Skip to main content
Bankes and Nightingale win historic snowboard gold for Britain
ICE WORK! GB’s Charlotte Bankes and Huw Nightingale celebrate with their gold medals after winning the Mixed Team Snowboard Cross Big Final at the Livigno Snow Park

CHARLOTTE BANKES and Huw Nightingale won Great Britain’s first ever Olympic gold medal on snow after roaring to victory in the mixed team snowboard cross event in Livigno today.

The duo shrugged off disappointing displays in their respective individual events to muscle their way through two heats of the high-octane relay before Bankes crossed first in the final to make history.

It marked an extraordinary reversal of fortunes for Bankes, a multiple World Cup race winner who partnered Nightingale to the world title in Georgia in 2023, and also led them to a World Cup podium as recently as December.

But hopes were not high after a difficult first week for the British ski and snowboard team, with Bankes issuing a tearful apology only two days ago after a frustrating ninth place finish on the same course.

Today, high in the Italian Alps, she proved unstoppable. In an event in which the women start the second leg at intervals determined by the result of the preceding men’s race, she made up a deficit of over a second on leaders Canada to qualify for the semi-finals in first place.

Then it was time for 24-year-old Nightingale, who has often candidly admitted his relay role is simply to leave Bankes in with a fighting chance, to dramatically transform into a world-beater.

He blazed to second place in the next heat, pipped only by Frenchman Loan Bozzolo, and gifting Bankes the chance to surge home from the front and seal Britain’s place in the four-team final in first place.

Once again, Nightingale rose to the challenge, delivering a superb run to leave Bankes with an almost inconsequential deficit behind leaders France.

A fall by Adam Lambert left the much-fancied Australians almost out of the running, and effectively guaranteed the British pair a medal provided Bankes kept on her feet.

But the 30-year-old had other ideas, surging past leader Lea Casta midway down the winding course and holding off a determined push by Italy’s Michaela Moioli to seal a brilliant, historic and thoroughly redemptive gold.

Bankes said: “I’m happy with my riding all day. I found it again, which I’ve been struggling with for the last week here.

“At last I found some speed and made it count. I really used my carving, the drafting, made the right choices and that’s where it pays off.”

Bankes and Nightingale are the fourth British athletes to win Olympic medals on snow, building on the bronze medals previously won by Jenny Jones in 2014, and both Billy Morgan and Izzy Atkin in 2018.

Nightingale admitted he was concerned he might be implicated in Lambert’s fall, but was relieved to see he had not been involved.

He said: “It’s unbelievable. GB on a whole is doing great on the snowboard side. We can thank the National Lottery for that. We want to keep it going and inspire little kids to do it as well, and maybe one day they can get a gold medal.

“I got a bit scared that I had taken Lambert out. I saw on the replay that it wasn’t me. That was a big relief off my chest. Everybody’s on such a high level, and it’s just an enjoyable race to do.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
08-08-2023 of CEO of PFA Maheta Molango talking during a panel
Men’s Football / 26 September 2025
26 September 2025

Tragic loss of young footballer sparks fresh scrutiny of ground safety standards

England's Amy Cokayne celebrates scoring a try during the Women's Rugby World Cup 2025 semi-final match at Ashton Gate, Bristol. Picture date: Saturday September 20, 2025
Women’s Rugby Union / 26 September 2025
26 September 2025
Daniel Evans (right) after his defeat to Novak Djokovic on day four of the 2025 Wimbledon Championships at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club, London. Picture date: Thursday July 3, 2025
Men’s Tennis / 3 July 2025
3 July 2025