Denmark | Born: 24 June 2007 | Active: FIS record 2024-present | Known for: EYOF 2025, Norwegian FIS and European Cup starts, Bungee Breakers Open | Discipline: slopestyle and big air
Bakuriani, Georgia, sat under blue sky and light wind when Sebastian Børve took his slopestyle qualifying run at the European Youth Olympic Festival in February 2025. The Danish teenager opened with a right 900, then sent a switch left double 900 double safety before moving into a 450 side flip from the cannon rail. A switch tail-press 360 over the roller and a switch 270 on, switch off on the final rail completed the line. Small errors cost enough points to keep him outside the final, but the run gave a clear technical snapshot of where his skiing was heading.
Denmark selected Børve alongside Silje Kinkead for freestyle skiing, and he also carried the Danish flag with alpine skier Sille Krause-Thorø at the opening ceremony. The result was not a medal or a final berth, and it should not be inflated into either. Its value lies in the selection itself and in a run that joined jump rotations, switch skiing, presses and rail work under an official international youth format.
Børve’s official FIS profile identifies him as Danish, born on 24 June 2007 and registered with Skiklubben Hareskov. His FIS code is 2539467 and his status remains active. Those details separate him from a loose social-media profile: he has a federation-recognised record in both slopestyle and big air. The database does not list a sponsor, home mountain or detailed equipment setup, so those details should remain unstated rather than guessed from posts or short clips.
The first visible FIS entries in his record came in 2024. At Trysil, he finished 38th in Norwegian national-championship slopestyle and 14th in national-championship big air. At Myrkdalen later that March, he was 17th in a FIS slopestyle and 13th in a FIS big air, while a Ringkollen big-air start ended in 47th. These are not headline finishes, but they map a junior season accurately: more starts, more formats and more exposure to fields stronger than a single home event.
That cross-border route is practical for a Danish skier. Slopestyle demands pace, rail control, grabs, transitions and clean landings across a full course, while big air concentrates all the pressure on one takeoff. Børve’s 2024 finishes do not suggest an instant breakthrough. They show a rider collecting the repetitions needed before higher scores begin to arrive.
On 8 March 2026, Børve finished fifth in a FIS big-air event at Wyller, on the Oslo-side terrain connected to Skimore Oslo. That top-five result is the best verified individual finish currently visible in his FIS event list. It came in a FIS race rather than a European Cup, which matters for context, but it marked a clear improvement on the 2024 results. The official result does not publish his trick, so no detailed spin or grab should be invented; the verified point is that he reached fifth in a recognised FIS field.
Four days later, at the 2026 Norwegian national championships in Geilo, Børve finished eleventh in big air and twenty-fifth in slopestyle. The difference is useful rather than contradictory. Big air is a single-hit format, while slopestyle asks for consistency across rails and jumps. His next result shifted the profile upward: on 10 April 2026, he finished seventh in European Cup slopestyle at Trysilfjellet with 93.90 FIS points and 36 European Cup points. Two days earlier, he placed 28th in the European Cup big-air event at the same stop.
Seventh in slopestyle is his strongest verified senior-level marker to date. It is not a podium, and it does not put him in a World Cup final, but it is a European Cup top ten against a deeper field than a standard FIS race. The result also matches the broader technical evidence: Børve can build a line rather than depend solely on one large jump.
The 2025 EYOF line remains the clearest public technical record. A right 900 requires two and a half rotations with a stable takeoff; a switch left double 900 adds a switch approach, an off-axis rotation and the double-safety grab named by the Danish federation. The rail portion changed the rhythm with a 450 side flip, tail-press 360 and a switch 270 on, switch off finish. This is not proof that these are career signatures. It is a factual record of the movements he attempted in an official qualifier.
Børve’s name appears in participant credits for Bungee Breakers Open edits released in 2024 and 2025. Those credits connect him with Bungee Breakers, the Danish collective behind events, street-oriented videos and apparel. They do not establish a professional sponsorship or a starring film role, so the relationship should be described narrowly: he has been listed as a rider in the event media. The connection still places him near a Danish scene where park laps, street sessions, Nordic trips and filming overlap.
FIS’s current European Cup standings list Børve 46th in slopestyle on 36 points and 118th in big air on three points for 2026. His ranking is still taking shape, but the direction is clear: 2024 FIS starts, Danish selection for EYOF 2025, then a fifth-place FIS big air and seventh-place European Cup slopestyle in 2026. Future updates should follow official results, confirmed team announcements and named Bungee Breakers projects. The present record supports a precise description: a Danish emerging freeski rider whose strongest current result is a European Cup slopestyle top ten in Trysil.