Cylian Cotto - Off The Leash Video Edition (2024)

This is Cylian Cotto's entry for 2024 https://www.instagram.com/bdog_offtheleash/ video edition presented by https://www.instagram.com/casablunt/ Vote for your favorite video at the bottom of this website https://bande.store/ (Voting open's on Monday, November 4th at Noon EST)

Cylian Cotto

Profile and significance

Cylian Cotto is a French freeski rider from the Southern Alps whose street-first edits and spring-park mileage have pushed his name beyond local circles. Working with the Dirty South Media crew, he cut a clean 2024 street part and followed with a 2025 segment filmed between France and Finland, a combo that spotlights both his home-base park craft and his comfort on Nordic urban features. His clips read the way judges and fans like to see them: early-and-held grabs, quiet upper body on rails, and an ender that still carries speed. Cotto isn’t chasing World Cup starts; his impact lives in film drops, crew projects, and rider-led showcases that define how the culture looks outside televised contests.



Competitive arc and key venues

Rather than medals, Cotto’s résumé is anchored by releases and invitations. His 2024 “Off The Leash” Video Edition entry flagged him to a street-savvy audience, and the Dirty South Media “Street Part 2K25” amplified that wave with shots from French cities and Finnish spots. The park context behind those lines is easy to trace. At home, the build crews at Vars and the Varspark program keep him fluent on long rail decks and slopestyle-style jump lines, while neighboring Forêt Blanche terrain at Risoul adds more laps and different snow textures. Up north, Finland’s compact training hills translate directly to street timing: night laps at Talma hardwire repetition, and the long-season consistency of Ruka Park provides bigger, FIS-style shapes to keep jump awareness sharp. The through line is volume on real features and builds that force decision-making—exactly what a good street part needs.



How they ski: what to watch for

Cotto skis with a measured, detail-driven style. On rails he favors a centered stance and calm shoulders so spin-ons, swaps, and pretzel exits look deliberate rather than forced. Approach angles are conservative right until commitment; lock-ins stay decisive through kinks and gaps, and exits land with glide so momentum survives into the next hit. On jumps—whether a step-down in the streets or a maintained park booter—he places the grab early and holds it across rotation, keeping axis clean for the camera and, if it were scored, for judges. He scales rotation to the speed window rather than forcing late corks, which is why his heaviest tricks still look readable when conditions tighten.



Resilience, filming, and influence

Street filming compresses the margin for error, and Cotto’s edits show a process that manages that pressure. He and his crew scout, shovel, salt, test speed, then only roll when the line will cut together without filler. You can see the same habits in his park clips: set the grab early, keep axes tidy, and link features so nothing dies on the deck. The Dirty South projects also reveal his behind-the-camera contribution—shooting for other riders’ parts, stitching a local scene together and letting everyone’s skiing read. That balance of on-snow clarity and crew-minded work is the engine of today’s street ecosystem, and it explains why his name is traveling beyond a single postcode.



Geography that built the toolkit

The places Cotto skis explain the way he skis. The Forêt Blanche area around Vars and Risoul offers high-frequency park laps and varied lines that reward speed control and run construction. Finland adds a different rhythm. Short-lift repetition at Talma turns movements automatic under lights, while Ruka Park supplies longer-season access to bigger features and firm morning timing. Stitch those environments together and you get a toolkit that travels from salted spring parks to frozen stair sets without losing clarity.



Equipment and partners: practical takeaways

Fans will recognize familiar European park staples on screen—whether it’s a twin-tip freestyle platform from Armada Skis or outerwear aesthetics popularized by Harlaut Apparel—but the labels are less important than the setup principles. A true-twin park ski mounted near center supports both-way spins and stable pretzel exits; a consistent edge tune with thoughtful detune at contact points reduces rail hang-ups without dulling pop for lip-ons; and boots with progressive forward flex plus firm heel hold help landings finish stacked when the snow is fast or chattery. Keep release values predictable for repeated impacts, and your style will read the same from a city rail to a spring line.



Why fans and progressing skiers care

Cotto matters because he turns fundamentals into footage people replay. His parts teach momentum management on rails, early-and-held grabs on jumps, and an economy of movement that survives variable speed, light, and snow. If you’re learning to “read” modern freeskiing, watch how he sequences rails so the ender still has room to breathe, and how he chooses rotation and grab combos that stay obvious at real speed. If you’re filming with friends, study the workflow—scout, build, test, commit—and how it keeps quality high even when the window is short. As his calendar swings between the Southern Alps and Finland, expect more of the same: clean lines, tricks that look inevitable, and edits that give the French street scene a wider audience.