
Olympic 2026 Medal Count, Final Tally, Winners from Day 7 Early Events
Johannes Klaebo tied Winter Olympics history on Friday.
The Norwegian cross-country skier captured his eighth-career Olympic gold and third of the Milan Cortina Games.
Klaebo now has three opportunities to become the winningest Winter Olympian in history. He'll be favored to make the medal podium in each of his three remaining events.
Klaebo's win was part of a surge of Norwegian medal wins on Friday morning. Norway claimed a quartet of medals to move level with Italy for the most overall medals. Norway is two ahead of Italy in the race for most golds.
Men's Cross Country Skiing 10km Freestyle
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Gold: Johannes Klaebo (Norway) - 20:36.2
Silver: Mathis Desloges (France) - 20:41.1
Bronze: Einar Hedegart (Norway) - 20:50.2
Johannes Klaebo tied the record for most golds at the Winter Olympics on Friday.
Klaebo took home the men's 10-kilometer freestyle event to tie three other Norwegians with eight career golds.
Klaebo, who is after a clean sweep of men's cross country golds, is tied with two other cross country athletes Marit Bjorgen and Bjorn Daehlie and biathlete Ole Einar Bjorndalen at the top of the record book.
The next men's event is Sunday. Klaebo and Norway are favored to win the 4x7.5-kilometer relay.
Men's Biathlon 10km Sprint
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Gold: Quentin Fillot Maillet (France) - 22:53.1
Silver: Velte Sjaastad Christiansen (Norway) - 23:06.8
Bronze: Sturla Holm Laegreid (Norway) - 23:09.8
France's Quentin Fillot Maillet won his fourth-career Olympic gold medal in the men's biathlon 10-kilometer sprint.
The Frenchman has now won an individual gold in three different events across his Olympic career. He also took gold with France in the mixed team relay to start the Milan Cortina Games.
Fillon Maillet finished in front of a pair of Norwegians. The silver and bronze earned from biathlon combined with the gold-bronze finish in cross country put Norway at 18 total medals, which is tied for the lead alongside Italy.
Women's Snowboard Cross
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Gold: Josie Baff (Australia)
Silver: Eva Adamczykova (Czechia)
Bronze: Michela Moioli (Italy)
Josie Baff won Australia's second gold medal of the Milan Cortina Games.
Baff captured first in a tight final race over Czechia's Eva Adamczykova.
The 23-year-old became the first Australian woman to medal in snowboard cross in the history of the event.
Italy's Michela Moioli made a late surge to try and earn another gold for Italy, but she settled for bronze. That was the 18th medal earned by Italy in 2026. Italy has already eclipsed its medal total from the 2022 Beijing Games.
Men's Speed Skating 10,000 meters
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Gold: Metodej Jilek (Czechia) - 12:33.43
Silver: Vladimir Semirunniy (Poland) - 12:39.08
Bronze: Jorrit Bergsma (Netherlands) - 12:40.48
Metodej Jilek became an Olympic champion at 19 years old in the men's 10,000 meters.
The phenom from Czechia, who won silver in the 5,000 meters, turned in the best time by close to six seconds compared to silver medal winner Vladimir Semirunniy.
Jilek became the first Czech medalist in the men's 10,000 meters, an event typically dominated by the Netherlands.
Jorrit Bergsma, who won gold in 2014 and silver in 2018 in the event, claimed bronze to keep the Dutch medal streak alive in the 10,000 meters. At least one Dutch male has medaled in 11 straight Olympic 10,000 meters.
Snowboarding: Men's Halfpipe
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Gold: Yūto Totsuka (Japan) - 95.00
Silver: Scottie James (Australia) - 93.50
Bronze: Ryusei Yamada (Japan) - 92.00
Yūto Totsuka won gold after scoring a phenomenal 95 points in his second run on Friday evening, just enough to best Scottie James, who finished with the silver medal for the second straight Olympics.
The 24-year-old Totsuka has competed at three Olympic Games. He finished 11th in 2018 and sixth in 2022 before earning gold in 2026.
It's an incredible and inspiring comeback for Totsuka, who suffered a horrible crash at the 2018 Games after his snowboard caught the lip of the halfpipe. Thankfully, he did not suffer a serious injury, per Japan's Olympic officials.
Eight year later, the third time was a charm for Totsuka.
James has now won back-to-back silver medals after having done so in 2022.
The 19-year-old Yamada was participating in his first-ever Olympics.
Men's Figure Skating
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Gold: Mikhail Shaidorov (Kazakhstan) - 291.58
Silver: Yuma Kagiyama (Japan) - 280.06
Bronze: Shun Sato (Japan) - 274.90
Mikhail Shaidorov won Kazakhstan's first Winter Olympics gold medal since 1994 after taking first in men's figure skating on Friday evening.
The reigning World Championship silver medalist was fifth in the short program but authored a tremendous free skate performance, earning 198.64 points, more than 10 points better than the next competitor (186.37 for Canada's Stephen Gogolev).
Japan took the other two podium spots. Yuma Kagiyama finished with the silver medal for the second straight Olympics. The 22-year-old Shun Sato, participating in his first Olympics, took bronze.
Ilia Malinin, the 21-year-old American who won back-to-back World Championships entering this Olympics, entered the free skate portion first in the competition.
However, he struggled during the free skate, falling multiple times and ultimately finishing 15th in that portion en route to eighth overall.
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