
Olympic 2026 Medal Count, Final Tally, Winners from Day 6 Events
Italy's Francesca Lollobrigida and Sweden's Frida Karlsson became the fourth and fifth athletes to win multiple gold medals at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Thursday.
Lollobrigida was one of two Italian women to claim gold on Thursday. Italy currently has the most overall medals with 15 and the second-most gold medals behind Norway.
Karlsson picked up her second gold of the Milan Cortina Games in cross-country skiing.
Lollobrigida and Karlsson are the only two women to win multiple individual golds in northern Italy. France's Julia Simon has two golds, but one came in the biathlon mixed relay.
In total, five athletes claimed multiple gold medals through six days of competition.
Women's Alpine Skiing Super-G
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Gold: Federica Brignone (Italy) - 1:23.41
Silver: Romane Miradoli (France) - 1:23.82
Bronze: Cornelia Huetter (Austria) - 1:23.93
Federica Brignone continued Italy's incredible home Olympics with gold in the women's Super-G.
Brignone got down the course in a time that was four-tenths of a second faster than her closest competition.
Brignone earned the fifth Italian gold of the Milan Cortina Games and the host country's fourth overall medal in alpine skiing.
Romane Miradoli of France and Austria's Cornelia Huetter completed the medal podium. No American athlete finished inside the top 10.
Men's Freestyle Skiing Moguls
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Gold: Cooper Woods (Australia) - 83.71
Silver: Mikael Kingsbury (Canada) - 83.71
Bronze: Ikuma Horishima (Japan) - 83.44
Cooper Woods won Australia's first gold and first overall medal of the Milan Cortina Games.
Woods edged out Canadian moguls legend Mikael Kingsbury by .07 of a point.
While Australia isn't usually associated with Winter Olympics success, it has had success in the moguls. Woods became the third Australian male to medal in moguls in the last five Winter Games.
Kingsbury picked up the fourth medal of his Olympic career. He is now a three-time silver medalist in moguls.
Japan's Ikuma Horishima repeated his bronze medal performance from Beijing.
Women's Cross Country 10km Free
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Gold: Frida Karlsson (Sweden) - 22:49.2
Silver: Ebba Andersson (Sweden) - 23:35.8
Bronze: Jessie Diggins (USA) - 23:38.9
Frida Karlsson and Ebba Andersson repeated their one-two finish from the women's skiathlon in the women's 10-kilometer freestyle race.
Karlsson kept Sweden's hope for a perfect Olympics in women's cross country alive. Karlsson owns two of the three golds won by Swedish skiers in cross country.
Seven of Sweden's eight medals won so far in Italy have come from cross-country skiing.
The Swedish women have three events left to complete the perfect program, something they achieved at the 2025 World Championships.
Men's Snowboard Cross
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Gold: Alessandro Haemmerle (Austria)
Silver: Eliot Grondin (Canada)
Bronze: Jakob Dusek (Austria)
Alessandro Haemmerle became the third repeat winner in the history of men's snowboard cross.
Haemmerle came out on top in a wildly entertaining race in which he barely beat out Canada's Eliot Grondin.
Haemmerle joined Seth Westcott of the United States and Pierre Vaultier of France as back-to-back winners in the event that has only been contested at six Winter Olympics.
Grondin took second behind Haemmerle for the second straight Winter Games. Austria's Jakob Dusek was the only new athlete on the medal stand compared to 2022.
Women's Speed Skating 5,000m
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Gold: Francesca Lollobrigida (Italy) - 6:46.17
Silver: Merel Conijn (Netherlands) - 6:46.27
Bronze: Ragne Wiklund (Norway) - 6:46.34
Francesca Lollobrigida's dream Olympics on home ice continued with a win in the women's 5,000 meters.
Lollobrigida, who won the 3,000 meters earlier in the Games, got off to a phenomenal start and held on to the winning time on the final lap.
The 35-year-old Italian eked out the victory by one-tenth of a second over Merel Conijn of the Netherlands.
Lollobrigida joined Karlsson as the only women to win two individual gold medals at the Milan Cortina Games. Five total athletes have won multiple golds across individual and team events.
Women's Snowboard Halfpipe
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Gold: Gaon Choi (South Korea) - 90.25
Silver: Chloe Kim (USA) - 88.00
Bronze: Mitsuki Ono (Japan) - 85.00
South Korea's Gaon Choi had a rough first run that ended with a scary crash, but she was able to bounce back and put together an exceptional final run to edge out America's Chloe Kim.
Kim led for the majority of the competition after scoring an 88.00 on her first run, but ultimately couldn't hang on to that lead. Had she won gold, she would have been the first-ever snowboarder to win three consecutive Olympic gold medals in a single event.
Mitsuki Ono came up short of Choi and Kim, but still managed to earn her first Olympic medal.



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