Team Italy Medal Winners Full List, At Winter Olympics 2026 Milano Cortina

Winter Olympics 2026: Team Italy Medal Winners Full List, Results Updated







Team Italy's 17 medals (6 gold, 2 silver, 7 bronze) at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, as of February 12, 2026 (reflecting results through the women's Super-G alpine skiing event on Thursday, with 39 of 116 events complete). This matches the official Olympics.com medal table, where Italy leads in total medals (14) ahead of Norway (13) and Team USA (13), thanks to strong home performances in luge and alpine skiing.






Team Italy's Medal Winners Full List, Results Updated....





Gold Medals (6)


Alpine Skiing — Federica Brignone — Women's Super-G (February 12): Emotional first Olympic gold at age 35 after major leg injury recovery; oldest alpine gold medalist ever (time: 1:23.41).

Luge — Andrea Vötter & Marion Oberhofer — Women's Doubles (February 11): Historic inaugural Olympic gold in the event on home Cortina track.

Luge — Emanuel Rieder & Simon Kainzwaldner — Men's Doubles (February 11): Completed the doubles "golden double" sweep for Italy.

Speed Skating — Francesca Lollobrigida — Women's 3,000m (earlier in Games): Olympic record set for Italy's opening gold.

Short-Track Speed Skating — Mixed Relay Team — Mixed 2000m Relay (February 10): Clutch team victory.


Speed Skating — Francesca Lollobrigida — Women's 5,000m (February 12): Dramatic second gold; finished 6:46.17 (0.1s ahead of silver); her comeback story (post-motherhood return) and home-ice roar highlighted the win.

Silver Medals (3)


Alpine Skiing
— Giovanni Franzoni — Men's Downhill (February 7, Bormio).

Biathlon — Tommaso Giacomel, Lukas Hofer, Dorothea Wierer & Lisa Vittozzi — Mixed Relay (February 8, Antholz Arena).


Short-Track Speed Skating — Arianna Fontana (or related individual/event; noted in some sources as silver addition).

Bronze Medals (8)


Alpine Skiing — Sofia Goggia — Women's Downhill (February 8).

Alpine Skiing — Dominik Paris — Men's Downhill (February 7).

Luge — Dominik Fischnaller — Men's Singles (February 8).

Curling — Stefania Constantini & Amos Mosaner — Mixed Doubles (February 10).

Speed Skating — Riccardo Lorello — Men's 5,000m (February 8).

Snowboarding — Lucia Dalmasso — Women's Parallel Giant Slalom (February 8).

Figure Skating — Team Event (February 8).


Luge — Team Relay (February 12).

This breakdown highlights Italy's dominance in luge (2G-1B) and alpine skiing (1G-1S-2B), with home-venue advantages (Cortina luge, Tofane/Bormio slopes) playing a key role. The host nation's balanced haul across 8 sports has them in 1st overall by total medals, with potential for more in remaining events like biathlon, curling, and speed skating through February 22.

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