Weight 68 kg Siblings Arielle Gold Height 1.75 m Parents Patty Gold, Ken Gold | Role Olympian Name Taylor Gold | |
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Profiles | ||
Alma mater University of Colorado |
Taylor Gold puts down an amazing run to win the 2014 Burton US Open Half Pipe - TransWorld SNOW
Taylor Gold (born November 16, 1993) is an American Olympian snowboarder. He competes in the halfpipe.
Contents
- Taylor Gold puts down an amazing run to win the 2014 Burton US Open Half Pipe TransWorld SNOW
- Taylor Gold Laser Vision Correction
- Personal
- Early years
- 201112 Junior World Championships silver medalist
- 2013present Olympian
- References

He is a two-time U.S. Revolution Tour champion, 2013 Copper Mountain Grand Prix/World Cup champion, 2014 Burton US Open champion, and 2014 Red Bull Double Pipe champion. He is also a Mammoth Mountain U.S. Grand Prix silver medalist (2013–14), 2011 FIS Junior World Championships silver medalist, and 2013 Breckenridge Dew Tour iON Mountain bronze medalist. He competed for the United States in the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.

His younger sister is American Olympian and World Champion snowboarder Arielle Gold.
Taylor Gold Laser Vision Correction
Personal

Gold is Jewish, and was born in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. His father Ken Gold, who was a professional moguls skier, videotapes each of his practices. His younger sister is American Olympian and World Champion snowboarder Arielle Gold. He and his family live part of the year in Steamboat Springs and part in Breckenridge, Colorado.
Early years

Gold became interested in competitive snowboarding after watching the sport during the 2002 Winter Olympics . He trained at the Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club, and began competing at the age of nine.

His home mountain is Steamboat. He is coached by Mike Jankowski, Spencer Tamblyn, and Ashley Berger
2011–12; Junior World Championships silver medalist
He was on the 2011 FIS World Championships team in Spain, and earned a gold medal in halfpipe at the 2011 FIS Junior World Championships in Valmalenco, Italy. He won in halfpipe at the 2011 U.S. Revolution Tour, in Mount Hood, Oregon, and at the United States of America Snowboard and Freeski Association (USASA) National Championships.
For most of 2012, he was sidelined with a bruised heel injury.
2013–present; Olympian
In 2013, he won the halfpipe competition in the U.S. Revolution Tour/US Open Qualifiers in Seven Springs, Pennsylvania, and placed sixth in halfpipe at the Burton U.S. Open in Vail, Colorado. He also took second in halfpipe at the 2013 USASA Nationals in Copper Mountain, Colorado, and came in ninth in halfpipe in the 2013 Burton European Open in Laax, Switzerland. He ranked 11th in the World Snowboard Tour standings in 2012–13, and was 5th in the world among men in reaching snowboard finals.
He was also the 2013 Copper Mountain Grand Prix/World Cup champion, earned a silver medal in the Mammoth Mountain U.S. Grand Prix superpipe, and earned a bronze medal in the 2013 Breckenridge Dew Tour iON Mountain Championships.
He competed at the 2014 Winter Olympics at Rosa Khutor Extreme Park in Sochi, Russia, in the halfpipe competition, after becoming the first snowboarder to qualify for the men's USA Team. On February 11, 2014, at the Olympics Gold almost went to the finals of the snowboard halfpipe. But, on the end of his second run in a two-round semi-final he tried one last trick, but ran out of halfpipe, and fell. He was one of the first two athletes to compete at a summer or winter Olympics with the surname "Gold."
His sister was the youngest member of the US 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics halfpipe team, at the age of 17. But she was not able to compete in the qualification for the Olympic halfpipe finals, because of a separated right shoulder injury she suffered on February 12 when she caught an edge at the end of the pipe during a practice run and crashed moments before her competition.
Not long after returning from Sochi, Gold won first place in the 32nd annual 2014 Burton US Open half-pipe competition in Vail, and also won the Red Bull Double Pipe over second-place 2014 Olympic bronze medalist Taku Hiraoka of Japan.