Spain / North America | Public Record: 2023-2026 | Known for: Lucas Blanch, Yung Sizzla, Variance clips, OS Crew VORTEX, Mammoth park sessions | Current: film-first park and street-facing freeski profile
The Mammoth Unbound takeoff had that late-season shine: soft snow, sun glare, edges cutting through slush before the next rail. Lucas Blanch, better known in ski-video circles as Yung Sizzla or Lucas Sizzla, appears publicly in that kind of setting: park crews, spring sessions, short edits, and films where style moves faster than formal biography.
His profile is not built from X Games medals, Olympic starts or World Cup podiums. The reliable trail is smaller and more specific. FIS lists Lucas Blanch as a Spanish freestyle skier, while freeski media credits place him inside Variance projects, Mammoth edits, SOURCE, guanson., Til Guan and OS Crew’s VORTEX. That makes him a film-first park rider with enough verified appearances for a concise creative profile.
FIS lists Lucas Blanch as an athlete from Spain, born in 2002, with FIS Code 2535758 and All Radical Mountain as his club. His public FIS status is not active, and the available record points toward slopestyle and big air rather than a long senior international career. That official entry gives the alias a useful anchor.
The FIS page matters because “Lucas Sizzla” is mostly a video-credit name. Without the Lucas Blanch record, the public trail would be harder to identify cleanly. The safest frame is therefore dual: Lucas Blanch for the official athlete record, Yung Sizzla or Lucas Sizzla for the park-video and crew-facing identity.
One of the clearest alias links appears in SOURCE, a Newschoolers video listing that credits Lucas Blanch as Yung Sizzla. The cast includes Barclay Weyhrauch, David Mackens, Cayden Snyder, Jake Rickey, Tristan Cholowicki, Dominick Pucherelli, Caroline Klusza, Harry Edmonds, Cam Smith and Annabelle Santerre.
That project places him in a North American park and freeride-video environment rather than a national-team lane. The listing tags Mammoth, Breckenridge, park, rails, jumps and big mountain, which gives a broad read of the terrain around the edit. For Blanch, it confirms the name that later appears across more creative ski projects.
Freeskier’s coverage of DENiM placed Blanch with the Variance crew at Mammoth before Level 1’s SuperUnknown 21. The session included Aaron Durlester, Lucas Blanch, Luca Harrington and Campbell Burrows, filmed by Jack Benziger in the south and main parks at Mammoth Mountain.
That context matters because Variance sits in the modern park-film world: short projects, crew energy, spring snow, creative rail use and riders who treat shaped park features like a canvas. Blanch’s appearance beside Harrington, Durlester and Burrows gives his public record more weight than an isolated upload would.
iF3’s film guide lists Lucas Blanch among the athletes in Variance: Maybe I Should, alongside Aaron Durlester, Ridge Dirksmeier, Danya Manyak, Keegan Supple, Hunter Henderson and Ryan McElmon. Prime Skiing also covered the full movie, keeping Blanch tied to that Variance film cycle.
This is the most stable creative lane for him. Variance projects tend to favor park improvisation, rails, side hits, fast edits and the kind of trick selection that reads in a crew video rather than a judged final. Blanch fits that environment as a skier whose public footprint is built through repeated clips, not a single breakout contest result.
The Newschoolers listing for guanson. gives another useful piece of the profile. Published by variance.ski in September 2024, the description says the video was filmed in a week and a half after Copper had freshly closed, ending with a note signed by Yung Sizzla.
That setting says a lot about the way this kind of skiing works. Closed or late-season parks often mean limited access, melting snow, patched takeoffs and soft landings that change by the hour. A skier has to work with what remains: rails, tubes, leftover jumps, slush, speed checks and the patience to make a short session feel complete.
Prime Skiing’s 2025/26 trailer guide lists Til Guan by Variance with skiing by Lucas Blanch, Zach Shuster, Owen Ready, James Pouch, Matt Donahoe, Chris Colgan and friends. Newschoolers also lists the Til Guan trailer with Jack Benziger on film and edit duties, plus Jay Burrows on additional shots.
That keeps Blanch visible in the same creative network beyond one season. The names around him point to a park-first group interested in clips, movement and shared visual identity. For skipowd.tv, that continuity matters more than trying to inflate his competition résumé. His story is best read through the projects that keep using his name.
OS Crew’s VORTEX gives the Lucas Sizzla credit a wider 2025 film reference. Freeskier described VORTEX as OS Crew’s tenth annual ski film, built around street and backcountry riding, spring kicker sessions and mid-winter powder. The rider list includes Lucas Sizzla with Mason Kennedy, Kyle Johnston, Trevor Hattabaugh, Ben Moxham, Ian Russell, Graham Gray, Anton Holter, Josh Karcher, Jack Feick, Nikolay Dobrianov, Danner Brummer, Colin Dexter, Nathan Goddard, Chris Colgan, Keegan O’Brien and Juice Kennedy.
Downdays gave the trailer a similar frame, calling out street spots, backcountry hits and a private slushy park shoot. For Blanch, VORTEX expands the context from park laps into a broader crew film. He is still not presented as the central star, but the credit places him inside a large North American film roster with street, pow and spring-build energy.
The public record does not support a detailed list of signature tricks, sponsors or personal milestones. The safe technical frame is park and creative freeskiing: rails, jumps, slush sessions, spring edits, short video parts and crew-based filming. His appearances point toward a skier comfortable around features that reward timing, pop, switch control, grab definition, rail balance and clean landings.
Viewers should read his skiing through the projects around him. Variance, SOURCE and VORTEX are not official ranking systems. They measure whether a clip fits the session, whether a trick has enough shape, whether speed survives the landing and whether the edit feels coherent. Lucas Sizzla’s current public value sits in that video ecosystem.
Lucas Sizzla’s archive is still limited, but it is no longer empty. The verified line runs through Lucas Blanch’s FIS entry, SOURCE, DENiM, Maybe I Should, guanson., Til Guan and VORTEX. That gives enough material for a concise creative profile, but not enough for a long biography built on sponsors, podiums, hometown history or interviews.
The accurate frame is Spanish park skier turned North American crew-video name. His profile should stay close to the evidence: Lucas Blanch on official records, Yung Sizzla or Lucas Sizzla in edits, Mammoth and Copper-style park environments, Variance projects, OS Crew’s VORTEX and a film-first identity still being built clip by clip.