
Sadowski-Synnott Tops Snowboarding Slopestyle Qualifying, Full Women's Results from Olympics 2026
Reigning Olympic champion Zoi Katherine Sadowski-Synnott of New Zealand leads the women's snowboarding slopestyle field after two qualifying runs on Sunday during the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics.
Here's a look at the full women's results after Sunday's qualifying runs at Livigno Snow Park.
2026 Women's Snowboard Slopestyle qualifiers
- Zoi Katherine Sadowski-Synnott, New Zealand: 88.08 best run
- Murase Kokoma, Japan: 84.93
- Yu Seung-eun , Republic of Korea: 76.80
- Reira Iwabuchi, Japan: 73.65
- Anna Gasser, Austria: 73.50
- Ally Hickman, Australia: 71.41
- Mari Fukada, Japan: 71.03
- Annika Morgan, Germany: 69.53
- Laurie Blouin, Canada: 69.30
- Lily Dhawornvej, United States: 68.90
- Jessica Perlmutter, United States: 68.58
- Juliette Pelchat, Canada: 68.25
Slopestyle, in which competitors ski or snowboard over a course with obstacles and jumps, has been featured at the Olympics since the 2014 Sochi Games.
Sadowski-Synnott, the reigning women's snowboarding slopestyle Olympic champion, is coming into the event after already earning a silver medal in women's snowboard big air.
She is also the reigning slopestyle world champion after completing her successful comeback from a 2023 ankle injury to claim her third world title in Switzerland last March.
Japan's Murase Kokoma, who won gold in the women's snowboard big air and currently sits on top of the FIS slopestyle standings, will head into Tuesday's final ranked second after the qualifying run.
Austria's Anna Gasser, who won gold medals in big air in 2018 in Pyeongchang and 2022 in Beijing, also qualified for a shot at her third Olympic medal.
Great Britain's Mia Brookes, who won slopestyle gold in the 2026 X Games, and Australia's Tess Coady, who claimed bronze at the Olympic event in 2022, both fell short of qualifying on Sunday.
Both the men's and women's snowboard slopestyle qualifiers were originally scheduled for Monday before the weather forecast in Livigno caused the FIS to push the events to Sunday.
The women's final is still set to take place Tuesday starting at 7 a.m. ET.




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