Snowboard Stance Type: Regular or Goofy?
What is regular and goofy snowboard stance? If you do not already know, now is the final time to find out what your stance type is. Are you goofy or are you regular. The difference between the two is which leg is in front. If you put your left foot in front when you go downhill, you are regular and if it is your right foot you are goofy. Most of the snowboarders are regular. Using the right stance type makes it much easier to learn snowboarding. 
See How To Determine Your Snowboard Stance. You can know your stance from skateboarding, wakeboarding, surfing etc. or you can try sliding in your socks over smooth surface. The foot you put in front normally corresponds with your stance. The last and most sure test of your stance type is the first day of snowboarding. You will be able to tell the difference right away - try it both ways and you will feel the difference! Stance anglesWhat are stance angles? Stance angle is the angle at which the snowboard binding is mounted on to the snowboard. If the snowboard binding is totally perpendicular to the snowboard length the the stance angle is zero. If the front of the binding (your toes) is angled towards the nose of the snowboard, you have a positive stance angle and if the front of the binding (your toes) is angled towards the tail of the snowboard, you have a negative stance angle. Each snowboard binding can have (actually they always do or should) different stance angle. The angles are normally written like +24°/+9°. That would mean that the front binding is set at 24 degrees (positive stance angle) and the back binding is set at 9 degrees (also positive stance angle). Stance angles should be always in sync. If the front angle is bigger then also the rear angle should be bigger and vice versa. Do not make a really big angle difference between both bindings. The goal is to always put your body and knees in a natural position. Rear angle should never be larger than the front angle (your knees will not be thankful)! Depending on the angles you could say stance angles are: - Alpine stance
- Forward stance
- Duck stance
Alpine StanceWhat is alpine stance? Alpine stance is a setup used for alpine (or race, or carve) snowboards. These snowboards are so narrow that small stance angles are impossible as your feet will quickly overhang your snowboard and you will wipe out. Front and rear angles are anywhere between +70° and +35° degrees and are usually set by the width of the snowboard. These angles together with hard boots allow you to carve aggressively. For better control in short turns, the difference between the front- and rear angle should be at least 5°. Forward stanceWhat is forward stance? Forward stance is the usual stance used by most of snowboarders. Both snowboard bindings have positive stance angles but they are much smaller than with alpine stance. Stance angles can be smaller because the regular snowboards (freeride and freestyle snowboards) are much wider that race snowboards. Stance angles can vary between +40° and +15° degrees for the front binding and between +30° and 0° degrees for the rear binding. Keep the difference between the front and rear angle under at least 21° degrees. Some stance angles setups: - Stance angles: +21° on the front and +6° on the rear - this is a common all-mountain setup,
- Stance angles: +30° on the front and +15° on the rear - this is common setup if you are more carving oriented rider or if you are just starting out (stance for learning snowboarding).
Duck stance
What is duck stance? Duck stance is a stance where the front binding angle is positive and the back binding angle is negative. This stance makes your toes face different directions like Donald ducks feet. Duckstance gives you more stability as your body is aligned with the snowboard and is useful for riding halfpipe. With duck stance, the front angle is anywhere between 30° and 0° degrees while the rear angle is negative, between -1° and -20°. Keep the angles apart by at least 10 degrees. Duckstance angles setup: - Stance angles: +18° on the front and -6° on the rear - this is more laid back duckstance
- Stance angles: +15° on the front and -15° on the rear - this is 100% (mirror) duckstance.
Stance angles and toe overhangWhat is toe overhang? Toe (or heel) overhang is when your snowboard boots hang over the snowboard or better - over the snowboards edge. Toe overhang must be avoided, because if your boot overhangs the edge it will come in the contact with the snow when you turn frontside. Your boot will cause the snowboard edge to loose contact with the snow and you will fall on your face. If your overhang is really small this will happen only with deep carving turns, but it is still a bad idea. To get rid of the overhang you must adjust your stance angles. With the boot centred in a binding, rotate the binding until the boot toe and heel are directly over the edge of the board with no overhang. The larger your snowboard boot is, the greater angle you should use. If your feet are really big you should consider buying a wider snowboard. There are special WIDE snowboard models, that are (duh!) wider than regular snowboards and are made for people with big feet. Most snowboarders do not want big stance angles so this is not a common problem but still - If the stance angles are to big the boots are inside the edges and you will not be able to put enough pressure on the snowboard. Choosing your stance angleAs ewe said - there is no right or wrong snowboard stance (if you stick to the limits mentioned above). Start with a commonly used stance, bring a screwdriver with you and play with your angles. What feels right usually works. |