Megan Oldham
Team Canada Medal Count
Biography
Megan Oldham made her Olympic debut at Beijing 2022 where she was the top qualifier for the women’s big air final. She ended up finishing just off the podium in fourth place. She missed advancing to the slope final by just one spot.
Oldham has won four medals at the FIS World Championships. In her debut in 2021she won slope bronze as she rebounded from a fall in her first run. She came close to hitting the podium in big air as wellfinishing fourth. She reached the podium in both events in 2023taking slope silver and big air bronze. In 2025she added another bronze in slope and finished fifth in big air.
Oldham has been a standout performer at the Winter X Gameswinning seven medals (as of 2025). Her success began in Norway in 2020 where she won the gold in big air. She had been crashing on almost every trick she tried in training but decided in the start gate to just trust her muscle memory and even landed her dub 12 safety which she hadn’t tried on the jump that week.
Oldham was a double medallist at the 2021 Winter X Games in Aspen where she won big air silver and slope bronze. At the 2022 Winter X Games in AspenOldham repeated as the silver medallist in big air and bronze medallist in slope. She had a history-making moment at the 2023 Winter X Games where she became the first woman to land a triple cork in any ski or snowboard event to take big air gold. She also won the gold medal in slope.
In her first year on the FIS World Cup circuit in 2018-19Oldham won the slope Crystal Globe as the overall top-ranked skier in the discipline. She had won her first medala silverin Seiser AlmItaly in just her third World Cup event. She added a bonze at Mammoth Mountain in March before closing the season with her first World Cup victory in SilvaplanaSwitzerland.
As of January 2026Oldham has 11 career World Cup podiumsincluding four victories.
Oldham first competed internationally on the Nor-Am Cup circuit in February 2018winning slope gold in her very first event. She competed at the 2019 FIS Junior World Championships where her big air silver was Canada’s first ever medal in the discipline at the junior worlds.
A Little More About Megan
Getting into the Sport: Started skiing at age 5 with her familybut as a child was more focused on gymnastics and figure skating… Loved flipping and spinning so when she was 14 her brother suggested she try free skiing and she was hooked immediately… Within a year was competing in her new sport… Outside Interests: Enjoys yoga and slack lining to relax and have fun during the ski season… Spends her summers practicing tricks on a big in-ground trampoline in her family’s backyard and enjoys water activities such as tubingwakeboarding and boating… Would like to become a lawyer… Odds and Ends: Realized the true depth of her Olympic dream while watching Maggie Mac Neil win 100m butterfly gold in swimming at Tokyo 2020; had no prior knowledge of Mac Neil but could relate to the passion and dedication and effort she showed… Favourite quote: “Work hard in silence. Let your success be your noise.”
Olympic Highlights
| Games | Sport | Event | Finish |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beijing 2022 | Skiing - Free | Big Air - Women | 4 |
| Beijing 2022 | Skiing - Free | Slope - Women | 13 |
| Milano Cortina 2026 | Skiing - Free | Slope - Women | Bronze |
Notable International Results
Olympic Winter Games: 2026 - BRONZE (slope); 2022 - 4th (big air)13th (slope)
FIS World Championships: 2025 – BRONZE (slope)5th (big air); 2023 – SILVER (slope)BRONZE (big air); 2021 - BRONZE (slope)4th (big air)
FIS World Junior Championships: 2019 - 9th (slope)SILVER (big air)
Winter X Games: 2025 – 4th (slope – Aspen); 2023 – GOLD (slope – Aspen)GOLD (big air – Aspen); 2022 – SILVER (big air – Aspen)BRONZE (slope – Aspen); 2021 – SILVER (big air – Aspen)BRONZE (slope – Aspen); 2020 – GOLD (big air – Norway)7th (slope – Norway)5th (big air – Aspen)6th (slope – Aspen)



