Beijing Snowboard Big Air World Cup: Stats Preview
Dec 02, 2025·Snowboard Park & Pipe2025/26 FIS Snowboard Big Air World Cup - Beijing Big Air World Cup Statistics Sheet
Beijing is the second of three Big Air World Cup events in the 2025/26 season: Secret Garden (CHN); Beijing (CHN) and Steamboat (USA). All three serve as qualifiers for the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games.
Beijing was added to the Snowboard Park & Pipe World Cup calendar in the 2017/18 season. The city has previously hosted five editions of the Big Air World Cup (2017/18, 2018/19, 2019/20, 2023/24 and 2024/25).
Beijing Big Air World Cup - Men
Su Yiming (CHN) is the reigning Olympic champion in the men’s Big Air, winning that title at this venue in 2022.
His victory last week in the first FIS Big Air World Cup event of the 2025/26 season in Secret Garden (CHN) made Su the first snowboarder to claim multiple wins in a men’s FIS Big Air World Cup event on Chinese snow. Su first won the World Cup in Beijing on 2 December 2023
Su Yiming (CHN) is the first snowboarder representing China to top any standings in a men’s FIS Snowboard Park & Pipe World Cup event.
Su can become the first man to win back-to-back Big Air World Cup events in almost 10 years if he wins in Beijing. Max Parrot (CAN) was the most recent man to achieve this, when he won in Boston (USA) and Quebec (CAN) in February 2016.
Ge Chunyu (CHN) finished second in Secret Garden last week, marking the first time that multiple snowboarders representing China shared a podium in a FIS Park & Pipe World Cup event. Before this season, Ge’s best World Cup result was 16th in Big Air in Klagenfurt (AUT) in 2024/25.
Ian Matteoli (ITA) can become the first Italian snowboarder to win a Big Air World Cup event. He has already claimed three podium finishes: second place in Beijing in 2024/25; third in Copper Mountain (USA) in 2022/23; second in Klagenfurt in 2024/25.
Romain Allemand (FRA) can become the second snowboarder representing France to win a Big Air World Cup event, after Mathieu Crepel won in Grenoble (FRA) on 6 December 2008.
Japanese men have reached the podium in each of the last 11 Big Air World Cup events in Beijing. Hiroto Origawa (JPN) won the 2024 edition.
Beijing Big Air World Cup - Women
Japanese women swept the podium at the first FIS Big Air World Cup event of the 2025/26 season in Secret Garden, with Mari Fukada in first, Reira Iwabuchi in second and Miyabi Onitsuka in third place. It was the first time that snowboarders from a single country swept a women’s Big Air World Cup event.
Mari Fukada (JPN) can become the third woman to win the first two Big Air events in a World Cup season after Anna Gasser (AUT) in 2016/17 and 2017/18, and Reira Iwabuchi (JPN) in 2019/20.
Miyabi Onitsuka (JPN) has earned 12 FIS World Cup podium finishes in Big Air events, of which five were on Chinese snow. Only Anna Gasser (AUT) has achieved as many podiums on Chinese snow.
Miyabi Onitsuka (JPN) recorded her sole Big Air World Cup win in Beijing in 2019.
Japanese women have taken second place in each of the last seven Big Air World Cup events.
Mia Brookes (GBR), who won the Big Air Crystal Globe in the last two seasons, claimed victory in Beijing in 2024. Since her ninth place finish during her Big Air World Cup debut in October 2022, Brookes has placed inside the top five in all nine of the Big Air World Cup events she has contested.
Xiaonan Zhang (CHN) can become the first Chinese woman to finish on the podium at a Big Air World Cup event. In women’s Halfpipe events, China has already collected 72 World Cup podium finishes.
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