Photo of Andreu Moreno Coll

Andreu Moreno Coll

Solsona, Catalonia, Spain | Active: 2019-present | Known for: freeski slopestyle, big air, rail events, independent European Cup path | Current: Club d’Esquí Solsona / FIS active athlete



Grau Roig With A Score To Chase



Grau Roig felt sharp in February, the kind of Andorran cold that keeps takeoffs firm and landings loud. Andreu Moreno Coll dropped into the slopestyle course with the start list already compressed around him, skis flat, shoulders quiet, speed carrying into the first feature. His win at Sunrise Park Grau Roig in 2023 did not place him in the World Cup spotlight, but it gave a clean marker for his route: Spanish freeski outside the deepest national-team structure, built through FIS points, regional contests, European Cup starts and a heavy travel calendar across Pyrenean and Alpine snowparks.



Solsona Before The Freestyle Switch



Moreno comes from Solsona, in Catalonia, and FIS lists him under Spain with Club d’Esquí Solsona. His background did not begin in park skiing. Spanish coverage says he started skiing at three, entered competition at eight with the Solsona ski club in alpine racing, then moved toward freeski competition around age fifteen with Ski Club Font-Romeu. That detail explains part of his skiing. The freer shape of slopestyle came after years of edge discipline, gate timing and lower-body control. Font-Romeu then became more than a training site. It gave him access to one of the strongest snowpark cultures in the Pyrenees.



Font-Romeu As The Second Base



Moreno has described Font-Romeu as one of his favorite parks even after traveling around Europe. The resort matters because it sits close enough to Catalonia to become a practical training base, but its park language is more international than local. Jumps, rails, tubes, takeoff rhythm and spring laps there can prepare a skier for FIS courses without requiring a full federation setup. In interviews, Moreno also linked his path to TD1 and TD2 coaching education, plus summer time at Les 2 Alpes. That mix of athlete and coach is central to his profile: training for himself, teaching others, and using work inside skiing to keep his own competitive route moving.



Port Ainé And The Betula Signal



The first clear public signs came at Port Ainé. In March 2021, Moreno won both men’s freeski days at the Trofeu Betula, a FIS-calendar event run with the local club, RFEDI, FCEH and the ski area. The course included two jump sections and two jib sections, a format that asked for more than a single spin. FIS records line up with that period, showing back-to-back Port Ainé slopestyle wins in 2021 and another Port Ainé FIS slopestyle win in 2022. Those results built his base before larger European Cup trips to places like Davos, La Clusaz, Alpe d’Huez, Corvatsch and Stubai.



La Clusaz, Davos And The European Cup Gap



The European Cup record gives a more precise view of his ceiling and workload. Moreno’s FIS page shows starts in big air and slopestyle across France, Switzerland, Austria and Italy, with European Cup results including Alpe d’Huez, Davos, La Clusaz, Prato Nevoso, Corvatsch, Stubai, Font-Romeu and Laax. His 22nd place in La Clusaz slopestyle in February 2023 became one of the reference results in Spanish coverage. It was not a podium, but it showed he could score inside a European field while still operating mainly through a self-managed structure. That distinction matters. Moreno’s story is not domination; it is persistence inside a system where access, travel and coaching resources shape the start list before the first drop-in.



The Staircase Behind Harlaut



One of Moreno’s most useful non-FIS markers came at The Staircase 2 in Snowpark El Tarter, Andorra, in February 2023. Spanish coverage placed Henrik Harlaut first, Moreno second and Enric Font third. The names around him make the result interesting. Harlaut brought an X Games-heavy, style-driven legacy into the same event, while Font connected the podium back to the Iberian freeski scene. The format sat closer to a showpiece rail-and-feature event than a standard FIS slopestyle contest. For Moreno, finishing behind Harlaut helped give his season a cultural reference point, not just another spreadsheet line. It placed his skiing in front of a freeski audience that understands tricks, style, pressure and event atmosphere.



How He Builds A Season Without A Big Machine



Moreno’s preparation has been described as unusually self-directed. In Spanish interviews, he explained that he, his physical trainer and his father organize a training calendar with competitions, technical sessions, dryland work and gym time. He has also said his father acts almost like a manager, helping organize the logistics around a season. That practical detail matters because it separates him from skiers protected by larger national structures. His support has included BlueBanana, local institutional help from Solsona or Lleida, shops in Font-Romeu, Club d’Esquí Solsona and his trainer’s gym. The result is a career assembled from smaller pieces: sponsors, family, coaching work, regional support and enough FIS points to keep entering contests.



Slopestyle First, Rail Events Now In The Mix



Moreno’s FIS record is mainly slopestyle and big air, but the recent data adds rail events. FIS lists him fourth in the Den Haag European Cup rail event in December 2025 and thirteenth at the Innsbruck European Cup rail event in November 2025. That shift fits the wider direction of freeskiing in Europe, where rail-focused contests, SLVSH-style duels and urban-influenced formats have created more lanes for skiers outside the Olympic slopestyle pipeline. His 2026 Grandvalira SLVSH listing also points toward that space. SLVSH rewards a different kind of competitor: one who can answer tricks, adapt fast, use rails cleanly and keep composure when another rider sets the move first.



Where The Solsona Route Points Next



Moreno’s strongest verified profile is national-level and European development-level, not World Cup established. FIS shows Spanish FIS wins, national-championship podiums, European Cup starts, rail-event entries and an active athlete status. FCEH also lists him as the 2024-2025 Catalan freeski champion in the absolute category. The next factual step is not abstract hype; it is whether he can turn the independent route into deeper European Cup results, more rail-event finals, stronger SLVSH visibility, or filmed projects that match his own interest in recording and producing ski content. His lane is clear: Solsona roots, Font-Romeu training, self-managed travel, and a freeski career still being built contest by contest.

2 videos
Miniature
GAME 7 || Evan McEachran vs. Andreu Moreno || SLVSH CUP GRANDVALIRA '25
07:09 min 18/03/2025
Miniature
GAME 7 || Ryan Stevenson vs. Andreu Moreno Coll || SLVSH CUP GRANDVALIRA '26
10:20 min 15/03/2026