Photo of Jordan Peet - Jo Peet

Jordan Peet - Jo Peet

Canada | Active FIS athlete: Jordan PEET, born 2004, FIS Code 2538220 | Public record: BC Freestyle Team, Whistler Freestyle, Canada Winter Games gold and bronze, Canada Cup, Rev Tour, NorAm | Main lane: slopestyle and Big Air



Brookvale Under The Lights



The Big Air jump at Mark Arendz Provincial Ski Park sat cold under Prince Edward Island lights on February 21, 2023. Jordan Peet had qualified third, with Naomi Urness still carrying the heaviest score from the preliminary round. The final changed on Peet’s second jump. She landed an 89.60, enough to jump past Evelyn Mullie, Ava Aubry, and the rest of the women’s field. The result gave Team BC another gold medal at the Canada Winter Games and fixed Peet’s name to a clear competitive moment: a Whistler Freestyle skier delivering her best score when the event had narrowed to one decisive jump.



Whistler Freestyle On The Team BC List



Peet’s public pathway runs through British Columbia’s freestyle system. Freestyle BC listed her as part of Team BC for the 2023 Canada Winter Games in the Big Air and Slopestyle group, alongside Kristin Hoivik, Zoe Greze-Kozuki, Tate Garrod, and Aidan Mulvihill. The same announcement connected her specifically to Whistler Freestyle. Her official FIS biography lists her as Jordan PEET of Canada, born April 12, 2004, active, with FIS Code 2538220 and BC Freestyle Team attached to her profile. That combination gives her biography a stable base: provincial-team development, Whistler park culture, and a live international results record.



Whitehorse Before The Games



The winter before the Canada Games podiums, Peet was already visible in Canada Cup results. At Whitehorse, Yukon, during the 2022-23 Canada Cup Series presented by Toyo Tires, she finished sixth in women’s Big Air on December 1, 2022. The field placed Naomi Urness first, Ava Aubry second, Zoe Greze-Kozuki third, Caoimhe Heavey fourth, and Ayden Fraser fifth. Peet then finished fifth in women’s slopestyle at the same Whitehorse stop from December 2 to 4. Those results show her working across both park formats before the larger national-stage result arrived two months later in Prince Edward Island.



The Gold Jump And The Bronze Follow-Up



The Canada Winter Games gave Peet two separate proof points. In Big Air, she rose from third after qualification to first in the final, winning by five points over Mullie and more than eleven points over Aubry. In slopestyle, Freestyle BC later reported that she continued her Games with a bronze medal. The difference between the two medals matters. Big Air rewarded one high-pressure jump: speed, takeoff timing, rotation, grab position, landing control, and judging impact. Slopestyle required a longer run across rails, jumps, and transitions. Peet leaving the Games with medals in both formats made her more than a one-event specialist.



New Zealand And The Wanaka Training Block



Freestyle BC’s New Zealand recap adds useful context around Peet’s development. The team trained for five days before competing in the FIS Australia / New Zealand Cup, facing a strong international field and difficult snow conditions. The article’s main women’s slopestyle note centered on Caoimhe Heavey, who opened with a left 540, switch right 540, and right cork 900. The same recap pictured Heavey sharing a podium with Whistler Freestyle athlete Jordan Peet. After the event, the group stayed in the Wanaka area for spring-weather training, using the Big Air course to refine competition tricks before returning to Squamish and Whistler preparation.



Rails, Jump Lines, And Two-Format Demands



Peet’s verified competition categories define the technical reading. She is documented in Big Air and slopestyle, not halfpipe, moguls, ski cross, or freeride. Big Air asks for a single high-value maneuver, with the score tied to takeoff confidence, amplitude, rotation, grab quality, axis control, and landing. Slopestyle spreads the pressure across a full course: rail features, switch entries, jumps, grabs, transitions, speed maintenance, and the ability to land one trick without losing the setup for the next. Because her public records do not list a full trick inventory, the page should stay discipline-based rather than inventing signature moves.



Copper Mountain Put Her Into Rev Tour Results



In January 2024, Peet appeared in the women’s freeski slopestyle result from the U.S. Revolution Tour at Copper Mountain. She finished tenth, behind Skye Clarke, Elaina Krusiewski, Marley Leavitt, Evelyn Mullie, Ayden Fraser, Amy Shipley, Taylor Breen, Rayne McClure, and Finley Good. Copper is not a casual stop for park skiers. It is a North American training and competition venue where athletes from Canada, the United States, New Zealand, and other programs often measure themselves before larger NorAm starts. For Peet, that result extended the record beyond domestic Canada Cup and Canada Winter Games pages.



Aspen On The X Games Course



Freestyle Canada’s February 2025 Aspen NorAm recap listed Peet thirteenth among the women, while Avery Krumme finished fifth, Evelyn Mullie seventh, and Eliza Bell eleventh. The event used features originally built for the X Games, following a World Cup on the same course. The article described firm snow, no wind, and temperatures around minus two degrees Celsius. That setting matters for a development skier. Aspen’s slopestyle course forces athletes to carry speed through technical rails and still arrive composed for the jump line. Peet’s thirteenth place does not read like a breakthrough podium, but it is a verified NorAm-level marker in a demanding field.



Mammoth Points And The Rev Tour Table



The 2025 U.S. Revolution Tour standings add another layer. In women’s Big Air at Mammoth, Peet ranked ninth with 290 points, behind Evelyn Mullie, Naomi Urness, Abby Winterberger, Keva Kelly, Indra Brown, Ayden Fraser, Eliza Bell, and Marley Leavitt. In the women’s slopestyle overall table, she ranked twenty-third, with a thirteenth-place Aspen result worth 200 points. Those numbers show a skier still building consistency rather than dominating the series. They also show a useful pattern for skipowd.tv: Peet kept entering both jump-focused and full-course events against the same North American peer group.



Stoneham Keeps The Current File Open



Peet’s name remains active in more recent public results. LiveHeats search results list her in the 2026 StepUpTour Stoneham FIS NorAm slopestyle women’s result, with SMS Freeski Canada’s Ely-Rose Toner and Ellie DeRosier also visible in the same division. A separate Stoneham Big Air page lists Peet on the leaderboard with BC Freestyle, behind names including Hunter Belle Hall and other women’s competitors. These are not medal claims, but they confirm the current lane. Peet is still connected to FIS NorAm starts, BC Freestyle, and the slopestyle / Big Air route rather than moving into a film-only or retired profile.



Where Peet Fits On Skipowd.tv



Jordan Peet fits as a 3/5 emerging Canadian park profile. The verified record is stronger than a basic youth-athlete page because it includes Canada Winter Games Big Air gold, Canada Winter Games slopestyle bronze, Whitehorse Canada Cup results, Rev Tour starts, Aspen NorAm, and recent Stoneham activity. It should not be inflated into a World Cup or X Games biography. The best angle is narrower and more accurate: a Whistler-linked BC Freestyle skier building a North American slopestyle and Big Air record through national Games, Canada Cup, Rev Tour, and NorAm starts.

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