McMorris just happy to be back after horrific injuries
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[January 22, 2018]
By Jack Tarrant
(Reuters) - The list of injuries
suffered by Canadian snowboarder Mark McMorris in a freak accident
at the end of last season would be enough to put some people off the
sport for life.
Riding in the back country with his brother Craig in March, the
then-23-year-old caught an edge as he took off for a jump and
spiraled into a tree.
McMorris broke his jaw and left arm, ruptured his spleen, suffered a
pelvic fracture, rib fractures and a collapsed lung.
The injuries were so severe that McMorris feared he might lose his
life.
"I thought it was going to be the end for a long time but luckily
all the injuries I was able to come back from. I am very, very
blessed to have another chance to go snowboarding,” McMorris told
Reuters from Whistler.
Speaking about the injuries do bring back a lot of difficult
memories for McMorris but they have also given him a different
outlook on life.
“It makes me thankful to be here and to experience everything again
and whatever outcome happens it is better than what it could have
been,” he said.
“I have always been thankful to snowboard for a living but now more
than ever.”
McMorris, who will compete in the slopestyle and big air events at
the Olympics in Pyeongchang, admits his sport is dangerous and the
injuries he has suffered do make him more worried about going into
jumps.
“I try and keep it out of my mind but definitely it makes me more
insecure than I was in the past but over time that goes away, which
is chill,” McMorris said.
“This sport is pretty scary at times, especially when you are
pushing for the optimum.”
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Canada's Mark McMorris performs a jump during the men's snowboard
slopestyle competition at the 2014 Sochi Olympic Games in Rosa
Khutor February 8, 2014. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo

McMorris was speaking to Reuters from Whistler, where he is
preparing for the upcoming Winter X Games in Aspen. The event, which
runs from Jan. 25-28, will give McMorris the chance to add to his
impressive X Games medal haul.
At the edge of 24, McMorris has amassed 15 X Games medals, including
seven golds.
The X Games will see many of the world’s top extreme sports athletes
competing for the final time before they head to Pyeongchang for the
Olympics.
Four years ago in Sochi, McMorris battled back from yet another
injury – a broken rib – to claim an Olympic bronze medal.
Now he is focused on gold.
“It is very surreal to imagine this is my life. It is a pretty
dreamy life that I never thought I would get to live,” he said.
“My dream was just to make it to a pro snowboarding level and then
all this other stuff is a bonus."
(Reporting by Jack Tarrant, editing by Ed Osmond)
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