Redlands, California, United States | Active: 2021-present FIS record | Known for: Slopestyle, big air, rail events, Rev Tour results, SuperUnknown 21 | Current: Active FIS athlete
The April light at Mammoth Mountain can turn Main Park gold before the air gets cold again. Campbell Burrows was there in 2024, skiing spring lanes before Level 1’s SuperUnknown 21 with Aaron Durlester, Lucas Blanch, Luca Harrington and the Variance crew. That scene fits his profile better than a single label. Burrows is not only a contest skier with a FIS sheet. He is also a Mammoth-raised park rider whose public record moves between slopestyle starts, rail events, big air, halfpipe history, crew edits and late-season California footage.
Snowdyssey lists Burrows under The Unbound Series from Redlands, California, with 100 recorded events, 44 wins, 14 second places, 11 third places, 29 Nationals top 10s and 12 active seasons. Those numbers show a long youth-development record before the senior FIS results. The Unbound Series connection matters because Mammoth’s park system is not a casual training hill. It gives young skiers rails, jumps, halfpipe laps, spring slush, firm winter speed and repeated contest setups inside the same mountain culture. Burrows’ competition base was built through that repetition.
Burrows’ official FIS profile lists him as an active U.S. freestyle skier, born on June 18, 2007, with FIS code 2537752. The results archive reaches across slopestyle, big air, halfpipe and rail event starts from 2021 through 2026. That range is useful. It suggests a skier who did not come through one discipline only. Early halfpipe and rail-event records sit beside later slopestyle and big-air results, giving him a broader park foundation than a jump-only competitor.
The strongest national result on the current record is Burrows’ second place in men’s freeski slopestyle at Copper Mountain on April 8, 2026, listed by FIS as a National Championships result. Copper has become a measuring venue for American development skiers because the course exposes weak speed control fast. Rails demand clean feet before the jump line, and the jump line punishes late takeoffs. Burrows had already placed fifth at the 2025 Nor-Am slopestyle stop at Copper, so the 2026 Nationals podium reads less like a surprise and more like a progression step.
On April 18, 2026, Burrows placed third in freeski big air at the European Cup Premium event at Corvatsch, Switzerland, scoring 251.30 FIS points and 90 cup points. That is his clearest international podium marker. Corvatsch is not a small local setup. The Silvaplana venue is known for long spring light, high-alpine weather, big jump shapes and a field that often includes European riders using the stop as a proving ground. A podium there shows that Burrows’ jump skiing can travel outside the American Rev Tour and National Championships loop.
U.S. Ski & Snowboard’s 2026 Park and Pipe Project Gold invitee list includes Burrows under men’s freeski slopestyle. Project Gold is not a World Cup team nomination, but it is still a meaningful development marker because it gathers invited athletes around high-level park-and-pipe progression. The same document separates halfpipe and slopestyle groups, and Burrows appears in the slopestyle section. That aligns with the direction of his FIS record: earlier multi-discipline exposure, then a clearer move toward slopestyle, big air and rail-based contest skiing.
Freeskier’s coverage of “DENiM” placed Burrows in the Variance session before SuperUnknown 21, skiing Mammoth’s south and main parks with Aaron Durlester, Lucas Blanch and Luca Harrington. Freeskier later credited him in “Pink Eden,” Gavin Rudy’s SuperUnknown 21 project. That video layer matters because it keeps Burrows from reading as only a results-table athlete. SuperUnknown rewards clip presence, style, crew chemistry and the ability to make a park feature look intentional. Burrows’ appearance there places him inside the same modern bridge between judged runs and skier-made footage.
The FIS archive also sends Burrows outside the United States. He competed at Cardrona Alpine Resort in 2022, 2023 and 2024, including Australian New Zealand Cup slopestyle and big air starts. Cardrona gives a different kind of test from Mammoth or Copper: southern-hemisphere timing, exposed alpine wind, early-season northern preparation and a jump line used by international park skiers before winter returns to North America. Add Mammoth, Copper, Aspen, Stoneham, Snowmass, Park City and Corvatsch, and his record shows a skier learning how courses change from spring slush to high-altitude contest speed.
The verified record does not publish a complete signature trick list, so the technical frame should stay discipline-based. Burrows’ profile points toward all-around park skiing: rail balance, jump takeoffs, switch control, grab discipline, slopestyle line construction, big-air pop and enough halfpipe background to understand transition timing. His 2024 National Championships fourth place in rail event, 2025 Copper top five in slopestyle, 2026 Copper Nationals podium and 2026 Corvatsch big-air podium all point to a skier whose strongest asset is versatility across the park, not one isolated trick.
Burrows is still an emerging profile, but the public record is now too strong for a simple short bio. The clean facts are active FIS status, a Redlands / Unbound Series base, repeated Nationals and Rev Tour results, Project Gold slopestyle recognition, SuperUnknown 21 visibility, a National Championships slopestyle podium at Copper, and a European Cup Premium big-air podium at Corvatsch. The next measurable step is straightforward: turning those development results into deeper Nor-Am consistency, more international finals, and a larger video archive beyond the Mammoth spring crew window.