Park City, Utah, United States | Active: 2025-present public record | Known for: Slopestyle, Futures Tour overall title, Project Gold invite, Surface Skis footage | Current: Active FIS athlete
The jump lane at Park City felt bright and dry under spring sun when Adrian DiPietra’s 2026 season started to take shape. His public record is still young, but the direction is already clear: slopestyle first, regional dominance before national depth, and a Park City Ski and Snowboard pathway that moved him from Big Mountain West starts into FIS events, Futures Tour recognition and Project Gold attention. For a skier born in 2010, the verified profile is unusually clean. It has official results, a club structure, a ski sponsor page, and enough contest context to support a full emerging-athlete profile.
FIS lists DiPietra as Adrian DIPIETRA of the United States, born in 2010, active under FIS code 2539815 and attached to Park City Ski and Snowboard. That club connection gives his record a clear training context. Park City is built around repeatable freestyle access: resort park laps, Woodward-style progression, Utah Olympic Park infrastructure and a local competition calendar that lets young riders stack starts without leaving the Wasatch system. DiPietra’s early public profile fits that environment. He is not presented as a freeride or halfpipe skier; the evidence points toward slopestyle and park-based progression.
USASA lists DiPietra in Freeski Men, Big Mountain West Series, with regional 2025 slopestyle results that include first place at Woodward PC Slopestyle 1, first at Dollar Mountain Slopestyle 1, second at Dollar Mountain Slopestyle 2, first at Park City Mountain Resort Slopestyle and first at the Woodward PC Final Slopestyle. Those results should be read as development markers rather than senior pro results. They show a young skier winning repeatedly inside his regional system, learning judged-run rhythm before the FIS sheet became more visible.
The first strong official FIS marker came at Okemo Mountain Resort on February 5, 2026. FIS lists DiPietra first in men’s freeski slopestyle, scoring 50.00 FIS points ahead of Henry Shields and Barrett Beyer. That result matters because it moved the record from regional USASA dominance to a FIS-ranked event with a larger field. Okemo also gave the season a useful East Coast test: colder snow, flatter light, firm takeoffs and a slopestyle course where speed errors can travel from the rail section into every jump afterward.
DiPietra followed the Okemo win with another FIS slopestyle victory at Park City Mountain Resort on March 10, 2026. FIS lists him first with 50.00 FIS points, ahead of Hampton Knight and Cash Thwaits. That result was more than a home-area comfort note. It confirmed that the Okemo result was not a one-day spike. Park City Ski & Snowboard later named him the Futures Tour Overall Men’s Slopestyle winner, while also noting that several PCSS athletes earned Rev Tour starts from Futures Tour results that season.
The deeper national test arrived at Copper Mountain. On February 18, 2026, FIS lists DiPietra 12th in a men’s freeski slopestyle FIS event at Copper. On April 8, 2026, he placed 11th at the National Championships slopestyle event, behind Colin Harris, Campbell Burrows, Parker Stines, Gustav Reilly, Gavin Higashi, Luke Geiser, Daniel Hilleke, Bennet Kobe, Henry Sanderson and Ryan Jones. That result gives the profile a realistic frame. DiPietra was already winning Futures Tour-level events, but the national championship field showed the next layer of depth.
Park City Ski & Snowboard reported that DiPietra received a Gold Camp invitation after strong Futures Tour and Nor-Am-circuit performances. U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s 2026 Park and Pipe Project Gold invitee list also includes Adrian Dipietra under Freeski Slopestyle. Project Gold is not the same thing as a senior national-team spot, and the profile should not treat it that way. It is better understood as a development marker: a sign that his slopestyle results had reached the level where U.S. Ski & Snowboard wanted him in a high-performance progression environment.
DiPietra also has a small but clear brand and video layer. Surface Skis hosts an Adrian DiPietra team page, while Freeride.cz credits him in a 2025 Surface Skis session at Woodward Copper with Mike Kennedy, Mitch Zyzlewski, Jordan Cooper, Kellan Baker and Levi Ascher. That gives the profile a useful second angle beyond results. He is not only appearing in databases; he is also present in brand-backed park footage, inside a ski company roster that overlaps with modern rail and park culture.
The verified technical picture should stay grounded. DiPietra’s FIS record and USASA page point to freeski slopestyle as the main discipline, with big-air points appearing on the FIS profile but without the same depth of results as slopestyle. His development likely depends on the standard park toolkit: rail balance, switch approaches, controlled landings, grab discipline, jump-line speed, takeoff timing and full-run construction. The safest reading is an all-around park skier whose strongest verified results come when the entire slopestyle run holds together.
DiPietra is still very young, so the profile should avoid treating him like a finished senior athlete. The clean facts are already enough: active FIS status, Park City Ski and Snowboard affiliation, repeated Big Mountain West slopestyle wins, FIS victories at Okemo and Park City, 11th at U.S. National Championships slopestyle, Futures Tour overall recognition, Project Gold slopestyle selection and Surface Skis footage. The next measurable step is whether those development results translate into stronger Rev Tour, Nor-Am and national-level finishes as the fields get older and deeper.