Travis Rice in action during The Fourth Phase
Travis Rice poses for a portrait at Hangar-7 in Salzburg, Austria on March 23, 2017.

Travis
Rice

United States

United States

·

Snowboarding

Travis Rice is a big-mountain freeride legend with an unrivalled track record for making genre-defining, trailblazing snowboarding films.

Date of birth

October 9, 1982

Birthplace

Wyoming, USA

Age

43

Nationality

United States

United States

Career start

2001

Disciplines

Snowboard Backcountry

Born in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and son to a ski patroller, Travis Rice has snow in his blood. He's hailed by critics as the best all-round snowboarder in the world and is one of the most globally renowned riders there is.
With more than 12 years of elite competition experience and more than 30 grand slam titles in his possession, ‘Trice’ is a legend of the slopes. But unlike most pro snowboarders who started competing from an early age, Travis didn’t enter his first major competition until he was 18. In 2001, the young outsider entered Snowboarder magazine’s event, Superpark, attempting something that others wouldn’t dare – a handful of backside rodeos over a 30m-plus kicker. He left a star.
Travis’s career skyrocketed as he not only won a place to compete in the Winter X Games that following season, but he also landed a life-changing part in the snowboarding film "Transcendence."
In 2005, together with Curt Morgan, he co-founded Brain Farm Digital Cinema, which has some of the highest-selling snowboarding films in history, such as That’s It, That’s All and The Art of Flight.
In 2012, Travis founded Red Bull Supernatural, which combined freeriding in natural terrain with freestyle tricks to create an event that favored the all-round rider. In October 2016 he released The Fourth Phase, his much-anticipated follow-up to the iconic The Art of Flight, with the new multi-year movie shot in 4K ultra high-definition.
Simultaneously, he has continued to complete, and has won podium places on the Freeride World Tour in 2017 and 2019.