Photo of Misha Litvinenko

Misha Litvinenko

Québec, Canada | Active: 2022-present public record | Known for: Slopestyle, big air, Équipe Québec, Stoneham Nor-Am silver, Whistler big air win | Current: Active FIS athlete



Stoneham Snowfall And A First Nor-Am Podium



The big-air jump at Stoneham Mountain Resort was running through heavy Quebec snow when Misha Litvinenko put down the result that changed his public record. On March 1, 2025, he finished second in men’s freeski big air at the Stoneham Nor-Am, behind Tate Garrod and ahead of Jérémy Gagné. Freestyle Canada described the event as a difficult weather week, with Canadian riders dominating podiums across slopestyle and big air. For Litvinenko, that silver was the cleanest early proof that his skiing could score beyond the provincial level.



Union Freeski Club And The Québec Team Route



Ski Acro Québec lists Litvinenko on its Équipe Québec de slopestyle page, with Union Freeski Club as his club of origin and 2022 as the year he joined the provincial team. That gives his development a clear frame inside Québec freeskiing: cold winter parks, regional club coaching, rail-heavy local culture, and a provincial team system that moves athletes into Nor-Am, FIS and national championship starts. His profile is not a random edit-only record. It is built through a recognized provincial pathway.



FIS Code And The Active Athlete Marker



His official FIS profile lists him as Misha LITVINENKO of Canada, attached to Équipe de Québec de Slopestyle, born on August 4, 2006, active under FIS code 2539668. The record includes freeski slopestyle, freeski big air and freeski rail event results from 2023 through 2026. That matters because the disciplines show a full park direction rather than a single-format profile. Big air carries his strongest podiums, while slopestyle and rail event fill out the wider competitive base.



Canadian Nationals Put Him Near The Front



The 2024 Canadian National Championships at Whistler gave Litvinenko two useful domestic markers. In men’s slopestyle, he finished fourth behind Matthaeus Heslop, Jude Oliver and Ty Kargus. In men’s big air, he finished seventh behind Malcolm Farris, Henri Joyal, Drew Christensen, Ty Kargus, Joel Macnair and Landon Owen-Mold. Those results did not make him the champion yet, but they showed he could sit near the front of a Canadian field containing several of the same names that would later appear across Nor-Am, Junior Worlds and national-team development conversations.



Whistler Blackcomb Turned Big Air Into Gold



One year later, the same mountain gave him a stronger headline. On April 6, 2025, FIS results list Litvinenko first in men’s freeski big air at Whistler-Blackcomb, ahead of Jude Oliver and Avery Macyk. Pique Newsmagazine also reported that he struck gold among male big-air contestants at the 2025 Canadian championships. That result matters because it confirmed the direction suggested by Stoneham: Litvinenko’s clearest scoring strength was becoming big air, where speed, pop, rotation control and landings are isolated under pressure.



Copper And Aspen Added The Rev Tour Layer



Litvinenko’s public record also includes American development events. Snowdyssey lists Rev Tour slopestyle appearances at Copper Mountain and Aspen Snowmass, including 25th at Copper in January 2025, 15th at Aspen in February 2025, and 24th at Copper in January 2026. Those are not podium results, but they are useful context. Rev Tour fields are deep, fast and travel-heavy. A Quebec skier entering those events has to adjust to larger western courses, longer jump lines, altitude, different snow textures and stronger North American depth.



Wentworth And Whistler Kept The 2026 Record Active



The 2026 season added more confirmed FIS results. Litvinenko won men’s freeski big air at Wentworth, Nova Scotia, on February 15, 2026, after placing eighth in slopestyle the day before and 33rd in rail event earlier that week. On April 4, 2026, he finished seventh in men’s Nor-Am big air at Whistler Blackcomb, behind Walker Woodring, Jude Oliver, Gianni Biello, Jacob Durepos, James Kanzler and Aimo Mandelin. Those results keep the profile current: not a single 2025 spike, but an active competition record across two seasons.



Surface Skis And The Video Side



Surface Skis lists him on its team page as Misha Litvinenko NDiaye, giving the profile a verified brand layer beyond federation results. Because Surface is a commercial ski brand, the clean external attribution is the official Surface Skis team page rather than an inferred sponsorship claim from social media alone. Litvinenko also appears in the Newschoolers edit “I Can Sue!” alongside Landon Owen-Mold, Armaan Xavier, Luke Miller, Jack Burgham, Ewan Clemenson, Ryder Bartlett, Jesse Downs, Dexter McPherson, Deston Swift, Avery Krumme and Kazuki Sekine. That credit adds a video-facing layer to a profile otherwise led by results.



How Litvinenko’s Skiing Should Be Read



The verified record does not publish a complete trick list, so the technical description should stay disciplined. Litvinenko’s strongest evidence points to big air and slopestyle, with rail event experience in the background. That means the relevant toolkit is takeoff speed, air awareness, grab discipline, landing control, switch comfort, rail entries and enough line construction to survive full slopestyle courses. His results show that big air is the clearest current strength, but the slopestyle starts at Stoneham, Aspen, Copper, Whistler and Wentworth keep him from being framed as a single-jump-only athlete.



The Current Marker Is Emerging But Concrete



Litvinenko is still an emerging Canadian park skier, not a World Cup regular or senior international medal name. The verified profile is already strong enough for a full development page: Équipe Québec since 2022, Union Freeski Club roots, active FIS status, Canadian Nationals big-air gold at Whistler in 2025, Stoneham Nor-Am big-air silver, Wentworth FIS big-air victory, Whistler Nor-Am top seven, Rev Tour starts, Surface Skis team listing and a Newschoolers video credit. The next measurable step is whether those big-air results translate into deeper slopestyle finals and more consistent Nor-Am podium-level finishes.

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