Whistler / Pemberton, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2016-present public record | Known for: Freeride, Whistler footage, HEAD team film, CHEF - Third Party, FWT Qualifier record | Current: Emerging freeride and film skier
The snow around Pemberton can feel heavier than it looks from the road. Storm slabs stack over pillows, trees hold shade, and the landing zones change every hour when Pacific weather keeps moving through the Coast Mountains. Floyd Guy’s public profile belongs to that terrain. His skiing is not defined by one slopestyle course or a single contest trick. It sits between Whistler freeride, crew footage, backcountry film projects, and the kind of young British Columbia skiing that grows from small local results into bigger lines on camera.
Guy’s public skiing record reaches back to Whistler’s youth freestyle scene. Pique Newsmagazine listed Floyd Guy among Whistler Blackcomb Freestyle Ski Club Super Youth slopestyle medallists in 2017, while also placing the club at a Timber Tour and Super Youth stop on Blackcomb Mountain. That early detail matters because it shows a skier who was already inside the Whistler system as a child. Whistler-Blackcomb gives young riders a rare mix: park laps, alpine terrain, freeride faces, heavy snowfall, spring events, and a dense local crew culture around filming.
The strongest official competition marker is his Freeride World Tour profile. The FWT Qualifier page lists Floyd Guy as a Canadian ski men rider, 19 years old, associated with Whistler Blackcomb, with an Americas ranking entry, 360 total points and a 10th-place event result on the visible record. His FWT Junior/Qualifier presence does not make him a senior Freeride World Tour name yet, but it does clarify the direction of his skiing. The profile points toward freeride terrain: exposed faces, line choice, cliffs, speed control, snow reading and the ability to manage consequence beyond a shaped park feature.
The freeride layer also appears through IFSA-linked records and Whistler Freeride Club references. A 2024 Kicking Horse IFSA Junior result sheet lists Floyd Guy with Whistler Freeride Club in U19 Ski Men, while FWT’s indexed result history points to junior events including Whistler, Kicking Horse and Red Mountain. Those venues are important for context. Whistler gives maritime snow and large resort terrain. Kicking Horse adds steeper Rocky Mountain exposure. Red Mountain brings interior British Columbia snow and natural features. That travel map fits a skier learning how to adapt line choice to changing snowpacks rather than only repeating one home-mountain style.
Guy’s strongest film-side brand marker before Out of the Ordinary is HEADCASE. Forecast Ski describes the short film as a project by Cole Richardson and Ethan Cook showcasing Head Freeskiing’s up-and-coming athletes, all riding the HEAD Oblivion 116 and 102. The skier list includes Tai How, Adam Kuch, Floyd Guy, Blaze Swaine, Stephen Lindsay-Ross, Steven Kahnert, Nolan Johnson, Deston Swift, Joel Macnair and Cole Richardson. That credit places Guy inside a young HEAD Ski group where park, freeride and backcountry styles overlap. It also connects him with skiers who move between rails, cliffs, side hits, powder and film-first skiing.
In 2025, HEAD and Tyrolia credited Guy in Out of the Ordinary, directed and edited by Jeff Thomas. The official release frames the movie as the third HEAD / Tyrolia freeski team film and lists locations across Ålesund, Hakuba, Haines, Golden Alpine Holidays, Journeyman Lodge, Whitecap Alpine, D’Arcy, the Tordrillo Mountains, Myoko, Hokkaido, Arlberg, St. Anton, Verbier, Whistler and Pemberton. The athlete list is broad: Jess Hotter, Hedvig Wessel, Sam Cohen, Evan McEachran, Zoe Atkin, Cole Richardson, Jesper Tjäder, Adam Kuch, Floyd Guy, Oliver Movenius, Stephen Lindsay-Ross, Joel Macnair and others. For Guy, that is a major context jump: from local Whistler/Pemberton footage into a global team-film roster.
Guy’s independent film identity sharpened through CHEF - Third Party. iF3 lists the 2025 short ski film as a Canadian production directed by Nick Thucydides and filmed mainly in British Columbia, with athletes Alex Thucydides, Stephen Lindsay-Ross, Chase Ujeski, Anders Ujeski, Jarl Whist, Steven Kahnert, Will Penrose, Alec Henderson, Floyd Guy and Aidan Mani. Newschoolers also lists Third Party with support from Arsenic Anywhere. That film matters because it is not a corporate team movie built around one sponsor’s full roster. It is a crew project, rooted in British Columbia, where style, spots, timing and who you ski with define the result.
The 2025 iF3 Movie Awards gave that film work a clearer public marker. Forecast Ski’s awards recap lists Floyd Guy in CHEF - Third Party among the Amateur Skier of the Year nominees, beside Andreya Zvonar in Evergreen, Dillon Flinders in RIFF, Hannah Langes in Bucket Clips 4 and Kyle Johnston in Vortex. Guy did not win the category, but the nomination is still useful for evaluating his profile. It shows that his part in Third Party was visible enough inside the ski-film circuit to be singled out by a festival-facing awards list, not just buried in a crew roster.
The verified record does not publish a complete trick list or a detailed segment breakdown, so the technical reading should stay grounded. Guy’s profile points toward freeride-informed freeskiing: line choice, natural takeoffs, drops, backcountry landings, powder turns, pillow timing, and enough freestyle awareness to fit beside HEAD’s park-and-freeride riders. His Whistler and Pemberton context matters here. Coast Mountain skiing rewards skiers who can move quickly between modes: alpine storm laps, pillows in the trees, side hits, cornices, wind lips, and park-influenced tricks when the terrain opens.
Guy is not yet a senior FWT podium name, Olympic athlete or long-established film star. The verified profile is more specific: Whistler youth freestyle roots, Whistler Freeride Club / IFSA pathway, FWT Qualifier record, HEADCASE credit, Out of the Ordinary team-film credit, Third Party film appearance, and an iF3 Amateur Skier of the Year nomination tied to that CHEF project. That is enough for a real emerging freeride-film profile. The next measurable step is whether his British Columbia footage grows into larger standalone parts, deeper FWT results, or more recurring team-film segments after the 2025-26 window.