Milano Cortina 2026: Every Alpine Olympic Medal

Downhill | Team Combined | Super-G | Giant Slalom | Slalom

Milano Cortina 2026 demanded strength, timing, skill and total commitment. The speed events rewarded skiers willing to attack. The technical races punished hesitation. And the Olympic debut of Team Combined reshaped the medal table with dramatic, razor-thin margins.

Here is the complete medal recap across five disciplines for women and men, with verified winning times and podium deficits.


WOMEN

Downhill

  • 🥇 🇺🇸 Breezy Johnson (USA, 1996, Atomic) — Stifel U.S. Ski Team — Rowmark Ski Academy1:36.10
  • 🥈 🇩🇪 Emma Aicher (GER, 2003, HEAD) — 1:36.14 (+0.04)
  • 🥉 🇮🇹 Sofia Goggia (ITA, 1992, Atomic) — 1:36.69 (+0.59)

Johnson edged Aicher by just four hundredths in one of the tightest finishes of the Games.


Team Combined (Olympic Debut)

(Combined Downhill + Slalom total time)

Five hundredths separated gold and silver in the discipline’s Olympic debut.


Super-G

  • 🥇 🇮🇹 Federica Brignone (ITA, 1990) — 1:23.41
  • 🥈 🇫🇷 Romane Miradoli (FRA, 1994) — 1:23.82 (+0.41)
  • 🥉 🇦🇹 Cornelia Hütter (AUT, 1992, HEAD) — 1:23.93 (+0.52)

Brignone controlled the race on home snow, winning with authority.


Giant Slalom (Tie for Silver — No Bronze Awarded)

  • 🥇 🇮🇹 Federica Brignone (ITA, 1990) — 2:13.50
  • 🥈 🇸🇪 Sara Hector (SWE, 1992, HEAD) — 2:14.12 (+0.62)
  • 🥈 🇳🇴 Thea Louise Stjernesund (NOR, 1996) — 2:14.12 (+0.62)

Two skiers matched times to the hundredth. No bronze was awarded.


Slalom

Shiffrin delivered commanding runs to close the women’s program.


MEN

Downhill

  • 🥇 🇨🇭 Franjo von Allmen (SUI, 2001, HEAD) — 1:51.61
  • 🥈 🇮🇹 Giovanni Franzoni (ITA, 2001) — 1:51.81 (+0.20)
  • 🥉 🇮🇹 Dominik Paris (ITA, 1989, Nordica) — 1:52.11 (+0.50)

Von Allmen attacked Bormio’s Stelvio and delivered gold.


Team Combined (Tie for Silver — No Bronze Awarded)

(Combined Downhill + Slalom total time)

  • 🥇 🇨🇭 Franjo von Allmen (HEAD) / Tanguy Nef (Atomic) — 2:44.04
  • 🥈 🇦🇹 Vincent Kriechmayr (HEAD) / Manuel Feller (Atomic) — +0.99
  • 🥈 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt (Stöckli) / Loïc Meillard+0.99

Switzerland claimed gold. Two silvers were awarded.


Super-G

  • 🥇 🇨🇭 Franjo von Allmen (SUI, 2001, HEAD) — 1:25.32
  • 🥈 🇺🇸 Ryan Cochran-Siegle (USA, 1992, HEAD) — Stifel U.S. Ski Team — Mt. Mansfield Ski Academy / Cochran’s Ski Club — 1:25.45 (+0.13)
  • 🥉 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt (SUI, 1997, Stöckli) — 1:25.60 (+0.28)

Von Allmen earned his third straight Gold of the 20256 Olympics


Giant Slalom

  • 🥇 🇧🇷 Lucas Pinheiro Braathen (BRA, 2000, Atomic, Oakley) — 2:25.00
  • 🥈 🇨🇭 Marco Odermatt (SUI, 1997, Stöckli) — 2:25.58 (+0.58)
  • 🥉 🇨🇭 Loïc Meillard (SUI, 1996) — 2:26.17 (+1.17)

Braathen delivered Brazil’s first Winter Olympic alpine medal, which was gold.


Slalom

  • 🥇 🇨🇭 Loïc Meillard (SUI, 1996) — 1:53.61
  • 🥈 🇦🇹 Fabio Gstrein (AUT, 1997, Atomic) — 1:53.96 (+0.35)
  • 🥉 🇳🇴 Henrik Kristoffersen (NOR, 1994) — 1:54.74 (+1.13)

Meillard closed the Men’s races with composure and execution.


Medal Count

(Five Disciplines — Team Combined counted as one medal per nation per team)

NationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
🇨🇭 Switzerland4318
🇮🇹 Italy2125
🇺🇸 USA2114
🇦🇹 Austria1214
🇧🇷 Brazil1001
🇩🇪 Germany0202
🇸🇪 Sweden0112
🇳🇴 Norway0112
🇫🇷 France0101

Switzerland led the alpine medal table across these disciplines, powered by depth in both speed and technical events.


Multiple Medal Winners

Switzerland’s dominance was driven by multi-medal performances.

Franjo von Allmen (SUI) captured three gold medals — Downhill, Super-G, and Team Combined — establishing himself as the breakout star of the Games.

Loïc Meillard (SUI) secured three medals: Slalom gold, Giant Slalom bronze, and Team Combined silver.

Marco Odermatt (SUI) added three medals of his own — Giant Slalom silver, Team Combined silver, and Super-G bronze.

On the women’s side, Federica Brignone (ITA) delivered a double-gold performance in Super-G and Giant Slalom, winning twice on home snow.

Emma Aicher (GER) claimed two silver medals — Downhill and Team Combined — confirming her rise on the Olympic stage.


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About the Author: Peter Lange

Lange is the current Publisher of Ski Racing Media. However, over 38 seasons, he enjoyed coaching athletes of all ages and abilities. Lange’s experience includes leading Team America and working with National Team athletes from the United States, Norway, Austria, Australia, and Great Britain. He was the US Ski Team Head University Coach for the two seasons the program existed. Lange says, “In the end, the real value of this sport is the relationships you make, they are priceless.”