|
Not held in other editions
| Event type

Combined, Team, Women

Date10 February 2026 — 10:30
StatusOlympic
LocationPista Olimpia, Gillardon, Cortina d'Ampezzo
Participants56 from 12 countries
FormatOne downhill and one slalom run, total time determined placement.

The women’s team combined event was contested one day after the men’s team combined event and two days after the women’s downhill, as the second women’s Alpine skiing event held in Cortina. It was a newly introduced event at the Olympics. It was first held at the 2023 World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships and only held at the World Championships in 2025, where it was won by the United States’ Breezy Johnson and Mikaela Shiffrin. The other medals went to Switzerland’s Lara Gut-Behrami and Wendy Holdener (silver) and Austrians Stephanie Venier and Katharina Truppe (bronze).

Rumours before the Games of Lindsey Vonn pairing with Shiffrin as a “Super Team” would not materialize when Vonn crashed in the downhill, sustaining a tibia fracture. Johnson / Shiffrin again formed a team and were the favourites, but the field of medal contenders was wide open with the United States, Italy, Austria all entering more than one strong pair. Also of interest was that downhill silver medalist Emma Aicher of Germany competed in this event in the slalom, partnered with Kira Weidle-Winkelmann.

The downhill phase saw Johnson in the lead with Ariane Rädler (AUT) only 6/100ths of a second behind, followed by Laura Pirovano (ITA), Jackie Wiles (USA), and Conny Hütter (AUT). Weidle-Winkelmann, in sixth place, put Aicher in good position for her slalom run. Slovakian Katarína Šrobová finished last in the downhill, but that allowed Petra Vlhová to make her comeback after an injury break of more than two years, although Vlhová skied out after about 20 seconds and did not finish.

Before the top six started their slalom run Switzerland’s Wendy Holdener (partnered by Jasmine Flury) was in the lead, but Aicher had a brilliant run with what would be the best slalom time to take the lead more than 8/10ths of a second ahead of Flury / Holdener. Austria’s Katharina Huber bettered the German by 5/100ths of a second after leading by more than 6/10ths after the downhill. Starting last was Shiffrin, who shockingly finished only 15th in the slalom phase, dropping Johnson / Shiffrin off the podium in fourth place.

Rädler / Huber, who called their team “Team 95” according to their year of births, won the first gold medal for Austria at MiCo26. Downhill silver medallist Aicher won silver, this time showing her slalom skills. The United States took bronze with Wiles and Paula Moltzan. The gold team used skis from Head and Völkl, team Germany raced on Rossignol and Head, while the US women both skied on Rossignols.

PosCompetitorsNOCTimeDownhillSlalom
1Austria 1AUT2:21.66– (–)– (–)Gold
DownhillAriane Rädler 1:36.65 (2)– (–)
SlalomKatharina Huber – (–)45.01 (10)
2GermanyGER2:21.71– (–)– (–)Silver
DownhillKira Weidle-Winkelmann 1:37.33 (6)– (–)
SlalomEmma Aicher – (–)44.38 (1)
3United States 2USA2:21.91– (–)– (–)Bronze
DownhillJackie Wiles 1:37.04 (4)– (–)
SlalomPaula Moltzan – (–)44.87 (=4)
4United States 1USA2:21.97– (–)– (–)
DownhillBreezy Johnson 1:36.59 (1)– (–)
SlalomMikaela Shiffrin – (–)45.38 (15)
5Austria 2AUT2:22.27– (–)– (–)
DownhillConny Hütter 1:37.19 (5)– (–)
SlalomKatharina Truppe – (–)45.08 (13)
6Switzerland 2SUI2:22.54– (–)– (–)
DownhillJasmine Flury 1:38.13 (13)– (–)
SlalomWendy Holdener – (–)44.41 (2)
7Austria 3AUT2:22.63– (–)– (–)
DownhillNina Ortlieb 1:37.60 (9)– (–)
SlalomKatharina Gallhuber – (–)45.03 (=11)
8France 2FRA2:22.79– (–)– (–)
DownhillLaura Gauché 1:37.92 (11)– (–)
SlalomMarion Chevrier – (–)44.87 (=4)
9Switzerland 1SUI2:22.90– (–)– (–)
DownhillCorinne Suter 1:38.10 (12)– (–)
SlalomCamille Rast – (–)44.8 (3)
10Italy 2ITA2:22.94– (–)– (–)
DownhillNicol Delago 1:37.75 (10)– (–)
SlalomAnna Trocker – (–)45.19 (14)
11NorwayNOR2:22.98– (–)– (–)
DownhillKajsa Vickhoff Lie 1:37.36 (7)– (–)
SlalomBianca Bakke Westhoff – (–)45.62 (16)
12France 3FRA2:23.69– (–)– (–)
DownhillCamille Cerutti 1:38.69 (17)– (–)
SlalomCaitlin McFarlane – (–)45.00 (9)
13Canada 1CAN2:24.05– (–)– (–)
DownhillValérie Grenier 1:39.10 (19)– (–)
SlalomLaurence St-Germain – (–)44.95 (7)
14Austria 4AUT2:24.17– (–)– (–)
DownhillMirjam Puchner 1:38.18 (14)– (–)
SlalomLisa Hörhager – (–)45.99 (17)
15United States 3USA2:24.90– (–)– (–)
DownhillKeely Cashman 1:39.91 (21)– (–)
SlalomA. J. Hurt – (–)44.99 (8)
16Czechia 1CZE2:26.29– (–)– (–)
DownhillBarbora Nováková 1:41.41 (23)– (–)
SlalomMartina Dubovská – (–)44.88 (6)
17ArgentinaARG2:29.18– (–)– (–)
DownhillNicole Begue 1:44.15 (24)– (–)
SlalomFrancesca Baruzzi – (–)45.03 (=11)
18Czechia 2CZE2:32.16– (–)– (–)
DownhillElisa Negri 1:45.22 (25)– (–)
SlalomAlena Labaštová – (–)46.94 (18)
DNFItaly 1ITA– (–)– (–)
DownhillLaura Pirovano 1:36.86 (3)– (–)
SlalomMartina Peterlini – (–)– (DNF)
DNFFrance 1FRA– (–)– (–)
DownhillRomane Miradoli 1:37.37 (8)– (–)
SlalomMarie Lamure – (–)– (DNF)
DNFSloveniaSLO– (–)– (–)
DownhillIlka Štuhec 1:38.29 (15)– (–)
SlalomAna Bucik Jogan – (–)– (DNF)
DNFSwitzerland 3SUI– (–)– (–)
DownhillJanine Schmitt 1:38.50 (16)– (–)
SlalomMélanie Meillard – (–)– (DNF)
DNFSwitzerland 4SUI– (–)– (–)
DownhillDelia Durrer 1:39.06 (18)– (–)
SlalomEliane Christen – (–)– (DNF)
DNFItaly 3ITA– (–)– (–)
DownhillNadia Delago 1:39.42 (20)– (–)
SlalomGiada D'Antonio – (–)– (DNF)
DNFSlovakiaSVK– (–)– (–)
DownhillKatarína Šrobová 1:46.66 (26)– (–)
SlalomPetra Vlhová – (–)– (DNF)
DNFItaly 4ITA– (–)– (–)
DownhillSofia Goggia – (DNF)– (–)
SlalomLara Della Mea – (–)– (DNS)
DNFUnited States 4USA– (–)– (–)
DownhillIsabella Wright – (DNF)– (–)
SlalomNina O'Brien – (–)– (DNS)
DQCanada 2CAN– (–)– (–)
DownhillCassidy Gray [1:41.15] ([22])– (–)
SlalomAli Nullmeyer – (–)– ([DQ])