I can't really say the list is all that bad this year. There are four true "skier's" mountains in Stowe, Sugarloaf, Sugarbush, and Smuggs, which is a pretty substantial total given Ski's bias toward the resort skier over the years. Holliday Valley was the only place that really ever irked me for being on the top ten list. The 750 feet of vertical drop really got to me because the east coast has so much better to offer- even at mediocre ski areas/resorts.
Any chance in the next decade that Tremblant gets knocked off its throne at number one? It certainly doesn't have the best snow or terrain in the east, but as a complete package, no other resorts really seem to compare. I was there back in 08 when they claimed 236 inches of snow. The glades were pretty deep, all their former lift lines were open. The place had pretty good options for the life long skier (assuming they enjoy cruising from time to time). I'm not saying this place could hold its own terrain wise against Northern Vermont and Sugarloaf, but relative to SR, Bretton Woods, Okemo, Stratton, Mount Snow and resorts of the like, there's really no comparison.
Any chance in the next decade that Tremblant gets knocked off its throne at number one? It certainly doesn't have the best snow or terrain in the east, but as a complete package, no other resorts really seem to compare. I was there back in 08 when they claimed 236 inches of snow. The glades were pretty deep, all their former lift lines were open. The place had pretty good options for the life long skier (assuming they enjoy cruising from time to time). I'm not saying this place could hold its own terrain wise against Northern Vermont and Sugarloaf, but relative to SR, Bretton Woods, Okemo, Stratton, Mount Snow and resorts of the like, there's really no comparison.