On a day filled with high drama and raw emotion at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, Italy’s Sofia Goggia delivered a performance that will be remembered forever: a hard-fought bronze medal in the women’s downhill on the iconic Tofane slope in Cortina d’Ampezzo—her home mountain, her heart’s true home.
Racing in front of a roaring home crowd that had waited years for this moment, Goggia attacked the course with her trademark fearless aggression. Starting with bib 15 after an interruption caused by Lindsey Vonn’s shocking crash, she built early speed, leading at the first intermediate by 0.18 seconds over eventual gold medalist Breezy Johnson (USA). A slight line error in the steep Duca d’Aosta section cost her time, but Goggia fought back fiercely through the lower flats, crossing the finish in 1:36.69—0.59 seconds behind Johnson’s winning 1:36.10 and just enough to hold off the chasing pack for bronze.
Germany’s Emma Aicher took silver by a razor-thin 0.04 seconds over Johnson, but for the Italian fans packed along the barriers and cheering from every balcony in Cortina, this was Goggia’s day. The 33-year-old Bergamo native—who lit the Olympic cauldron in Cortina during the opening ceremony and helped bring these Games to Italy—now stands alone in history as the first athlete ever to win three consecutive Olympic medals in downhill: gold in PyeongChang 2018, silver in Beijing 2022, and bronze on home snow in 2026. No one in alpine skiing—male or female—has ever achieved this in the same discipline.
“This is where my heart belongs,” Goggia said afterward, tears mixing with the joy as the tricolor flags waved wildly and the crowd chanted her name. The bronze completed her full Olympic downhill podium set, a testament to her unbreakable resilience through injuries, crashes, and the relentless pressure of being Italy’s speed queen. She’s won four World Cup downhills on these very Tofane slopes, and today she added the ultimate home triumph.
The race was overshadowed by Vonn’s violent fall just seconds in—yet even in defeat, the sport’s legends showed mutual respect, with Goggia later expressing concern for her American rival. But when the dust settled and the podium ceremony began, it was Goggia’s moment: beaming in the Italian blue suit, bronze around her neck, surrounded by an adoring nation.
From lighting the flame to claiming history on home snow, Sofia Goggia’s journey at Milano Cortina 2026 is the stuff of legend. There truly is no one like her.
