Lucas Pinheiro Braathen

Brazilian alpine skier (born 2000) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lucas Pinheiro Braathen (/ˈluːkəs piˈɲeɾu brah-ten/ , born 19 April 2000) is a Norwegian and Brazilian alpine ski racer who specializes in the technical events of slalom and giant slalom. He is the men's giant slalom champion at the 2026 Winter Olympics, becoming the first Brazilian and South American in history to win a medal at the Winter Olympics, as well as the first athlete representing any tropical nation to win a Winter Olympic medal.[1][2]

Born (2000-04-19) 19 April 2000 (age 26)
Oslo, Norway
OccupationAlpine skier
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Country Brazil (since 2024)
 Norway (2018–2023)
Quick facts Personal information, Born ...
Lucas Pinheiro Braathen
Pinheiro Braathen in 2026 with his gold medal won at the 2026 Winter Olympic Games
Personal information
Born (2000-04-19) 19 April 2000 (age 26)
Oslo, Norway
OccupationAlpine skier
Height1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Sport
Country Brazil (since 2024)
 Norway (2018–2023)
Skiing career
DisciplinesSlalom, giant slalom
ClubBærums Skiklub
World Cup debut8 December 2018 (age 18)
Olympics
Teams2 – (2022, 2026)
Medals1 (1 gold)
World Championships
Teams2 – (2023, 2025)
Medals0
World Cup
Seasons7 – (20192023, 2025-2026)
Wins8 – (4 SL, 4 GS)
Podiums25 – (14 SL, 11 GS)
Overall titles0 – (2nd in 2026)
Discipline titles2 – (GS2026; SL2023)
Medal record
Men's alpine skiing
Representing  Brazil
World Cup race podiums
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
Slalom 1 2 3
Giant slalom 2 5 0
Total 3 7 3
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place2026 Milano CortinaGiant slalom
Representing  Norway
World Cup race podiums
Event 1st 2nd 3rd
Slalom 3 2 3
Giant slalom 2 2 0
Total 5 4 3
Junior World Championships
Silver medal – second place2018 DavosTeam
Silver medal – second place2019 Val di FassaSuper-G
Bronze medal – third place2019 Val di FassaAlpine Combined
Close

Until his retirement from World Cup racing in October 2023, he represented Norway in international events. In March 2024, Pinheiro Braathen announced that he would return to the alpine skiing circuit, representing Brazil instead.

Early life

Pinheiro Braathen was born in Oslo to a Norwegian father and a Brazilian mother on 19 April 2000.[3][4][5] His parents divorced when he was three years old and he went to Brazil with his mother to live in the city of Campinas. Later in his childhood, he moved back to Norway to live with his father while regularly visiting Brazil.[3][6] He grew up speaking Norwegian and Portuguese.[7]

Pinheiro Braathen first skied when he was three or four years old, but he did not start skiing again until he was nine years old.[8] Braathen also played football as a child, though he preferred skiing as it is an individual sport.[9]

Career

From Hokksund, Pinheiro Braathen raced for Norwegian club Bærums SK.[10] At the Junior World Championships in 2019, he finished fourth and eleventh, followed by a silver medal in super-G, and a bronze medal in the combined event. He made his World Cup debut in December 2018 in Val d'Isere, and collected his first points (five) with a 26th-place finish.[11]

Pinheiro Braathen in December 2022 at Canalone Miramonti, Madonna di Campiglio

Pinheiro Braathen recorded his first victory (and podium) in October 2020 at the opener of the 2020–21 season, a giant slalom in Sölden. In 2022, he won his first slalom at the Lauberhorn race in Wengen, going from 29th place after the first run to first place after the second run, the largest jump to victory at that time.[12]

Pinheiro Braathen with the Small Crystal Globe of the 2023 Men's Slalom

Pinheiro Braathen announced his retirement from World Cup racing on 27 October 2023, a day before the new season's opening event in Sölden.[13] However, on 7 March 2024, he announced his return to alpine ski racing as a competitor for Brazil instead of Norway.[14][15] On 27 October 2024, exactly a year after he had announced his retirement, he returned at the World Cup giant slalom season opener in Sölden, narrowly finishing in 4th place behind three of his former teammates from Norway and scoring the first ever world cup points for Brazil in alpine skiing.

On 6 February 2026, Pinheiro Braathen participated in the opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics as the flag bearer of Brazil, alongside Nicole Silveira.[16][17] On 14 February, Braathen arrived in the Milano Cortina 2026 as the second in the slalom, giant slalom and overall rankings after a successful 2025–26 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, behind only skiing superstar Swiss Marco Odermatt. In the giant slalom Braathen put himself in pole position for gold with a leading time of 1:13.92 in the first run, almost a full second faster than second-place Odermatt. Braathen's second run saw him maintain his lead to secure the gold medal in a combined time of 2:25.00, with Odermatt (2:25.58) and Loïc Meillard (2:26.17) of Switzerland taking silver and bronze, respectively.

Braathen's historic victory made him the first Latin American and Brazilian, as well as the first athlete from any tropical nation, to win a medal in the Winter Olympics.[18]

After the Olympics, Pinheiro Braathen competed in the penultimate World Cup event of the season in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia. He topped the field in the giant slalom, winning a title in that discipline for the first time while representing Brazil.[19] On the next day he attained another podium with a third-place finish in the slalom.[20]

Next, Pinheiro Braathen competed in the last World Cup event of the season in Lillehammer, Norway. He topped the field in the giant slalom with a total time of 2:20.65, winning the title in that discipline and securing that season's crystal globe on the giant slalom, the first of his career and the first ever for a Brazilian.[21]

Personal life

Pinheiro Braathen speaks Norwegian, Portuguese, English, and German fluently, is a fan of Brazilian musical genres such as bossa nova, and is a supporter of São Paulo Futebol Clube he currently has a home base established inside of Milan Italy, and he says "I owe it all to the winter Olympics for helping me find this new home.[22] Part of his family resides in Paulínia, northwest of the state of São Paulo, while his mother lives in New Zealand.[23]

In June 2025, he made his romantic relationship with Brazilian actress Isadora Cruz public.[24][25]

Lucas Pinheiro Braathen with Isadora Cruz in 2026

World Cup results

Season titles

  • 2 titles – (1 SL, 1 GS)
Season
Discipline
2023 Slalom
2026 Giant slalom

Season standings

Season
Age Overall Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-G Downhill Combined Parallel
20191814751N/a
20201927241510
2021204315N/a18
202221944
20232241739N/a
202423temporary retirement
202524665
202625231

Race podiums

  • 8 wins – (4 SL, 4 GS)
  • 25 podiums – (14 SL, 11 GS), 60 top tens
Season
Date Location Discipline Place
2021 18 October 2020 Austria Sölden, Austria Giant slalom 1st
2022 16 January 2022  Switzerland  Wengen, Switzerland Slalom 1st
22 January 2022 Austria Kitzbühel, Austria Slalom 2nd
12 March 2022 Slovenia Kranjska Gora, Slovenia Giant slalom 2nd
19 March 2022 France Courchevel, France Giant slalom 2nd
2023 11 December 2022 France Val d'Isère, France Slalom 1st
18 December 2022 Italy Alta Badia, Italy Giant slalom 1st
8 January 2023  Switzerland  Adelboden, Switzerland Slalom 1st
15 January 2023  Switzerland  Wengen, Switzerland Slalom 3rd
22 January 2023 Austria Kitzbühel, Austria Slalom 3rd
24 January 2023 Austria Schladming, Austria Slalom 3rd
19 March 2023 Andorra Soldeu, Andorra Slalom 2nd
2025 9 December 2024 United States Beaver Creek, United States Giant slalom 2nd
11 January 2025  Switzerland  Adelboden, Switzerland Slalom 2nd
26 January 2025 Austria Kitzbühel, Austria Slalom 3rd
1 March 2025 Slovenia Kranjska Gora, Slovenia Giant slalom 2nd
16 March 2025 Norway Hafjell, Norway Slalom 3rd
2026 16 November 2025 Finland Levi, Finland Slalom 1st
21 December 2025 Italy Alta Badia, Italy Giant slalom 2nd
10 January 2026  Switzerland  Adelboden, Switzerland Giant slalom 2nd
18 January 2026  Switzerland  Wengen, Switzerland Slalom 2nd
27 January 2026 Austria Schladming, Austria Giant slalom 2nd
7 March 2026 Slovenia Kranjska Gora, Slovenia Giant slalom 1st
8 March 2026 Slalom 3rd
24 March 2026 Norway Hafjell, Norway Giant slalom 1st

World Championship results

Year
Age Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-G Downhill Combined Team
combined
Parallel Team
 event 
Representing Norway Norway
2023227N/a
Representing Brazil Brazil
2025241314N/aN/a

Olympic results

Year
Age Slalom Giant
slalom
Super-G Downhill Combined Team
combined
Team
 event 
Representing Norway Norway
202221DNF1DNF2N/a
Representing Brazil Brazil
202625DNF11N/aN/a

References

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