2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics Points Table: Latest rankings after Wednesday’s action

A fresh look at the updated medal standings from the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics after Wednesday’s action, as the race for podium dominance heats up.

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2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics Points Table: Latest rankings after Wednesday’s action

2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics Points Table (via Getty)

Story Highlights:

Norway and Italy remain locked in a fierce battle at the top of the medal table.

Team USA stays within striking distance as multiple nations tighten the race in the top 10.

Another thrilling day of competition has concluded at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, and the medal table is beginning to take definitive shape. With athletes from more than 90 nations competing across 116 events over 16 days, the race for supremacy is intensifying as the Games move deeper into their schedule.

Here’s a comprehensive look at the updated medal standings following Wednesday’s action.

Norway and Italy set the pace

At the top of the standings, Norway and Italy are locked together with 13 total medals each. Norway leads the table courtesy of its seven gold medals, along with two silver and four bronze finishes. Italy, meanwhile, has capitalized on home support to secure four gold, two silver, and an impressive seven bronze medals.

The United States remains firmly in contention, sitting third with 12 total medals. Team USA has captured four golds, six silvers, and two bronzes, keeping pressure on the leaders as momentum builds heading into the next wave of medal events.

Tight battle across the top 10

Germany, Austria, and Japan are tied with eight medals apiece, though Germany’s three gold medals give it the edge in fourth place. Switzerland and France follow closely with seven medals each, while Sweden rounds out the top nine with six podium finishes.

Canada currently sits in 10th place with four medals, still searching for its first gold of the Games.

Full medal standings after Wednesday (Feb. 11)

1. Norway: 13 Total (7 Gold, 2 Silver, 4 Bronze)

2. Italy: 13 Total (4 Gold, 2 Silver, 7 Bronze)

3. United States: 12 Total (4 Gold, 6 Silver, 2 Bronze)

4. Germany: 8 Total (3 Gold, 3 Silver, 2 Bronze)

5. Austria: 8 Total (2 Gold, 5 Silver, 1 Bronze)

6. Japan: 8 Total (2 Gold, 2 Silver, 4 Bronze)

7. Switzerland: 7 Total (4 Gold, 1 Silver, 2 Bronze)

8. France: 7 Total (3 Gold, 3 Silver, 1 Bronze)

9. Sweden: 6 Total (3 Gold, 2 Silver, 1 Bronze)

10. Canada: 4 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 3 Bronze)

11. Netherlands: 3 Total (1 Gold, 2 Silver, 0 Bronze)

12. China: 3 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 2 Bronze)

13. Czech Republic: 2 Total (1 Gold, 1 Silver, 0 Bronze)

14. Slovenia: 2 Total (1 Gold, 1 Silver, 0 Bronze)

15. New Zealand: 2 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 1 Bronze)

16. South Korea: 2 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 1 Bronze)

17. Bulgaria: 2 Total (0 Gold, 0 Silver, 2 Bronze)

18. Latvia: 1 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 0 Bronze)

19. Poland: 1 Total (0 Gold, 1 Silver, 0 Bronze)

20. Belgium: 1 Total (0 Gold, 0 Silver, 1 Bronze)

21. Finland: 1 Total (0 Gold, 0 Silver, 1 Bronze)

With multiple medal events still ahead, the standings remain fluid. As the world’s best winter athletes continue to push limits in Italy, every event could reshape the leaderboard.

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