Oriol Cardona Coll (SPA) etched his name in Olympic history as he became the first man to ever win gold in a ski mountaineering event at the Winter Olympics. In the process, he snapped Spain's 54-year gold medal drought in Winter Games competition.

Standing beside Cardona Coll on the podium was Nikita Filippov, a Russian man who's competing as an Individual Neutral Athlete. He claimed silver. 

Rounding out the top three, two-time world champion Thibault Anselmet (FRA) secured bronze.

A two-time world champion and number one ranked athlete in the sprint during the 2024-25 season, Cardona Coll was a medal favorite heading into the event. He stormed out in front early, leading the six-racer pack in the first uphill skiing portion.

Arno Lietha and Jon Kistler usurped the Spaniard's position by the time they reached the diamond section. Kistler, who according to the broadcast, slept in a hyperbaric tent at college to get acclimated to the higher Bormio altitude looked to be in control until the boot pack transition.

The 23-year-old Swiss star had trouble getting his skis into his pack, which opened the door back up for Cardona Coll. He flew up the stairs, while his adversaries Lietha and Filippov stumbled. 

Once he reached the top of the steps, Cardona Coll deployed his skis quickly and hurried up to the course's summit. He put an exclamation point on his stellar transition performance, ripping the skins off the bottom of his skis and traversing downhill.

When he crossed the finish line, he threw his arms in the air, overjoyed at his historic feat.

Ski mountaineering returns on Saturday when Americans Anna Gibson and Cam Smith team up to compete in the mixed relay event. The action starts at 7:30 a.m. ET and will stream live on Peacock and NBCOlympics.com.

Top-6 finishers in men's sprint

1 Oriol Cardona Coll (ESP)
2 Nikita Filippov (AIN)
3 Thibault Anselmet (FRA)
4 Arno Lietha (SUI)
5 Ot Ferrer Martinez (ESP)
6 Jon Kistler (SUI)

 

Semfinals

Semifinal 1

Jon Kistler threw down an impressive semifinal performance, posting the fastest time of his heat (2:34.93). Kistler and Oriol Cardona Coll remained relatively even for the duration of the race, but the former separated himself when it came to the transitions.

Kistler blazed out of the first — which involved removing his skis and looping them into his backpack — while Cardona Coll (usually an expert at that facet) struggled.

The mishap proved to be the difference, as Kistler rode the advantage to the win. Cardona Coll did post the second fastest time (+1.17), clinching his spot in the final. 

Two-time world champion Thibault Anselmet placed third and finished as one of the semifinal’s lucky losers.

Semifinal 1

Athlete Country
Bu Luer CHN
Thibault Anselmet FRA
Oriol Cardona Coll ESP
Jon Kistler SUI
Hans-Inge Klette NOR
Phillip Bellingham AUS

Semifinal 2

Arno Lietha crossed the finish line before anyone else in the pair of men’s semifinal sprint races (2:33.79) and earned his spot in the final. It was a wire-to-wire victory for the second ranked SkiMo sprinter in the world, although Ot Ferrer Martinez kept pace throughout.

Even so, it was Nikita Filippov that made a last-30 second push to overtake Martinez and make it down the slalom downhill just behind Lietha (+0.74).

Martinez wound up clinching a finals berth as a lucky loser (+3.48), joining Lietha and Filippov. The trio will contest for medals later this morning.

American Cameron Smith finished 6th in this semifinal (+16.95), an unsurprising result given that he’s more of a long-distance competitor. He’ll return to Stelvio on Saturday for the mixed relay, along with his partner Anna Gibson.

The semifinals will be contested in two groups:

Semifinal 2

Athlete Country
Maximilien Drion du Chapois BEL
Ot Ferrer Martinez ESP
Arno Lietha SUI
Nikita Filippov AIN
Pablo Giner Dalmasso FRA
Cameron Smith USA

Heats

Heat 1

Multi-time SkiMo sprint world champion Oriol Cardona Coll (ESP) crossed the finish line first in his six-athlete pack with a time of 2:37.96. His mark also wound up leading the entire 18-person field across the three heats.

Ot Ferrer Martinez (ESP), the fourth ranked sprint SkiMo'er in the world, placed 2nd (+3.36), joining his compatriot Coll in the semifinals.

The French made their presence felt too, as Pablo Giner Dalmasso rounded out the top three (+4.41). He qualified for the semifinals, and so did lucky loser Luer Bu of China. The 21-year-old recorded the fourth-best time (+5.93) and advanced because he was one of the three fastest athletes in the three heats who did not automatically qualify for the semifinals.

Heat 2

Jon Kistler (SUI), the No. 1-ranked male sprinter in the world, paced his heat with a stellar time of 2.38.36 and qualified for the semifinals.

Joining Kistler in the semis was Russian Nikita Filippov, who's competing as an Individual Neutral Athlete (+1.48).

Maximilien Drion du Chapois (BEL), a vertical event specialist, snatched the third qualification spot (+4.04).

Two losers were lucky in the second heat. Even though they finished outside of the top three, American Cam Smith (+9.23) and Australian Phillip Bellingham (+10.03) advanced to the semifinals due to their strong times.

Heat 3

The second-ranked SkiMo sprinter in the world Amo Lietha (SUI) posted the quickest Heat 3 time of 2:43.23.

Thibault Anselmet (FRA), a two-time world champion and a medal favorite in Saturday's mixed relay, came in 2nd (+3.75).

The third and final man to advance to the semifinals from Heat 3 was Hans-Inge Klette of Germany (+4.96).