Silvaplana was meant to be a full-stop finale to the World Cup season. Instead, it turned into a split narrative: one decided in the pipe, the other by the mountain itself.
On the halfpipe side, Japan’s Yuto Totsuka left no room for doubt. Delivering under pressure when it mattered most, he claimed the Silvaplana win and with it both the Halfpipe Crystal Globe and the Overall Park & Pipe title. It marks a defining season for Totsuka, who has steadily built a reputation not just for technical precision, but for consistency across the entire winter.
In the women’s halfpipe, Maddie Mastro took the win in Silvaplana, putting down when it counted in a field that continues to push progression and consistency. Mastro’s riding has long been about technical ambition, but this result shows the ability to convert under pressure at the end of a long season.
But while the pipe finals delivered, slopestyle never got the chance.
Persistent weather issues forced the cancellation of the slopestyle competition, freezing the standings as they were. That decision handed the men’s Crystal Globe to China’s Su Yiming, who secures his second career title after another season of high-level riding and consistency across stops.

On the women’s side, the cancellation confirmed a breakthrough moment for Lily Dhawornvej, who takes her first Crystal Globe. With no final contest to reshuffle the standings, the season title comes down to consistency, and Dhawornvej did enough across the winter to secure the biggest result of her career.


