MikaĂ«l Kingsbury just added a new crown to his career. The Canadian moguls icon won the first-ever Olympic gold in menâs dual moguls at Milano Cortina 2026, closing what he described as his final Olympic run with the kind of signature control and speed that earned him the âKing of Mogulsâ nickname.
Why this gold matters: Kingsburyâs win didnât just deliver Canadaâs breakthrough moment on the medal table â it pushed him into a milestone that sets him apart from every freestyle skier before him. With five Olympic medals now on his rĂ©sumĂ©, he becomes the first freestyle skier to reach that total, pairing Sundayâs gold with a silver earlier in these Games and a medal trail that spans four Olympics.
Dual moguls is built for athletes who thrive under pressure: two skiers drop side-by-side, racing a mirrored field of bumps while trying to stay clean, fast, and technically sharp. Kingsbury embraced the format, describing how his plan was simple â explode out of the gate, land a strong Cork 1080, and keep absorbing fast while maintaining a tight line.
The day unfolded exactly the way champions like it: calm preparation, tidy execution, and incremental improvement with each round as conditions stayed quick and bright. Kingsbury said he felt unusually settled heading in, and once he started stacking runs, the rhythm took over.
Round-by-round, the path opened. In the quarterfinal, South Koreaâs Jung Daeyoon was unable to complete his run. In the semifinal, Japanâs Takuya Shimakawa ran into trouble through the turns, leaving Kingsbury to ski within his âpocketâ and build momentum toward the final.
That set up the matchup many expected: Kingsbury versus Japanâs Ikuma Horishima, a rival he openly calls one of the very best in the world right now. Kingsbury framed it as the ideal scenario â to become the first Olympic champion in this new event, against the toughest opposition available.
The gold-medal final ended in a flash. Horishima was thrown off line midway down the course and didnât attempt his second jump, allowing Kingsbury to celebrate before the judgesâ scores even arrived. In a discipline where timing, lane discipline, and composure are everything, the Canadian was the one who made it to the bottom clean â as heâs done for years.
A âdad podiumâ made the moment even sweeter. Kingsbury celebrated alongside Horishima and Australiaâs Matt Graham, with the trio sharing a commemorative family photo that captured the unusual warmth of a brutally competitive event. For Kingsbury â who has spoken about what it means to ski at the Olympics with his son watching â it landed as a full-circle finale.
Put the career in numbers and it looks unreal. Kingsburyâs Olympic medal arc now reads: silver (Sochi 2014), gold (PyeongChang 2018), silver (Beijing 2022), plus silver and gold at Milano Cortina 2026. And beyond the Games, the sport still orbits his rĂ©sumĂ© â including a record tally highlighted by 100 World Cup victories, a figure many in moguls consider almost untouchable.
He also delivered a timely spark for Team Canada at these Games, having admitted he was tracking the medal table and hoping a teammate would strike gold first. In the end, it was the veteran â steady under a blue Italian sky â who supplied the breakthrough.
For fans, the headline is straightforward: the new event got its first champion, and the most decorated moguls skier of his generation wrote the name. For the sport, the implication is bigger â dual moguls has an Olympic benchmark now, and Kingsburyâs final run set it.
Read the full Team Canada recap via this official write-up from Olympic.ca.
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