đ 26/01/2024
đ Aspen
X Games Aspen 2024 ski slopestyle was held at Buttermilk Mountain in Aspen, Colorado on January 27 and 28 2024 | Disciplines: men's ski slopestyle and women's ski slopestyle | Notable winners: Birk Ruud and Tess Ledeux | Format: three-run finals with best score counting
X Games Aspen 2024 ski slopestyle ran at Buttermilk Mountain during the January 26 to 28 2024 X Games weekend, with the menâs final on January 27 and the womenâs final on January 28. The course followed the modern X Games slopestyle structure: rail features at the top, jump features below, three runs for each finalist and the best score deciding the result. The official X Games menâs ski slopestyle result and X Games womenâs ski slopestyle result make this edition especially clean for archive use because the podium scores and full final rankings are published.
Birk Ruud won the menâs ski slopestyle final with 96.33, using his second run to move ahead in one of the tightest modern Aspen scorelines. His first run was only 34.00, so the win did not come from early control. It came from rebuilding the contest on run two and then surviving Alex Hallâs late 96.00 in run three. The margin was 0.33 points, small enough to make every rail detail, grab, landing and speed choice feel decisive. For Ruud, already known for Olympic big air gold and World Cup slopestyle strength, the result filled a missing X Games slopestyle line.
Menâs Ski Slopestyle â January 27 2024
Gold: Birk Ruud (NOR) with 96.33
Silver: Alex Hall (USA) with 96.00
Bronze: Mac Forehand (USA) with 95.33
The rest of the menâs final showed how high the standard was. Colby Stevenson finished fourth with 94.33, Andri Ragettli fifth with 93.33 and Jesper TjĂ€der sixth with 92.33. That means six riders broke 92 points, while Evan McEachran, Max Moffatt, Henrik Harlaut and Ferdinand Dahl completed the ten-rider final. The score depth matters because Ruudâs win did not come from a weak field. Aspen 2024 demanded a near-perfect complete run just to stay inside medal range.
Tess Ledeux won the womenâs final with 95.33, and she did it immediately. Her first run became the number everyone else chased for the rest of the event. Mathilde Gremaud came closest with 92.33 on run three, while Giulia Tanno improved to 88.00 on run two for bronze. Ledeuxâs result was also part of a larger Aspen 2024 weekend because she had already won womenâs ski big air. That double-gold context makes the slopestyle win more than a single result. It confirmed that Ledeux could dominate both one-jump pressure and full-course construction inside the same X Games edition.
Womenâs Ski Slopestyle â January 28 2024
Gold: Tess Ledeux (FRA) with 95.33
Silver: Mathilde Gremaud (SUI) with 92.33
Bronze: Giulia Tanno (SUI) with 88.00
The womenâs final also gave the Swiss team a double podium behind Ledeux. Gremaud used her third run to climb from 85.66 to 92.33, turning the end of the contest into a real challenge rather than a quiet Ledeux victory lap. Tanno held bronze with 88.00, ahead of Rell Harwood on 84.33, Sarah Hoefflin on 83.66 and Anastasia Tatalina on 81.33. Ruby Star Andrews finished seventh, while Olivia Asselin placed eighth. The spread showed a clear medal cut: the podium sat above 88, while the rest of the field stayed in the low-to-mid 80s or below.
X Games describes the slopestyle course as roughly 1,700 feet long, with six features and about 290 feet of vertical drop. The top section tested rail ability through three rail-based features, while the lower section shifted into three jumps. That layout explains the 2024 results. A skier needed rail precision early, then enough jump difficulty and execution to keep the score alive. Ruud, Hall and Forehand all passed 95 because they built complete runs rather than relying on one signature trick. Ledeuxâs 95.33 carried the same message on the womenâs side: Aspen rewarded full-course control from the first rail to the final landing.
X Games Aspen 2024 ski slopestyle should be indexed as a major modern X Games freeski edition with two complete podiums, official scores and unusually tight menâs results. The permanent facts are clear: Buttermilk Mountain, January 27 and 28, best-of-three-run finals, Birk Ruud 96.33, Alex Hall 96.00, Mac Forehand 95.33, Tess Ledeux 95.33, Mathilde Gremaud 92.33 and Giulia Tanno 88.00. The archive value comes from contrast. The menâs final was a 0.33-point knife edge between Ruud and Hall. The womenâs final was Ledeux establishing the winning number on run one and protecting it through the rest of the event.