Birthdate: July 31, 1981 Home Club: Gunstock Ski Club
Height: 5’ 9” High School: New Hampton School
Weight: 175 College: Colby College
Home town: Gilford, NH  

Sponsors: Atomic, Booster Strap, Marker, Holmenkol, Slytech, Reliable Racing, Level Gloves, Team America

Warner was born and raised in Gilford, NH, skiing all winter at Gunstock Mountain, the local ski area, and sailing on Lake Winnipesaukee in the summer.  Warner attended Gilford High School and was a member of the soccer and ski team before he transferred to New Hampton Prep School - as a day student - during his sophomore year to focus more on skiing and academics. 

After graduating from New Hampton Prep School in 2000, he joined Team Go, an elite ski team based in Summit County, Colorado, for a year of competitive ski racing. After a successful year in Colorado he realized the importance of a college education outweighed another year of international ski competition and moved to Waterville, ME to attend Colby College. Attending Colby College afforded him not only the opportunity to excel in the classroom, but also on the slopes. Upon enrollment at Colby in the fall of 2001 he claimed the number two spot on the Colby Alpine Ski Team, behind fellow freshman Rob Saunders. During his four-year college career he successfully balanced ski racing and school.

Warner graduated from Colby in May 2005 with degrees in both economics and government. He was the captain of the Colby Ski Team during his senior year and won Colby’s male E. W. Millett Award. This award recognizes a male and a female athlete that contributed the most to Colby athletics during his or her four years as an undergraduate. As a college skier he was a two-time NCAA All-American. However, it was not until his junior year that his college skiing career took shape. Chris Frank of Williams College and Warner studied abroad for a semester in Dunedin, New Zealand where they focused the vast majority of their time on basic ski racing technique and logged over 30 days on-snow. Upon returning to the United States, Warner won five EISA College Carnivals and finished fourth at U.S. Nationals in the Slalom (missing U.S. Ski Team qualification criteria by 18 hundredths of a second). At the completion of his junior year, his slalom world rank was 105th (once again missing qualification criteria by the slimmest of margins).

During Warner’s senior year he won three EISA College Carnivals, including the EISA Slalom Title, finished second at the NCAA Division I National Championships in the Giant Slalom, and took home two silver medals from Innsbruck, Austria in the Giant Slalom and the Overall during the Winter World University Games. At the year’s conclusion he once again finished just short of qualifying for the U.S. Ski Team.

After graduating Colby Warner decided to dedicate at least two years to competitive ski racing and joined up with Ski Racing International (SRI), an elite post college program. At the start of the season he had some exceptional results and won a time trial to compete in the slalom World Cup at Beaver Creek. Warner suffered a deep bone bruise a few weeks after that race and was side lined for all of January. Then Warner pushed during the end of the season to finished 5th in the GS at U.S. Nationals and flew off to Sweden and Norway looking for results to qualify for the USST. He fell just short of qualify by 2 world ranks. Warner was ranked 100 and 102 rather than having two top 100 world ranks. However, the USST saw promise in the late blooming athlete and invited them to their Mammoth and New Zealand camps. After two successful camps and a number of discussions, Warner became a non-funded named member of the U.S. B Team.

Last season, Warner raced in Beaver Creek, Hinterstoder, and Alta Badia World Cups. He was racing the GS world cup circuit for all of December. In January, he won a Nor-Am event in Sunday River and then suffered a contusion to his Fibular head and strained his anterior tibialis on January 19th at a Europa Cup GS in La Plagne, France. Warner took a break, but struggle with the injury through the rest of the season. At Canadian Nationals he put together a podium performance in slalom, but other than that he didn’t’ have much luck racing with an injury. At the completion of the season, the USST completely dropped Warner. Warner was disappointed – to say the least – that his national governing body no longer considered him a sound investment. Since then the USST has made it very clear that Warner is no longer a member of their team. Over the summer, Warner took 2 months off skiing to let his knee injury finally heal and then he went to New Zealand to train with Roger Brown.

This season Warner has teamed up with Roger Brown to form Team Maximum Velocity to focus on continental cup competition to drop his points profile low enough to have a good, sub 45 start position, in his next world cup start. Warner thinks that it’s not worthwhile to race world cup events for experience with high points and a high bib number.