Ryan Cochran-Siegle and Jessie Diggins appeared on the Today Show Tuesday after their Olympic medal wins. Screenshot via NBC

Starksboro-raised Ryan Cochran-Siegle and Stratton-trained Jessie Diggins won Olympic skiing medals Tuesday at the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing.

Cochran-Siegle, 29, scored silver in the alpine super-G almost 50 years to the day after his mother, Barbara Ann Cochran, snagged slalom gold at the 1972 competition in Sapporo, Japan.

Hours later, Diggins, 30, took bronze in cross-countryโ€™s individual sprint. She won gold in the 2018 womenโ€™s team sprint, but her latest race makes her the first U.S. woman to nab a solo Nordic cross-country medal and only the second American to do so after Vermonter Bill Koch captured silver in 1976.

Cochran-Siegle skied โ€œa near perfect run,โ€ according to Rutland writer Peggy Shinn, a reporter for the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committeeโ€™s website, TeamUSA.org.

โ€œHe crossed the finish line, took off his skis, looked at the camera and said, โ€˜Whatโ€™s up, Vermont. I hope that holds,โ€™โ€ Shinn wrote in her story from Chinaโ€™s Yanqing National Alpine Center.

Cochran-Siegleโ€™s time of 1 minute, 19.98 seconds was only four-hundredths of a second behind that of the winner, defending 2018 gold medalist Matthias Mayer of Austria.

โ€œPart of me recognized that I was skiing well, and trusting that, and just fighting all the way to the finish,โ€ Cochran-Siegle was quoted by Shinn after the race. โ€œItโ€™s definitely a special, special run.โ€

Cochran-Siegle was raised at his familyโ€™s namesake Richmond ski area, which his grandfather Mickey Cochran started by installing a rope tow in his backyard.

โ€œHappy, relieved, a little bit of proud,โ€ Cochran-Siegle said when asked about medaling like his mother. โ€œJust really appreciating that Iโ€™m here and able to accomplish my childhood dream on a day like today. Itโ€™s a lot of really good and positive emotions.โ€

USA Today deemed Cochran-Siegleโ€™s victory a โ€œsurpriseโ€ in part because the skier broke his neck in a downhill racing crash just a year ago.

โ€œYou dream of these moments,โ€ he was quoted by Shinn. โ€œYou see it in your mind and at times you have to put it away because you have to just focus on the skiing. That was what I was doing today. โ€ฆ I think this was the best second place that Iโ€™ll ever get in my life.โ€

Viewers of NBCโ€™s Today show watched Cochran-Siegle show off his medal and FaceTime with his mother when Diggins took the podium in her own event.

โ€œItโ€™s so special and so exciting,โ€ Diggins went on to tell the programโ€™s hosts. โ€œI really felt the love and the cheering all the way from over here and itโ€™s been overwhelming, but in the best way.โ€

Jonna Sundling of Sweden won gold by less than three seconds, while teammate Maja Dahlqvist took silver by a stride.

Many believed the individual sprint represented Digginsโ€™ best chance to capture a medal this year, although sheโ€™s set to defend her title in the team sprint next week.

โ€œTo be honest, I actually wasnโ€™t sure that I had definitely gotten the bronze, so I was a little bit scared to celebrate,โ€ Diggins told NBC after she crossed the finish line.

The New York Times described the freestyle sprint course as โ€œa furious, three-minute tear around a 1.5-kilometer loop on a course built into the side of a hill that includes a lung-busting climb, a dicey descent and a final burst down the flat straightaway to the finish.โ€

โ€œI was just in a lot of pain,โ€ Diggins told NBC. โ€œItโ€™s a really challenging course, but I love that. My biggest goal today was to just finish with nothing left. Iโ€™m so proud to say that I definitely did that.โ€

Find out how to watch the two dozen athletes with Vermont ties here.

VTDigger's southern Vermont and features reporter.