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Outside magazine, December 2000 Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
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Sports
22. Andrew McLean
SKI MOUNTAINEER
Age: 39 Specs: 5-foot-10, 150 pounds
Home: Park City, Utah

THE CASE: A cool head who often climbs routes two or three times before attempting to ski them, McLean has brought a new level of technical refinement to ski mountaineering, often linking the broken sections of a "discontinuous line" with breathtaking traverses and rappels. (He's also seen avalanches claim the lives of three of his close friends, including über-alpinist Alex Lowe in 1999.) McLean is known for skiing big alpine faces, couloirs, and even serious ice climbs, from the Alps to the Himalayas. When it comes to his home range, he wrote the book, The Chuting Gallery, which details 95 expert-to-extreme descents in Utah's Wasatch Mountains and features a disclaimer from his mother: "Obviously, no one in their right mind would ski this stuff—and you shouldn't either." A product designer for Black Diamond, he came up with the Whippet, a miniature ice-ax head that snaps onto your ski-pole handle and may help stop you if you fall. "Of course," as McLean points out, "falling is verboten."

SECOND OPINION: "Andrew looks between the obvious descents for the sneaky lines," says Hans Saari, a fellow skier from Bozeman, Montana. "Sometimes that means skiing. Sometimes it means sideslipping madness, hopping down backwards on ice with your tails slamming into the rock."

MOST HARROWING MOMENT: In 1998, in icy conditions, McLean and Saari descended the Hossack-McGowan Couloir on the northeast face of the Grand Teton, a discontinuous 2,000-foot descent that includes a 55- to 60-degree, 1,000-vertical-foot chute. "It was totally exposed, over cliffs the whole way," says McLean. "Within the first five minutes you were in the no-fall zone, and it went on like that for four or five hours."

WHAT'S NEXT: A family—perhaps. "The desire is there, but it keeps getting put off," McLean admits. "Maybe after next ski season." —Rob Buchanan

CarloBorlenghl/KOS
Soldini in the 1999 Around Alone

23. Giovani Soldini
SAILOR

Around-the-world single-handing is not so much a sport as it is "a complete career," says the 34-year-old Italian. "You need to know a little bit of everything: The designing of the boat, the reading of the weather, the fixing of the generator..."

And let's not forget the throwing of the hammer. In February 1999, midway through the epic Around Alone race, Soldini sailed 200 miles back into the heart of a merciless Southern Ocean storm to rescue competitor Isabelle Autissier, whose yacht had capsized. When he got there, Autissier, sheltering inside her upturned hull, couldn't hear his shouts over the shrieking wind. Soldini reached into his toolbox, pulled out the heaviest thing he could find, and flung it across the water at the Frenchwoman's hull. A few minutes later Autissier opened her escape hatch, tossed out her life raft, and made her way over to his boat.

Such resourcefulness is the product of Soldini's youth, spent working in boatyards and on the foredecks of other people's yachts after dropping out of school in Milan at 16. By his midtwenties he was chafing for his own command. "If you work on a cruising boat, the owner is always wanting to stop, to take a swim or something," he says. "The boat never goes." With a tiny budget but a fierce desire to race in the 1994 BOC Challenge (since renamed the Around Alone), Soldini enlisted a dozen patients in a drug-rehab clinic to work for free on the construction of an ultralight sloop. With it, he won two legs of the race, battling the more experienced Australian David Adams right to the wire in the regatta's 50-foot Class II. Four years later, with backing from Fila, he built a 60-foot boat and, after rescuing Autissier, easily won the elite division of the race. He was the first non-Frenchman to do so.

Soldini is known to his peers for his bold tactics—he often sails away from the fleet on speculative "fliers"—as well as his ambitious race schedule, which includes both single-handed and fully crewed events. The latter have not always been kind to him. In early 1998, he and four friends attempted to set a transatlantic record on Fila and capsized in rough seas 400 miles short of the English Channel. Despite a sturdy safety harness, Soldini's codesigner and best friend, Andrea Romanelli, was washed overboard, never to be seen again. "It was terrible, my worst experience ever," Soldini says. "When you are alone, you have only yourself to worry about. When you are five people sailing, you have to think about much more." —R.B.


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