Stubai Jump Skiing

Just a bunch of jump tricks from the end of last year.

Aidan Mulvihill

Profile and significance

Aidan Mulvihill is a Canadian freeski slopestyle and big air specialist who has risen quickly from the Whistler scene onto the international circuit. Born in 2004 and raised around Vancouver before moving to Squamish, he learned to ski as a child at Grouse Mountain and then developed his park craft on the world-class terrain at Whistler Blackcomb. He joined Canada’s national freeski program and broke through in 2023–24 by winning multiple NorAm slopestyle events and the overall NorAm title, earning World Cup starts the following winter. In April 2025 he captured the Canadian National FIS slopestyle title at Whistler Blackcomb, a marker that he’s among the country’s next-up riders. For fans tracking emerging talent, Mulvihill represents the wave of well-rounded, park-bred athletes transitioning from regional dominance to consistent international appearances.



Competitive arc and key venues

Mulvihill’s competitive résumé shows steady, verifiable progress through each tier. After junior results in North America and early-season starts in New Zealand at Cardrona, he put together a strong 2023–24 North American Cup run with slopestyle wins at Aspen Snowmass and Stoneham, plus a big air podium in Stoneham. Those points secured his move onto the 2024–25 World Cup, where he gained experience on the major stages of European and North American freeskiing. Highlights from that rookie World Cup campaign include top-25 results in big air at Chur and Beijing, and a solid 21st at Kreischberg, one of the tour’s benchmark jump venues. He also logged valuable slopestyle reps in venues like LAAX, Tignes, and Aspen, learning to translate NorAm-winning consistency to deeper, more technical fields. Capping the season, Mulvihill won Canada’s national slopestyle title at Whistler Blackcomb with a clean, composed run—confirmation that his competitive ceiling is still climbing.



How they ski: what to watch for

Mulvihill’s skiing reflects a Whistler-forged toolkit: strong jump line management, dependable grabs, and the ability to land forward or switch with equal confidence. On rails, he favors precise, centered slides with solid exits that keep speed into the next feature—an essential trait for modern slopestyle where momentum preservation is everything. On jumps, his amplitude is efficient rather than flashy, allowing him to stay on axis, lock grabs, and ride out cleanly in firm or variable snow. Watch for his timing on takeoffs and his habit of setting spins early without over-rotating; that economy pays off late in runs when many athletes lose composure. As he accumulates laps on XL features—think the “Shaq Left” jump line at Whistler Blackcomb or the perfectly shaped booters at Aspen Snowmass—expect even more polish in trick variety and grab tweaks across directions.



Resilience, filming, and influence

While Mulvihill’s season focus has leaned toward contests, he’s also appeared in coaching-style and park-tour content that showcases his readability on camera and clarity in line choice. That kind of exposure matters for a modern freeski career, where athletes balance World Cup calendars with brand storytelling. His path—regional park kid to NorAm standout to national champion—resonates with young riders building step by step rather than chasing overnight virality. The through-line is resilience: taking lessons from mid-pack World Cup finishes, returning to domestic starts, and converting them into wins when it counts.



Geography that built the toolkit

Mulvihill’s home base provided ideal ingredients for a slopestyle/big air skier. Early turns at Grouse Mountain ingrained comfort in a city-adjacent hill where park laps and storm days build balance and edge feel. A move to Squamish put him within daily striking distance of Whistler Blackcomb, whose parks routinely host elite-level features. Off-snow, British Columbia’s dedicated freestyle facilities such as The Airhouse (Squamish) add reps on trampolines and air awareness tools that translate directly to confident in-run decisions. Internationally, venues like LAAX, Tignes, Stubai Glacier, Kreischberg, Aspen Snowmass, Mammoth Mountain, and Stoneham have broadened his course visualization and speed control across different snowpacks and course designs.



Equipment and partners: practical takeaways

Mulvihill rides with Line Skis, matching a brand steeped in freeski culture to his park-forward progression. For optics, he uses Trinsic Optics, whose lens and frame systems are geared toward clarity and quick changes on contest days when light can swing rapidly. His training environment includes The Airhouse for air-awareness work and dryland sessions, and he’s supported by Canada-based loyalty partner More Rewards, a relationship that underscores the practical reality of funding a World Cup schedule through travel-heavy seasons. For progressing skiers, the gear takeaway is simple: prioritize skis that feel intuitive on rails and stable on takeoff, pair them with goggles that keep vision consistent through flat light, and build year-round air sense in safe facilities before scaling to XL jumps.



Why fans and progressing skiers care

Mulvihill is a clear case study in how a modern Canadian park skier advances: dominate regional circuits, learn to win at NorAm level, collect World Cup reps without skipping steps, and then convert domestic finals into national titles. The style is rooted in fundamentals—clean grabs, centered landings, dependable rails—so viewers can track progression run to run without needing slow-mo breakdowns. If you follow slopestyle and big air to see who’s building toward future X-factor seasons, keep Mulvihill on the radar; his mix of consistent technique, adaptable speed, and expanding course experience suggests a rider still on the rise.

Stubai Zoo

Overview and significance

Stubai Glacier (Stubaier Gletscher) is Austria’s flagship glacier resort and a Southern Alps preseason hub for park skiers. Sitting at the head of the Stubai Valley within easy reach of Innsbruck, it’s home to the Stubai Zoo—a purpose-built freestyle program that turns on early each autumn, draws national teams, and reliably hosts the season-opening FIS Freeski Slopestyle World Cup. The combination of high elevation, repeatable jump speed, and a shaping crew aligned with elite camps like Prime Park Sessions gives Stubai global pull from October through late spring. Marketed as Austria’s largest glacier ski area, the resort’s footprint, modern lifts, and season length make it a reference venue for progression and filming.

Geographically, Stubai’s terrain fans out around the Gamsgarten and Eisgrat plateaus, with the famous “Top of Tyrol” viewpoint at 3,210 m providing a literal and symbolic high point. For skiers planning an Austria circuit, the resort pairs naturally with the Innsbruck city network and other Tyrolean parks; see the Skipowd page on Austria for broader context.



Terrain, snow, and seasons

Stubai skis like a connected set of glacial benches and ridgelines. Groomed mileage sits mainly on broad, open faces, while marked ski routes and off-piste bowls add variety when visibility and stability align. Elevations span roughly 1,750 m at the Mutterberg base to over 3,200 m on the upper stations, which keeps snow quality viable from early October well into May and, in cold springs, beyond. Wind is a frequent player on high glaciers; between storms, surfaces reset to chalk and corduroy, and the shaping crew times park rebuilds to deliver consistent speed.

Two features define the seasonal rhythm. In autumn, the Stubai Zoo XL build rises on the Gaiskarferner, taking advantage of sun and early-season cold to stage big, repeatable jump and rail lines. Once winter deepens, the setup shifts to the Gamsgarten side for the “Spring Garden,” maintaining a public progression ladder while storms and sun angles change. By late March and April, expect classic corn cycles by aspect, forgiving park landings mid-day, and panoramic glacier laps that run until the lifts close.



Park infrastructure and events

The Stubai Zoo is the reason many freeskiers come. The autumn XL on Gaiskarferner stacks Pro, Medium, Jib, and Easy lines with carefully managed in-runs so riders can lock speed quickly. Through winter and spring, the Spring Garden keeps the session alive with medium kickers, rails, tubes, and creative hips near Gamsgarten—ideal for volume and for stepping through tricks without the commitment of the XL line. Shaping and park operations are integrated with elite training blocks: Prime Park Sessions runs late October into November, concentrating teams, media crews, and coaches during the most stable early-season windows.

On the competition side, Stubai is a reliable stage for slopestyle at World Cup and Continental Cup levels. FIS has repeatedly opened the slopestyle season here, and the resort’s event page announces dates each November. For the public, those weeks mean front-row viewing of elite runs and, typically, dialed features left in the wake of the contest—great timing if you’re building toward winter tours in the Northern Hemisphere.



Access, logistics, and on-mountain flow

Access is straightforward: it’s about a 45–50 minute drive from Innsbruck to the valley station at Mutterberg via the A13 Brenner route and Stubaitalstraße. If you’re car-free, regional transport and ski buses connect Innsbruck and Stubai Valley towns to the lifts, and resort shuttles run to the base during the main season; check the official “Getting there” guidance before you commit a morning plan. The lift system is modern and fast, anchored by the two-section 3S Eisgratbahn, which is designed to cope with the glacier’s exposure and efficiently feed the upper terrain hubs.

For flow, think in windows. Start with visibility: when light is flat, stay near Gamsgarten’s features and groomers; when skies clear, step up to higher benches and marked routes. Park laps are time-efficient if you stage at the top of the current build and keep circuits short until speed and light are nailed. If wind rises, rotate back to rails and smaller sets until it settles. Keep an eye on the resort status page for staged openings—it’s common on high glaciers as patrol moves ropes and crews reset lips.



Local culture, safety, and etiquette

Stubai balances international training energy with a friendly public scene. Park etiquette is explicit: call your drop, hold your line, and clear landings immediately. Give shapers space during rebuilds; their schedule is what keeps speed consistent for everyone the next day. Off the groomed network, treat the “Powder Department” freeride offer with full high-alpine discipline. The resort maintains checkpoints at Eisgrat and Gamsgarten, publishes route maps and GPS tracks, and provides an ORTOVOX transceiver training area; start at the freeride info hub and read the avalanche bulletin before leaving marked pistes. This is glaciated terrain—crevasses, cornices, and rapid weather shifts are part of the package—so equipment, partners, and conservative decision-making matter.

Down-valley, you’ll find classic Tyrolean lodging and food in Neustift and Fulpmes, while Innsbruck works brilliantly as a city base. If you want complementary venues, the Innsbruck area parks at Axamer Lizum and Nordkette Skyline Park slot neatly around glacier days for mid-winter rail miles or quick after-storm laps.



Best time to go and how to plan

For park-first trips, target late October through late November for the XL autumn build and overlapping World Cup week; it’s when teams and filmers converge and the shaping is at its most exacting. December and January are colder, more variable, and great for rail mileage and carving days with fewer crowds. From March into April and early May, chase spring cycles: melt-freeze nights make for smooth morning groomers, then forgiving park speed and soft landings by mid-day. Always reserve flexibility for wind holds and staged openings, and consider a mix of glacier and city-based days so you can pivot quickly if the forecast shifts.

Book accommodation early for November contest windows and Easter holidays. If you’re driving, carry chains when storms are inbound and check the morning road status; if you’re on public transport, time your departure to meet first upload from the valley. Keep the resort’s snow/operations page and park status bookmarked so you can plan shot lists and coaching sessions around rebuilds rather than fighting them.



Why freeskiers care

Stubai turns the idea of preseason into a working lab: stable jump speed, clean rail geometry, and enough altitude to hold quality through a long window. Add a modern 3S gondola network, serious freeride safety infrastructure, and a calendar that mixes elite training with public access, and you get one of Europe’s most dependable places to progress. Whether your goal is to unlock a new trick set before the Northern winter, stack content in crisp light, or run contest-like slopestyle laps on a public line, Stubai delivers the repetition and refinement that make each run count.