Forehand Wins Aspen Toyota U.S. Grand Prix Slopestyle
After a tough beginning to the slopestyle season due to snow conditions, the Toyota U.S. Grand Prix at Aspen Snowmass made the wait worth it with Stifel U.S. Freeski Team athlete Mac Forehand coming away with the win in the slopestyle.
For the first time since 2018, slopestyle was held at Snowmass instead of Buttermilk. Aspen Snowmass built a stellar venue, even with lack of snow at the beginning of the week. The athletes were excited about the course, with Mac Forehand thanking the teams.
"Aspen has been awesome," said Forehand. "Shoutout to Charles (Beckinsale) and the Aspen park crew for getting the course ready in time. The course is amazing; the jumps are perfect."
After an exciting first run, 2025 World Championship medalist Forehand held onto the lead through the end of the competition. The judges loved his jumps with his switch left double cork 1620 lead cuban wowing the judges and earning him the top score of that section. He was joined on the podium by Estonia's Henry Sildaru in second and Norway's Ulrik Samnoey in third. Thinking about his results today, Forehand said,
"Today was amazing, I couldn't have asked for a more perfect day. I was definitely super stressed going into it. It all clicked today, it all worked, and finally, the stress has gone away. I'm just super excited that I got the win, and hopefully I'm one step closer to going to Milan and the Olympics."
While this win does not confirm a spot for Forehand at the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympic Games, it does put him in a good position to earn his second Olympic start.
Konnor Ralph was the next American, with a strong finish in fourth. Ralph was strong on both his jumps and rails, earning him a second top-five finish of the season. Henry Townshend had a career-best result in seventh, after making his first World Cup finals earlier this week. Townshend impressed the judges most with his second rail: a left 270 front swap, pretzel 270.
Colby Stevenson finished ninth, Hunter Henderson 13th and Alex Hall 14th.
On the women's side, Avery Krumme was the lone American woman in the finals. Krumme finished sixth with slow, snowy conditions for the women. Krumme had another great result in at the Visa Big Air presented by Toytoa in Steamboat, making this her second top-six World Cup finish of the season.
The Stifel U.S. Freeski Team throws down in the halfpipe finals Saturday at 3:00 p.m. ET. Watch live on Outside TV.