I'm not certain this is the same on modern Ultima blades, but -
My Ultima Matrix 1 Dance and Synchro blade runners are almost identical - except that the Dance runners are thinline and have blunted toepicks, especially the drag pick at the back. My Synchro runners are very close to my Supreme (high level freestyle) blades - but the Synchro toe pick is blunted with respect to the Supreme.
(In addition, the Supreme spin rocker is flatter than that of the Dance and Synchro - but that might be because Mike Cunningham re-sharpened the Supremes for me - he said he wanted to give them a profile intermediate between what I was used to (MK Dance) and off-the-shelf Supremes.)
So Ultima Matrix 1 Synchro had picks in between those of Ultima Matrix 1 Dance and Ultima Matrix 1 Supremes. If Modern Ultima blades are the same, the same may hold for them. (OTOH, a more entry level freestyle blade might not have toe picks that stick out as far?)
P.S. You can't always judge what you can do based on what the top elite skaters can do with a given blade. Some hockey players with figure skating backgrounds can do the more basic figure skating jumps in hockey skates, with no toe picks.
Flexibility is also a big deal here. If you can point your toes enough, you can reach the toe picks on the Dance and Synchro blades. Though, on toe jumps, if you reach back all the way behind you (which creates a full toe point - try it in bare feet to see what I mean), you may GLIDE instead of stop the picking foot, on a Dance blade, especially if the Dance blade is somewhat worn - I've had this happen on worn MK Dance, which is why I am back on the Ultima blades.
Wilson "Coronation Dance blades" have a 7' rocker, but are described
at Kinzie's Closet as ENTRY LEVEL Dance. I don't think they are the same as "Wilson Dance".
The problem with sharpening Dance picks for jumps is that they also don't stick out as far as Freestyle picks, so they don't produce the same shape as real freestyle picks even when sharpened. Plus only the very best figure skate sharpeners can sharpen picks well.
There is another approach. Some people grind off the back of freestyle blades if they find the tails too long. But again, get a top rate figure skate sharpener, because this isn't all that common.
Since you skate at Bowie, you are within an hours drive or less to Skater's Paradise. He (Mike Cunningham) charges more than other area fitters and sharpeners, but he can give you expert advice, especially on something this big. He is semi-retired, so get an appointment.