Ledecká with Martina Sáblíková (left) at Old Town Square in Prague after returning from the 2018 Winter Olympics

Ester Ledecká (Czech pronunciation: [ˈɛstɛrˈlɛdɛtskaː], born 23 March 1995) is a Czech snowboarder and alpine skier. At the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, Ledecká won gold medals in the super-G in alpine skiing and in the parallel giant slalom in snowboarding, becoming the first person to not only compete in the Winter Olympics using two different types of equipment (skis and snowboard) but to go further and win two gold medals and do so at the same Winter Olympics. She was the second woman to win an Olympic gold in two separate disciplines but the first to do so at the same Winter Olympics. She was the first Czech to win the parallel giant slalom in snowboarding at the FIS Snowboard World Cup.

Early life

Ester Ledecká was born in Prague, to mother Zuzana, a figure skater, and father Janek Ledecký, a well-known musician in the Czech Republic and Slovakia. She comes from a sporting family: her maternal grandfather is a former ice hockey player Jan Klapáč, who was a seven-time World Championship and two-time Olympic medallist. In 2014, she was still at high school, attending a distance-learning programme in Prague.

Ice hockey was the first sport she took up as a child, before taking up skiing at the age of four and later adding snowboarding. "I was following what my brother did," Ledecká says. "He is one and a half years older than me, and so when he started with a board, I wanted to do it too. I was five years old when I started snowboarding, and I did freestyle snowboarding and boardercross until I was about thirteen years old. And again, it was my brother who started with alpine snowboarding, and I wanted to beat him, so I learned that too."

Her hobbies include playing the guitar and singing. She also enjoys participating in summer sports such as beach volleyball and windsurfing.

Career

Ledecká competed in her first World Cup tournament in the 2012–13 competition, finishing in 13th place in the parallel giant slalom event. In March 2013, at the age of 17, she won gold in the parallel slalom event at the Junior World Championships, her second gold of the competition. She was named "Junior Sportsperson of the year" at the Czech Republic's 2013 Sportsperson of the Year awards.

During the 2013–14 FIS Snowboard World Cup, Ledecká placed second behind Patrizia Kummer in the first parallel slalom event in Bad Gastein and third in the second event. She subsequently won gold at Rogla in the parallel giant slalom event at the same competition, becoming the first Czech to do so. In doing so, she also became just the third Czech to win any World Cup snowboarding event.

Ahead of the 2014 Winter Olympics, The Daily Telegraph's Andrew Lawton mentioned Ledecká as the "one to watch" in the women's snowboarding competition. She was among the Czech athletes most expected to win a medal at the games, along with Martina Sáblíková, Gabriela Soukalová and fellow snowboarder Eva Samková. After she had finished ninth in qualifying for the alpine skiing event at the Winter Olympics, the Czech Ski Association attempted to register her as a competitor. However, the FIS rejected the proposal, reiterating that only eight Czechs could compete.

Ledecká made her Olympic debut at the 2014 Winter Olympics on 19 February 2014 in the parallel giant slalom snowboarding event. She reached the quarter-final stage before being eliminated by Patrizia Kummer, who went on to win the gold medal in the event. Ledecká was classified as seventh overall.

Ledecká has combined her snowboarding career with competing in alpine skiing: she made her debut on the FIS Alpine Ski World Cup in February 2016, finishing 24th in her first race, the Kandahar downhill in Garmisch. She went on to score points in four of her first five World Cup races, competing in the downhill and Super-G disciplines. In 2017 she became the first sportsperson to compete in World Championships in both skiing and snowboarding, taking a gold in the parallel giant slalom and a silver in the parallel slalom at the Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships in Sierra Nevada, Spain, and scoring top 30 finishes in the downhill, super-G and alpine combined at the Alpine Skiing World Championships in St. Moritz, Switzerland.

Ledecká made her Olympic debut in alpine skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics while also being qualified for alpine snowboarding. She won the gold medal in super-G in alpine skiing at the 2018 Winter Olympics in a historic upset. She was visibly shocked after finishing 0.01 seconds ahead of the 2014 Olympics defending gold medalist Anna Veith, who had already been proclaimed the winner by many media outlets. Ledecká was ranked 49th in the event before the Olympics and had never medalled in any World Cup level international skiing event. To make the feat even more surprising to reporters, she was rumored to be allegedly racing on skis borrowed from Mikaela Shiffrin (both racers are sponsored by Atomic). She refused to remove her goggles for the post-victory press conference, insisting that this is her trademark (which is true), and when pressed by reporters, she stated that she had skipped wearing makeup as she had not expected to win the event. Her snowboard coach, American Justin Reiter, arrived at the start of the Ladies PGS event with his reversible Czech team jacket confidently already turned gold side out. After victory in the parallel giant slalom she became the first ever female athlete to win an Olympic gold medal in two different disciplines during the same Winter Olympics (Anfisa Reztsova had previously won gold in different disciplines but not at the same Olympics, nor using completely different equipment: cross country skiing in 1988 and biathlon in 1992 and 1994). Ledecká was chosen as the flag bearer for the Czech Republic at the closing ceremony.

In the 2018–19 Alpine Ski World Cup, Ledecká finished 24th in the downhill standings and 28th in super-G. In December 2019, Ledecká scored her first win on the Alpine Ski World Cup in downhill at Lake Louise, eclipsing her previous personal best World Cup downhill result of seventh at the same venue two years previously. In December 2020, she won her first World Cup Super-G race.

Ledecká continued to split her time between snowboarding and Alpine skiing, finishing second in World Cup Alpine skiing in the downhill for the 2020 season and third for the 2022 season, as well as third in the combined in 2020, the last season it has been contested due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In the 2022 Winter Olympics, Ledecká repeated as the snowboarding gold medalist in parallel giant slalom, while in Alpine skiing she finished fifth in super-G and fourth in combined. However, she was injured while training during the summer of 2022 and targeted a possible return during February 2023. Ultimately, she was unable to return for the Alpine skiing world championships in February but made it back for the final snowboarding races in March at Berchtesgaden, where she won the women's parallel slalom for her only win of the season.

On Thursday March 20, 2025, Ledecká made history as she claimed her third World Championship gold in the parallel giant slalom at St. Moritz, becoming the first athlete in the world to win two FIS World Championship medals in the same season, in two different disciplines.

World Cup results

All results are sourced from the International Ski Federation (FIS).

Snowboarding

Season titles

  • 7 titles – (4 parallel overall, 3 parallel giant slalom)
SeasonDiscipline
2016Parallel overall
Parallel giant slalom
2017Parallel overall
2018Parallel overall
Parallel giant slalom
2019Parallel overall
Parallel giant slalom

Season standings

SeasonAgeParallel overallParallel slalomParallel giant slalom
201317151615
201418223
201519382
201620151
201721123
2018221241
2019231131
20202417817
2021252313
2022261512
202327181520
202428133
202529242026
2026302322

Standings through 31 January 2026

Race podiums

  • 26 wins – (20 PGS, 6 PSL)
  • 40 podiums – (29 PGS, 11 PSL)
SeasonDateLocationDisciplinePlace
2013–1410 January 2014Austria Bad Gastein, AustriaParallel slalom2nd
12 January 2014Parallel slalom3rd
18 January 2014Slovenia Rogla, SloveniaParallel giant slalom1st
2014–159 January 2015Austria Bad Gastein, AustriaParallel slalom1st
7 February 2015Germany Sudelfeld, GermanyParallel giant slalom1st
28 February 2015Japan Asahikawa, JapanParallel giant slalom3rd
2015–1612 December 2015Italy Carezza, ItalyParallel giant slalom1st
23 January 2016Slovenia Rogla, SloveniaParallel giant slalom1st
30 January 2016Russia Moscow, RussiaParallel slalom3rd
27 February 2016Turkey Kayseri, TurkeyParallel giant slalom1st
2016–1715 December 2016Italy Carezza, ItalyParallel giant slalom2nd
17 December 2016Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyParallel slalom1st
28 January 2017Slovenia Rogla, SloveniaParallel giant slalom1st
5 March 2017Turkey Kayseri, TurkeyParallel giant slalom1st
18 March 2017Germany Winterberg, GermanyParallel slalom2nd
2017–1814 December 2017Italy Carezza, ItalyParallel giant slalom1st
15 December 2017Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyParallel giant slalom1st
5 January 2018Austria Lackenhof, AustriaParallel giant slalom1st
20 January 2018Slovenia Rogla, SloveniaParallel giant slalom1st
26 January 2018Bulgaria Bansko, BulgariaParallel giant slalom1st
3 March 2018Turkey Kayseri, TurkeyParallel giant slalom2nd
10 March 2018Switzerland Scuol, SwitzerlandParallel giant slalom1st
2018–1913 December 2018Italy Carezza, ItalyParallel giant slalom2nd
15 December 2018Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyParallel giant slalom1st
16 February 2019South Korea Pyeongchang, South KoreaParallel giant slalom1st
17 February 2019Parallel giant slalom3rd
23 February 2019China Secret Garden, ChinaParallel giant slalom2nd
9 March 2019Switzerland Scuol, SwitzerlandParallel giant slalom2nd
2019–2014 January 2020Austria Bad Gastein, AustriaParallel slalom2nd
18 January 2020Slovenia Rogla, SloveniaParallel giant slalom1st
2020–2112 December 2020Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyParallel giant slalom1st
2021–2216 December 2021Italy Carezza, ItalyParallel giant slalom2nd
18 December 2021Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyParallel giant slalom1st
2022–2315 March 2023Slovenia Rogla, SloveniaParallel giant slalom2nd
18 March 2023Germany Berchtesgaden, GermanyParallel slalom1st
2023–2420 January 2024Bulgaria Pamporovo, BulgariaParallel slalom1st
21 January 2024Parallel slalom1st
9 March 2024Germany Winterberg, GermanyParallel slalom1st
2024–2530 November 2024China Mylin, ChinaParallel giant slalom1st
2025–2623 January 2026Austria Simonhöhe, AustriaParallel giant slalom1st

Alpine skiing

Season standings

SeasonAgeOverallSuper-GDownhillCombined
201620934237
201721773834
201822614722
201923542824
202024102123
2021251358—N/a
20222617233
202327injured, did not compete in alpine skiing
20242823623
20252921168
20263017514

Standings through 25 March 2026

Race podiums

  • 4 wins (2 DH, 2 SG)
  • 12 podiums (7 DH, 4 SG, 1 AC), 49 top tens
SeasonDateLocationDisciplinePlace
2019–206 December 2019Canada Lake Louise, CanadaDownhill1st
8 February 2020Germany Garmisch-Partenkirchen, GermanyDownhill3rd
23 February 2020Switzerland Crans-Montana, SwitzerlandCombined3rd
2020–2120 December 2020France Val-d'Isère, FranceSuper G1st
22 January 2021Switzerland Crans-Montana, SwitzerlandDownhill2nd
2021–2222 January 2022Italy Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyDownhill3rd
26 February 2022Switzerland Crans-Montana, SwitzerlandDownhill1st
27 February 2022Downhill2nd
2023–243 March 2024Norway Kvitfjell, NorwaySuper G3rd
22 March 2024Austria Saalbach, AustriaSuper G1st
2024–2511 January 2025Austria St. Anton, AustriaDownhill3rd
2025–2618 January 2026Italy Tarvisio, ItalySuper G3rd

Olympic results

  • 3 medals – (3 golds)

Snowboarding

  • 2 medals – (2 golds)
YearAgeParallel slalomParallel giant slalom
Russia 2014 Sochi1867
South Korea 2018 Pyeongchang22—N/a1
China 2022 Beijing261
Italy 2026 Milano Cortina305

Alpine skiing

  • 1 medal – (1 gold)
YearAgeGiant slalomSuper-GDownhillCombined
South Korea 2018 Pyeongchang22231
China 2022 Beijing265274
Italy 2026 Milano Cortina30DNF—N/a

World Championships results

  • 6 medals – (3 gold, 2 silver, 1 bronze)

Snowboarding

  • 5 medals – (3 gold, 2 silver)
YearAgeParallel slalomParallel giant slalom
Spain 2011 La Molina154033
Canada 2013 Stoneham171716
Austria 2015 Kreischberg1915
Spain 2017 Sierra Nevada2121
Switzerland 2025 Engadin2921

Alpine skiing

  • 1 medal – (1 bronze)
YearAgeDownhillSuper-GGiant slalomSlalomCombined
Switzerland 2017 St. Moritz2121293720
Sweden 2019 Åre23172715
Italy 2021 Cortina25448
Austria 2025 Saalbach2937

See also

External links

Awards
Preceded byKarolína ErbanováCzech Junior Athlete of the Year 2013 2015 (with Jiří Janošek)Succeeded byAnežka Drahotová
Preceded byGabriela Koukalová Lukáš Krpálek Josef DostálCzech Athlete of the Year 2018 2022 2025Succeeded byLukáš Krpálek Markéta Vondroušová