PREDAZZO, Italy — Anna Odine Stroem made the Olympic debut of women's large hill ski jumping a night to remember for Norway.
Stroem sailed to her second gold medal of the Milan Cortina Games as Norway took the top two spots, with Eirin Maria Kvandal winning silver. Slovenian favorite Nika Prevc settled for bronze.
Stroem said she hadn't dared to believe she would leave the Olympics with two gold medals and a silver as she praised her team and Kvandal.
''It's been an unbelievable championship for me. I don't think much can top this,'' Stroem said. ''We've pushed each other all the way, and now we've pushed each other to the top of the podium.''
Women's ski jumping on the normal hill was first included in the 2014 Sochi Games but until this year, the contest on the large hill had been limited in the Olympics to men.
''These girls — 10 or 15 years ago — had to fight against resistance in the ski jumping system just to be allowed to compete,'' said Norway's Prime Minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, who watched the event. ''And now they're jumping like this. It's impressive, and it's exactly how it should be.''
Stroem won with a final jump of 132 meters (433 feet). Kvandal's jump was 133.5 meters (438 feet), but Stroem made up for it in style points from the judges and compensation points for wind.
The three jumpers on the podium have amassed a lot of hardware at the Predazzo Ski Jumping Stadium.