Nicolas Müller is one of the best snowboarders on the planet, but you won’t see him on the podium at the X Games or in highlight clips on SportsCenter. The 32-year-old Swiss native started out as a competitive snowboarder, eventually reaching the top of the international circuit, but hung it all up to push the progression on the sport on bigger canvas: big mountain freeriding. He calls it “returning to the spirit of riding”; by doing so, he’s been able to access more of his natural talent and style than ever before, on full display in two recent films, Never Not, and Burton Backcountry. While he was in New York for the premier of Oakley’s new snowboarding film, Snowboarding: For Me, we sat down to chat about his journey to big mountain riding.
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Q. What’s one thing every man should know?
A. This is hard. I would like to share everything I’ve learned in life meeting people all around the world, but I would say, work on yourself to truly know who you are. Yes: finding who you really are.
Q: Who or what influences you?
A: I grew up wanting to be a soccer player and played a lot so it had a huge influence on me. But on snowboarding, Terje Håkonsen, when I saw “Subject: Haakon”. That video made me want to go snowboarding so bad. I was hooked. It was like virus. All I wanted to do was snowboarding. There are also other riders, Mikkel Bang, Johan Olofsson, Ingemar Backman, Jamie Lynn, you know…all the legends. But on the skateboarding side, Tom Penny, Danny Way, and even Tony Hawk.
Q. What are you reading right now?
A. Homo Faber.
Q. If you could go back and tell your 16 year old self something, what would you say?
A. I’d probably say “take it easy”, you know [laughs].
At this point, it’s all about clicks, and traffic and visibility. But fuck, I don’t care about any of that. All I want to see is the art of riding.