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Olympic 2026 Medal Count, Final Tally, Winners from Day 10 Events
Switzerland's Loic Meillard and Xandra Velzeboer of the Netherlands became double individual medalists at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Monday.
Meillard claimed gold in a wild men's slalom competition that was filled with crashes due to the weather on the slopes.
Velzeboer came out on top in short track speed skating. She claimed a second gold for the Dutch, who are typically stronger in long track speed skating.
Monday afternoon was headlined by American Elana Meyers Taylor capturing gold in the women's monobob bobsleigh competition.
Women's Short Track Speed Skating 1,000m
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Gold: Xandra Velzeboer (Netherlands) - 1:28.437
Silver: Courtney Sarault (Canada) - 1:28.523
Bronze: Kim Gilli (South Korea) - 1:28.614
Xandra Velzeboer won her second gold in short track speed skating in the women's 1,000 meters.
Velzeboer beat out Canada's Courtney Sarault in the five-woman final to claim the Netherlands' fourth short-track gold of the Milan Cortina Games.
The two-time winner in Milan extended the Netherlands' gold-medal streak to three in the women's 1,000 meters. Suzanne Schulting won the last two for the Dutch.
Sarault won Canada's 10th medal of the Games and the third in short track speed skating.
Kim Gilli picked up South Korea's sixth overall medal, which was also the country's third in short track.
Men's Alpine Skiing Slalom
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Gold: Loic Meillard (Switzerland) - 1:53.61
Silver: Fabio Gstrein (Austria) - 1:53.96
Bronze: Henrik Kristoffersen (Norway) - 1:54.74
Loic Meillard added a gold in slalom to his bronze in the giant slalom.
The Swiss skier produced the second-best time in the opening of two runs and the second-best time in the final trip down the hill to claim gold.
The slalom competition could have gone to Norway's Alte Lie McGrath, the leader after the first run, but he crashed on his second run in brutal conditions. A good amount of athletes in the field struggled to finish one or both runs because of the weather.
Meillard's gold was the fourth for the Swiss in alpine skiing. All four of the golds have been won by the Swiss men.
Fabio Gstrein took silver for Austria, the country's 14th medal in northern Italy.
Henrik Kristoffersen added to Norway's leading medal haul with the bronze.
Figure Skating Pairs
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Gold: Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara (Japan) - 231.24
Silver: Anastasiia Metelkina and Luka Berulava (Georgia) - 221.75
Bronze: Minerva Fabienne Hase and Nikita Volodin (Germany) - 219.09
While Japan's Riku Miura and Ryuichi Kihara struggled in the short program and entered Monday's free skate in fifth place, they were brilliant with the medals on the line.
The pair dazzled the crowd and took advantage of slight errors from the other teams and skated their way to gold.
Georgia's Anastasiia Metelkina and Luka Berulava stayed in their second-place spot from the short program, but only because Germany's Minerva Fabienne Hase and Nikita Volodin fell from their first-place position to bronze.
It has been an incredible Olympics for Miura and Kihara, who also won the pairs portion of the team event on the way to a silver medal.
They posted a career-best score Monday and won Japan's first Olympic gold in pairs figure skating as a result.
Freestyle Skiing Women's Big Air
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Gold: Megan Oldham (Canada) - 180.75
Silver: Eileen Gu (China) - 179.00
Bronze: Flora Tabanelli (Italy) - 178.25
All eyes were on China's Eileen Gu as one of the headliners of the Olympics, especially since she was attempting to defend her gold medal in the event.
While she impressed in the competition and took home the silver as a result, the women's freestyle skiing big air belonged to Canada's Megan Oldham. In fact, Oldham put up a high enough score on her final two jumps that she had a victory lap third attempt.
She fell on her final jump, but it didn't matter because she was already an Olympic champion.
As for Gu, it was her second silver medal of the 2026 Games after she also finished in second place in the women's freeski slopestyle.
Italy's Flora Tabanelli took home the bronze Monday with the home crowd behind her.
Bobsleigh Women's Monobob
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Gold: Elana Meyers Taylor (United States) - 3:57.93
Silver: Laura Nolte (Germany) - 3:57.97
Bronze: Kaillie Armbruster Humphries (United States) - 3:58.05
The women's monobob competition belonged to the United States.
Elana Meyers Taylor was the headliner as the gold-medal winner, but she was joined on the podium by fellow American Kaillie Armbruster Humphries. Humphries captured the bronze, while Germany's Laura Nolte took home the silver.
Meyers Taylor made history with a sixth Olympic medal, which tied Bonnie Blair for the most by an American woman in Winter Games history. But Monday was particularly notable because it was Meyers Taylor's first gold in her historic career.
Armbruster Humphries is no stranger to the podium either, as this was her fifth Olympic medal in her own legendary career.





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