
Olympic 2026 Medal Count, Final Tally, Winners from Day 11 Events
Norway, Italy, the United States and Germany all added to their overall medal hauls at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Tuesday.
Norway became the first, and likely only, country to eclipse the 30-medal mark with a gold and a silver across the morning's four medal events.
Jens Oftebro became the third Norwegian to claim multiple individual golds at the Milan Cortina Games.
Italy claimed its ninth gold thanks to the men's team pursuit speed skating team.
The Italians beat out Team USA in the event. The silver medal placed Team USA at 20 overall medals.
It wasn't the only medal for the Americans, as Mac Forehand captured the silver in the men's freeski big air behind only Norway's Tormod Frostad. And then Germany put an exclamation mark on the day by sweeping the podium in the men's two-man bobsleigh.
Men's Nordic Combined Large Hill/10 km
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Gold: Jens Oftebro (Norway)
Silver: Johannes Lamparter (Austria)
Bronze: Ilkka Herola (Finland)
Jens Oftebro completed the nordic combined individual sweep on Tuesday.
Oftebro beat out Austria's Johannes Lamparter by five seconds in the second leg of the large hill/10-kilometer event.
Oftebro was fifth in the event after the ski jumping portion, but then climbed to the top of the standings with his tremendous skiing performance.
Lamparter was second in both disciplines. He was unable to do enough to chase down Oftebro for gold.
Finland's Ilkka Herola claimed bronze with a four-spot jump from seventh in the ski jumping to third in the 10-kilometer cross-country ski.
Men's Biathlon 4x7.5-km Relay
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Gold: France
Silver: Norway
Bronze: Sweden
France continued its success in the biathlon with a gold in the men's 4x7.5-kilometer relay.
France won by nine seconds over Norway to claim its fourth biathlon gold and ninth overall medal in the sport at the Milan Cortina Games.
Norway's silver was the 30th medal won at the Games by the leader in the overall medal count.
Norway has eight total medals in biathlon to go along with its nine from cross-country skiing. The biathlon and cross-country medals alone would put Norway in a tie for fifth in the medal standings.
Men's Speed Skating Team Pursuit
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Gold: Italy
Silver: United States
Bronze: China
Italy's Olympic gold-medal party at the speed skating oval was extended into Tuesday.
The Italian trio of Davide Ghiotto, Andrea Giovannini and Michele Malfatti beat the United States for gold in the team pursuit.
Three of Italy's nine gold medals at its home Olympics have come from speed skating, the most of any individual sport.
The Americans settled for silver, as they finished four seconds behind Italy.
The silver was the 20th overall medal for Team USA, but it has some work to do to catch Italy for second place. Italy currently has 24 medals.
Women's Speed Skating Team Pursuit
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Gold: Canada
Silver: Netherlands
Bronze: Japan
The second week of the Olympics has been much kinder to Canada than the first week.
Canada's team pursuit trio picked up the third gold in the last few days for Canada, who went almost a week without topping a podium.
Canada surged over the final few laps to edge out the Netherlands for the gold.
The Dutch have been the most successful country on the speed skating ice with nine total medals.
Men's Freeski Big Air
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Gold: Tormod Frostad (Norway) - 195.50
Silver: Mac Forehand (United States) - 193.25
Bronze: Matej Svancer (Austria) - 191.25
It seemed like American Mac Forehand was going to capture gold when he unleashed a nearly perfect nose butter triple cork 2160 with a safety grab on his final jump.
His score propelled him into first place and gold-medal position with just one more competitor remaining.
The only problem for Forehand was that competitor was Norway's Tormod Frostad.
While Frostad's final jump didn't feature as many rotations as Forehand's, the judges ruled it as more stylish and technical.
The result was another gold medal for Norway, which has continued to dominate the 2026 Games.
Bobsleigh Two-Man
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Gold: Johannes Lochner and Georg Fleischhauer (Germany) - 3:39.70
Silver: Francesco Friedrich and Alexander Schuller (Germany) - 3:41.04
Bronze: Adam Ammour and Alexander Schaller (Germany) - 3:41.52
The two-man bobsleigh competition was one to remember for Germany.
The biggest question for the three German sleds came down the color of the medals, as the Johannes Lochner team, Francesco Friedrich team and Adam Ammour were all brilliant.
Lochner's pairing jumped out to a commanding lead through the first two heats and ultimately cruised to the gold, preventing Friedrich from an Olympic three-peat.
Yet the latter still took home the silver.
Americans Frankie Del Duca and Joshua Williamson were the best non-German team and finished in fourth place. They ended up 0.44 seconds outside of the podium.



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