Norway secured a record 18 gold medals at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, with 17 coming from skiing disciplines, led by Johannes Klebo's unprecedented six golds in cross-country events. Amid the triumphs, suspicions arose over the use of banned fluorinated waxes by Norwegian athletes, prompting protests from other teams. The Games also featured historic moments, including the debut women's 50km classic race and a viral dog interruption.
The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics highlighted Norway's skiing hegemony, as the nation claimed 18 gold medals overall, predominantly in skiing. Johannes Klebo became the first athlete to win all six men's cross-country events at a single Winter Games, bringing his career total to 11 Olympic golds. "It's hard to find the words. It's unbelievable," Klebo said after his final event. Other Norwegian standouts included Jens Oftebro with three golds in Nordic combined, making him the second four-time Olympic champion in the discipline, and biathletes Johan-Olav Botn and Johannes Dale-Shevdal with two golds. The women's cross-country relay team also secured gold, while Anna Odine Strøm won in ski jumping and Maren Kirkeide in biathlon sprint. Speed skater Sander Eitrem added the sole non-skiing gold in the 5,000 meters.
Controversy emerged during the men's 50km classic marathon, where Klebo, Martin Lövström Nyenget and Emil Iversen completed the race without changing skis, unlike competitors, amid warm conditions that typically wear down ointments. This raised suspicions of banned fluorinated compounds, prohibited by the International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) since the 2023/24 season due to environmental concerns. Past incidents involved Norway and Sweden using high-fluorine C8 compounds, leading to public censures but no sanctions. Protests from Finland, Sweden, and Germany cited Norwegian use of an automated ointment applicator and suspicious "Hand sanitizer" bottles, with minimal FIS response. Another protest over pre-race ski testing resulted in a minor sanction: removal of one Norwegian delegation member.
The United States men's team achieved its best Olympic result in 50 years with two silvers, including Ben Ogden's in the classic sprint and a team sprint with Gus Schumacher. "This era started a while ago, but it's cool to prove it at the Olympics," Schumacher noted. Sweden's women nearly swept golds, but Ebba Andersson fell in the relay, leading to silver behind Norway. Andersson won the inaugural women's 50km classic by 2:15 over Heidi Weng. U.S. skier Jessie Diggins earned bronze in the 10km freestyle despite an injury and finished fifth in the 50km. A lighthearted moment came when a wolfhound named Nazgul interrupted the women's team sprint qualifying, going viral.
South Korean skiers Han Da-som and Lee Ii-chin were disqualified for using banned fluoride gel. Retirements of biathlete Johannes Bø at 31 and skier Helene Fossesholm at 24 fueled speculation, linked to past therapeutic use of asthma drugs and growth hormones approved by WADA.