The United States won 33 medals at the Milano Cortina Olympics: 12 gold, 12 silver and nine bronze. Norway finished with the most overall medals with a Winter Games-record 41, including 18 golds — also a record.
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GOLD: Men’s hockey

Jack Hughes scored in overtime to give Team USA a 2-1 victory over Canada, the nation’s third men’s title at the Olympics and its first since the “Miracle on Ice” in 1980 — 46 years to the day of the upset over the Soviet Union.
GOLD: Kaila Kuhn, Connor Curran and Chris Lillis, freestyle skiing, mixed aerials

The U.S. team won its record-breaking 11th gold medal of the Winter Olympics when the freestyle skiing trio of Kaila Kuhn, Connor Curran and Chris Lillis took the title in mixed aerials. The 11th gold breaks a record set at the last Olympics on U.S. soil — in Salt Lake City in 2002, an Olympics that has long stood out as a turning point for a Winter-sports program that had struggled for decades.
BRONZE: Kaillie Armbruster Humphries and Jasmine Jones, two-woman bobsled

Kaillie Armbruster Humphries collected her second bronze medal of the Milan-Cortina Games on Saturday, piloting her two-woman bobsled to a spot on the medal stand at the Cortina Sliding Centre. Humphries and brakewoman Jasmine Jones finished third behind a pair of German sleds. It was the sixth Olympic medal for Armbruster Humphries, tying monobob gold medalist Elana Meyers Taylor for the most by any woman in the sport’s history.
BRONZE: Mia Manganello, speedskating, women’s mass start

Mia Manganello, this season’s World Cup champion in the mass start, took a victory lap with a U.S. flag after taking third place in the final race of her career. Manganello, 36, finished behind reigning world champion Marijke Groenewoud of the Netherlands, who hadn’t finished better than seventh in her other three races. Ivanie Blondin of Canada was the silver medalist for the second Games in a row.
BRONZE: Corinne Stoddard, short-track speedskating, women’s 1,500 meters

Corinne Stoddard earned a drought-ending bronze medal in the women’s 1,500 meters. It’s the first time in 16 years that an American woman has won an individual medal in short-track. Stoddard set the early pace in the final race of the Olympic program, but South Korea’s Kim Gilli (gold) and Minjeong Choi (silver) raced past her. Stoddard raised her arms in triumph as she crossed the line for third.
GOLD: Alex Ferreira, freestyle skiing, men’s halfpipe

American freeskier Alex Ferreira won the men’s halfpipe final to complete his collection of Olympic medals. The 31-year-old Ferreira won with a third and final run worth 93.75 points, adding the gold medal to his silver in 2018 and bronze in 2022. Estonia’s 19-year-old Henry Sildaru took the silver in his first Olympics. His third run was just 0.75 points off Ferreira’s mark. Brendan Mackay of Canada took the bronze, nudging American Nick Goepper off the podium on the last run of the 11-man final.
GOLD: Women’s hockey

Megan Keller backhanded in a shot 4:07 into overtime and the United States won its third Olympic gold medal in women’s hockey, beating Canada 2-1 to close another thrilling chapter of one of sports’ most heated rivalries. American captain Hilary Knight, in her fifth and final Olympics, forced overtime by tipping in Laila Edwards’ shot from the blue line with 2:04 remaining. The goal was the 15th of her Olympic career and 33rd point to break the U.S. record in both categories.
GOLD: Alysa Liu, women’s figure skating

Alysa Liu delivered the U.S. its first women’s figure skating Olympic gold medal in 24 years, performing a near-flawless free skate in a glittering golden dress to upstage Japanese rivals Kaori Sakamoto and Ami Nakai. The 20-year-old from the San Francisco Bay Area, who had walked away from the sport after the Beijing Games four years ago only to launch a remarkable comeback, finished with a career-best 226.79 points. Sakamoto scored 224.90 points to earn a silver to go with her bronze from Beijing. Nakai finished third with 219.16 points.
SILVER: Jordan Stolz, speedskating, men’s 1,500 meters

Jordan Stolz‘s bid for a third gold medal came up short with a loss to China’s Ning Zhongyan in the 1,500 meters. Ning won in an Olympic-record time of 1 minute, 41.98 seconds. Stolz, skating in the day’s last heat, finished 0.77 off the pace and added a silver to the golds he claimed earlier at these Winter Games in the 500 and 1,000. Only two long-track speedskaters have won at least four golds at one Games: Eric Heiden of the U.S. went home with five from the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics, and Lidiya Skoblikova, representing the Soviet Union, claimed four in 1964.
GOLD: Mikaela Shiffrin, Alpine skiing, women’s slalom

Mikaela Shiffrin put in two dominant runs in gorgeous conditions amid the jagged peaks of the Dolomites to win the women’s slalom by a massive 1.50 seconds, ending her eight-year medal drought at the Winter Games and showing why she is widely regarded as the greatest Alpine skier of all time. It made the 30-year-old Shiffrin the first American skier to win three Alpine golds and was the third-largest margin of victory in a women’s Olympic slalom.
SILVER: Gus Schumacher and Ben Odgen, cross-country skiing, men’s team sprint free

The U.S. men’s cross-country ski team had won only one medal in the history of the Olympics before the Milan Cortina Winter Games. Now it has two more. Gus Schumacher anchored a two-man team relay that took the silver medal behind Norway and held off Italy in third. The medal makes this the winningest U.S. men’s team ever. Schumacher’s partner in the relay, Ben Ogden, became the first American man to win a cross-country skiing medal in the Olympics in 50 years when he won a silver in the sprint on Feb. 10.
BRONZE: Jake Canter, snowboarding, men’s slopestyle

Nine years after enduring a traumatic brain injury, the result of getting kicked in the head in a freak accident on a trampoline at an action-sports camp, 22-year-old Jake Canter won the Olympic bronze medal in his sport’s trick-filled trip down the hill — slopestyle. That third-place finish stamped an exclamation point on one of those only-at-the-Olympics kind of stories.
SILVER: Emery Lehman, Casey Dawson and Ethan Cepuran, speedskating, men’s team pursuit

When it ended, Oak Park’s Emery Lehman and his teammates, Casey Dawson and Glen Ellyn’s Ethan Cepuran, tried to look happy. They smiled politely while they took their place on the podium and lowered their heads for their medals. They waved to the crowd. They hid well whatever heartbreak or disappointment they carried. Second place was not what they anticipated after years of training together and rising to the top of their sport.
SILVER: Mac Forehand, freestyle skiing, men’s big air

Mac Forehand pushed the men’s big air freeskiing to the last jump of a high-scoring final, winning a silver medal behind Tormod Frostad of Norway. Frostad had the lead through most of the final, but Forehand turned a thrilling competition on its head when he moved ahead of Frostad on the second-to-last jump of the night. That turned a victory lap for Frostad into the most pressure-filled run of his career. Frostad finished with 195.50 points to Forehand’s 193.25.
GOLD and BRONZE: Elana Taylor Meyers and Kaillie Humphries Armbruster, bobsleigh, women’s monobob

Elana Meyers Taylor won her first Olympic gold in women’s monobob, and she made history as the oldest American woman to do it at the Winter Games. She rallied in the final heat on Feb. 16 and dropped to her knees in tears. Kaillie Humphries Armbruster took bronze for the United States. Meyers Taylor already owned five Olympic medals, but she had never won gold. Her sixth medal ties Bonnie Blair for the most by a U.S. woman at the Winter Games.
GOLD: Jordan Stolz, speedskating, men’s 500 meters

Jordan Stolz won his second speedskating gold medal of the Milan Cortina Olympics by finishing first in the 500 meters in an Olympic-record time on Feb. 14. The 21-year-old from Wisconsin was coming off a victory in the 1,000, the first of his four individual events in Milan. The men’s record for most speedskating titles at one Olympics is the five by Eric Heiden in 1980 in Lake Placid, N.Y. Stolz beat 500 world champion Jenning de Boo of the Netherlands, who took the silver.
SILVER AND BRONZE: Jaelin Kauf and Elizabeth Lemley, freestyle skiing, women’s dual moguls

Skiing through a heavy snowstorm, American Jaelin Kauf captured her third Olympic silver medal and second of these Games, and teammate Elizabeth Lemley added bronze to go with the gold she won earlier in the week. They each won their second medals in four days despite falling in their semifinal rounds. Australia’s Jakara Anthony took the gold.
SILVER: Chloe Kim, snowboarding, women’s halfpipe

Chloe Kim fell short in her bid to become the first Olympic snowboarder to win three consecutive gold medals, finishing second to Choi Gaon of South Korea in the women’s halfpipe on Feb. 12. Choi, 17, bounced back from an ugly crash to jump into the lead with a score of 90.25 on her final run. Kim had one more shot to get back on top, but the 25-year-old American wiped out on her last of three runs to settle for silver.
BRONZE: Jessie Diggins, cross-country skiing, women’s 10-km freestyle

Jessie Diggins battled through bruised ribs suffered in the opening race to claim bronze on Feb. 12 in the women’s 10‑kilometer interval start, a race dominated by Sweden’s Frida Karlsson as she won her second gold medal. The 34-year-old Diggins, racing in her final season, collapsed to the ground, shouting in pain after finishing the freestyle race and adding to her gold, silver and bronze career medal tally.
SILVER: Madison Chock and Evan Bates, figure skating, mixed ice dance

In a controversial judging decision, France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron answered a season-best free dance by the dominant American duo of Madison Chock and Evan Bates with a season best of their own on Feb. 11, giving them 225.82 points and the top step of the podium. Chock and Bates finished with 224.39 and a bittersweet silver medal after having lost just four times in the four years since they finished fourth at the Beijing Games. Cizeron made several mistakes while Chock and Bates were nearly perfect. Yet the French judge favored the French skaters by nearly eight points in the free dance, while five of the nine judges favored the American team.
GOLD: Jordan Stolz, speedskating, men’s 1,000 meters

Wisconsin native Jordan Stolz, 21, will hope to add to his collection of trophies as he entered three more events in Milan. In winning the 1,000 meters in 1 minute, 6.28 seconds on Feb. 11, Stolz didn’t threaten his world record of 1:05.37 but did better the Olympic standard of 1:07.18 that had stood since 2002 — before Stolz was born.
GOLD AND SILVER: Elizabeth Lemley and Jaelin Kauf, freestyle skiing, women’s moguls

Elizabeth Lemley, 20 — nicknamed “Lizard” by her teammates — landed an unbeatable run to lead a 1-2 finish for the red, white and blue in the women’s moguls on Feb. 11. Lemley topped the eight-skier final with a score of 82.30 points, right in front of countrywoman Jaelin Kauf, who successfully defended her silver medal from Beijing with a score of 80.77. Perrine Laffont of France, the 2018 champion, took bronze.
SILVER: Ryan Cochran-Siegle, Alpine skiing, men’s super-G

Ryan Cochran-Siegle’s latest silver medal was inspired by his mother and powered by maple syrup. The 33-year-old Vermont captured his second straight Olympic super-G silver on Feb. 11 when he finished 0.13 seconds behind winner Franjo von Allmen of Switzerland. Before the race, a little fuel of maple syrup — which, like ski racing, has become the family business (Cochran’s Slopeside Syrup). In the stands to cheer him on was his mother, Barbara Cochran, who won Olympic gold in the slalom at the 1972 Sapporo Games.
SILVER: Cory Thiesse and Korey Dropkin, curling, mixed doubles

Swedish siblings Isabella and Rasmus Wranå took the gold medal with a 6-5 win on Feb. 10, but the American pair of Cory Thiesse and Korey Dropkin made history as the first U.S. team to medal in Olympic mixed doubles, and Thiesse is the first American woman to medal in Olympic curling.
SILVER: Ben Ogden, cross-country skiing, men’s sprint classic

Ben Ogden finished 0.8 seconds behind the defending gold medalist, Norwegian cross-country ski star Johannes Høsflot Klæbo, in the men’s sprint on Feb. 10.
SILVER: Alex Hall, freestyle skiing, men’s slopestyle

Alex Hall’s silver medal in men’s freeski slopestyle on Feb. 10 goes with the gold he won four years ago in Beijing, even though he said everything he tried this time was more difficult. Visibility on the mountain created challenging conditions for all the skiers.
BRONZE: Jacqueline Wiles and Paula Moltzan, Alpine skiing, women’s team combined

The U.S. pair of Jaqueline Wiles (downhill) and Paula Moltzan (slalom) took bronze in the women’s team combined on Feb. 10, beating out the other American team of Mikaela Shiffrin and Breezy Johnson by 0.06 for the podium.
BRONZE: Ashley Farquharson, luge, women’s singles

Ashley Farquharson, who started sliding as an after-school activity when she was a little kid in Park City, Utah, won the bronze medal in women’s singles on Feb. 10, representing a seventh Olympic medal for USA Luge.
GOLD: Team figure skating

Ilia Malinin beat Japanese rival Shun Sato in a head-to-head showdown at the Milan Cortina Olympics on Feb. 8, helping the U.S. defend its team figure skating gold medal by breaking a deadlock with Japan in the final session of the competition.
GOLD: Breezy Johnson, Alpine skiing, women’s downhill

Ski racer Breezy Johnson won the Olympic downhill on Feb. 8 with a hard-charging run on a day marred by teammate Lindsey Vonn’s crash that saw her being taken off the mountain in a helicopter. The 30-year-old Johnson joins Vonn, 41, as the only American women to win the Olympic downhill.
Associated Press contributed.




