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Para Snowboard

2026-27 Toyota U.S. Para Snowboard Team Nominations

By Ryan Odeja - Toyota U.S. Para Snowboard Team
May, 6 2026
para snowboard team on the podium in steamboat

Park City, UT (May 6, 2026) - U.S. Ski & Snowboard officially announces the six athletes nominated to the 2026-27 Toyota U.S. Para Snowboard Team across all classifications and disciplines. 

U.S. Ski & Snowboard announces its teams in two phases: nomination and acceptance. The athletes are formally nominated to the Toyota U.S. Para Snowboard Team in May. Pending their acceptance of the nomination and adherence to the team expectations outlined in team criteria, athletes will be officially announced to the team in October 2026. 

2026 Paralympic gold and silver medalist and 2025-26 banked slalom, snowboard cross and overall Crystal Globe winner Noah Elliott will lead the team into the season alongside Kate Delson, who also took home a gold and silver medal in her Paralympic debut, as well as all three Globes. Also headlining the team is the most decorated Para snowboard athlete of all time, Brenna Huckaby, who earned a bronze medal at the 2026 Paralympics in Italy. Jackie Hamwey is a new face to celebrate on the team this season, making her Paralympic debut in 2026 as well as her maiden World Cup podium. 

2026-27 Toyota U.S. Para Snowboard Team
(Hometown; Club; College; Birthdate)

A TEAM
Women

  • Kate Delson (San Diego, CA; Team Utah Snowboarding; 5/5/2005)
  • Brenna Huckaby (Baton Rouge, LA; Team Utah Snowboarding; 1/22/1996)

Men

  • Noah Elliott (St. Charles, MO; DeVry University; 7/12/1997)
  • Zach Miller (Silverthorne, CO; Adaptive Action Sports; DeVry University; 3/10/1999)

B TEAM
Men

  • Joe Pleban (Fredericksburg, VA; Adaptive Action Sports; Christopher Newport University; 8/7/1990)*

D TEAM
Women

  • Jackie Hamwey (Boston, MA; Team Utah Snowboarding; Northeastern University; 3/28/1989)*

*Newly named to the Toyota U.S. Para Snowboard Team

FOLLOW THE TOYOTA U.S. PARA SNOWBOARD TEAM
Instagram: @usparaskisnowboard 
Facebook: @usskiandsnowboard
TikTok: @usskiandsnowboard
X: @usskiteam
Threads: @usskiteam 

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FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT
Ryan Odeja - Toyota U.S. Para Snowboard Team Press Officer
[email protected] 

Schultz Taking Next Step in his Snowboarding Career

By Ryan Odeja - Toyota U.S. Para Snowboard Team
April, 19 2026
Mike Schultz celebrates with his medal on the podium at the 2026 Paralympic Winter Games

At the end of the season, Para snowboarding legend and innovator “Monster” Mike Schultz announced that after three Paralympic Games and four Paralympic medals (one gold, two silver, one bronze), he is retiring from competitive snowboarding. But numbers alone can't capture what he’s meant to the sport. 

Long before he first strapped in to a snowboard, Schultz was dominating in snocross and motocross back home in Minnesota. In 2008 during a snowmobile competition, he sustained a severe compound fracture to his knee and, after multiple surgeries, had his leg amputated above the knee. Shortly after his crash, Mike returned to sports and realized that the prosthetics available weren’t up to par with what he needed to compete at the highest level. What began as a personal project turned into a revolution: Schultz founded BioDapt and engineered a mechanical knee using a bike shock, along with a prosthetic foot that would go on to become the gold standard for lower limb athletes worldwide. 

Along this journey, Schultz discovered snowboarding. Shortly after he took to the slopes for the first time, he was competing at the X Games, then rising through the World Cup circuit ranks. By 2018, he was standing atop the Paralympic podium in his debut with gold in snowboard cross and silver in banked slalom.

Despite his success, he never slowed down. Over the next eight years, Schultz stacked up seven World Championship medals, 28 World Cup podiums, and added two more Paralympic medals to his collection. But his influence stretches far beyond the podium. Every athlete riding with his cutting-edge equipment today is part of his legacy.

Now, Schultz is shifting his focus and investing in the sport’s future. With plans to grow BioDapt and continue pushing innovation, his next chapter may be even more impactful than his competitive one.

“Big picture, I'm trying to progress the sport as a whole and am very proud that I could be a part of that,” said Schultz. “That is one of the big reasons that I’m retiring from snowboard racing, so I can spend more time with my business and more time with my family, of course, but I’ve got some big ideas I've wanted to pursue for a while, but I’ve been too busy with snowboarding."

While this marks the end of an era on the course, it’s far from goodbye. If anything, Mike Schultz is just getting started.

Thank you, Mike

Delson, Elliott Win Paralympic Gold; Schultz, Huckaby Add Bronze in Banked Slalom

By Courtney Harkins
March, 13 2026
snowboard medals
Kate Delson and Noah Elliott win gold; Brenna Huckaby and Mike Schultz win bronze. (Getty Images)

Team USA closed out Para snowboard competition at the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games with Kate Delson and Noah Elliott winning gold medals and Mike Schultz and Brenna Huckaby earning bronze in the banked slalom.

The standout day for the U.S. team featured sunny skies and warm temperatures for the final Para snowboard event. Delson continued her impressive Paralympic debut by winning gold in the women’s Lower Limb competition, posting the fastest time of the field to secure her first Olympic title after capturing silver in snowboard cross earlier in the Games. 

“I'm just so happy we get to share this moment with someone who I've literally been watching and has been my role model and my friend and my roommate,” said Delson, referencing Huckaby. “Now we get to stand on the Paralympic podium together. It's the best thing ever.”

Two-time Paralympic champion Huckaby added to Team USA’s medal haul with a bronze medal, continuing her legacy as the most accomplished woman athlete in Para snowboarding. It brings her medal total to five: two golds in PyeongChang, a gold and bronze in Beijing and now a bronze in Milano Cortina. 

“I'm so freaking stoked. I've said it before and I'll say it again: There's no one else I'd rather be on that top spot if it’s not me!” said Huckaby, speaking about Delson. “I love sharing a podium with Kate.”

Delson has developed through the sport looking up to Huckaby and they continued to laud each other throughout the day. “I'd say her form is the best of all time out here on the Para snowboard circuit,” said Delson. “The stuff she does to compensate – she's the only one out there today without a knee – and she just has to execute, execute, execute and that's inspiring to see for any rider out there.”

Huckaby responded, “I have to execute because this girl came out of nowhere and has just been crushing us and it's awesome. We were waiting for the next generation and now she's here – and not only is she here, but she's a gold medalist Paralympian. It's exciting.”

Jackie Hamwey also competed and finished ninth in her first Paralympic banked slalom.

In the men’s Lower Limb 1 (LL1) classification, Elliott delivered a dominant performance to secure his name as the “King of Banked Slalom.” It is his second gold in the discipline having won in the 2018 Paralympics. The victory capped an emotional Paralympic campaign, who earlier in the Games captured silver in snowboard cross, marking a remarkable comeback after injury challenges in the 2022 Paralympics that kept him off the podium. 

“This is exactly what we worked so hard for,” said Elliott. “I've been working this whole time to try to get up on that first podium spot. And to be here, coming into the banked, my strong suit, after being so close to that gold medal in bordercross, I was really excited to be able to hopefully lay down the best run and to see where that put me.”

Behind Elliott, Mike Schultz added another Paralympic medal to his decorated career, earning bronze in what marked the final Paralympic race of his career. Schultz’s podium finish brought his total Paralympic medal count to four and provided a fitting close to one of the sport’s most influential careers.

“Banked slalom is not really my strongest compared to border cross,” said Schultz. “But I knew if I did my perfect run, I had a shot and I did that twice today. Coming home with the bronze medal is the most incredible feeling, especially when this was the last race in my snowboard career. So I'm just floating inside.”

Schultz will leave a lasting impact on the sport, as he is the engineer behind the legs nearly all amputee snowboarders use to compete. 

It was the third time Schultz and Elliott had stood on a Paralympic podium together—twice in PyeongChang and once in Milano Cortina. “If I wasn't on the top of the box, it better be Noah,” said Elliott. “I mean, he's at a different level. That dude is crushing it, and he will be for a while.”

Elliott echoed the sentiment. “My first Games we got to share a podium together and so it means so much to me to send him off like this. To be able to be right by his side on top of that podium, I'm so proud.”

In men’s Lower Limb 2 (LL2), Zach Miller led Team USA in fifth. Keith Gabel, in his final Paralympic appearance, was eighth and Joe Pleban was 11th. Pleban broke his wrist in the snowboard cross and was competing with a cast; he will have surgery when he returns to the U.S.

The four-medal performance in banked slalom capped a successful Paralympic Games for the U.S. Para Snowboard Team. With six medals total across both snowboard cross and banked slalom, the depth and strength impressed the world on the biggest stage.  

RESULTS
Women LL
Men LL1
Men LL2

Delson, Elliott Take Silver at Paralympic Snowboard Cross

By Courtney Harkins
March, 8 2026
kate delson and noah elliott
Noah Elliott and Kate Delson celebrate silver medals in the 2026 Paralympic Games snowboard cross. (Getty Images)

It was all silver for Team USA at the Cortina Para Snowboard Park on Sunday, with Kate Delson and Noah Elliott both winning silver medals in the Milano Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games snowboard cross. 

It was another warm and sunny day in Cortina with athletes racing underneath the soaring Dolomites in front of their friends and family. The conditions were variable, with hard snow on the top of the course that deteriorated to slush throughout the day. But the snow didn’t deter Delson or Elliott, who both put down stellar heats to collect medals. 

For Delson, the medal came in her Paralympic debut. At 20 years old, Delson is the youngest athlete on the U.S. Para Snowboard Team, but she navigated the strategic course confidently through the heats and final of the women’s Lower Limb 2 (LL2) classification to secure the first Paralympic medal of her career.

“I've got a smile on my face right now!” said Delson. “This represents so much and I'm so proud to be here representing my country and my family and friends that are here and at home that have been supporting me from the very beginning. Their support has brought the confidence that I get to wear now and I’m so excited to show them this medal and put it over their necks.”

On the men’s side, Elliott battled it out for silver in the Lower Limb 1 (LL1) classification, marking the third Paralympic medal of his career. Elliott has a gold and bronze from the 2018 Paralympic Winter Games, but endured a difficult 2022 Games following a serious injury that kept him off the podium. Sunday’s performance represented a powerful comeback for the veteran American, who now has a medal of each color in his collection. 

“I'm so proud because I just realized today the silver completes my Paralympic set: gold, silver, bronze. That's really, really cool and exciting,” said Elliott. “But it's just been a lot of hard work these last four years - a lot of sacrifice, time with the family on the road and just constant grind every single day. So I couldn't be more proud to cross that finish line and get my medal today.”

Behind Elliott in the LL1 field, Mike Schultz finished sixth in what will be his final Paralympic Games. Athletes lauded Schultz in the media mixed zone at the end of the day, as Schultz is the engineer behind many of their prosthetic limbs with which they compete. 

In the finals of the men’s LL2 competition, Keith Gabel led the Americans in fifth, followed by Zach Miller in sixth. Joe Pleben took eighth after taking a hard fall in the small final.

Behind Delson in women’s LL2, two-time Paralympic champion Brenna Huckaby finished sixth, while Jackie Hamwey was seventh in her Paralympic debut.

With the first snowboard event complete, Para snowboarders will return to competition later in the Games for the banked slalom, the second and final medal event of the Paralympic program.

RESULTS
Women’s Paralympic LL2 
Men’s Paralympic LL1
Men’s Paralympics LL2