Snowboarder Lee Chae-woon Finishes Sixth in Olympic Halfpipe Final

By PARK, JONG-HO Posted : February 14, 2026, 06:33 Updated : February 14, 2026, 06:33
Lee Chae-woon speaks with reporters after the final.
Lee Chae-woon speaks with reporters after the final. [Photo by Yonhap]

South Korea’s top men’s snowboard halfpipe rider, Lee Chae-woon of Kyung Hee University, finished sixth in the Olympic final and said he will work harder “to stand on the highest spot on the podium.”

Lee scored 87.5 points in the men’s snowboard halfpipe final at Livigno Snow Park in Italy at the 2026 Milan-Cortina d’Ampezzo Winter Olympics, held Saturday in Korea.

The 2023 world champion was aiming for a medal in his second Olympics but came up short. He made consecutive mistakes in his first and second runs and could not complete his routines. In his third run, he landed the triple cork 1620 he had prepared for the Olympics and delivered a clean, high-quality performance. The triple cork 1620 — a four-and-a-half-rotation trick — was reported to be the first time Lee has landed it in competition.

Lee said he expected a higher score. “I thought it would be around 92 or 92.5,” he told reporters. “I think I came up short.” He added, “I’m proud of myself just for landing the first triple cork 1620. It’s disappointing, but I feel relieved,” and said that after the landing, “I first thought I had overcome the pressure and done it.”

Lee said he had felt pressure after reaching World Cup finals throughout the season but failing to land a full run. “Just overcoming it and doing everything I could (at these Olympics) makes me proud,” he said.

At the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, Lee placed 18th in qualifying and did not reach the final. This time, he became the first South Korean man to advance to an Olympic snowboard halfpipe final.

Born in April 2006, Lee said he will prepare for the next Olympics with even more training. “I worked really hard for this Olympics, but maybe it was only enough for me,” he said. “If tears of blood aren’t enough, I’ll shed blood, sweat and tears. For the next Olympics, I need to train more, as if I’m ready to die. I’ll work harder so I can stand on the highest spot on the podium.”

Yuto Totsuka of Japan won gold, Scotty James of Australia took silver, and Ryusei Yamada of Japan won bronze. All three scored above 90 points.




* This article has been translated by AI.

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