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From Street to Stadium: How Action Sports Found Their Way into the Olympic Winter Games

Highlights

RSB SPORTS LAB and Concordia Sports Agency announce strategic partnership

RSB SPORTS LAB is proud to announce the start of a strategic partnership with Concordia Sports Agency, a Riga-based football agency representing professional players across Europe.

The cooperation focuses on the development of individual sponsorship and brand partnerships for professional football players, complementing the existing club sponsorship structures and supporting the growing importance of the individual athlete brand in modern football.

Felix Fauner, CMO & Head of Sports at RSB SPORTS LAB, commented:
“In modern sports marketing, sustainable success rarely comes from working in isolation. The most impactful projects emerge when strong partners combine their expertise. Strategic partnerships allow agencies to focus on their strengths while creating better opportunities for the athletes they represent.”

For RSB SPORTS LAB, the partnership also marks an important step beyond the agency’s traditional roots in the action sports ecosystem. While the company continues to work extensively with athletes from the outdoor and action sports world, the collaboration with Concordia Sports Agency opens a valuable opportunity to learn from the highly structured and professional environment of international football.

“At the same time, we believe we can bring meaningful value to Concordia and their players by helping to build authentic commercial partnerships and by supporting the development of individual athlete brands — something that is becoming increasingly important even in a global team sport like football.”

Both organizations aim to combine their expertise in athlete management, commercial partnerships and brand development in order to create long-term value for the players involved.

“We are excited about this partnership and look forward to working closely with Concordia Sports Agency to unlock new opportunities for their players. In the end, great sports careers deserve great stories off the field as well — and the right partners to tell them. ”

— Felix Fauner
CMO & Head of Sports
RSB SPORTS LAB

Marks Amosejevs, Founder & CEO of Concordia Sports Agency, commented:
“We are very pleased to begin this collaboration with RSB SPORTS LAB. From our very first conversations, it was clear that there was a natural chemistry between our teams. What impressed us most was their energy, their entrepreneurial mindset, and the genuine passion they bring to working with athletes and building meaningful partnerships. At Concordia Sports Agency, we strongly believe that modern football requires a holistic approach to player development — not only on the sporting side, but also in building a sustainable personal brand and creating the right commercial opportunities around the athlete.

Working with partners like RSB SPORTS LAB makes it possible to think bigger and to build projects that go beyond traditional agency work. We are confident that this partnership is just the beginning of something exciting, and we look forward to creating new opportunities for the players we represent together.”

– Marks Amosejevs
Founder & CEO
Concordia Sports Agency

In two days, the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026 will officially open.
A global stage. A historic brand. And once again, a spotlight on disciplines that were never
meant to be framed by five rings.
Action sports are no longer guests at the Olympics.
They’ve become part of the program – even if the relationship remains… complicated.
A Short History: When Action Sports Entered the Olympic System
For decades, action sports lived far outside the Olympic universe. They were born in the streets, on mountainsides, in backyards and skateparks – shaped by subculture, not by Federations.
The first real breakthrough came in 1998 (Nagano) with Snowboarding, a move that was both celebrated and fiercely criticized by the core scene.

What followed over the years was a slow but steady integration:
● Snowboard Halfpipe & Slopestyle
● Freestyle Skiing (Halfpipe, Slopestyle, Big Air)
● Ski Cross & Snowboard Cross (bridging freeride aesthetics with race formats)

Each inclusion expanded the Olympic audience – and stretched the Olympic system itself.
Action Sports at Milano Cortina 2026: What’s In – and What’s Not
A selection of included disciplines:
● Snowboard Halfpipe
● Snowboard Slopestyle
● Snowboard Big Air
● Freestyle Ski Halfpipe
● Freestyle Ski Slopestyle
● Freestyle Ski Big Air
● Ski Cross / Snowboard Cross

These formats work for TV, judging systems and international comparison – key
requirements for the IOC.
What’s missing (and why):
● Backcountry Freeride
● Natural Terrain Events
● Street-focused formats without standardized judging

Why?
Because authenticity in action sports often thrives on creative freedom, variable terrain and subjective expression— all things the Olympic system struggles to standardize, broadcast and govern.
Some disciplines haven’t been dropped.
They were simply never compatible with the Olympic logic to begin with.

The Core Tension: Culture vs. System Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Action sports are cultural movements.
The Olympics are an institutional system.
And that difference matters.
Why the X Games still matter more to the core scene The Winter X Games are perceived by many athletes and fans as more relevant, more authentic, more real. Not because they’re better organized – but because they feel closer to
the roots.
● Athlete-driven formats
● Raw visual language
● Risk-taking as cultural capital
● Less protocol, more personality

The X Games don’t try to sanitize action sports.
They amplify what makes them different.

Why the Olympics Never Feel “As Cool” – and Probably Never Will Olympia isn’t uncool because it fails.
It’s uncool because it can’t be what action sports are.

The Olympic system:
● Values consistency over chaos
● Rewards repeatability over experimentation
● Communicates professionalism, not rebellion From an action sports perspective, that can feel sterile.

From an Olympic perspective, that’s exactly the point.
And here’s the interesting part:
The action sports scene knows this – instinctively.
There’s no need to explain why X Games feel different from the Olympics.
Athletes understand it. Fans feel it. Brands sense it.
That distinction doesn’t need communication.
It’s culturally embedded.
Does the Olympic System Appreciate the Difference?
More than many assume.
The IOC doesn’t misunderstand action sports — it reframes them.
In the Olympic context, professionalism isn’t the opposite of authenticity. It’s a prerequisite.

From the Olympic point of view:
● “Street-born” doesn’t mean “unstructured”
● “Core” doesn’t justify a lack of governance
● “Cool” alone isn’t a sustainable global framework

What action sports interpret as “over-organization,” the Olympic system sees as
responsibility — to athletes, nations, broadcasters and sponsors.
Both perspectives are valid.
They’re just not the same.

Looking Ahead: Los Angeles 2028 – Back to the Source
The Olympic Summer Games LA 2028 represent something unique.
For action sports, this isn’t just another host city.
It’s home.

California is where:
● Skateboarding culture was shaped
● BMX evolved from backyard ramps
● Surfing defined its global aesthetic
● Action sports became a lifestyle, not a discipline

LA 2028 offers a once-in-a-generation opportunity to lean into origin, not imitation.
The real question isn’t whether action sports will be part of the Olympics.
That’s already answered.

The question is:
Will core action sports and the Olympic system continue to coexist as deliberately
different worlds – or try to converge?
Personally, I believe the strength lies in difference, not alignment.
Action sports don’t need the Olympics to be cool.
The Olympics don’t need to be cool to be relevant.
And maybe that’s exactly why this relationship works – without ever needing to explain itself.
A Final Thought

As Milano Cortina 2026 approaches, we’re not watching action sports “enter” the Olympics anymore.
We’re watching two systems that know each other well — and have learned to keep a respectful distance.
And that might be the most authentic outcome of all

Photo by Hert Niks von Pexels