Jamison Coty - Off The Leash Video Edition (2024)

This is https://www.instagram.com/_jam0__/ 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)

Jamison Coty

Profile and significance

Jamison Coty is a New England–raised freeski rider whose film-first approach and rail fluency have pushed his name beyond local laps. In 2025 he earned Level 1’s SuperUnknown 22 Wildcard, a community-voted ticket that placed him on finals week and signaled he can perform when the lights are on. The season before, he cut a clean entry for the Off The Leash Video Edition, a street-focused showcase that values originality and make-it-look-inevitable execution. Between those touchpoints, Coty has been a consistent presence in Plymouth Freeski crew projects and appeared in Ski The East releases, giving viewers a steady stream of watchable segments built on speed control, early-and-held grabs, and decisive lock-ins.



Competitive arc and key venues

Coty’s résumé is anchored in rider-led films and selective showcases rather than federation starts. The SuperUnknown 22 Wildcard placed him on Level 1’s main stage; his Off The Leash submission showed that his street process survives tight in-runs and imperfect landings. Away from headline weeks, his calendar revolves around East Coast parks that reward repetition and line construction. Long rail decks and spring rhythm at Loon Mountain have been a laboratory for both-way entries and momentum management, while the high-frequency build at Carinthia Parks in Vermont’s Mount Snow turns spin-on precision and pretzel exits into second nature. Episodes filmed at Sugarbush added that resort’s fast, feature-dense lines to the mix—exactly the kind of spacing that shows up in rail-jam and streetstyle courses. The throughline is repetition on real features that also read on camera.



How they ski: what to watch for

Coty skis with measured economy, the kind you can read at full speed. On rails, look for a centered stance and quiet shoulders so spin-ons, transfers, and pretzel exits appear deliberate rather than forced. Approach angles stay conservative right up to the moment of commitment; lock-ins ride through kinks and small gaps without chatter, and exits land with enough glide to keep a line alive. On jumps—whether a compact street step-down or a maintained park booter—he places the grab early and holds it through rotation, keeping the axis obvious for any camera and for any judge. Rotation scales to the day’s speed window instead of relying on last-second corks, which is why his heaviest hits still look inevitable on rewatch.



Resilience, filming, and influence

Street filming compresses the margin for error: short in-runs, limited light, and landings that punish hesitation. Coty treats those constraints as craft. His parts reveal a repeatable workflow—scout and measure, shovel and salt, test speed, adjust angles, and roll only when the make will read clean without filler. That discipline carries into jam formats and video weeks where every hit counts. In crew projects, he reads as the rider who preserves glide from feature to feature so editors have an ender with room to breathe. That reliability, more than any single trick, explains why his clips keep circulating through core channels.



Geography that built the toolkit

The East Coast explains the polish. Night laps and firm-morning speed windows at Loon Mountain cultivate patience on steel and stacked landings when the snow is fast. The density of rails at Carinthia Parks (Mount Snow) forces precise edge changes and switch takeoffs, habits that travel straight into street missions. At Sugarbush, long lines demand continuity—miss a hit and the run dies on the deck—which is why Coty’s sequences tend to hold momentum to the closer. Together, these venues build a toolkit that reads the same under January lamps and April sun.



Equipment and partners: practical takeaways

Coty’s output doesn’t revolve around headline sponsor lists, but the setup principles behind his skiing are widely useful. A true-twin park ski mounted near center supports both-way spins and predictable pretzel exits on kinked rails. Keep a consistent tune with a thoughtful detune at contact points to reduce hang-ups on steel without dulling pop for lip-ons or step-downs. Boots with progressive forward flex and locked-in heel hold help landings finish stacked when conditions are chattery. Bindings should be set for predictable release across repeated impacts. None of this is flashy, but it’s the neutral, repeatable platform that lets a trick read the same from a municipal handrail to a spring booter.



Why fans and progressing skiers care

Jamison Coty matters because he turns fundamentals into footage you want to replay. If you’re learning to “read” modern freeskiing, watch how he preserves speed through multi-feature rail decks so the last hit still has room for meaningful rotation, and how early—and held—grabs keep rotations obvious without slow motion. If you’re building your own projects, study the process as much as the trick list: measure the spot, test speed, commit to the reproducible version, and make the make look inevitable. Add a SuperUnknown Wildcard nod and steady appearances across East Coast venues, and you get a rider who shows how local winters become durable, rewatchable films.