Adam Kuch
Nelson / Whitewater, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2022-present public record | Known for: Freeride Junior Worlds, Whitewater, HEAD Freeskiing projects, Apricity, Bakerview | Current: Emerging freeride and creative ski-film presence Kappl Snow With The Whitewater Crew Watching The Kappl face in Austria was steep, open and far from the trees that shape a normal Whitewater day. Adam Kuch arrived there in 2022 as part of a small Nelson-linked group heading to the Freeride Junior World Championships, with Mason Scott and Brodie Jensen also representing the Whitewater Freeride Team. The story carried extra weight because Sam Kuch joined the trip after coach Dano Slater was diagnosed with cancer.... Read more on the Athlete page
Aidan Mulvihill
Squamish, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2020-present | Focus: slopestyle, big air, Whistler park skiing | Current: Freestyle Canada NextGen athlete Whistler Blackcomb When The Score Hit Ninety The Whistler Blackcomb course ran bright under April light, with spring snow softening each takeoff and rails scraped clean by a long Canadian nationals field. Aidan Mulvihill dropped into the men’s freeski slopestyle contest on April 5, 2025, and left with the win. 00 points, ahead of Avery Macyk and Henri Joyal.... Read more on the Athlete page
Floyd Guy
Whistler / Pemberton, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2016-present public record | Known for: Freeride, Whistler footage, HEAD team film, CHEF - Third Party, FWT Qualifier record | Current: Emerging freeride and film skier Coast Snow Above Pemberton The snow around Pemberton can feel heavier than it looks from the road. Storm slabs stack over pillows, trees hold shade, and the landing zones change every hour when Pacific weather keeps moving through the Coast Mountains. Floyd Guy’s public profile belongs to that terrain.... Read more on the Athlete page
Jesse Downs
Vancouver / Whistler, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2023-present public record | Known for: Slopestyle, big air, BC Team, Whistler footage, I Can Sue! edit | Current: Active FIS athlete Jesse Downs is a Canadian freeski park skier from British Columbia, with a public record split between official development competition and Whistler-based video footage. FIS lists him as a Canadian athlete with Whistler Freestyle, born in 2006, active under FIS code 2539599.... Read more on the Athlete page
Jordan Peet - Jo Peet
Canada | Active FIS athlete: Jordan PEET, born 2004, FIS Code 2538220 | Public record: BC Freestyle Team, Whistler Freestyle, Canada Winter Games gold and bronze, Canada Cup, Rev Tour, NorAm | Main lane: slopestyle and Big Air Brookvale Under The Lights The Big Air jump at Mark Arendz Provincial Ski Park sat cold under Prince Edward Island lights on February 21, 2023. Jordan Peet had qualified third, with Naomi Urness still carrying the heaviest score from the preliminary round. The final changed on Peet’s second jump.... Read more on the Athlete page
Jude Oliver
Whistler, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2024-present FIS record | Known for: Big air, slopestyle, Junior Worlds bronze, Nor-Am podiums, BC Freestyle Team | Current: Active FIS athlete Calgary Flat Light And A Bronze Run The big-air jump at WinSport in Calgary sat under flat March light when Jude Oliver needed his landings to hold. He was 16, skiing on home snow for Canada, and the Junior World Championships final was already moving fast around Frank Wahlstroem and Lucas Ball. 50, claiming bronze in men’s freeski big air.... Read more on the Athlete page
Kai Martin
Sydney, Australia / Whistler, British Columbia | Active: 2018-present public archive | Known for: Australian World Cup team, ANC slopestyle wins, Nor-Am podiums, Whistler park clips | Current: Australia Freeski Park & Pipe athlete Chur Under Festival Lights The Big Air jump in Chur rose out of the city like a temporary mountain, dry-slope in-run dropping into snow while the festival crowd pressed close to the scaffold. Kai Martin stood there in Australian colours after five years competing under Canada, staring at a World Cup start he had chased through Nor-Am events, Whistler park laps, and southern-hemisphere contests. His first World Cup did not bring a final.... Read more on the Athlete page
Makenna Griffiths
Whistler, British Columbia, Canada | Active: 2025-present FIS record | Known for: Slopestyle, big air, BC Team, Whistler Freestyle, Vancouver street podium | Current: Active FIS athlete Whistler Speed Before The Names Were Bigger The Blackcomb park can change fast when spring light hits the landings and the in-run softens between laps. Makenna Griffiths comes from that Whistler setting: rails, jumps, coastal weather, club training, and a local scene where young riders share the same sessions as older BC names. Her public record is still early, but it already has structure.... Read more on the Athlete page
Max Moffatt
Guelph / Caledon, Ontario, Canada | Active: 2016-present World Cup record | Discipline: Slopestyle and Big Air | Known for: X Games silver, Seiser Alm World Cup win, Beijing Olympic final, technical rail skiing Seiser Alm In The January Cold The Seiser Alm course sat high in the Dolomites, bright and hard under January snow, with rails first and a jump line waiting above the Italian valley. Max Moffatt arrived in 2019 without a World Cup top-five result. That changed in one final.... Read more on the Athlete page
Reid Ferguson
Canada | Active: 2019-present public record | Known for: Filming, editing, park skiing, About NZ, ICEDOUTMONALISA, Bakerview | Current: Skier-filmer and creative freeski collaborator New Zealand Slush Through Reid’s Lens The New Zealand park snow looked soft enough to bend under every landing, with spring sun sitting low over the jumps and rails. Reid Ferguson’s strongest public identity lives in that kind of footage. He is not best understood through contest results alone.... Read more on the Athlete page
Tai How
Whistler / Canadian scene | Active: 2024-present public video record | Known for: HEADCASE, Whistler park clips, Tai Who video credits | Current: Emerging creative freeski video presence Tai How is a freeski park and creative-video skier whose public record is still small but clearly tied to the Whistler and Head Freeskiing scene. Forecast Ski credits him in HEADCASE, a short film by Cole Richardson and Ethan Cook built around Head Freeskiing’s younger creative crew, all riding the Head Oblivion 116 and 102. That places How inside a style-first ski-film context rather than a formal competition pathway: rails, side hits, soft snow, crew laps, creative mountain skiing and footage built around how the skier reads terrain.... Read more on the Athlete page