Lead: On Sunday at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics, medals were decided across nine events in a packed schedule that included alpine skiing, skeleton, biathlon and speed skating. U.S. athletes pushed for podiums while established champions and new record-setters left their mark on the Games. Mikaela Shiffrin entered the women’s giant slalom seeking her first Olympic medal since 2018, and Erin Jackson aimed to defend her 500m speed skating title. Several finals and mid-competition podium stands produced headlines that shaped the day’s narrative.
Key Takeaways
- Nine medal events concluded Sunday: men’s 12.5km biathlon pursuit; men’s dual moguls; men’s cross-country relay; mixed team snowboard; women’s giant slalom; women’s 10km biathlon pursuit; men’s speed skating team pursuit; mixed-team skeleton; women’s large-hill ski jumping.
- Mikaela Shiffrin returned to the giant slalom start line aiming for her first Olympic podium since 2018; Federica Brignone won the women’s giant slalom on the same day.
- Erin Jackson, Team USA flag bearer, was in contention to defend her Olympic 500m speed skating title, while the U.S. team pursuit trio posted 3:39.37 to advance from qualifying.
- Mystique Ro and Austin Florian represented the United States in the mixed-team skeleton final; monobob veterans Elana Meyers Taylor and Kaillie Humphries sat 2nd and 3rd midway through competition.
- Mikael Kingsbury won gold in men’s dual moguls, becoming the most decorated Olympic freestyle skier; Federica Brignone took her second gold of the Games in giant slalom.
- Freeski big air qualifying leaders were Mac Forehand (183.00), Matej Svancer (182.25) and Birk Ruud (181.00); U.S. slopestyle qualifiers included Jake Canter (10th), Red Gerard (11th) and Ollie Martin (6th).
- Team Norway’s 4×7.5km relay victory made Johannes Høsflot Klæbo the winningest Winter Olympian in terms of gold medals.
- U.S. men’s curling earned a notable round-robin victory over defending Olympic champion Sweden, a result USA skip Ben Richardson framed as proof-of-concept for medal ambitions.
Background
The Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic program has mixed traditional marquee events with new or recently modified formats, creating varied medal opportunities for nations and athletes. Coming into Sunday, several headline names carried heavy expectations: Mikaela Shiffrin for alpine skiing, Erin Jackson for speed skating and veteran bobsled and skeleton pilots aiming for podium returns. The Games have so far combined veteran dominance—such as Johannes Høsflot Klæbo’s continued success—with breakout moments from younger athletes across snow and ice disciplines.
Historically, the pursuit and relay formats (biathlon and cross-country) distribute advantage to nations with depth, while single-run or head-to-head events (moguls, freeski, skeleton mixed team) can deliver surprise podiums. The monobob and mixed-team events have in recent cycles reshaped medal tables by rewarding nations that can field multiple high-caliber entries. For the United States, Sunday represented both a chance to defend titles and to convert depth into medals across speed skating, freeski, snowboard and sliding sports.
Main Event
The women’s giant slalom produced one of the clearest results of the day: Italy’s Federica Brignone surged to an early lead and held it to secure her second gold of these Games, a result that reshuffles alpine narratives on home-continent snow. Mikaela Shiffrin, who had publicly stated she was targeting a return to the Olympic podium for the first time since 2018, competed but did not displace Brignone from gold. The race underlined the depth of the field and the razor-thin margins that separate top technical skiers.
In sliding sports, the mixed-team skeleton final featured Team USA’s Mystique Ro and Austin Florian among the entries. Their participation signaled the U.S. program’s investment in mixed-team formats after recent international development. Meanwhile in monobob, established names Elana Meyers Taylor and Kaillie Humphries were positioned 2nd and 3rd midway through runs, with Germany’s Laura Nolte leading and Kaysha Love sitting in 5th—a tight leaderboard heading into the final heats.
On the snowpark and freeski side, Mac Forehand topped big air qualifying with a 183.00 score, narrowly ahead of Matej Svancer (182.25) and Birk Ruud (181.00), setting the stage for an aggressive final. In slopestyle qualifying the U.S. advanced three riders—Ollie Martin (6th), Jake Canter (10th) and Red Gerard (11th)—with Gerard returning to his strongest event eight years after his 2018 gold in park discipline competition.
Speed skating and ice hockey moments added to the day’s variety: the world record-holding U.S. team pursuit trio of Casey Dawson, Emery Lehman and Ethan Cepuran clocked 3:39.37 to advance, finishing second in their heat behind Italy. In hockey, Team USA captain Auston Matthews scored on a power play to make it 2-0 versus Germany in final group play, a pivotal moment that reinforced the U.S. forward corps’ impact.
Analysis & Implications
Brignone’s giant slalom victory on an alpine stage with home-continent sympathy does more than add a medal to Italy’s haul: it demonstrates consistent elite technical form that will influence season narratives beyond the Olympics, potentially affecting sponsorships and World Cup momentum. For Shiffrin, the result is a reminder of how Olympic timing and course specificity can interrupt even the strongest careers; her pursuit of an Olympic podium remains a major storyline for upcoming events.
The successes and near-misses for Team USA reflect a mixed but encouraging picture. The team pursuit time of 3:39.37 to advance underscores the U.S. squad’s capacity to remain competitive against traditional speed skating powers, while freeski and slopestyle qualifiers show pipeline depth. Yet sliding sports’ mixed-team outcomes and monobob midway standings indicate that converting position into medals will require flawless final runs and small margins to go the United States’ way.
Klaebo’s relay gold and resulting record for Winter Olympic gold medals highlight how individual legacies can shift the perception of a Games. Records change national narratives and can boost a country’s momentum across disciplines. Similarly, Mikael Kingsbury becoming the most decorated freestyle Olympic skier solidifies his long-term dominance and raises the bar for challengers in freestyle events.
Comparison & Data
| Event | Athlete/Team | Metric |
|---|---|---|
| Freeski big air qualifying | Mac Forehand | 183.00 |
| Freeski big air qualifying | Matej Svancer | 182.25 |
| Freeski big air qualifying | Birk Ruud | 181.00 |
| Men’s team pursuit (qualifying) | USA (Dawson/Lehman/Cepuran) | 3:39.37 |
The table above highlights select performance markers that shaped Sunday’s advancing fields. Forehand’s margin over Svancer was marginal but decisive in a judged freeski discipline; in timed competition the U.S. team pursuit trio’s 3:39.37 placed them second to Italy in their heat, a competitive time that still leaves room for strategy adjustments in semifinal matchups. These metrics illustrate the contrast between judged scoring sports, where style and amplitude matter, and timed events, where pacing and exchanges are decisive.
Reactions & Quotes
Event participants and team representatives framed Sunday as both a validation of preparation and a call for continued focus.
“We know we can beat any of these teams, and we’re here to win.”
Ben Richardson, USA men’s curling skip
Richardson’s comment came after a statement win over Sweden in round-robin play; the team described the victory as confirmation that their strategic approach can compete with defending champions. The quote has been used by U.S. curling staff to underscore belief and momentum going into additional round-robin matches.
“A perfect way”
WESH headline on Johannes Høsflot Klæbo’s relay victory
The phrase captured the tone of Norwegian celebrations after the 4×7.5km relay that elevated Klæbo’s place in Olympic history. Norwegian team officials and commentators framed the result as the culmination of depth and a generational athlete’s consistency across events.
Unconfirmed
- Some medal placements for events that concluded late in the day were still being finalized in official result feeds at time of reporting; final IOC confirmation may adjust official ordinals.
- Video embeds and linked highlight clips reported as unavailable in some regions; availability depends on local streaming rights and broadcaster geofencing and was not independently verifiable for all readers.
Bottom Line
Sunday at Milan Cortina delivered a concentrated mix of established champions extending legacies and contenders positioning themselves for late-stage medal conversions. Italy and Norway recorded headline-making wins while U.S. athletes collected advancing positions and competitive times that keep medal prospects alive across multiple disciplines. The day reinforced that the 2026 Games will be decided by small margins—an athlete’s single clean run or an extra second in a team exchange can determine podium outcomes.
Looking ahead, attention shifts to finals that remain and to how mid-competition standings (such as in monobob) close out overnight. Nations with depth and athletes who can execute under pressure are best positioned to turn today’s promising positions into medals in the sessions to come.
Sources
- WESH (Local/National news report summarizing Sunday highlights and video coverage)
- Olympics.com (Official Olympic schedule and results)