Welcome to Starter Pack, a gear-obsessed sequence that provides WIRED readers a peek into how notable personalities reside, store, and tinker.
When he was 27, snow cross racer Mike Schultz (who received the nickname “Monster Mike” due to his famend fearlessness) drifted astray in a race, flew off his snowmobile, and obliterated his knee. It required a number of surgical procedures and a number of days in a coma to avoid wasting his life. In the end, his medical workforce needed to amputate his leg.
Reasonably than quit his love of motion sports activities, Schultz engineered his personal prosthetic knee and based his personal high-performance prosthetic firm, BioDapt. His prostheses use a patented proprietary linkage system and mountain bike shocks to dial in such exact efficiency, enabling him to return to compete on the highest ranges of the game. Since 2008, he has received a number of Winter Paralympics and World Championships for adaptive snowboard cross and banked slalom.
Extra importantly, nevertheless, excessive athletes, amputees, and veterans all use his prosthetics. That features a lot of his rivals, whose gear he typically finally ends up repairing proper earlier than an occasion. “You by no means get the temptation to, you recognize, ‘repair’ a competitor’s Moto Knee?” I requested him over Zoom when WIRED caught up with him for a couple of minutes at coaching camp for the 2026 Paralympic Video games. (I additionally made slightly wrenching gesture.)
“I simply inform them, ‘Yeah, I’m sorry, there’s truly a recall on this one. I’ll get it again to you in April,’” Schultz says. “Ensure you put the ‘simply kidding’ half in if you write that!” Right here’s what Schultz is bringing to Cortina.
His Prothesis
Bizarre prostheses are effective for strolling round and going to the grocery retailer. However for snowboard cross—a sport the place you fly over jumps and take hairpin turns at excessive speeds—you want a rugged, sturdy software that may stand up to low temperatures, endure bodily abuse, and take up exact ranges of strain rapidly. Schultz’s Moto Knee 2 and Versa Foot 2 are each tuned exactly for the occasion. “The alignment is essential, in any other case you are not going to have the ability to roll over to your toe edge or heel edge to make a flip,” Schultz says. “Modifications in an angle by half or 1 / 4 activate a set screw are noticeable. Having these alignment choices on my snowboard leg is essential for that final efficiency.”
The Helmet
After his board, the primary piece of security gear that Schultz at all times has is his helmet. He would not know the model; I checked out it within the Zoom when he held it up. It’s a Giro-brand snow-sports-specific spherical helmet with Mips (an acronym for Multi-directional Impression Safety System) that reduces rotational impression and mind trauma within the occasion of a crash.
A Good Multi-Instrument
“As an amputee athlete, my toolkit is extraordinarily vital,” Schultz says. He at all times carries each a whole software package with a whole spare package for each prostheses, together with spare nuts and bolts in case he has to rebuild the complete factor from scratch in 5 minutes. “It is all able to go in case I’ve a problem, like a crash or a break or one thing,” he says. Along with Allen wrenches, a crescent wrench, and pliers, he additionally retains his Gerber multi-tool in his package. This one is gentle, pocketable, and has instruments that you must alter snowboard bindings, like screwdrivers.
The Board
Schultz has labored with Donek Snowboards for his whole racing profession; he’ll most likely carry six Donek B-1s to Cortina. His prostheses work so nicely that proper now, he is using an ordinary racing board constructed to his dimensions. “Earlier on, we tried doing customized work with torsional resistance to accommodate, you recognize, me as an amputee and having much less management with my ankle pedaling or my ankle strain,” Schultz says. “However proper now, I am operating all the usual flex patterns.”
His Fortunate Bear
Schultz by no means goes wherever with out his Fortunate Bear. His daughter, Lauren, was 4 or 5 (she’s 12 now) and she or he snuck Fortunate Bear into his bag behind his again for his first snowboard cross competitors. “I used to be like, man, he is this massive!” Schultz says, gesturing. “I haven’t got room for Fortunate Bear! I gotta carry spare legs and stuff!” It seems that Lauren was proper, and Schultz has been a world champion in a number of adaptive sports activities—snow bike, snow cross, snowboard cross, and motocross—ever since.
“The good half about Fortunate Bear is now Lauren is competing in gymnastics, so she has her personal mini Fortunate Bear that goes into her backpack each time she competes,” Schultz says. And naturally, they match. He has a giant one, and she or he has a small one.
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