At Pyeongchang 2018, 15 athletes from six countries used BioDapt equipment, resulting in 11 medals—including Schultz’s gold in snowboard cross and silver in banked slalom. Few action sports athletes know as well as Mike Schultz what it takes to win—how much it depends on mental and emotional strength as much as, sometimes more than, physical […]

At Pyeongchang 2018, 15 athletes from six countries used BioDapt equipment, resulting in 11 medals—including Schultz’s gold in snowboard cross and silver in banked slalom.
Few action sports athletes know as well as Mike Schultz what it takes to win—how much it depends on mental and emotional strength as much as, sometimes more than, physical strength.
Schultz competes in the SB-LL1 class, or athletes who have a significant impairment to one leg, such as amputation above the knee (as Schultz does) or a significant combined impairment in two legs.
“You throw in that young energy, it’s hard to keep up with for sure. On the flip side, all the years of my competitive career stemming back from my motocross and snowmobile racing and snowboarding career, I’ve learned so much. I can use that wisdom I’ve accrued over the years and make up for that young energy some of these other athletes have.”
The rigors of competing in his chosen sports were mismatched with the standard prosthetic Schultz was using, and he quickly learned that to compete at his highest level, he would need to build his own.
Now, most of his competitors are also using BioDapt equipment. Approximately 30 out of 42 athletes on the World Cup circuit right now in the men’s and women’s lower limb classes (LL1 and LL2) use Schultz’s prosthetics, though not all of the 42 athletes are amputees.