daiek couldnât believe it. By 2007, he was doing all the stops on the Freeskiing World Tour, grabbing a handful of top-10 finishes and even more DNFs. âI like to ski fast, hit big airs and send big backies to my feet,â he says. âBut itâs all or nothing. Iâd tell myself to take it easy, but I donât have a very good off switch.â
Townsend describes Daiekâs style this way: âHeâs got pretty much one speed and thatâs pedal to the metal in fifth gear. But you can tell itâs never out of wanting to show off or impressâhe just does it because thatâs who he is.â
His style worked in 2008âhe grabbed the overall title on the U.S. Freeskiing World Tour. But even with those competition results, Daiek remained more or less unknown. By the time he nabbed another overall title in 2012 and joined the Salomon team in 2013, Malman, the Salomon athlete manager, told him he didnât need to risk injury by competing anymore if he didnât want toâhe could just focus on filming.
âI was like, âCool, I donât have to risk my life in shitty snow conditions anymore?ââ Daiek says. He retired from competition in 2014 and has spent the years since traveling from Japan to Chamonix, France, to British Columbia, filming for Salomon Freeski TV. In 2015, he starred in Blank.The Movie, a made-by-skiers-for-skiers film.
Back home in Tahoe, few people have any clue what Daiek does when heâs away. âHe doesnât talk about himself at all,â says his boss, Bickert. âHeâd come back from a winter away and Iâd have to pry it out of him.â
PHOTO: Mattias Fredriksson | LOCATION: Revelstoke, BC
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Over the last few years, Daiek has transitioned from spending all day, every day lapping the burliest inbounds lines at Kirkwood to spending long, quiet days in the backcountry. âThereâs a different element when you earn your turns and youâre out there cruising around the backcountry,â he says. âI love the exploration of it. To me, itâs really fun to see new terrain and let your mind go wild on what you can do.â
In 2016, he and friend Abe Greenspan climbed 10,000 vertical feet and over 22 miles in a day from their home in Meyers, near South Lake Tahoe, linking together four iconic Tahoe peaksâFlagpole Peak (8,363 feet), Angora Peak (8,586 feet), Mt. Tallac (9,738 feet) and Maggies (8,699 feet). No skier had climbed and skied all those peaks in a single day before. It took them over 12 hours, fueled primarily by cheese and salami.
PHOTO: Christoffer Sjöström | LOCATION: Tignes, France
They documented their mission in a short film they called Tahoe 10,000. They did another 10,000-foot day the next winter, from Kirkwood to Hope Valley, tagging five peaks and traversing 20 miles along the way. Both times, Daiek and Greenspan ended their day with beers and a hot broiled sandwich at Divided Sky, the localâs bar near Daiekâs house. Besides a local newspaper article and a well-watched YouTube video, there was little fanfare. Which is totally fine with Daiek. âIâm ready to abandon the whole â10,000-foot thing,ââ he says. âI want to just reach outside what we think is doable. I just want to go and see how far we can get.â
Clearly, heâs accomplished a lot in his ski career, so why is Daiek still so under the radar? Maybe itâs because he struggles with the self-promotion and look-at-me attitude thatâs required in pro skiing these days. âHeâs got that old-fashioned, Midwest humbleness that means any sort of praise bestowed upon him makes him feel uncomfortable,â says Townsend. Daiek says he still doesnât consider himself an elite athlete. âSometimes, when weâre on a trip, I think, âDo I even deserve to be here?ââ he says. âItâs my own insecurity. Itâs how Iâm wired.â
Plus, heâs not a huge fan of social media. âIâm not that loud guy whoâs always animated. Iâm more quiet, reserved,â he says. âI feel like with social media, I have to put on a front like Iâm this crazy, outgoing guy. But Iâm just not.â
âIn an industry that has become very social media-based with self-promotion being the name of the game, this can make things difficult for someone like Josh,â says Rubens. âBut Josh has always been one of those guys who lets his skiing do the talking.â
PHOTO: Christoffer Sjöström | LOCATION: Tignes, France
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âHeâs the humblest person Iâve ever met,â adds his wife, Casey Daiek (nĂ©e Lucas), a former competitive snowboarder who met Daiek in the lift-line at Kirkwood a dozen years ago. The two got married this past summer. âHe doesnât like talking about himself. But heâs very good at staying true to himself. He is so focused on his skiing.â
For Daiek, whoâs 35 now, it all comes down to a true love of skiing. Heâll return from a filming trip, exhausted and jet-lagged, having spent the last week logging long days on skis, but by 6 a.m. the next day at home, heâll be calling friends and asking, âWant to go skiing?â
âSkiing is my life,â he says. âIâm sure Iâll have to tone it back eventually, but I plan on skiing forever.â




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