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Elijah Krumme

Whistler / Squamish, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2010s-present | Known for: FIS halfpipe, big air, Whistler Freestyle development | Current: Active Canadian junior freeski competitor



Calgary Pipe Under Junior Worlds Pressure



The Calgary halfpipe at WinSport carried cold light, blue walls and the clean echo of edges climbing vertical snow. Elijah Krumme entered that 2026 Junior World Championships week as a Whistler Freestyle skier, not yet a senior name, but already inside Canada’s park-and-pipe pathway.

Krumme is listed by FIS as a Canadian freestyle skier with Whistler Blackcomb Freestyle Ski Club, FIS code 2541308, birth year 2010 and active status. His official record points most clearly toward halfpipe, with additional big air and rail-event entries. That makes his profile different from many young Whistler park riders: the pipe is already a central part of his documented competition identity.



Whistler Freestyle Before The FIS Page



Krumme’s public record begins well before his FIS results. In February 2018, Pique Newsmagazine reported Whistler Blackcomb Freestyle Ski Club results from a home event on Blackcomb Mountain. Elijah Krumme was listed as the U8 boys winner in slopestyle and moguls, and he also won the U8 big air category.

Those youth results place his development inside Whistler-Blackcomb, a resort system with terrain parks, mogul courses, junior club structure and enough scale for athletes to move between disciplines early. For a skier born in 2010, that matters. The early record does not prove a finished style, but it shows years of exposure to judged freestyle formats before FIS starts became visible.



Squamish Names And The BC Games Step



In March 2023, Squamish media listed Elijah Krumme among the local athletes competing in freestyle skiing at the BC Winter Games. A separate Squamish preview named him among Squamish youth heading to the Games, where freestyle skiing included moguls, big air and slopestyle at SilverStar.

That step is useful because it connects Krumme to a broader British Columbia development ladder, not only to one local club. BC Games events sit below senior international skiing, but they matter for young athletes because they create travel pressure, provincial fields and multi-discipline exposure. Krumme’s public path moves from Whistler youth results into provincial competition before the FIS halfpipe record becomes the main reference point.



Canadian Nationals And The Park Field



LiveHeats entries and results from the 2024 Freeski Canadian National Championships list Eli Krumme with Whistler Development Team. The men’s slopestyle entry places him in a field that also included Jude Oliver, Landon Owen-Mold, Misha Litvinenko, Nathan Barriault and Luke Gareau. The men’s big air results list him further down the field, again inside a national park contest setting.

Those results should be read carefully. They do not turn Krumme into a national podium skier, but they show him competing in the same development environment as several Canadian park riders who already appear in FIS and video records. Slopestyle and big air require rail timing, speed control, takeoff accuracy, grab discipline and landing direction. Even a lower finish can be useful evidence when the athlete is still in the early junior phase.



Why Halfpipe Became The Clearest Marker



By 2026, Krumme’s strongest public result was no longer slopestyle or big air. The FIS record shows him 10th in men’s freeski halfpipe at the FIS Junior World Ski Championships in Calgary on March 5, 2026, after a 12th-place qualification entry two days earlier. That is the key result currently supporting his emerging-athlete profile.

Halfpipe narrows the test. A skier has to manage wall speed, edge pressure, amplitude, takeoff timing, landing angle and trick order without the variety of rails and jumps that shape slopestyle. A 10th-place Junior Worlds finish gives Krumme a stronger factual anchor than scattered youth results because it sits in an international FIS championship field and in a discipline where Canada has a serious development history.



Aspen Halfpipe And The Nor-Am Jump



The next important FIS marker came at Aspen / Buttermilk on March 26, 2026. Krumme placed 14th in men’s freeski halfpipe at a Nor-Am Cup Premium event, earning FIS points and cup points in a field led by more established North American pipe skiers.

Aspen / Buttermilk is not just another stop on a list. The venue carries X Games history, large halfpipe infrastructure and a contest culture where young riders are exposed to serious pipe standards. For Krumme, the Aspen result shows the next layer after Junior Worlds: leaving Canada, entering a U.S. pipe field and recording a scored Nor-Am result rather than only an entry.



Big Air Starts Around The Pipe Record



Krumme’s FIS record also includes big air results. He placed 9th at Wentworth, Nova Scotia, in a February 2026 FIS big air event, then 40th in a Nor-Am Cup freeski big air at Whistler Blackcomb on April 4, 2026. LiveHeats also listed him in the Whistler big air draw, with a recorded score in the heat structure.

Those big air results round out the profile, but they should not overtake the halfpipe narrative. The strongest public evidence points toward a young skier with pipe as his clearest international discipline and big air as part of his broader park record. That balance is common in development skiing, where athletes may enter multiple formats before one discipline becomes dominant.



Whistler Benchmarks And Older Names Nearby



Krumme’s pathway sits near older Whistler-linked riders such as Aidan Mulvihill, whose record shows a more advanced slopestyle and Nor-Am profile. That comparison should stay structural, not personal. Mulvihill represents a later stage of the Canadian park ladder, while Krumme is still early in the FIS cycle.

The value of the comparison is the environment. Whistler gives young skiers club structure, terrain repetition, spring park culture, airbag training and access to athletes already moving through Canadian Freestyle systems. Krumme’s results show him using that ladder through youth events, BC Games, Canadian Nationals, Junior Worlds and Nor-Am starts.



What The Current Record Supports



The verified record supports a Canadian emerging park-and-pipe profile. Krumme has official FIS identity, Whistler Blackcomb Freestyle Ski Club affiliation, Junior Worlds halfpipe selection and result data, Nor-Am halfpipe and big air entries, and earlier Whistler youth competition results. That is enough for a complete but careful skipowd.tv athlete page.

No verified X Games, Olympic, World Cup podium, major sponsor contract or full film segment was found under Elijah Krumme’s name. The profile should therefore stay focused on development, not stardom. The most useful future updates will be additional FIS halfpipe results, higher Nor-Am placements, confirmed sponsor information, or named video projects. For now, his clearest identity is a 2010-born Canadian skier from the Whistler system whose 2026 Junior Worlds halfpipe result gives his young record a real international marker.

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