New Zealand has had a much smaller participation in the Winter Olympics, owing to its oceanic climate and Southern Hemisphere location requiring athletes to peak in the middle of the New Zealand summer. The nation did not assemble its first Winter Olympic team until 1952. In
1988 the team included
bobsleighers; the first entry in a winter sport other than alpine skiing. In 1992,
Annelise Coberger of New Zealand became the first person from the Southern Hemisphere to win a medal at the
Winter Olympics when she won silver in the
slalom at
Albertville in
France. In 2018,
Zoi Sadowski-Synnott won New Zealand's second Winter Olympic medal in the inaugural
big air snowboarding competition in
Pyeongchang,
South Korea, winning bronze. Later on the same day, 16-year-old
Nico Porteous won New Zealand's third Winter Olympic medal in the
men's ski halfpipe, also taking bronze. Four years later in 2022, Zoi Sadowski-Synnott also won New Zealand's first-ever Winter Olympics gold medal, in the
women's slopestyle. Nico Porteous later won New Zealand’s second-ever Winter Olympics gold medal, again in the men’s ski half pipe. == Athlete selection and sport funding ==