2026 Winter Olympics: Women’s Free Skating Finals & Gold Medal Race
The wait is finally over. Tonight, the Milano Ice Skating Arena will witness one of the most closely contested finales in Olympic history. After a breathless Short Program that left the standings separated by the narrowest of margins, the Women’s Single Free Skating event is set to determine who walks away with gold at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
If you haven’t been following the drama in Milan, here is everything you need to know before the first blade hits the ice tonight.
The Leaderboard: A 2.12-Point Game
The Short Program on February 17 was a masterclass in precision, leaving the top three skaters within striking distance of one another. The stakes couldn’t be higher:
| Rank | Skater | Country/Status | Key Storyline |
| 1st | Ami Nakai | Japan | The 17-year-old phenom leading with a Triple Axel. |
| 2nd | Kaori Sakamoto | Japan | The 3-time World Champ seeking the only title she lacks. |
| 3rd | Alysa Liu | USA | The reigning World Champ looking to end a 20-year US drought. |
The Top Contenders to Watch
1. Ami Nakai (Japan): The Technical Prodigy
At just 17, Nakai is the “new era” of figure skating personified. Her Short Program was bolstered by a massive Triple Axel, a high-risk jump that gave her the edge. Tonight, if she lands her technical elements with the same clinical precision, she could become one of the youngest Olympic champions in history.
2. Kaori Sakamoto (Japan): The Golden Veteran
Sakamoto is the sentimental and professional favorite for many. While she doesn’t typically rely on the Triple Axel, her Program Component Scores (PCS)—which reward skating skills, transitions, and performance—are second to none. She skates with a power and flow that makes the ice look twice as fast. For Kaori, tonight is about legacy.
3. Alysa Liu (USA): The Comeback Queen
After a brief retirement and a triumphant return that saw her win the 2025 World Championships, Alysa Liu is the leader of the American “Blade Angels.” Sitting in third, she is well within reach of the gold. Her consistency and newfound artistic maturity make her a formidable threat to the Japanese duo.
4. Adeliia Petrosian (AIN): The Quad Factor
Competing as an Individual Neutral Athlete, Petrosian is the “wild card.” She is rumored to be the only skater in the field planning to attempt quadruple jumps. If she lands them, she could catapult from the middle of the pack straight onto the podium, regardless of the Short Program scores.
The Storylines Defining the Night
- The “Blade Angels” & Celebrity Support: Team USA (Liu, Amber Glenn, and Isabeau Levito) has taken social media by storm. Amber Glenn, skating to Madonna’s “Like a Prayer,” even received a personal “go for gold” video from Madonna herself!
- The Triple Axel vs. Artistry: The judges are facing a classic dilemma. Do they reward the raw technical difficulty of Nakai’s jumps or the exquisite, mature artistry and speed of Sakamoto?
- The New Age Rule: This is the first Winter Olympics under the new rule requiring skaters to be at least 17 years old. The result has been a field that feels more physically resilient and artistically developed than in years past.
Event Details & How to Watch
- Date: Thursday, February 19, 2026
- Time: 19:00 CET (Local Milan Time) / 1:00 PM ET
- Venue: Milano Ice Skating Arena, Milan
- What to look for: The final group of six skaters will take the ice around 21:30 CET. This is where the medals will be decided.
Pro Tip: Keep an eye on the “Second-Half Bonus.” Skaters get a 1.1x multiplier for jumps performed in the latter half of the program. In a race this tight, a late-program Triple-Triple combination could be the difference between gold and silver.