FREESKIER is proud to announce that Phil Casabon is the 2018 Male Skier of the Year (SOTY), as voted by his peers.
To determine the winners, we contacted over 200 of the most talented and knowledgeable professional skiers out there and had them rank the athletes they felt had the best 2018 ski season. āBest seasonā is a term open to interpretation, but we ask the athletes to think about a few things, including, but not limited to, film segments, web series and edits, contest results, magazine exposure and overall impact in regards to spreading skiing stoke and growth.
Each nomination (1-3) corresponds with a point value: A #1 pick earns 10 points, a #2 pick earns five points and so on. Thereby, if a particular skier shows up consistently in the #3 or #4 slot, theyād still have a shot at faring well in the final tally. There were no restrictions on nominations; skiers were able to throw any and all names in the ring.
Casabon took the top spot on the menās side for 2018, earning him SOTY honors for the first time. Casabon, or B-Dog as much of the ski world knows him, released his film En Particulier to tremendous praise in fall 2018. The Quebec-native worked with friend and filmmaker Brady Perron on the 20-minute-plus movie. āWorking with Phil is always an honor. He somehow maintains a truly special style at a tip-top skill level. He balances his progression with heavy integrity and sincere grittiness,ā Perron says. āPhilās awareness, experience and devotion are reflected in his video projects, which are highly anticipated by peers and fans alike each year. He is goofy but has discipline, kind of on some cartoon, cold weather, martial artist tip.ā
We caught up with Casabon over the phone from his hometown in Quebec, where he takes us through his personal outlook on skiing.
Phil, where are you right now?
Iām Shawinigan in Quebec, my hometown, just in the middle of a storm, but luckily indoors right now. Itās raging super, duper hard. Itās going to be awesome, weāve been getting quite a lot of snow, so probably going to utilize that.
Congratulations on your Skier of the Year win, itās much deserved.
Itās amazing man, weāre celebrating over here, weāre very happy. Itās great news.
Letās talk about En Particulier⦠itās an amazing film and has received tremendous praise since its release. What do you have to say about the success itās had?
Itās the result of a condensed, intense experience with one of my best friends. The outcome is really heart spoken and really raw, and I think that we touched people with the realness of it all, and also the genuine approach to it. Brady Perron, who filmed, directed and edited the film, is a big reason why En Particulier took the turn that it did, and our relationship is also a big factor in why this piece came out the way that it did. Iām so grateful, he built that and I helped assembled it, it was a month and a half of condensed filming to make this twenty minute movie. Thereās great memories there.
Youāve worked with Brady pretty consistently on your filming. Can you talk about that relationship?
We met early on at a competition in Vermont, the VT Open at Stratton, and lost sight of each other for a while after that. Obviously, we were aware of what the other was doing as we were fans of each otherās skiing. Later on at Mount Hood we met again and kicked it, after, when Brady made the switch from a professional skiing career to filmmaking, our relationship became even tighter, because we were around and he became the filmmaker for Be Inspired. Thatās when we got to know each other and feel each other out and become brothers ultimately. Itās definitely the collective mind that we have and our similar interests and highly passionate personalities that combine together and match really well.
Do you think growing up in Quebec influenced your style? Would you ski differently had you grown up somewhere else?
Absolutely, a lot of the stuff filmed in En Particulier and the video piece weāre shooting for X Games Real Ski this year, basically itās all in my hometown. Itās snows here, itās a town built off of hydro electricity money. There was a lot of action over here in the early 1900s and now itās pretty calm. Some places are abandoned and I search a lot for spots out here to ski where there are hills and I can just ski around without having to go to a ski resort and ask for a lift ticket. That influenced my style for sure, the surroundings of my home town.
Speaking of skiing outside of the resort, in urban areas, what feeling does skiing in the streets give you, as opposed to a regular terrain park at a resort?
Itās much more work, itās harder and thereās a bigger reward. It also allows for a higher vibrancy of the moment, because youāre out in the elements with just your friends, rather than being at a resort where everything is given to you, out in the streets you have to make something out of things that arenāt built for that purpose, so it creates a great spirit and has shaped me as a skier.
Do you think that you have a different āeye?ā A different way of looking at things that allows you to be so creative on these street features?
Itās hard to say where I stand with that because Iām inside myself all of the time, so I canāt tell you if Iām creative and do have a different eye. But, I have been bred to see these things and ski, ski, ski⦠So now all Iām seeing is skiing and my mindās synapses will connect how to ski through an architectural feature that Iām looking at. Itās not me trying to look at it and be like āOh, I can ski on this,ā itās just going to naturally happen because thatās what I do and it fulfills me right now, very much so. I try to not mimic, but then again I am mimicking something, somewhere that Iāve see before, from inspiration that I see on the daily and as a result of my outlook and sharp eye for street skiing that I have.
Do you look to other skiers for inspiration and influence, or does that come strictly from inside of you?
Oh so many, man. Definitely in skiing thereās an abundance of styles and people that influence me. The list is so long that I wouldnāt give it justice if I start naming names. I have many skiers that influence me right now. Those skiers that influence me, I have a certain portion of their style in me, thatās embedded in me because I love watching them ski. Therefore, a lot of my peers are the reason that I ski, because I love their style, and a lot of their styles Iāve integrated into me.
What do you have to say to the young skiers who idolize you and hope to emulate your style in their skiing?
Itās good to study these people that we highly respect. Eventually, everybody becomes more and more conscious about who and what they are. So the younger you are, the harder it is to see yourself in that chaos: āI could be whoever, but I donāt know who I am.ā And at a certain point you just have these pings that tell you, āyeah, I like watching this guy and that guy,ā and that will help you build your skills and at some point youāre going to be yourself, and make something out of what youāve studied from these people. Iāve studied so much, Iāve studied Mickael [Deschenaux], Tanner [Hall], Eric Pollard, Candide [Thovex], Dave Crichton, I studied those dudes so much, and you would never say that I have Dave Crichtonās style, but at the time I was trying his tricks and his shit and I would recommend that to all skiers. Thatās why the new generations are getting so much better, they have access to a huge library of footage to look up to and get influence from. Eventually they can put all of the pieces of the puzzle together.
Do you have a goal for your skiing?
Itās more so just my life. Itās something that Iāve grown up around and cherished forever. Now I have the access to doing it, being in it, having it be the thing that sustains me and helps me sustains my friends a little bit through this art, and Iām so grateful, therefore I donāt necessarily want to put a stamp on skiing, itās just something that I do. This was a goal, to be Skier of the Year at some point, at 15 years old I wrote everything down and Iām slowly scratching things off the bucket list and it feels amazing. I guess Iām really living out the goals that I set way back in the day. Iām still setting some now. But itās naturally unfolding, as Iām letting openness do itās thing and itās natural. I want to see where it takes me.
How do you balance life outside of skiing?
I definitely try to be as diverse in my approach to being a human in general⦠growing things, building things, sustaining myself as best as possible and just having standards that are low. I realize and am more and more grateful for the little that I do have. Iām just trying to slowly knock some stuff out of my life to simplify things, so, Iām starting to love different passions just as much as I love skiing, and ultimately they all build each other up, if youāre too stuck up on one thing it can lose its essence and value at some point because youāre overdoing it. I just try to give myself some breaks and explore myself in different areas, get out of my comfort zone of the classic things I did last year and changing it up and experience what fits the best and eventually just be able to do me full time and be comfortable with my choices and move.
Any parting words?
Big thanks for throwing on this contest and Iām happy that I could take that title, it represents a lot.




![[GIVEAWAY] Win a YoColorado X Coors Banquet Prize Package](https://www.datocms-assets.com/163516/1764877349-long-live-local-cooler-bag2.jpeg?w=200&h=200&fit=crop)

![[GIVEAWAY] Win a YoColorado X Coors Banquet Prize Package](https://www.datocms-assets.com/163516/1764877349-long-live-local-cooler-bag2.jpeg?auto=format&w=400&h=300&fit=crop&crop=faces,entropy)






