Photo of Aidan Mulvihill

Aidan Mulvihill

Squamish, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2020-present | Focus: slopestyle, big air, Whistler park skiing | Current: Freestyle Canada NextGen athlete



Whistler Blackcomb When The Score Hit Ninety



The Whistler Blackcomb course ran bright under April light, with spring snow softening each takeoff and rails scraped clean by a long Canadian nationals field. Aidan Mulvihill dropped into the men’s freeski slopestyle contest on April 5, 2025, and left with the win. FIS listed him first with 90.00 points, ahead of Avery Macyk and Henri Joyal. For a skier still building his World Cup identity, that result gave the season a home-mountain anchor: not a training clip, not a social post, but an official FIS victory at the resort where his freestyle path had begun.



Grouse At Three, Whistler At Four



Mulvihill’s Freestyle Canada profile gives the early route clearly. He started skiing at age three on Grouse Mountain in North Vancouver, then moved with his family to Squamish at age four and began lessons at Whistler. The attraction was not straight-line skiing. He described constantly spinning and flipping off side hits until his parents and instructors encouraged him into the Whistler Freestyle Development program at age ten. By age twelve, he was in the Freestyle Whistler Club. That progression matters because his base is local and layered: North Shore start, Squamish home, Whistler training, then the provincial and national freestyle systems.



From Whistler Freestyle To Canada NextGen



Freestyle Canada lists Mulvihill as a NextGen slopestyle and big air athlete, with Vancouver as birthplace, Squamish as hometown, Freestyle Whistler as home club, and 2023 as the start of his national-team listing. His own profile says he made the BC Team at age seventeen and moved into the NextGen program at eighteen. Freestyle BC’s athlete ascension update placed him on the path from Whistler Freestyle to the BC Team and then to the NextGen Team in slopestyle and big air. The public record therefore shows a standard but demanding Canadian development ladder rather than a sudden viral rise.



Cardrona Tricks In Heavy New Zealand Snow



The first result that shows his jump vocabulary came from the 2022 Australia New Zealand Cup trip at Cardrona. Freestyle BC reported that the BC Park and Pipe Team spent sixteen days training on snow in New Zealand before the ANC events. Mulvihill placed second in big air, with Bryce Menning third, in challenging snow conditions. The trick list was specific: right double cork 1080, left rodeo 1260, and right double cork 1440. That set of jumps says more than the podium alone. It shows rotation both ways, off-axis control, and enough depth to adapt a big-air run to Southern Hemisphere snow and travel pressure.



Prince Edward Island Silver



The 2023 Canada Winter Games added another junior-stage marker. Freestyle Canada notes Mulvihill’s favorite result as his 2023 Canada Games second place, while Freestyle BC reported silver in men’s slopestyle for Team BC. The Games took place on Prince Edward Island, far from his Whistler training base, and placed him in a national multi-sport environment rather than a standard park event. Squamish coverage also recorded his eighth place in big air and second place in slopestyle. The result did not make him a senior star, but it gave him a national-age-group result strong enough to support the NextGen direction that followed.



Aspen And Stoneham Build The Nor-Am Case



The 2023-24 Nor-Am season is the strongest competitive part of Mulvihill’s résumé so far. Freestyle Canada lists him as the 2023-24 overall Nor-Am champion, with first place in slopestyle at Aspen and first place in slopestyle at Stoneham. FIS records match that climb: first at Aspen Snowmass in March 2024, first at Stoneham in slopestyle later that month, and third in Stoneham big air the next day. Those results earned practical value. FIS’s Nor-Am Cup recap stated that Skye Clarke and Aidan Mulvihill took the top spots in the women’s and men’s freeski big air and slopestyle rankings, earning World Cup places for the following season.



Chur, Beijing, Kreischberg, Klagenfurt



Mulvihill’s 2024-25 World Cup season shows the difficult step from Nor-Am success to full international fields. FIS lists 22nd in Big Air at Chur, 24th in Big Air at Beijing, 21st in Big Air at Kreischberg, 36th in Big Air at Klagenfurt, 34th in slopestyle at Laax, 34th in slopestyle at Aspen, 55th in slopestyle at Stoneham, and 28th in slopestyle at Tignes. Freestyle Canada’s Klagenfurt report confirmed that Mulvihill and Dylan Deschamps represented Canada at the inaugural Big Air Klagenfurt World Cup in Austria. These results are not podiums, but they mark the real transition zone: learning qualification speed, jump size, rail standards, and scoring pressure against established World Cup finalists.



Whistler XL Park And Training Habits



Mulvihill’s technical identity is tied closely to Whistler terrain and air awareness. Ski Addiction has filmed him touring Whistler Blackcomb’s XL park, while his Freestyle Canada profile says he spends off-snow time at Airhouse in Squamish learning tricks on trampolines. The best verified trick details remain the Cardrona set: right double cork 1080, left rodeo 1260, and right double cork 1440. Around those jumps, his discipline requires switch takeoffs, grab timing, rail approaches, cork rotation, landing absorption, and speed management between features. His profile is still emerging, so the safer reading is not a signature style claim. It is a skier building the full slopestyle toolkit through Whistler laps, trampoline repetition, Nor-Am pressure, and World Cup exposure.



The Next Marker Is A Final



Mulvihill earns a 2/5 importance rating because his record is strong for an emerging athlete but does not yet include a World Cup podium, X Games medal, Olympic start, or major film-part identity. The verified anchors are clear: Freestyle Whistler development, Canada Games silver, Cardrona ANC big-air silver, 2023-24 Nor-Am overall title, Aspen and Stoneham Nor-Am wins, World Cup starts, and the 2025 FIS slopestyle win at Whistler. The next concrete step is equally clear: turning qualification starts at Chur, Laax, Aspen, Stoneham, Tignes, Kreischberg, or future World Cup venues into a final-round result.

15 videos
Miniature
55 seconds of skiing
00:55 min 05/02/2026
Miniature
A Tour Of Whistlers 2025 XL Terrain Park With Aidan Mulvihill
09:16 min 28/01/2025
Miniature
Advanced Grabs | Tramp Series EP 6
05:33 min 17/10/2025
Miniature
How To Backflip Effortlessly
02:58 min 20/11/2025
Miniature
Tramp Ski Pro Vs DOLLO Tramp Ski
01:01 min 30/09/2025
Miniature
Landing Your First Frontflips
02:45 min 04/12/2025
Miniature
The Basics | Pretzeling Explained EP. 1
08:14 min 03/01/2025
Miniature
Dialing in Your First 540's On Skis
01:51 min 31/10/2025
Miniature
A tour of Whistlers 2023 XL terrain Park with Aidan Mulvihill
11:20 min 23/01/2023
Miniature
Sweet Spot
02:39 min 01/03/2026