Photo of Zoe Greze-Kozuki

Zoe Greze-Kozuki

Campbell River / Whistler Freestyle, Canada | Active: 2017-present public record | Known for: Big air, slopestyle, Nor-Am podiums, SuperUnknown 23 finalist | Current: Active FIS athlete



Whistler Blackcomb In April With Big Air On The Line



The spring light at Whistler-Blackcomb can turn hardpack silver before the takeoff softens. Zoe Greze-Kozuki had to ski through that familiar Coast Mountain contrast in April 2025, when the Canadian National Freestyle Championships brought women’s big air and slopestyle back to Whistler. Her own athlete record lists gold in women’s big air, bronze in women’s slopestyle, and the overall women’s big air and slopestyle title from that week. Those results gave her profile a sharper shape: not only a developing Whistler Freestyle rider, but a Canadian park skier converting home-terrain pressure into medals.



Campbell River Roots, Whistler Freestyle Structure



Greze-Kozuki’s Canada Winter Games profile lists Campbell River as her hometown and Whistler Freestyle as her club. FIS lists her as a Canadian freestyle athlete with Whistler Freestyle, born on December 21, 2005, under FIS code 2539458. That combination says a lot about her route. Campbell River is not the classic shorthand for elite park skiing, but Whistler gives access to a much larger freestyle system: spring parks, club coaching, provincial selections, Canada Games pathways, and the ability to train around the same mountain that hosts national-level events.



Team BC Selection Before The Nor-Am Sheet



Freestyle BC named Greze-Kozuki to Team BC for the 2023 Canada Winter Games in big air and slopestyle, alongside Kristin Hoivik, Jordan Peet, Tate Garrod and Aidan Mulvihill. The Games sent park athletes to Prince Edward Island while moguls and aerials used separate venues in New Brunswick and PEI. That selection matters because it came before her strongest FIS results. It marks the point where she moved from promising provincial rider to athlete trusted in a multi-sport national setting, with judged runs, provincial delegation structure and the pressure of representing British Columbia.



Junior Podiums And The Early Big Air Pattern



Her own athlete site traces a clear early pattern around big air. It lists a 2019 Canadian under-18 Junior Nationals gold in freeski big air and bronze in slopestyle at age 13, plus the 2019 Dueck Scholarship Award as the top under-20 female freestyle skier in British Columbia. The same record lists 2022 Canadian under-18 Junior Nationals honors, including the highest overall freeski score and gold in big air finals. Those details should be read carefully because they come from her athlete site, but they fit the wider trajectory shown later by FIS: big air strength first, then slopestyle consistency catching up.



Copper Mountain Gave The Result A Number



The strongest FIS marker arrived at Copper Mountain on January 14, 2026, when Greze-Kozuki placed third in women’s freeski slopestyle at a Nor-Am Cup. FIS credits her with 121.40 FIS points and 60 cup points from that result. Snowdyssey also lists the same 2026 Copper podium within her Revolution Tour record. Copper is a useful measuring point because it removes the ambiguity of home terrain. The course is high, fast, exposed, and familiar to a deep North American development field. A podium there puts a skier into a different conversation than regional finals alone.



Aspen Followed With A Near-Podium Check



Two months later, Greze-Kozuki placed fourth in women’s freeski slopestyle at Aspen / Buttermilk on March 27, 2026, in a Nor-Am Cup Premium event. That result came after the Copper podium and before the Whistler Nor-Am stop in early April. The timing matters: January confirmed she could reach a Nor-Am podium; March showed the result was not isolated. Aspen / Buttermilk rewards clean jump speed, rail control, and the ability to manage a course that can feel different between inspection, qualifiers and finals. For an emerging skier, that repeat presence near the top is often more revealing than one single peak result.



Rails, Big Air And Slopestyle Balance



Greze-Kozuki’s verified record does not publish a full trick list, so the technical read has to stay grounded in disciplines and results. Her profile sits across freeski big air and slopestyle, with enough rail-jam presence to show comfort beyond jump-only contests. Her athlete site lists Women’s Best Street Trick and silver finalist status at The Grind Series in 2025. FIS lists repeated slopestyle starts at Copper, Mammoth, Aspen, Stoneham and Whistler Blackcomb from 2023 through 2026. The likely competitive base is all-around park skiing: takeoff speed, switch control, rail composure, jump landings and enough air awareness to score in big air.



Mammoth Wind And The BC Update



Freestyle BC’s 2024 high-performance update gives one of the more useful snapshots of her development. It described difficult travel, weather and Nor-Am conditions for BC athletes, then singled out Greze-Kozuki for a fourth-place finish at Mammoth Mountain despite strong 50 km/h winds. That is a more specific detail than a results table alone. Mammoth can be a clean contest site when the weather cooperates, but wind changes speed, lip timing and landing confidence. A fourth place in those conditions suggests she was already learning how to keep a run together when the course did not behave cleanly.



SuperUnknown 23 Opened The Video Door



In April 2026, Level 1 Productions listed Greze-Kozuki as one of sixteen finalists for SuperUnknown 23 at Banff Sunshine Village. That placed her beside athletes from Canada, the United States, Sweden, France, Japan, Austria, Switzerland and Australia in one of freeskiing’s best-known video talent searches. SuperUnknown is not a standard contest route. It rewards style, clip selection, creativity, peer visibility and the ability to translate skiing into footage. For Greze-Kozuki, the finalist selection widened the story beyond Nor-Am standings and Canadian Nationals results.



Atomic Support And The 2030 Target



Her athlete site lists Atomic, Freestyle BC and Freestyle Whistler among 2025 supporters, while also stating a long-term goal of representing Canada at the 2030 Winter Olympics. That should be treated as an athlete-stated aspiration, not a prediction. The verified present is already strong enough: active FIS status, Canadian Nationals big air gold, Nor-Am slopestyle podium, Aspen top four, Whistler Freestyle pathway, and SuperUnknown 23 finalist selection. Greze-Kozuki’s next measurable step is not hype. It is whether those results keep stacking through Nor-Am, Canadian events and video-driven opportunities after the 2025-26 breakthrough window.

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