It鈥檚 a chilly December night at the top of Howelsen Hill in Steamboat Springs. A crisp whistle cuts through the silence on the mountain. Sixteen-year-old Ella Wilson now knows it鈥檚 time to start her ski jump.
She races down the hill鈥檚 in-run, going up to sixty miles per hour before, WHOOSH! She flies off the ramp and hits the landing hill hundreds of feet below. She only gets to do a few repetitions, so she鈥檚 treating each jump like it鈥檚 the real thing. She shares her thoughts with her coach through a walkie talkie.

鈥淛umped with a low line,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his one, I'm gonna think jumping up with a higher line.鈥
Wilson is practicing for a Nordic Combined competition 鈥 a sport that combines ski jumping with cross-country skiing. She鈥檒l not only fly more than the length of a football field off a 90-meter hill, but she will also need endurance to do a cross-country race 鈥 more than three miles on land.
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鈥淭hat鈥檚 what it takes, you have to be a little bit crazy to do the sport,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淏ut getting into the air is honestly the best feeling I've ever felt.鈥
Wilson is one of seven people 鈥 and two women鈥 on the . Her other female teammate, Haley Brabec, got started in the sport when she was only five years old.

鈥淕rowing up in Steamboat as a kid, when you learned to walk, they were putting you on skis,鈥 Brabec said.
Wilson has a slightly different story of how she started in the sport. Her dad, Todd Wilson, competed in Nordic Combined. He helped expose her to it at a young age.
鈥淥nce I was born, he would carry me in the front pack down the landing hill,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o you could say I've been doing it since (I was) a baby.鈥
Todd Wilson competed at the 1988 and 1992 Winter Olympics in the sport. More than 20 local athletes have also made it to the Olympics in Nordic Combined.
But Ella can鈥檛 follow in her dad鈥檚 footsteps. While the sport debuted more than 100 years ago, it's the only Olympic winter sport where women can鈥檛 compete. It has been since the 1990s, but any sport added before then can exclude them.
鈥淭hey don't really have any love for us, passion for us, and support for us, which is unfortunate, but we are trying to win them over,鈥 she said.
Advocates for the sport have long been fighting to add women to the Olympics. In 2022, they were hopeful it would happen for the next Winter Games in 2026. But the said no due to low viewership and lack of diverse countries on the podium.
Brabec said there are other sports that are not watched as much or have the same country winning year after year that still allow women to compete.

鈥淭here's just this unfairness and we don't really know why it's there,鈥 she said.
Katie Adams with Steamboat鈥檚 Tread of Pioneers Museum said she believes there鈥檚 another concept at play 鈥 鈥渕isogyny.鈥

鈥淚t was sort of a widespread belief that women were not equipped physically to handle the demands of both disciplines,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淭hey assumed they would get hurt, that it wouldn't go well for them, I guess is the misunderstanding.鈥
But in Steamboat Springs, women have been skiing for over a century, thanks to the inspiration of Carl Howelsen. Before his arrival, Steamboat residents mainly used skis and snowshoes to check on cattle or carry mail. But in 1913, Howelsen came to town after doing a ski jumping show for the Barnum and Bailey Circus, looking for bigger hills.
鈥淪o I think it was a really exciting time, kind of moving winter from like a desolate, cold endeavor to more of a recreational, fun experience,鈥 she said.
Howelsen got to work cutting up trees and constructing some jumps. Soon after, he hosted a ski jumping expedition. Thousands of people came to watch him jump, and the town became obsessed. Later in 1947, there was a photo in the Associated Press captioned, 鈥淭he population of Steamboat Springs, Colorado is 1,700. The number of persons who skis is reported to be 1,685. The others are children under one year of age.鈥

鈥淚t's been said that Nordic Combined is to Steamboat Springs as football is to Texas,鈥 she said.
It wasn鈥檛 long after Howelsen that came to Steamboat Springs to train for the Olympics for Nordic Combined. He placed 11th in the 1952 Olympic Games in Norway. And then in 2002, Steamboat residents Todd Lodwick and Johnny Spillane just missed the podium with the U.S. men鈥檚 team at the Salt Lake City Olympics. Then, In 2010, Lodwick and Spillane took home a silver medal in the team event.
Today, more than 360 kids on average train at Howelsen Hill across all disciplines every weeknight, according to officials from the Steamboat Springs Winter Sports Club. It鈥檚 one of , and it鈥檚 the only one in Colorado and the Rocky Mountain region. Some kids have even become so good that they鈥檙e on the national team.
That鈥檚 the case for Steamboat resident Annika Malacinski, and her brother, Niklas. They鈥檙e some of the . She believes women are just as capable of excelling as men.
鈥淢e and Niklas go out and do the same exact training,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e push ourselves to the limit as well, like we should have the right to compete at a high level, we want to have the same rights as the men have. And it was really a slap in the face when they made that decision.鈥

Malacinski was crushed when she heard the news from the International Olympic Committee. She was flying back home from a training camp in Europe and bought Wi-Fi on the plane to listen to the decision. She said once she heard it, for the eight hours left of her flight.
鈥淚 had very intrusive thoughts, thinking like, 鈥榃hy am I doing this? Do I switch sports? Do I quit?鈥欌 she said. 鈥淚 was just disgusted by the situation, about the decision, about how they even handled it, how they talked about it.鈥
The committee marketed the , but still kept women out of Nordic Combined. The committee also said there needs to be 鈥渟ignificant positive development鈥 to keep men in the sport for 2030, or it will be cut altogether.
鈥淭heir idea behind making it an equal sport is to take out an Olympic original sport,鈥 Niklas Malacinski said. 鈥淚t just seems absurd and almost laughable, as if it's a joke, but then you realize it's the reality.鈥
Despite Annika and Niklas鈥 high rankings, she said many people鈥檚 eyes don鈥檛 light up unless you say the word 鈥淥lympics.鈥 That鈥檚 when she realized there鈥檚 so much more to the sport than one competition every four years.

鈥淵ou're doing it because you love it,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou love the journey, you love the people around it. You wanna push yourself to the limits.鈥
Back at Howelsen Hill, it鈥檚 the first competition of the season. Ella Wilson and Haley Brabec get on the poma lift as the announcer's voice booms through the speakers. They鈥檙e starting with ski jumping. Wilson, wearing a highlighter yellow suit, is ready to race.

鈥84.5 meters for Ella Wilson!鈥 the announcer shouts as Wilson hits the landing hill. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 how you do it. What an inspiration.鈥
After completing the cross-country portion, Wilson ended up finishing first in the competition. She鈥檚 a rising star in the sport 鈥 she was the first woman to win the Jumpin' and Jammin' contest in Steamboat in July, and she has competed in the Junior World Championships. Even though women will not be at the Olympics next year, she鈥檒l keep competing 鈥 for herself and others.
鈥淚t feels like a duty, like we have to stay in it for the little girls,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have to stay in it for the future of our sport.鈥
The IOC needs to determine if Nordic Combined will be canceled entirely for the 2030 Olympics due to low viewership. That decision is expected this summer. If the sport is kept, the IOC will discuss if women will be allowed to participate in the summer of 2026, according to officials from the International Ski and Snowboard Foundation.