Men: The U.S. men have been extraordinarily successful in freeskiing competition. At slopestyle’s debut in 2014, Team USA swept the podium, with Joss Christiansen, Gus Kenworthy, and Nick Goepper finish one-two-three. Since then, Goepper has claimed two more Olympic Winter Games medals: silvers at the 2018 and 2022 Winter Games. In 2022, his teammate Alex Hall claimed gold.
The men have been almost as successful in freeski halfpipe. David Wise claimed back-to-back golds in 2014 and 2018, then took silver in 2022. Alex Ferreira wasn’t far behind, earning silver in 2018 and bronze in 2022. In Big Air’s Olympic Winter Games debut in 2022, Colby Stevenson earned a silver medal.
Women: The U.S. women have not enjoyed quite the same success in Olympic freeski competition. To date, Devin Logan (silver in slopestyle, 2014) and Brita Sigourney (bronze in halfpipe, 2018) are the only U.S. women to have earned Olympic Winter Games medals in freeskiing.
Who to Watch
Ferreira, Goepper, Hall, Stevenson and Wise are all back, hoping for another shot at Olympic medals in 2026. Ferreira — now a member of the elite Team Stifel (a team within the Stifel U.S. Ski Team) — claimed the overall halfpipe world cup title last season, with Goepper ranked second. The previous season, Ferriera became the first skier to tally a perfect season in halfpipe, winning all of the seven major competitions, including his third X Games gold medal, 5 World Cups, and the Dew Tour. Hall ended the 2025 season atop the slopestyle world cup rankings, with Stevenson in third.
New on the horizon: Troy Podmilsak, who won the Big Air title at the 2023 world championships. The 21-year-old freeskier from Park City, Utah, won the first world cup Big Air competition of the season ahead of the Olympic Winter Games. And 2022 Olympian Mac Forehand will be looking to make his mark in the medals this go-round. The 24-year-old is the 2025 world championship silver medalist in slopestyle, finishing just ahead of bronze medalist Hall.
Important Dates
Freeskiing competition begins on February 9 with medals awarded on:
February 9 (Women’s Freeski Slopestyle)
February 10 (Men’s Freeski Slopestyle)
February 16 (Women’s Freeski Big Air)
February 17 (Men’s Freeski Big Air)
February 20 (Women’s Skier cross and Men’s Halfpipe)
February 21 (Men’s Skier Cross and Women’s Halfpipe)