Team USA's Oksana Masters Now Has a Whopping 10 Paralympic Medals to Her Name

Oksana Masters has officially won medals in four Paralympic sports to date — and if that's not impressive enough, she's only the fourth US woman to claim gold at both the Summer and Winter Paralympics. Masters, a double amputee Team USA athlete who has competed in five total Paralympics, was adopted at age 7 from Ukraine. She told POPSUGAR back in 2019 that if it weren't for her amputations, "I would not have been an athlete," and she's become a pro at balancing both winter and summer sports since.

Masters had leg surgery this past May, which she called a tough decision, and was unexpected after doctors discovered a tumor in her femur. She wrote on Instagram before her Tokyo Paralympics competitions that she would "be racing to celebrate life and the thousands of second chances I've been given through it."

The 32-year-old now has a total of 10 Paralympic medals. Let's break them down.

Summer Paralympic Medals Oksana Masters Has Won

Starting from her most recent Paralympic appearance, Masters won two para-cycling gold medals at the Tokyo Games: one in the women's H4-5 time trial and one in the women's H5 road race. At the Rio Paralympics in 2016, she finished just off the podium in the road race event and fifth in the time trial. However, her performance at the 2012 London Games with partner Rob Jones won them bronze in trunk and arms mixed double sculls (para-rowing), a first for the US in that discipline. Fun fact: she started rowing when she was 13 but had to retire from the sport in 2013 due to a back injury.

Winter Paralympic Medals Oksana Masters Has Won

Masters has two gold medals in para cross-country skiing that she won at the Pyeongchang Games in 2018. One was in the 1.1km sprint sitting event and the other was in the 5km sitting event. She also won bronze in the 12km sitting event that year, as well as a silver in both the 6km sitting and 12.5km sitting para-biathlon races. Masters secured a silver (12km sitting) and bronze (5km sitting) at the 2014 Sochi Games, too. Next up, she hopes to vie for more medals in Beijing 2022, just six months away!