Anton Frandsen
Copenhagen, Denmark | Active: 2019-present public record | Known for: junior big air title, CopenHill sessions, Bungee Breakers projects | Discipline: park, big air and dryslope freeskiing CopenHill’s Qualifier Line in 2026 On Copenhagen’s rooftop dryslope in 2026, Anton Frandsen entered the open qualifier at CopenHill with Norwegian skier Ola Gullstein. The weather shifted through the Scandinavian Team Battle, but the pair secured the two qualifier places against a field of local riders. The format was built around paired runs, creative use of the compact course and crowd response rather than a conventional alpine contest layout.... Read more on the Athlete page
Chris McCormick
Glasgow, Scotland | Active: 2017-present World Cup record | Known for: Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics, Stubai World Cup 7th, Bearsden dryslope roots | Disciplines: slopestyle, big air Livigno With An Ankle Still Talking The Livigno jump rose into cold Italian night, its landing cut hard enough to expose every mistake. Chris McCormick had already missed the slopestyle final, already spoken about a painful ankle, and still had to find speed for two switch double 1800s when the Olympic big air qualifier asked for one more answer. His Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics ended with 21st in men’s freeski big air and 26th in men’s freeski slopestyle.... Read more on the Athlete page
Christian Moser
Reichenbach, Switzerland | Active: 2018-present public archive | Known for: street skiing, G-Love, The Sqad, Urbanskistrasse, Known Territory, Tell Me I Belong | Current: European street film projects Stockholm Concrete With A Bungee Pull The Stockholm spot looked cold enough to ring. Snow was scraped into a thin in-run, a bungee stretched across the pavement, and a handrail waited beside concrete steps that would not forgive hesitation. Christian Moser stood inside that kind of street setup for Tell Me I Belong, the 2025 Bungee Breakers film that brought five European skiers into the Swedish capital.... Read more on the Athlete page
Ellen Damsgaard
Denmark | Active: 2023-present international public record | Discipline: Street Skiing, Rail Events and Creative Park | Known for: Rock A Rail Tour title, Frozen Babiez, Sushi Buffet, Bucket Clips Thun When The Down Bar Decided The Final The Rock A Rail setup in Thun sat in the middle of a city festival, steel features raised above a crowd that could hear every ski edge lock and scrape. Ellen Damsgaard came into the women’s ski final with a calm approach that fit the course better than panic or oversized tricks. She used multiple features, kept the line controlled, then put a front swap on the down bar and a front 270 out of the C-rail into the run that won the contest.... Read more on the Athlete page
Emil Granbom
Falun / Åre, Sweden | Active: 2014-present public archive | Known for: Child, nosebutter double cork 1800, Europa Cup overall, PATSHAM, HEAD Unified, Core Shots | Current: HEAD/Tyrolia-backed creative park and all-mountain skiing Åre Ice With A Quiet Axis The river outside Åre looked black in the cold before Emil Granbom clicked back into skis and returned to snow. In Core Shots, the Swedish resort feels less like a contest stage than a map of habits: park laps, all-mountain side hits, quick edges, and enough loose humor to keep the skiing from turning stiff. Granbom’s movements carry the same signature that made his older edits travel online.... Read more on the Athlete page
Felix Klein
Wānaka, New Zealand / Cirencester, England | Active: 2018-present | Focus: park skiing, slopestyle, big air, film projects, Boom Club | Current: Boom Club cofounder and SuperUnknown 21 men’s winner Mammoth South Park When The Week Opened Up Mammoth Unbound’s South Park sat huge under California spring light, rails polished by six days of laps and jumps carrying more speed than most finalists expected. Felix Klein arrived at SuperUnknown 21 with a style built far from that exact terrain: Snow Park memories from Wānaka, British team starts, indoor and dryslope habits, and Boom Club filming energy. By the end of the week, Level 1 listed him as the men’s SuperUnknown 21 winner.... Read more on the Athlete page
Gorm Garth-Grüner
Copenhagen, Denmark | Active: 2017-present public record | Known for: 2022 Danish slopestyle title, 2022 Big Air bronze, Scandinavian Team Battle | Discipline: slopestyle, big air and dryslope freeskiing Green Neveplast Under Copenhagen Weather On June 13, 2026, the green Neveplast surface at CopenHill sat under variable Copenhagen weather while national teams waited above the city. Gorm Garth-Grüner dropped into the Scandinavian Team Battle as part of Team Denmark with Jakob Ebskamp, facing pairs from Sweden, Norway, Finland, the United Kingdom and Canada. The course was short, public and nothing like a mountain slopestyle run: plastic surface, city skyline, compact features and spectators close enough to follow every movement.... Read more on the Athlete page
Isabella Tvede-Jensen
Denmark | Active: 2021-present public record | Known for: Bungee Break, Sushi Buffet, Frozen Babiez | Discipline: street skiing, creative park and film projects Helsinki’s Thin Snow Window Helsinki, Finland, 2023. Warm weather had narrowed the usable snow around the city’s urban features when Isabella Tvede-Jensen, Ellen Damsgaard and Maya Casier began filming Sushi Buffet. Skis, rails and rough landings replaced the comfort of a shaped park; each usable approach had to be built from what the streets and the weather allowed.... Read more on the Athlete page
Jakob Ebskamp
Copenhagen, Denmark | Active street skier, filmmaker, event organizer | Known for: Common Language, Tell Me I Belong, LINE x CopenHill, Natural Ice, Scandinavian Team Battle | Main lane: street skiing, dryslope culture, European film crews Stockholm Rails After Dark The Stockholm streets were cold, hard, and bright under city lamps, with handrails cutting through patches of winter snow like metal lines on a map. Jakob Ebskamp stood inside that setting for Tell Me I Belong, not only as a skier, but as the person shaping the film around five European friends. The project followed Christian Moser, Jonas Hofer, Christian Gander, Markus Boa, and Ebskamp through a street-skiing trip built on rails, crashes, jokes, injuries, and small windows of usable snow.... Read more on the Athlete page
Jesper Tjäder
49 m rail slide record | Current: Red Bull, Swatch, Head / Tyrolia setup, Unrailistic creator Genting Snow Park When The Bronze Finally Held Genting Snow Park was blue and hard under the Zhangjiakou sun, the snow features carved into castle shapes above the slopestyle course. Jesper Tjäder came through the rails with Swedish yellow flashing against the cold sky. 48.... Read more on the Athlete page
Johan Berg
Norway | Active public archive: 2011-present | Known for: 2013 Silvaplana World Cup win, SLVSH Grandvalira finals, Kimbo Sessions, Loose Connection | Discipline: slopestyle, big air, creative park skiing Silvaplana When The Scoreboard Turned Norwegian The Silvaplana course sat high above the Engadin valley, rails sharp in the cold and the jump line running fast under Swiss light. Johan Berg dropped into that 2013 World Cup slopestyle final needing a full run, not one trick: rail control first, speed into the jumps, then landings clean enough to hold against a field already pushing freeskiing toward its Olympic era. On February 8, 2013, Berg won the FIS World Cup slopestyle at Silvaplana.... Read more on the Athlete page
Markus Boa
Denmark | Public name: Markus Haakon Boa / Markus Boa | Main lane: street skiing, Bungee Breakers projects, Danish freestyle scene | Public markers: DM Freeski & Snowboard 2018, See You Soon, Whole Lotta Gang Shit, Tell Me I Belong, The League communications credit Stockholm Concrete After The Slam The Stockholm street spot was cold, narrow, and loud enough for every ski edge to echo between buildings. Markus Boa hit the setup inside Tell Me I Belong with the kind of street-ski timing that can disappear after one crash. The film does not frame him as a podium athlete or a polished park-system product.... Read more on the Athlete page
Mathias Skaarup - Scum of Skiing
Denmark | Active: 2021-present | Known for: Bungee Breakers street-ski films, documentary direction | Current: Director and producer Mathias Skaarup Schmidt is a Danish director and producer whose documented place in freeskiing is behind the camera, not in a verified contest record. The credits also separate him from Scum of Skiing: Promised Land (2022) names Skaarup and Jakob Ebskamp as filmmakers, while Scum of Skiing is part of the skier cast. Shot on winter street missions in Umeå and Sundsvall from late December 2021 into early January 2022, that first Bungee Breakers feature established his role in a crew built around bungee-assisted run-ins, rail spots and fast-changing Scandinavian snow.... Read more on the Athlete page
Robert Andre Ruud
Norway | Born: 1995 | Known for: 2014 Junior World slopestyle bronze, POSIVA, Silver Belt 2025 and Scandinavian Team Battle | Discipline: slopestyle, big air, freeride and creative freestyle skiing Copenhagen’s Green Roof and Norway’s First Team Battle Win On 13 June 2026, changing weather moved over Copenhagen while Robert André Ruud and Mikkel Brusletto Kaupang prepared to drop into the Scandinavian Team Battle at CopenHill. The slope was green Neveplast rather than snow, with a short run-in, compact features and a crowd able to see every turn from the roof of the city’s waste-to-energy plant. Norway’s pair used the format as it was intended: two riders linking creative lines, reacting to each other’s movements and making the small course feel larger than its dimensions.... Read more on the Athlete page