The women’s skeleton competition at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina is shaping up to be one of the most exciting battles of the Games. As the sliding season wraps up and the world’s top sliders converge on the Cortina track this week, the race for Olympic gold looks tight at the top. Belgium’s Kim Meylemans clinched the overall IBSF World Cup title for the first time in her nation’s history, with Germany’s Jacqueline Pfeifer challenging fiercely throughout. Will one of those sliders win gold, or will someone else supplant them at the top? Continue reading to get my Olympic women’s skeleton prediction from Italy.
Olympic Women’s Skeleton Odds
- Jacqueline Pfeifer (GER): +100
- Janine Flock (AUT): +400
- Kim Meylemans (BEL): +450
- Tabitha Stoecker (GBR): +450
- Kimberley Bos (NED): +1000
- Hannah Neise (GER): +1200
- Amelia Coltman (GBR): +1800
- Freya Tarbit (GBR): +2000
- Valentina Margaglio (ITA): +3300
- Hallie Clarke (CAN): +4000
- Anna Fernstaedt (CZE): +4000
- Nicole Roche Silveira (BRA): +4000
- Dan Zhao (CHN): +5000
- Kelly Curtis (USA): +5000
- Alessandra Fumagalli (ITA): +6600
Olympic Women’s Skeleton Major Storylines
One of the big storylines heading into this event is the season-long duel between Kim Meylemans and Jacqueline Pfeifer. Meylemans secured the overall World Cup crystal globe with consistent podiums across seven races, demonstrating extraordinary steadiness and peak form at key tracks, including Cortina d’Ampezzo’s Olympic run. Pfeifer, the veteran German slider with multiple crystal globes in her trophy cabinet, continued to score wins and showed sharp form on the Olympic track during the season opener, even setting a local track record, underscoring her threat on the biggest stage.
Janine Flock, the defending World Cup champion from Austria, also looms as a strong contender with multiple World Cup victories this season, including events where ice conditions were challenging and start times and precision were decisive factors. Her recent win at Winterberg reaffirmed her ability to rise to the occasion. Meanwhile, Germany’s Hannah Neise, though not as consistent as Pfeifer or Meylemans this season, has shown flashes of brilliance that could place her on the podium if conditions favour a slider with Olympic experience.
Home-ice advantage will be a factor for Italy’s Valentina Margaglio, who posted one of her best results in years in the World Cup season and will relish the support of the Italian crowd. The sliding track knowledge and small details in the line choices could make a difference for sliders who have trained extensively on the Olympic profile during the World Cup season.
Olympic Women’s Skeleton Medal Contenders
- Kim Meylemans (BEL) – World Cup overall champion and most consistent performer across seven races, combining steady starts with excellent run-to-run speed.
- Jacqueline Pfeifer (GER) – A three-time World Cup overall winner with deep experience and strong results on the Olympic track, Pfeifer will be near the top of the standings after the first heat.
- Janine Flock (AUT) – Two blistering wins this season show she can handle pressure and win outright, particularly if weather shifts and ice conditions change mid-competition.
- Hannah Neise (GER) – Threatens podiums when the ice gets tricky and can exploit her Olympic experience to gain crucial hundredths over rivals.
Olympic Women’s Skeleton Betting Prediction
Pick:
Confidence: 4 out of 5


