
Olympic 2026 Medal Count, Final Tally, Winners from Day 5 Events
Team USA captured its third and fourth gold medals of the 2026 Winter Olympics on Wednesday.
Elizabeth Lemley headlined a gold-silver finish for Team USA in the women's moguls.
Lemley and Jaelin Kauf were two of the three Americans to earn medals across Wednesday's four medal events.
Jordan Stolz won the United States' fourth gold when he set an Olympic record during the men's 1000m speed skating competition.
Ryan Cochran-Siegle added to the medal haul from alpine skiing with a silver in the men's Super-G, while Madison Chock and Evan Bates took home silver in the figure skating ice dance contest.
Team USA joined Italy and Norway on the list of countries with a double-digit medal haul at the Milan Cortina Games and also sits in third place for total medals.
Women's Freestyle Skiing Moguls
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Gold: Elizabeth Lemley (USA) - 82.30
Silver: Jaelin Kauf (USA) - 80.77
Bronze: Perrine Laffont (France) - 78.00
Elizabeth Lemley won the women's moguls in her first Winter Olympics.
The 20-year-old American qualified for the final in fourth place behind Jaelin Kauf and two others.
Lemley recorded her gold-medal winning score halfway through the medal round and then had to wait to watch the top contenders come down the hill.
Kauf was the only one of the top three qualifiers to finish on the medal podium. She took silver in moguls for the second straight Olympics.
France's Perrine Laffont, who was the eighth-place qualifier, captured the bronze medal.
Men's Alpine Skiing Super-G
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Gold: Franjo von Allmen (Switzerland) - 1:25.32
Silver: Ryan Cochran-Siegle (USA) - 1:25.45
Bronze: Marco Odermatt (Switzerland) - 1:25.60
Switzerland's Franjo von Allmen continued his dominance on the Olympic slopes with a gold medal in the men's Super-G.
Von Allmen previously won golds in the downhill and the team combined event.
Wednesday's win made von Allmen the third-ever male to win three gold medals at the same Winter Olympics.
American Ryan Cochran-Siegle finished 13-hundredths of a second behind von Allmen to capture silver.
Cochran-Siegle earned the third American alpine skiing medal in five days. Breezy Johnson won the women's downhill and a bronze was earned in the women's team combined event.
More alpine skiing medals are expected for Team USA with Mikaela Shiffrin competing in two individual events.
Switzerland's Marco Odermatt claimed bronze. Five of the seven Swiss medals have come from alpine skiing events.
Men's Nordic Combined Normal Hill/10km
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Gold: Jens Oftebro (Norway)
Silver: Johannes Lamparter (Austria)
Bronze: Eero Hirvonen (Finland)
Jens Oftebro added to Norway's leading medal haul with a win in nordic combined.
Oftebro was the fastest skier in the 10-kilometer cross-country portion of the two-sport event. The gold-medal winner was seventh in the event after the normal hill ski jump.
Johannes Lamparter claimed silver behind Oftebro. He began the 10 km race in sixth.
Finland's Eero Hirvonen made the biggest jump in the standings in the second leg, as he vaulted from 10th in the ski jump to third after the ski.
Oftebro's win gave Norway its seventh gold of the Milan Cortina Games. Norway is expected to finish with the most gold and most overall medals.
Women's Biathlon 15km Individual
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Gold: Julia Simon (France) - 41:15.6
Silver: Lou Jeanmonnot (France) - 42:08.7
Bronze: Lora Hristova (Bulgaria) - 42:20.1
Julia Simon won her second gold medal of the Milan Cortina Games and her first as an individual.
Simon, a member of France's winning team in the mixed relay, turned in a time that was close to a minute better than the rest of the competition.
Simon's teammate Lou Jeanmonnot added to the gold-silver for France, a country that has earned four of its six medals in biathlon.
Lora Hristova earned the second bronze of the Olympics for Bulgaria.
Men's 1000m Speed Skating
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Gold: Jordan Stolz (United States) - 1:06.28
Silver: Jenning de Boo (Netherlands) - 1:06.78
Bronze: Zhongyan Ning (China) - 1:07.34
All the pressure was on Jordan Stolz as one of the headline names of the Olympics for the United States, and he delivered in record fashion.
Stolz captured the gold in the 1000m speed skating competition with an Olympic record time of 1:06.28. While he fell just short of his own world-record time of 1:05.37, he cleared the rest of the field.
It was his first gold medal, but he has his eyes on three more with the 500m, 1500m and mass start competitions still to come in these Games.
Figure Skating Ice Dance
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Gold: Laurence Fournier Beaudry/Guillaume Cizeron (France) - 225.82
Silver: Madison Chock/Evan Bates (United States) - 224.39
Bronze: Piper Gilles/Paul Poirier (Canada) - 217.74
The figure skating ice dance competition was essentially a two-team race for gold with Americans Madison Chock and Evan Bates entering Wednesday's free skate 0.46 points behind France's Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron.
And that race lived up to its billing.
Both teams turned in excellent free skate performances, but France earned the narrow win with a 135.64 score to the United States' 134.67 in Wednesday's portion. The result was a total win by just more than one point and gold for the French.
Chock and Bates added the silver medal to the gold they already captured in the figure skating team event.

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