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WINTER PARALYMPIC GAMES: More gold for Team USA as Gretsch, Elliott and Delson all score wins in Biathlon and Snowboard

Americans Noah Elliott (l) and Mike Schultz celebrate a 1-3 Snowboard/Bank Slalom finish at the 2026 Winter Paralympics (Photo: OIS/Kirsty Wigglesworth).

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≡ GAMES UPDATE ≡

There were only three finals in the entire Winter Paralympic Games on Thursday, but 13 on Friday and Team USA got back to the business of winning more medals: five in all.

Para Biathlon:
Women/Sprint sitting ~ Gold: Kendall Gretsch

This was the first-ever Sprint Pursuit and Gretsch was a dominant winner at 11:33.1 (0 penalties), ahead of Korea’s Yun-ji Kim (11:41.6/2) and German Anja Wicker (12:39.1/0). Fellow Americans Oksana Masters (13:51.1/3) and Erin Martin (17:37.5/2) finished sixth and 11th.

It’s Gretsch’s fourth medal of this Games and first gold and she was surprised:

“It’s just so exciting. I was a little bit shocked. I didn’t really know until I saw the finish line, and saw that I was ahead that I had actually won the race. I thought that I was still in second. Definitely shock and I’m just really excited and proud of this result.

“Going into the second shooting I was still behind. I saw her [Kim] leaving the shooting, and so if she had been clean I was like, ‘Oh, she’s way far ahead of me’. But I think that’s when she had missed, on the second shooting, and that’s where I passed her.”

Para Snowboard:
Men/Banked Slalom (SBLL1) ~ Gold: Noah Elliott
Men/Banked Slalom (SBLL1) ~ Bronze: Mike Schultz

Elliott – with possibly the best moustache in the Games – won this race at the PyeongChang 2018 Paralympics and was the leader after the first run in 58.96, and that held up throughout the rest of the competition! Elliott celebrated by getting a better time of 58.94 on the second run for his second gold in the event.

Japan’s Daichi Oguri stood second after the first round at 1:00.09 and Schultz was third at 1:00.59. Oguri improved to 59.02 to secure silver and Schultz had to improve, to 1:00.05 to get the bronze over China’s Zhongwei Wu (1:00.35).

Elliott was emotional afterwards:

“I’m so, so proud. Oh, my god, my emotions. It was so hard for me not to cry coming across that finish line. And I’m sure it’s going to happen during the medal ceremony.

“I’ve worked so hard, and this is my ‘Redemption Games’. And to be able to stand atop the podium today, hear our national anthem, I couldn’t be more proud. This is what it’s all about. This is why we do what we do to try to get that top position. It just all hit me.

“I had such a bad injury in 2022. I had my femur bone come through my amputated leg, and so I actually competed like that [at Beijing 2022].

“I didn’t think I was going to even be able to go and do it, but it was just a great Games for me, and I couldn’t be more proud to come back after a surgery, get back on the grind, work hard, set those goals in the gym, work out, and just get better at snowboarding and show up here.”

Said Schultz, now 44, in his final Paralympics:

“Oh man, these boys are fast. You know, over the last couple of seasons, they’ve been pushing me beyond my comfort zone and that’s one of the reasons why I’m like, you know what, it’s time.

“There’s lots of reasons, but my goal this year was to be at my best during these Games. And I believe I achieved that. You know, I came up a little short in border cross, not making it to the big final. But I was in the fight and I’m like, ‘Here we go – last shot, two runs in banked slalom.’

“Let’s just lay everything out on the table and that’s what I did. And man, to come after my first run I was like, ‘Yeah, I’m feeling it. I’m feeling it today.’

“And then the second run, I’m like, ‘I got to pick up the pace. You know, I want to bump up into that silver spot.’ I don’t know if I could have caught Noah. But to be on the podium and bring home a medal in my last Paralympic Games is, man, that feels good. That feels good.”

Schultz won his fourth career Paralympic medal (1-2-1); Elliott also has four (2-1-1).

Women/Banked Slalom (SB-LL2) ~ Gold: Kate Delson
Women/Banked Slalom (SB-LL2) ~ Bronze: Brenna Huckaby

Two-time defending champion Huckaby (1:04:02) and fellow American Delson (1:03.75) were second and first after the first run, then Lisa Bunschoten-Vos (NED) moved into the lead on her final run at 1:03.53. Huckaby improved to 1:03.98 but was second, with Delson up. And she ripped off a winning time of 1:02.99 to take the gold.

Delson, 20, won her first Paralympic gold after a silver in the SnowCross final:

“It feels unreal to have a gold medal. I didn’t know if gold is my color, I like silver [laughing].

“It feels great and to have my family and friends here, as well as a really, really good friends who came out to watch today, means everything. I was just stoked to be here, I think it’s such a fun course. I got to get a medal with my teammate, one of my best friends in the world, that’s unreal.”

Huckaby, 30, won her fifth career Paralympic medal (3-0-2) and added:

“It was really hard for me today, and these girls are really good. I didn’t know I had it. It’s just really hard. And so whenever I finished on the podium, I was just shocked.

“I knew I wanted to try and beat my first time. I wanted to try and get on the top spot. I heard that Lisa had beaten my time, so I knew at that time I was in third.

“And I was like, ‘Don’t tell me anything else. I’m just going to go out there and leave it out, everything on the line’. And that’s what I did. I did the best that I could, and I’m really, really happy with it.”

Team USA has 19 medals so far (9-5-5), second overall behind China, which leads with 33 total medals (12-9-12).

The four-time defending champion U.S. sled hockey team qualified for the gold-medal final with a 6-1 win over the Czech Republic. They will play the winner of Canada vs. China on Sunday.

There are still 16 finals remaining in the Games, which close on Sunday. With 19 total medals so far, the U.S. looks to surpass its total of 20 from the 2022 Winter Paralympics in Beijing (CHN), although the 36 from PyeongChang 2018 appears out of reach.

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PANORAMA: U.S., Canada on to World Baseball Classic playoffs; Norwegian star Klaebo’s win streak ends; U.S. World Cup training site in Irvine

Cover of the 26-page German sports confederation questionnaire for the four cities/regions competing to be the country’s Olympic bidder! (Image: DOSB).

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games: Future ● It was reported that the German sports confederation (DOSB) has sent a 26-page questionnaire to the four cities/regions seeking to be the national bidder for a future Olympic Games, to be returned by 4 June.

The five major areas of interest are international appeal and national acceptance; sports and operations, vision and legacy, costs and financing, and proposed infrastructure projects. The four competing groups are Berlin, Hamburg, Munich and the Rhine-Ruhr region, for a Games in 2036, 2040 or 2044.

The DOSB will decide which Games to bid for and expects to select a city or region on 26 September.

● Athletics ● Sad news of the passing of 1956 Olympic men’s 1,500 m champion Ron Delany (IRL), who won immortality with a blazing kick to win in Melbourne, on 11 March at age 91.

He was a four-time NCAA winner at Villanova for coach Jumbo Elliott, in 1956 (1,500 m), 1957 (mile), and 1958 (880 yards and mile). He set world indoor records in the mile in 1958 (4:03.4), then twice in 1959 (4:02.5 and 4:01.4). He finished with bests of 1:48.0 (880 yards: 1961), 3:41.4 for 1,500 m (1956) and 3:57.5 for the mile, in 1958.

● Baseball ● World Baseball Classic pool play concluded with two dramatic, but one-sided games to fill out the quarterfinal bracket.

In Group A, Canada sailed past Cuba, 7-2, to win the group at 3-1 and advances along with host Puerto Rico. Cuba finished at 2-2 and did not advance to the playoffs for the first time in its World Baseball Classic history.

In Group B, Italy pounded Mexico by 9-1 before a mostly-disappointed crowd of 39,894 in Houston. That left Italy (4-0) as the surprise group winner and the U.S. (3-1) second and moving on to the quarterfinals. Mexico finished at 2-2.

The quarters start on Friday:

In Houston:
● 13th: U.S. vs. Canada
● 14th: Puerto Rico vs. Italy

In Miami:
● 13th: South Korea vs. Dominican Republic
● 14th: Venezuela vs. Japan

The semis will be on 15-16 March in Miami and the final on 17 March.

The U.S. vs. Mexico game on Monday (9th) drew a big television audience of 4.72 million on broadcast television on FOX in the U.S. and 5.02 million when including FOX Deportes.

Sports Media Watch reported that’s the biggest audience for any U.S. broadcast of World Baseball Classic ever, and “averaged an audience on par with last year’s League Championship Series games.”

● Cross Country Skiing ● Six-time Olympic gold medalist Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo was injured after a crash in the semifinal heat of the men’s Classical Sprint at the FIS World Cup in Drammen (NOR).

American Ben Ogden, the Olympic Sprint silver winner, tripped and fell across Klaebo’s skis and Klaebo fell backward and hit his head on the melting snow. As required, he was taken to a hospital, but was apparently not seriously injured. The fall ended Klaebo’s streak of six straight World Cup race wins.

Norway’s Ansgar Evensen won the Sprint in 2:31.24, ahead of Jiri Tuz (CZE: +0.31) and Kristian Kollerud (NOR: +0.34).

The women’s Sprint went to Sweden’s 2022 Olympic champ Jonna Sundling, in 2:59.64, ahead of Kristine Skistad (NOR: +0.77) and Nadine Faehndrich (SUI: +1.59). American seasonal leader Jessie Diggins reached the semifinals.

● Cycling ● Two-time Tour de France winner Jonas Vingegaard (DEN) is destroying the field in the 84th running of Paris-Nice, with a 3:22 edge after five of the eight stages.

He was seventh after stage three, then zoomed to a 41-second win in the hilly fourth stage and routed the field by 2:02 on the hilly fifth stage, with a 20 km solo to the finish. Vingegaard was third in this race in 2023, but is primed to win now. Colombia’s Daniel Martinez is second, but well back at +3:22 and no one else is within five minutes of the Danish star.

At the 61st Tirreno-Adriatico in Italy, home favorite Giulio Pellizzari lead after four of seven days by just two seconds over Mexico’s Isaac Del Toro and 21 seconds on Slovenian star – and two-time winner – Primoz Roglic. American Matteo Jorgenson is fourth at +0:34.

Dutch star Mathieu van der Poel won both stage two and stage four, but sits 15th at +1:06 after a rough opener in the individual Time Trial. The last two stages have some significant climbing, so the race remains open.

● Football ● U.S. Soccer will have its FIFA World Cup 2026 training center at Great Park in Irvine, California in Orange County, about an hour south of SoFi Stadium, where the American team will play two of its three matches.

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FOOTBALL: Town of Foxborough satisfied on security funding; Trump prefers Iran not come; California rep wants FIFA to reduce ticket prices!

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≡ FIFA WORLD CUP 2026 ≡

An agreement for $7.8 million in security funding for the town of Foxborough, Massachusetts related to the FIFA World Cup matches at Gillette Stadium was reached on Thursday. A joint statement by the town, the Boston Soccer 2026 host committee and Kraft Sports + Entertainment included:

“Kraft Sports + Entertainment, Boston Soccer 2026, and the Town of Foxborough have reached an understanding collectively that will allow Boston Soccer 2026 and the Town of Foxborough to finalize the details needed to approve an event license at the March 17 public hearing and ensure a safe and successful FIFA World Cup 2026 tournament at Gillette Stadium this summer.

“As part of this arrangement, the Town of Foxborough will not incur any cost or financial burden related to the FIFA World Cup, with Boston Soccer 2026 providing advance funding for security-related capital expenditures and the full extent of deployment that public safety officials have determined is needed to execute the event with Kraft Sports + Entertainment’s backing.”

The town was clear that it would not fund the security requirements, nor would it advance the costs and receive reimbursement. Seven matches are scheduled for the stadium, beginning on 13 June.

U.S. President Donald Trump wrote Thursday morning on Truth Social:

“The Iran National Soccer Team is welcome to The World Cup, but I really don’t believe it is appropriate that they be there, for their own life and safety.”

Trump had said earlier that Iran is “welcome” to come, but took a harder line on Thursday. The Iranian sports minister said this week that “definitely it’s not possible for us to take part in the World Cup.”

The Iranian team is scheduled to face New Zealand in Inglewood, California on 15 June, Belgium in Inglewood on 21 June and Egypt in Seattle on 26 June.

California Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-California) and 68 other members of Congress sent a letter to FIFA asking for a reduction in the cost of tickets for the FIFA World Cup, including:

“Both American fans and international visitors should have access to tickets at affordable prices. The extreme high demand for World Cup tickets should not be a green light for price gouging at the expense of the people who make the World Cup the most-watched sporting event in the world.

“When the tri-nation model for the 2026 World Cup was announced and confirmed in 2018, FIFA emphasized an inclusive tournament experience, including the availability of hundreds of thousands of low-cost tickets, some projected at approximately $21, to allow fans to follow their teams across all host cities in North America.

“That vision of an accessible, global celebration, welcoming 48 national teams and their supporters from every corner of the world, has been undermined by a dynamic priced ticketing model that is financially exclusionary and stands in stark contrast to the vision presented. This pricing structure has made tickets for all stages of FWC games unaffordable for many fans who have already confirmed travel for this monumental international sporting event.”

The letter further complains that FIFA is not paying anything to help host cities fund the required fan festivals, and that “local governments have had to garner additional funding of up to $150 million per city for infrastructure improvements, transportation, and security preparations.”

It closes with questions to FIFA, asking for remaining tickets to be priced affordably, to commit to static pricing in the future and, for future tournaments, either pay for fan festivals or allow sponsorship categories for local community to sell to underwrite the costs.

No deadline for a reply was included. FIFA has said it has more than 500 million requests for the 6-7 million tickets that will be available for the World Cup, beginning on 11 June.

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ATHLETICS: Duplantis gets world record no. 15 at his own meet in Uppsala, Sweden, at 6.31 m (20-8 1/2); will he ever catch Bubka?

He did it again! Sweden's Mondo Duplantis with another world record! (Photo: Matthew Quine for Diamond League AG)

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≡ MONDO CLASSIC ≡

No reason not to set a world record when you’re at your own meet and that’s exactly what Swedish star Mondo Duplantis did at the Mondo Classic indoors in Uppsala (SWE) on Thursday, clearing 6.31 m (20-8 1/2) on his first try.

He had eight outstanding competitors against him, but only Norway’s Sondre Gottormsen could clear 6.00 m (19-8 1/4) and he would end up second, ahead of American stars Zach Bradford and Sam Kendricks, both of whom cleared 5.90 m (19-4 1/4) to place 3-4. Australia’s Kurtis Marschall was fifth, also at 5.90 m.

Duplantis cleared 5.65 m (18-6 1/2) on his first try, then 5.90 m on his first and 6.08 m (19-11 1/4) on his first, winning the meet. The bar immediately went to a world-record 6.31 m, and he snaked over the bar, leaving it twitching, but still on!

Still just 26, Duplantis has been re-writing the record book with regularity, with 15 world marks so far:

2020: 2 ~ 6.17 mi (20-2 3/4) and 6.18 mi (20-3 1/4)
2021: 0
2022: 3 ~ 6.19 mi (20-3 3/4), 6.20 mi (20-4), 6.21 m (20-4 1/2)
2023: 2 ~ 6.22 mi (20-4 3/4), 6.23 m (20-5 1/4)
2024: 3 ~ 6.24 m (20-5 1/2), 6.25 m (20-6), 6.26 m (20-7 1/4)
2025: 4 ~ 6.27 mi (20-6 3/4), 6.28 m (20-7 1/4), 6.29 m (20-7 1/2), 6.30 m (20-8)
2026: 1 ~ 6.31 mi (20-8 1/2)

That’s seven set indoors and eight set outdoors, and since getting over 6.19 m in March 2022, he has been hammering out world records quickly:

● 6.19 mi (2022): required 6 tries in 2020, 30 in 2021 and 15 in 2022 (51 total)
● 6.20 mi (2022): required 3 tries to clear, across 1 more meet
● 6.21 m (2022): required 2 tries (1 more meet)
● 6.22 mi (2023): required 9 tries (3 more meets)
● 6.23 m (2023): required 16 tries (6 more meets)
● 6.24 m (2024): required 7 tries (3 more meets)
● 6.25 m (2024): required 18 tries (6 more meets)
● 6.26 m (2024): required 2 tries (1 more meet)
● 6.27 mi (2025): required 3 tries (2 more meets)
● 6.28 m (2025): required 7 tries (3 more meets)
● 6.29 m (2025): required 11 tries (4 more meets)
● 6.30 m (2025): required 3 tries (1 more meet)
● 6.31 mi (2026): required 4 tries (2 more meets)

(The number of meets noted counts only competitions where he tried a world-record height, not every other meet he competed in between records.)

Although he has vaulted higher than anyone else, the question can still be asked whether he is the greatest vaulter in history.

The reason to ask is because the track & field athlete with the most world records in history is another vaulter, former Soviet and Ukrainian star Sergey Bubka. According to the World Athletics’ Progression of World Records book (2024 ed.), the athletes with the most ratified world marks – combining indoor and outdoor – are:

● 27: Sergey Bubka (URS-UKR): pole vault, 1984-94
● 22: Paavo Nurmi (FIN): distances, 1922-31
● 22: Werner Hardmo (SWE), distances, 1943-45

In terms of counting, Bubka had an edge because when he competed, indoor and outdoor records were ratified separately. In 2000, the rule was changed and Duplantis can set a record anywhere, indoors or out, but does not get separate credit.

Duplantis is only 26; Bubka set records between the ages of 20-30 and competed into 2001, when he was 37. And at the rate he is producing records – five in little more than a year – Duplantis could catch Bubka, perhaps in 2029?

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ATHLETICS: Winners Alliance says it will fund exploratory effort to re-start Grand Slam Track if bankruptcy plan adopted

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≡ GRAND SLAM TRACK ≡

Ahead of Thursday’s hearing at the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware, a new filing by Grand Slam Track explains its plan to go forward if its plan is approved to liquidate its existing debt.

The key language is this:

“The Reorganized Debtor intends to re-launch the ‘Grand Slam Track’ concept under a new, updated business model where professional track athletes can compete in a defined series of competitions. The competitions will seek to expand on the most promising aspects of the ‘Grand Slam Track’ concept, including advance commitments from participating athletes, more predictable scheduling and clearer presentation to broadcasters, sponsors, and audiences, in a league that will operate alongside existing international and domestic track competitions.

“Upon the Effective Date of the Plan, the Reorganized Debtor will obtain funding from Winners Alliance in order to ensure that the Reorganized Debtor has sufficient funds to conduct a comprehensive effort to attract investments to implement the Reorganized Debtor’s goforward business plan. Such funding from Winners Alliance will allow the Reorganized Debtor to maintain basic business operations and engage in extensive fundraising efforts through at least December 31, 2026.

“The Debtor believes that such a timeline will provide sufficient time for the Reorganized Debtor to be able to obtain sufficient investments to be able to implement its long-term business plan. The Debtor estimates that the total cost of maintaining basic business operations and conducting a fundraising process will be in the $1.4 million range but the Debtor continues to evaluate such cost estimates and reserves the right to modify such estimates.

“The Reorganized Debtor’s long-term go-forward business plan involves raising sufficient funds to host at least one event in 2027, provided, however, that to the extent the Reorganized Debtor is unable to raise sufficient funds to host at least one event in 2027 and to implement its go-forward longer term business plan successfully, the Reorganized Debtor will wind down its business affairs and discontinue operations.”

The new “Grand Slam Track” would retain Michael Johnson as founder and chief executive and Stephen Gera as President.

The filing included letters of support from three athletes: sprint stars Kenny Bednarek and Melissa Jefferson-Wooden – both of whom were big winners in the three meets held – and hurdler Freddie Crittenden. The letters are essentially the same in format and language and were signed electronically.

The proposed reorganization plan classifies creditors into three broad classes:

● Winners Alliance, an arm of the Professional Tennis Players Association, which has $5.0 million in secured debt.

● Athlete claims of $7.0 million, to whom the plan would pay 85%; there are 184 athletes listed as claimants in this class.

● “General Unsecured Claims” of $12.9 million, who would get just 1.5% of their claims paid.

There are also some small claimants who would receive 85-100% of their claims, with the combined totals about $131,300.

A vote on the plan is being challenged by the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, which seeks to file a lawsuit to essentially claim that Winners Alliance is the de facto controller and owner of Grand Slam Track and is responsible for all of the debt to all parties and must pay damages in addition.

If approved, a vote on the plan would be taken in April. A hearing is underway today in Delaware.

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PANORAMA: Hamburg sees surplus on Olympic hosting in ‘36, ‘40 or ‘44; Italy upsets U.S. in WBC shocker; Iran says can’t come to FIFA World Cup

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games: Future ● With a public referendum coming on 31 May on whether the German city of Hamburg should bid for a future Olympic Games, the city’s Senate released a report on Wednesday projecting €4.8 billion in costs, including a €628 million contingency, and sees €4.9 billion in revenue and a €100 million surplus. (€1 = $1.16 U.S.)

Explained Senator Andreas Dressel:

“The financing costs we will incur to host the Olympic and Paralympic Games in Hamburg are significantly lower than what was estimated in 2015. We can host economically viable Games in this city based on transparent calculations.”

“We can afford to host the Games. If Hamburg’s bid is successful, public and private funds will flow more quickly and in a more targeted manner into infrastructure projects in Hamburg – rather than into Munich or the Rhine-Ruhr region.”

The key, compared to the €11.2 billion projected in 2015 to cost the 2024 Games, is the International Olympic Committee’s endorsement of existing venues, of which the Hamburg study identifies as 76% of the project with the other 24% to be temporary sites only.

The German Sports Confederation (DOSB) expects to make a decision in September between Hamburg, Berlin, Munich and the Rhine-Ruhr region, to bid for one or more of three future Games, in 2036, 2040 and/or 2044.

● Russia ● The Russian news agency TASS reported that roughly three months following the International Olympic Committee’s guidance to allow Russian “youth” athletes and teams to be re-admitted – with flag and anthem – to international competitions has been accepted in baseball and softball, equestrian, fencing, judo, modern pentathlon, taekwondo, volleyball, weightlifting, wrestling, curling and ski mountaineering.

Other federations allow Russian junior athletes to compete as “neutrals.”

● Athletics ● World Athletics announced its World Continental Tour line-up for 2026, with 281 meets listed in four levels: Gold (11), Silver (44), Bronze (89) and Challenger (137).

Continental Tour meets in the Gold, Silver and Bronze categories have multiple requirements, including drug testing and reimbursing athlete travel expenses, plus:

Gold: $180,000 minimum prize money; minimum 14 events
Silver: $75,000 minimum prize money; minimum 12 events
Bronze: $25,000 minimum prize money; minimum 12 events

No prize money requirement is shown for the Challenger meets. There are two Gold-level meets in the U.S. for 2026: 6 June for USATF Lone Star Grand Prix in College Station, Texas and 13-14 June for the USATF L.A. Grand Prix at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

USA Track & Field announced a “One Team” relay project which will place U.S. teams at two April meets in Florida in addition to national teams at World Athletics Championship events.

The two selected domestic “training” events are the Florida Relays on 4 April for the new, Mixed 4×100 m and the Tom Jones Memorial on 18 April, both at the University of Florida in Gainesville:

“Team rosters will be selected by USA Track & Field’s High Performance Directors with input from Team USATF relays coach Darryl Woodson. Athletes will be chosen based on factors including recent performance, prior international relay experience, and availability for each event.”

National team events include the World Indoors, World Relays, World U-20 Championships and the Ultimate Championships in September. Also, USATF announced that it will “implement an Equal Share Prize Money Model for relay events.

“Under this model, any athlete officially named to a relay squad – whether competing in preliminary rounds, finals, or serving as a designated alternate – will receive an equal share of prize money earned by the team.”

● Baseball ● The World Baseball Classic was completely shaken up by a dynamic performance from Italy, which roared to an 8-0 lead over the U.S. in Houston and held on for an 8-6 win and a 3-0 mark in Group B.

Home runs from Italian catcher Kyle Teel (3rd: solo), shortstop Sam Antonacci (3rd: one on) and right fielder Jac Caglianone (4th: one one) gave Italy a 5-0 lead after four and it was 8-0 in the sixth after an error and a wild pitch allowed the Italians to score three more. Two homers from center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong got to the U.S. to within two runs in the ninth, but it was not enough.

Italy plays Mexico on Wednesday to close pool play and if the Italians won, the U.S. will move on as second in the group. If Mexico wins, it advances IF – due to WBC tie-beakers – it scores four or less runs.

Canada and Cuba play on Wednesday in San Juan (PUR) to advance out of Group A. The quarterfinals begin on Friday.

Interest in the WBC on television has been good in the U.S., with audiences of 2.64 million and 2.98 million on FOX last Friday and Saturday.

Compared to 2025 MLB regular-season games, those audiences would have ranked second and fourth across the whole season!

● Football ● Iranian Sports Minister Ahmad Donyamali said on state television on Tuesday:

“Due to the wicked acts they have done against Iran – they have imposed two wars on us over just eight or nine months and have killed and martyred thousands of our people – definitely it’s not possible for us to take part in the World Cup.”

Iran has qualified out of the Asian confederation, and the U.S. has said that the team will be welcome to come and play at the World Cup. Iran was drawn in Group G and has matches slated against New Zealand in Inglewood, California on 15 June, Belgium in Inglewood on 21 June and Egypt in Seattle on 26 June.

If it does not play, Iran would be replaced by Iraq or possibly the UAE, and would be subject to sanctions by FIFA.

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IRAN: Letter from Iranian athletes asks IOC and Coventry for “dissolution” of the Iranian Olympic Committee

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≡ COVENTRY ASKED TO ACT ≡

A second letter from Iranian athletes to International Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry (ZIM), posted on 9 March (Monday) is asking not for sanctions against the National Olympic Committee of Iran, but regime change.

Posted by Global Athlete, the letter explains:

“In our first letter, we laid out the facts. Iranian sport is not governed by athletes. It is controlled by the ideological machinery of the Islamic Republic. Its federations are not independent institutions. They are extensions of state power.”

“We documented systemic discrimination against women. We exposed the exclusion of Baha’i athletes on religious grounds. We highlighted antisemitic policies that force Iranian athletes to withdraw rather than compete against Israelis. We detailed the institutional presence of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps at the highest levels of sports administration, including the National Olympic and Paralympic Committees.”

● “The National Olympic and Paralympic Committees of the Islamic Republic do not represent Iranian sport. They represent a regime. They function as political instruments, not sporting bodies. Their mandate is ideological alignment, not athletic excellence. For decades, the Islamic Republic has used sport as a tool to export its doctrine while presenting a sanitized image to the international community.”

● “Madam President, the Olympic Movement claims to stand for equality, neutrality and human dignity. Those principles are incompatible with enforced forfeits based on nationality, religious exclusion, gender segregation and the imprisonment of athletes.”

“As the first woman to lead the International Olympic Committee, your response to the repression of Iranian women athletes and the politicisation of Iranian sport will define more than a presidency. It will define whether the Olympic Charter is a living document or a ceremonial text.

“In moments of injustice, silence can be perceived as complicity rather than neutrality. We respectfully urge you to act with courage and in accordance with your stated principles by considering the dissolution of the National Olympic Committee of Iranian regime.”

About 200 athletes from a wide variety of sports, plus some academic and media figures are listed as signatories.

The letter comes, of course, during the combined strikes by Israel and the United States against the Iranian regime. On 3 March, Mehdi Alinajad, Secretary General of the National Olympic Committee of the Islamic Republic of Iran, sent his own message to the IOC and to the Olympic Council of Asia “demanding an investigation into ‘grave violations of the Olympic Truce and acts of aggression’ that targeted Iran’s sports community and facilities.”

Observed: The IOC, of course, is in the middle. It has suspended National Olympic Committees before, of course, for varying infractions and expelled South Africa from 1970-91 and Rhodesia from 1975 until it returned as Zimbabwe – Coventry’s native country – in 1980 for racial segregation policies.

What is true now is that nothing is going to be done by the IOC or a host of other international organizations until the strikes by the American and Israelis militaries have concluded.

All would prefer to have a change come from within Iran itself, rather than be imposed from the outside.

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WINTER PARALYMPIC GAMES: Hot skiing for Team USA with four cross country medals and gold for Masters, Peterson and Adicoff!

American Sydney Peterson celebrates her 2026 Paralympic Cross Country gold (Photo: OIS/Tyler McFarland).

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≡ GAMES UPDATE ≡

Team USA continued roaring through the Cross Country Skiing program on Wednesday, scoring four more medals, including tree golds:

● Medal machine Oksana Masters got her third gold of these Games, winning the 10 km Classical sitting event in 26:31.6, a 20-second final margin over Korea’s Yun-ji Kim (26:51.6) and almost a minute over U.S. teammate Kendall Gretsch (27:27.6).

Masters is one of 13 athletes at Milan Cortina ‘26 with three medals so far, but the only one with three wins. At 36, she now has 11 Para Cross Country medals (5-4-2) and six Para Biathlon medals (3-3-0) and is the most decorated U.S. Winter Paralympian ever. She said afterwards:

“I’m feeling just so much pure joy and shock. I did not expect it at all, because in the first half of the race, I was [coming] from behind and really didn’t know if I could close that gap.

“I know that she [Kim] is such a strong skier on this course. “I’m just so proud to be able to bring home another gold for team USA.

“When you line up, you do everything you can. I know my team helped me with the skis, the prep, the nutrition, sports psychology and everything, and it’s just for me to go and execute, and nothing’s a given. I had to fight.

“My team was telling me my splits at every single place they could, and was literally saying, ’How bad do you want it?’ I wanted to dig deep to get this for Team USA.”

Jake Adicoff got his second gold in as many days with a win in the visually-impaired men’s 10 km Classical – with guide Reid Goble – with a dominant victory in 28:03.6, with silver winner Inkki Inola (FIN: 29:52.3, with Reetu Inkila). Afterwards, Adicoff explained some confusion during the race:

Another hard day, another pretty fun day, in a way. Some really hard skiing and hard conditions, but I’m just so happy to get the win today.

“We got a split in the last lap, that we were a minute or something up, and one of the coaches said, ’relax’, and then he also said, ’rip them to pieces’, so we were kind of confused. … The whole strategy with the race was to try and get a comfortable gap in the first two laps and then stay upright for the last two, and that’s what we did.”

Sydney Peterson won the women’s 10 km Classical Interval Start standing race with a final time of 29:49.2, ahead of Vilde Nilsen (NOR: 29:51.8). She said later:

“I went out really hard, because I knew it was going to take everything I had to win today. About halfway, the splits turned the other way and Vilde started to close the gap on me. She’s such a strong skier, so I just tried to hold on and luckily it was enough. But you never know.

“She’s pushed me so much. She’s an amazing athlete, but more importantly she’s a very, very good person, she has amazing character and she works extremely hard, and is a very friendly competitor. I love having the opportunity to race against her.”

It was Peterson’s first individual Paralympic gold, after a mixed relay gold at Beijing 2022, and her fifth career Paralympic medal in all (2-2-1).

The U.S. now has 14 medals in all (6-5-3) and is second behind China (26: 10-7-9).

In Wheelchair Curling, the U.S. pair of Laura Dwyer and Stephen Emt finished fourth, losing in the bronze-medal match to Latvia, 11-10, in a wild match. The Americans scored four in the first and sixth ends, and Polina Rozkova and Agris Lasmans got five in the second and three in the seventh. Finally, the match was tied at 10 and the Latvians managed a ninth-end score for the bronze.

The four-time defending champion U.S. sled hockey team (3-0) will face the Czech Republic on Friday in one semifinal, while Canada and China will play in the other. The medal matches are on Sunday.

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PANORAMA: FIFA reported to be looking for $100 million in ‘26 World Cup cuts; World Cup exec Schirgi says event “too big” not to go on

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Winter Paralympic Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● The organizing committee noted Tuesday that 4,600 volunteers are supporting the Winter Paralympic Games, with 42% in the competition venues, 21% in the Paralympic Villages and the other 37% across other sites.

Almost a third – about 1,500 – are assigned to welcome and assist spectators.

A total of 18,000 volunteers are working across the Olympic Winter and Winter Paralympic Games, from 98 nations and territories and more than 2,000 from outside Italy.

● Baseball ● At the World Baseball Classic, home-standing Puerto Rico defeated Cuba, 4-1, on Monday and went to 3-0 in Group A and advanced to the playoff round.

The Cubans are 2-1 and still must play Canada on Wednesday to try and advance.

The U.S. is 3-0 and defeated Mexico, 5-3, on Monday, but it still tangled with Italy (2-0) and Mexico (2-1). The U.S. and Italy play Tuesday evening and then Italy and Mexico play on Wednesday to complete the group.

Japan (4-0) and South Korea (2-2) have qualified out of Group C and the Dominican Republic (3-0) and Venezuela (3-0) are advancing out of Group D. Quarterfinals start Friday.

● Figure Skating ● The annual International Skating Union awards vote is now open through 18 March for four categories:

● Best Costume (16 candidates)
● Most Entertaining Program (16)
● Best Choreographer (8)
● Best Coach (8)

The U.S. has five “Costume” candidates in Amber Glenn, Alysa Liu, Ilia Malinin and Ice Dance teams Madison Chock and Evan Bates and Emilea Zingas and Vadym Kolesnik.

Four of those five (all but Liu) are in the “Program” vote, also with men’s star Jason Brown.

Voting ends on the 18th; awards will be made on 29 March.

● Football ● The Athletic reported, from multiple sources, that FIFA is asking its 2026 World Cup organizing team to reduce the overall cost of the tournament by at least $100 million.

There are few details; the story surmises that the pressure on costs is to allow FIFA to ensure that its projected goal of $11.67 billion in “reinvestment” in the game – meaning money spent on football development and especially funds sent to national federations – is met or exceeded.

FIFA World Cup Chief Operating Officer Heimo Schirgi (AUT), speaking in Dallas, said he believes the tournament will proceed as planned, despite the ongoing conflict in Iran – which has qualified for the event – and the Middle East:

“If had a crystal ball I could tell you now what is going to happen, but obviously the situation is developing.

“It’s changing day by day and we are monitoring closely. We’re working together with all our federal partners and our international partners in evaluating the situation, and we basically take it day-by-day and at some stage we will have a resolution.

“And the World Cup will go on obviously, right? The World Cup is too big, and we hope that everyone can participate that has qualified.”

The former head of the Republic of Congo football federation, Jean-Guy Blaise Mayolas, was convicted in absentia in a national court for stealing $1.1 million in FIFA funding for the country’s federation.

He was sentenced to life in prison, but his whereabouts are unknown. His son, Lionel Mayolas, was also convicted on the same charge, but also in absentia. The Associated Press reported:

“Federation secretary general Badji Mombo Wantete and treasurer Raoul Kanda were each sentenced to five years in prison for complicity in money laundering, forgery, use of forged documents and misappropriation of funds.”

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ATHLETICS: Grand Slam Track and creditors trade harsh accusations as vendors ask Court for permission to sue, hearing on Thursday

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≡ GRAND SLAM TRACK ≡

Grand Slam Track’s suppliers and vendors, owed in excess of $13 million and offered a 1.5% payback under the proposal bankruptcy plan, asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware to allow it to directly sue lead investor Winners Alliance, founder Michael Johnson and the circuit’s officers and directors.

A total of 14 different causes of action are alleged; seven against Winners Alliance, five against Johnson and two against all of the directors and officers of Grand Slam Track.

The background, of course, is that Grand Slam Track ran up debt of more than $40 million in putting on three meets in the April, May and June 2025. The lengthy filing by the Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors notes that the internal business plan for Grand Slam Track (“Debtor”) forecast significant losses for the first two years:

“Debtor expected to lose $27 million in 2025, despite also projecting $14.5 million in revenue. In fact, the Debtor’s business model projected negative EBITDA in 2026 even when revenue was projected to reach $55 million. In its investor presentations, the Debtor did not expect to be profitable, under its projections, until 2027 when revenue was forecasted to reach $89.7 million. Even at that lofty number, EBITDA was only projected to be $2.2 million.

“Put differently, the Debtor and Winners Alliance knew that significant additional investments were required to fund the business, and the business could not sustain itself based on the projected revenues under their internal budget forecast. The Debtor and Winners Alliance created and knowingly implemented a business model that required significant cash outlays, and the Debtor’s only source of working capital beyond the initial seed investment was the potential $25 million line of credit from Winners Alliance set forth in the Investment Outline.”

● “Despite the unrealistic overly optimistic revenue projections, the Debtor only generated a paltry $1.8 million in revenue for 2025 despite completing three ‘Slam’ events, far short of the projected $14.5 million in revenue that was necessary to narrow the losses to $27 million.”

● “As a result of proceeding with two (2) events without sufficient capital and committed third-party financing, and potentially illegally promising athletes prizes for winning events, for the first six months of 2025, the Debtor lost $37.2 million. Had the Debtor ceased operations after learning that Eldridge [Industries] was not moving forward with the proposed investment, the Debtor would have significantly reduced the amount it owed all of its creditors.”

The proposed lawsuit claims that Winners Alliance, the for-profit arm of the Professional Tennis Players Association, “made clear that its top priority is not ensuring the Debtor’s business prospers or that the Debtor’s creditors are protected, but that its reputation in the athletic industry is shielded from any reputational damages” and that it has “now agreed to fund a Plan that would pay athletes at least 85% of what they were owed on the Petition Date, bringing the amount the athletes will receive from the Debtor to well over 90% of what their contracted for payments were, while at the same time only offering only 1.5% to the trade vendors.”

The proposed suit, which must be approved by the Bankruptcy Court to be filed, asks for Winners Alliance’s claims of debt to be disallowed on the basis that such funds actually represented ownership in Grand Slam Track and asks for damages of not less than $25 million each on four different allegations of fraud and other issues. Further, the suit asks for a decision at trial that “Winners Alliance is responsible for the debts of the Debtor.”

The suit takes issue with a $500,000 payment to Johnson as partial repayment of a $2 million loan which is not evidenced in any Board minutes of Grand Slam Track, as preferred self-dealing, and asks for $25 million in damages. There is a similar demand against the Grand Slam Track Board members for fraud and breach of fiduciary duty.

A reply filed by Grand Slam Track slaps back against the Committee of Unsecured Creditors in direct language, including

“The Objection is based on a fundamental misunderstanding of quintessential plan confirmation (not disclosure statement) issues and can be best characterized as an ill-conceived proposal to destroy the Debtor’s future prospects and jeopardize the New Value Contribution so that the Committee (which consists solely of a minority of trade creditors) can attempt to pursue its unsubstantiated litigation scheme against Winners Alliance and the Debtor’s officers and directors.”

This filing notes that the proposed plan – which pays almost nothing to the unsecured creditors – will provide $6 million in new funding. In terms of payments under the plan, this will almost all go to the athletes. The filing continues:

“The Committee’s half-baked, unsubstantiated, risky and punitive alternative to a reorganization is a litigation quagmire which will result in: (1) no assurance of any recovery to any creditor; (2) the end of the Debtor’s future business prospects; and (3) an administratively insolvent estate.”

The Grand Slam Track filing asks for the proposed plan to be approved so that it can be voted on by all of those owed money, under the 85% to athletes and 1.5% to vendors scenario.

Winners Alliance also filed a reply, saying that it was a minority shareholder and no more:

“The Committee’s Objection tells a fundamentally different – and fundamentally false – story. Lacking a genuine legal basis to contest the Motion, the Committee resorts to disparaging rhetoric and a series of inflammatory allegations that are both unsupported and irrelevant to the issues before the Court.

“The Committee’s transparent tactic to extort additional funds from WA through a reputational smear campaign should not be countenanced. The Committee’s opposition is full of unsubstantiated claims.”

The Winners Alliance filing noted that the television production entity, Momentum-Carr Hughes, which is the largest creditor, “was paid over $2.224 million of its $5.277 million in 2025.” That was for production services for the three meets that were held.

The parties won’t have long to wait for their day in court, as the matter will be heard on Thursday (12th) at 2 p.m. Eastern before Judge Karen B. Owens.

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WINTER PARALYMPIC GAMES: Team USA’s Masters gets 21st Para medal with Sprint win; Adicoff finally gets his Cross Country gold

American Jake Adicoff (and guide Peter Wolter) on the way to a 2026 Paralympic Cross Country Sprint gold! (Photo: OIS/Remi Vallat).

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≡ GAMES UPDATE ≡

American Paralympic medal machine Oksana Masters, 36, added to her collection on Tuesday with a stirring gold in the Cross Country Skiing women’s sitting Classical Sprint in the Val di Fiemme at the Winter Paralympic Games in Italy.

On the first day of Cross Country, Masters was a clear winner in 3:07.1, ahead of South Korea’s Yun-ji Kim (3:10.1). She was especially happy after finishing fourth in the Biathlon sitting Individual race on Sunday:

“I feel absolutely on top of the world right now, just in complete shock, and so, so happy.

“Today, I’m so proud of myself. To come back and not let the last race stay with me for this race. It was a new day and a new start. The key is not to carry what happened in the past. Just fight the fight today.”

It’s Masters’ 21st Paralympic medal in all (11-7-3) and 16th in the Winter Games (7-7-2), the most ever for an American woman. It was her third Sprint medal: gold in 2018, silver in 2022 and now gold in 2026.

U.S. teammate Sydney Peterson won a silver in the women’s standing Classical Sprint, trailing Norway’s Vilde Nielsen, 3:31.3 to 3:35.5. Peterson was thrilled:

“I’m pretty happy, it was a really fun day, a really fun race and I’m pretty stoked about how the result turned out.

“Every time you go up to the starting line at the Games, it gets harder and there’s more pressure. There are many more hurdles to get through, so I’m pretty stoked about it. I’m very happy with how I skied today.”

It’s her fourth career Paralympics medal (1-2-1).

In the men’s visually-impaired Classical Sprint, American Jake Adicoff – with Peter Wolter – won gold in 2:44.7 to 2:46.2 for China’s Shuang Yu (and Jincai Shang). The winner explained:

“I feel great. It was a tough day, but we did our best. I wanted it pretty bad, you know, a long-standing goal for this individual gold medal (as) I went for it so many times in the past.”

Adicoff won Cross Country silvers at the 2018 Paralympics (10 km) and 2022 (sprint and 20 km) and finally has an individual gold to go with his Mixed Relay win in 2022. He now has five Paralympic medals in all.

In the Mixed Doubles Curling, the U.S.’s Laura Dwyer and Stephen Emt lost to South Korea, 6-3, in the semis and will play for the bronze medal against Latvia on Wednesday.

The American sled hockey team roared past China, 7-1 and finished 3-0 in Group A with a 34-2 goals-against total and has advanced to the semifinals on 13 March, against the Czech Republic.

The U.S. has 10 medals so far (3-5-2), tied for second with Ukraine (3-2-5) and well behind China (23: 9-6-8). The Games continue through Sunday.

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PANORAMA: Record sled hockey crowd for USA-Italy in Milan; Chock and Bates to skip ISU Worlds; problems for Iran and Iraq football teams!

Opening ceremony of the 2026 Paralympic Winter Games in Verona (Photo: OIS/Jed Jacobsohn).

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Winter Paralympic Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● The U.S. vs. Italy sled hockey match at the Santaguilia Arena in Milan on Saturday drew a loud crowd of 8,992 fans, which was reported as a record for Para Ice Hockey at a major tournament. According to The Associated Press:

“That not only broke the previous Paralympic record of 8,462 fans for the gold medal match at the Salt Lake City Games in 2002, but also surpassed the attendance record of 8,600 spectators at the 2019 World Para Ice Hockey championship in the Czech Republic.”

The U.S. won by 14-1; coach David Hoff said:

“In sled hockey you don’t get this, with a packed house like this tonight and people out there, you know, the crowd, the cheering and everything like that. That’s cool for these guys too to play in that environment.”

● Athletics ● A close finish at the 2026 Los Angeles Marathon, where Kenyan Michael Kamau was leading by 30 seconds at the 20 km mark, then 1:14 by 25 km and 1:43 at 30 km.

Nathan Martin, a high school coach from Michigan and experienced marathoner, moved up to second by 35 km and was 1:54 behind. Martin chopped the lead down to 56 seconds by 40 km and kept coming as Kamau slowed. Then, a “fan” waving a Kenyan flag went onto the course in the final straight and Kamau moved away from his line to avoid her and lost time before correcting his path.

Martin kept coming and got to the line ahead of a diving Kamau in what was initially reported as a 2:11:16.50 to 2:11:16.68 finish. The official, posted results showed 2:11:16.5 to 2:11:16.9, with Kenyan Enyew Nigat third at 2:14:22.2.

American stars Nick Christie and Lauren Harris won the USATF Half Marathon Race Walking World Team Trials at Celebration Pointe, Florida on Sunday (8th) by considerable margins in the selection event for the World Athletics Race Walking Team Championships in April in Brazil.

Christie won the men’s race in 1:34:29, and set American Records en route for 5 km (17:26), 10 km (39:13) and 15 km (1:01:23). Second was Jordan Crawford in 1:39:49, with Jason Cherng claiming bronze in 1:40:38.

Harris won in 1:44:03, best ever by an American and in position to be recognized as an American Record. She also set en route records at 5 km (19:07), 10 km (42:32) and 15 km (1:06:46), lowering the three existing marks by Maria Michta-Coffey from 2014 to 2016.

Izabelle Trefts, the NAIA indoor 3,000 m winner, was second in 1:52:13, with bronze medalist Katie Burnett finishing in 1:52:23.

● Baseball ● Playoff qualifiers in the World Baseball Classic have been determined for Groups C and D, while Groups A and B are yet to be decided.

Japan is 3-0 in Group C and was the first to advance and South Korea, following a 7-2 win over Australia on Monday, will also advance. In Group D, the Dominican Republic is now 3-0 after a 10-1 win over Israel and will advance. Venezuela, now 2-0, will also advance.

The playoff rounds begin on 13 March (Friday).

● Figure Skating ●We left it all on the ice in Milan. Our season feels complete with those four performances where we delivered our best.”

That’s U.S. Ice Dance star Evan Bates, speaking for himself and partner Madison Chock, withdrawing from the upcoming ISU World Championships in Prague (CZE) from 24-29 March.

“While we have decided not to compete at the World Championships, we hold dear the incredible memories from winning the last three years. Those achievements have meant so much to us. We couldn’t be more appreciate of all the love and support.”

Caroline Green and Michael Parsons, fourth at the 2026 U.S. Championships, will make replace them and will compete in their third Worlds.

● Football ● Iraq has a 31 March date in Monterrey (MEX) to play for a spot in the 2026 FIFA World Cup against the winner of a Suriname vs. Bolivia play-in game, but with the turmoil in neighboring Iran, it’s impossible for the Iraqi team to even be together to prepare.

Iraqi coach Graham Arnold (AUS) is asking FIFA to postpone the match until the first week of June. That way, if Iran withdraws due to the attacks against it by Israel and the U.S., Iraq would be in position to be named to replace it. Then, the UAE would be the next Asian confederation team in line to play the winner of Bolivia-Suriname. Said Arnold:

“In my opinion, if FIFA were to delay the game it gives us time to prepare properly. In my opinion, it also gives FIFA more time to decide what Iran is going to do.“

As for the Iranian women’s football team, in Australia for the Women’s Asian Cup, is embroiled in controversy as they were silent during the national anthem for their opening match vs. South Korea on 2 March, opening up the possibility of punishment on their return.

Iran lost all three of its group matches by 3-0, 4-0 and 2-0, with at least five players asking for asylum. U.S. President Donald Trump wrote on his Truth Social account on Monday:

“I just spoke to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, of Australia, concerning the Iranian National Women’s Soccer Team. He’s on it! Five have already been taken care of, and the rest are on their way. Some, however, feel they must go back because they are worried about the safety of their families, including threats to those family members if they don’t return. In any event, the Prime Minister is doing a very good job having to do with this rather delicate situation. God bless Australia!”

● Gymnastics ● At the USA Gymnastics Winter Classic in Springfield, Illinois, 2025 World Championships U.S. team member Trevor Harder scored a big win in the men’s Elite Trampoline final, scoring 60.900 to edge Elijah Vogel (59.810) and 2025 Worlds silver medalist Ruben Padilla (58.93).

The women’s Elite title went to Leah Garafolo (53.870), also a 2025 U.S. Worlds team member, just ahead of Clare Bretscher (53.610) and Ava DeHanes (52.470).

● Skateboard ● Japan dominated the delayed World Skate 2025 World Championships in Sao Paulo (BRA), with the finals alternately held in sunny conditions or heavy rain.

The men’s rain-impacted Park final saw Spain’s Egoitz Bijueska hit his fourth run and score 95.83 to win the men’s title, just ahead of Kalani Konig (BRA: 94.80). American Tom Schaar was third, scoring 90.51 on his second run. It’s Spain’s first Worlds medal!

Women’s Park had go be shortened to two runs due to the weather with Britain’s Sky Brown claiming her second Worlds gold, ahead of Mizuho Hasegawa (JPN) and American Minna Stress, who won her second Worlds bronze in three editions (scores not posted).

In the Men’s Street final, Japan’s Toa Sasaki had the best run in the field at 86.33 in round two and added the third-best trick score for a winning total of 174.10. That was just better than Angelo Caro (PER) at 173.32 and Sora Shirai (JPN: 170.45).

The women’s Street was a Japan sweep, with first-time Worlds medal winner Ibuki Matsumoto (156.59) winning, ahead of Nanami Onishi (146.36) and Olympic champ Coco Yoshizawa (145.02), with Brazil’s iconic, two-time Olympic Street medalist Rayssa Leal (143.54) in fourth.

● Sport Climbing ● At the USA Climbing National Team Trials in Portland, Oregon, the usual format of qualifying to a final was discarded in favor of three rounds for all, for a better evaluation.

In the men’s Boulder, Auggie Chi, Colin Duffy and Hugo Hoyer won the three rounds and all were selected on the national team of five. In Lead, Jesse Grupper won rounds 1 and 3 and was third in round two, won by Sergey Lakhno. Colin Duffy was second in all three rounds and all three were among five selected. The Speed winners were Ben Jennings, Noah Bratschi and Michael Hom and they all made the team of five.

The women’s Boulder round winners were Melina Costanza, Adriene Akiko Clark and Nekaia Sanders and they were named on the team of five. Ella Fisher won the first women’s Lead event, with Brooke Raboutou second, then Raboutou won the last two rounds with Fisher second and were among the five named. The Speed victors were Isis Rothfork for the first two rounds and Sophia Curcio in the third and both were on the five-member team.

● Speed Skating ● The International Skating Union introduced first-ever awards for speed skating at a ceremony following the ISU World Sprint and Allround Championships in Heerenveen (NED).

Awards were given for those with the most World Cup wins – Jordan Stolz (USA) for the men and Femke Kok (NED) for the women – plus the seven world-record setters during the season, which included the U.S. men’s Team Pursuit squad of Ethan Cepuran, Casey Dawson and Emery Lehman.

Individual awards for the Most Improved went to Canada’s Valerie Maltais and to Czech star Metrodej Jilek for Best Newcomer.

● Swimming ● SwimSwam.com reported on a change from World Aquatics, dropping the Mixed 4×100 m Freestyle relay from its World Aquatics Championships program, meaning the Worlds event line-up will be the same as for the Olympic Games.

The Mixed 4×1 Free has been held seven times at the Worlds, between 2015-25.

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PARALYMPIC WINTER GAMES: Austria’s Aigners win first medals of 2026 Games; Team USA’s amazing Masters scores 20th career Para medal!

The Winter Paralympic Biathlon women’s sitting Sprint podium: Kendall Gretsch and Oksana Masters of the U.S. and Germany’s Anja Wicker (Photo: OIS-Remi Vallat).

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≡ GAMES UPDATE ≡

Medal events at the 14th Paralympic Winter Games got underway on Saturday and the skiing Aigner family from Austria was once again at the front of the line for medals.

Veronika Aigner, 23, with guide Lilly Sammer, won the first medal event of the Games in the Alpine women’s Downhill in the vision-impaired category, clocking 1:22.55. Italy’s Chiara Mazzel – with Nicola Cotti Cottini – won silver at 1:23.03.

In the men’s Downhill for vision-impaired, younger brother Johannes Aigner (20) – with Nico Haberl – won in 1:16.08, over Canada’s Kalle Ericsson (with Sierra Smith) in 1:18.33.

Mazzel came back to win the women’s vision-impaired Super-G, with Veronika Aigner second, and Johannes won the men’s vision-impaired Super-G, with Ericsson third.

The U.S. also got its first gold of the Games – in fact a 1-2 finish – on Saturday from superstar Oksana Masters and Kendall Gretsch in the women’s Biathlon sitting Sprint, with Masters crossing in 21:21.3 (0 penalties) to 21:37.3 (0) for Gretsch. Said Masters, who won her 20th career Paralympic medal:

“Oh my gosh, my emotions are just pure shock. I did not expect this. All I was hoping was just to have a good time in the shooting range. I did not expect a podium finish to be honest, let alone a gold.

“I’m starting to realize that’s who I am; I have to have adversity going into the Games, although I don’t like it.

“The summer started out with surgery and then the last three weeks has been just absolutely a lot of time away from training, with infection and with a concussion, and battling, and just trusting the process and waiting. This is why this just means so much more, I did not expect this.”

Gretsch added:

“I’m really excited and I’m just happy to get the first race under my belt. It’s been so long since we’ve raced this season, so you just never know where you’re at. It’s always a good feeling to get the good (first) race done, and have it go well.

“I’m excited for the rest of the week and excited for our team. We’re going to have an awesome week. It’s a really good start. Hopefully I can keep building from here and maintain this. I’m really excited for the rest of the races.”

Both of them are going to have clear more space in their crowded Paralympic Games trophy rooms:

Gretsch: 9 total medals
● 6 Biathlon medals (2-2-2)
● 1 Cross Country Skiing medal (1-0-0)
● 2 Triathlon medals (1-1-0)

Masters: 20 total medals
● 6 Biathlon medals (3-3-0)
● 9 Cross County Skiing medals (3-4-2)
● 4 Cycling medals (4-0-0)
● 1 Rowing medal (0-0-1)

The full U.S. tally through Monday:

Alpine Skiing:
● Men/Super-G sitting ~ Bronze: Andrew Kurka
● Men/Super-G standing ~ Silver: Patrick Halgren

Biathlon:
● Women/Individual sitting ~ Bronze: Kendall Gretsch
● Women/Sprint sitting ~ Gold: Oksana Masters
● Women/Sprint sitting ~ Silver: Kendall Gretsch

Snowboard:
● Men/Snowcross SBLL1 ~ Noah Elliott
● Women/Snowcross SBLL2 ~ Silver: Kate Delson

In the Curling Mixed Doubles, Laura Dwyer and Stephen Emt went 4-3 in the round-robin and are into the semifinals against South Korea (4-3) on Tuesday.

The four-time defending champion U.S. Sled Hockey team is 2-0 so far, beating Italy by 14-1 and Germany by 13-0. China is also 2-0 in Group A and they will play on Tuesday.

Through three days of medal events, China leads with 17 (8-5-4) and Ukraine has 10 (3-2-5). The U.S. ranks third with seven, tied with Canada and Germany. The Games continue through Sunday.

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PANORAMA: Liu will skip World Figure Champs; world Half-Mar record for Kiplimo; sprinter Kerley banned for two years!

First the World Cross Country title and now the Half Marathon world record for Uganda's Jacob Kiplimo! (Photo: Sergio Mateo María for World Athletics)

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2028: Los Angeles ● The Los Angeles City Council continued to 13 March consideration of a non-binding resolution urging “the LA 28 Organizing Committee, and the International Olympic Committee, to ensure that all leadership roles are held by individuals who consistently reflect the Olympic movement’s commitment to integrity, accountability, and respect for all people” and asking for another “review” of LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman’s “involvement” with  the late felon, Jeffrey Epstein.

Council member Monica Rodriguez, sponsor of the resolution, was not present at Friday’s session.

● Athletics ● The 2022 men’s 100 m World Champion and 2024 Paris bronze medalist, Fred Kerley, was suspended for two years to 11 August 2027 for “whereabouts” failures on 11 May 2024, 13 June 2024 and 6 December 2024, with another failure on 7 December not considered.

An Athletics Integrity Unit Disciplinary and Appeals Tribunal called Kerley’s conduct “negligent and, to a certain extent, reckless.” Kerley said technical failures with the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency’s reporting application caused his 11 May miss and blamed the Doping Control Officer for “not attempting” to locate him on 6 December. In fact, the Doping Control Officer had knocked on his door, rang the doorbell multiple times and called him three times.

Kerley, 30, can appeal the sanction to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. He has agreed to compete in the doping-friendly Enhanced Games in May.

World Athletics has rejected ratification of five world junior (U-20) records on the basis of false age claims. The Athletics Integrity Unit noted “date of birth” concerns on five women’s marks made by three athletes:

Mile: 4:17.13, by Birke Haylom (ETH) in Oslo (NOR) on 15 June 2023.
5,000 m: 14:23.71, by Haylom in Eugene (USA) on 25 May 2024.
5,000 m: 14:21.89, by Medina Eisa (ETH), in Brussels (BEL) on 14 September 2024.

1,500 m Indoor: 3:58.43, by Haylom in Boston (USA) on 4 February 2024.
3,000 m Indoor: 8:32.34, by Melknat Wudu (ETH) in Boston (USA) on 4 February 2024.

Canadian Running reported that no sanctions for age manipulations have been issued by World Athletics or the Athletics Integrity Unit, yet.

USA Track & Field posted a lengthy statement from chief executive Max Siegel on the situation concerning the mishap at the USATF Half Marathon Championships in Atlanta and the dilemma concerning selections of the women’s team for the Half Marathon at the World Road Running Championships in Denmark in September.

The statement notes that as regards selection, “[t]he spots are eligible for the top five finishers and are offered in ascending order. If all the athletes decline, the spots are offered based on world rankings.” However, the runners who probably would have gone 1-2-3 – Jess McClain, Emma Grace Hurley and Edna Kurgat – finished 9-12-13 after unknowingly being led off the course by the lead vehicle. So:

“Additionally, although they have all graciously and publicly stated they would decline their spots on the team, we felt strongly that the three official top finishers should be awarded for their efforts. On Monday, we sent an emergency request to World Athletics, outlining what happened. While we had hoped to share the results of this request with everyone today, we have learned the outcome will require a vote by the World Athletics Council. This vote is scheduled for the World Athletics Council meeting which will take place in Poland prior to the World Indoor Championships on March 18-19. Due to the nature of the request, we cannot share the details publicly until a vote has occurred.”

There is a clue to the request a little further in the statement:

“World Rankings bonuses and time bonuses are real concerns the athletes have voiced. While we cannot change the time on the clock, we hope that the outcome of our conversations with World Athletics addresses this.”

Note also that the World Athletics World Rankings are also a selection criteria. But the next step is to wait.

● Figure Skating ● Olympic women’s champion Alysa Liu will not defend her 2025 World Championships win at the 2026 Worlds in Prague (CZE).

Fellow Olympians Amber Glenn (fifth in Milan) and Isabeau Levito (12th) will compete, along with Sarah Everhardt, who finished fifth at the U.S. championships and will appear at the Worlds for the first time.

≡ RESULTS ≡

● Alpine Skiing ● The FIS women’s World Cup in Val di Fassa (ITA) was expanded and added a second Downhill race to make up for the cancellation at Crans-Montana on 28 February, but that only opened another opportunity for Italy’s Laura Pirovano. At 28, she had never won a World Cup medal, but won both Downhills in front of home fans.

She took Friday’s opener in 1:21.40, barely in front of Olympic silver winner Emma Aicher (GER: 1:21.41) with Olympic champ Breezy Johnson third (1:21.69). Americans Jackie Wiles (1:22.15) and Allison Mollin (1:22.19) were 11th and 13th.

Pirovano won on Saturday in 1:20.91, this time beating Olympic Super-G bronzer Cornelia Huetter (AUT) by 0.01 (1:20.92), with 2022 Olympic champ Corinne Suter (SUI: 1:20.96) third and Johnson fourth (1:21.55). Wiles was 15th (1:22.05).

Italy completed its sweep in Sunday’s Super-G with Elena Cutoni winning her fourth career World Cup gold in 1:29.07, just ahead of Norway’s Kajsa Vickhoff Lie (1:29.33) and Asja Zenere (ITA: 1:29.34). Keely Cashman was the leading American, in 17th (1:30.27) and seasonal World Cup leader Mikaela Shiffrin – looking for some more points – was 23rd (1:30.76).

The men’s World Cup in Kranjska Gora (SLO) started with the second World Cup gold of the season for Brazil’s Olympic champion Lucas Pinheiro Braathen, this time in the Giant Slalom in 2:11.95, after leading the first run. Swiss Loic Meillard, the Olympic bronze winner, was second (2:12.49) and Stefan Brennsteiner (AUT: 2:12.75) third. River Radamus was the top U.S. finisher, in 20th (2:14.63).

Pinheiro Braathen was on the podium again in Sunday’s Slalom, but in third (1:38.89) behind Norwegians Atle McGrath, the 2025 Worlds silver winner (1:38.85) and Henrik Kristoffersen, the Olympic bronze medalist, in 1:38.86. Americans Benjamin Ritchie (1:39.82) and Jett Seymour (1:39.90) finished 19-20.

● Athletics ● Uganda’s Jacob Kiplimo followed up on his World Cross Country Championships win in style, getting a world record in the men’s Half Marathon, timing 57:20 at the EDP Lisbon Half in Portugal on Sunday.

Kiplimo had set a world mark of 57:31 in Lisbon in 2021, but that was lowered by Ethiopia’s Yomif Kejelcha to 57:30 in 2024. Kiplimo ran a blistering 56:42 in Barcelona in February 2025, but the record time was disallowed for pacing assistance by a lead vehicle.

So Kiplimo returned to Lisbon and chopped a more believable 10 seconds off the existing record. He broke away from Nicholas Kipkorir (KEN) after 15 km and won alone; Kipkorir was second in 58:08, moving him to no. 12 all-time!

Tsigie Gebreselama (ETH) was an easy winner in the women’s race, in 1:04:48, no. 2 on the 2026 world list.

Hot vaulting continued at the World Indoor Tour Silver Perche Elite in Rouen (FRA), as both World silver medalist Emmanouil Karalis (GRE) and Norway’s Sondre Guttormsen cleared 6.06 m (19-10 1/2), with Karalis winning by his first-time clearance.

Guttormsen made it on his second try for a national record, and moved to equal-fifth all-time indoors. American stars KC Lightfoot (5.80 m/19-0 1/4) and Sam Kendricks (5.70 m/18-8 1/4) were sixth and eighth.

At the Race Walk Tour Gold Dudinska 50 in Dudince (SVK), Sweden’s three-time Worlds medalist Perseus Karlstrom got a lifetime best in the new half-marathon distance and a runaway win in 1:24:58 with Jerry Jokinen second, but far back in 1:28:17. The men’s marathon went to Hungary’s Bence Venyercsan in 3:03:45, also a lifetime best and well in front of Karl Junghannss (GER: 3:04:33).

Peru went 1-2 in the women’s half-marathon, but it was Evelyn Inga – eighth in the Paris 20 km – who won easily in 1:33:49 and two-time World Champion Kimberly Garcia was second in 1:34:17, both lifetime bests. Mexico’s Sofia Ramos took the marathon in 3:35:37, a national record, and well ahead of Spain’s Laura Monje (3:39:11).

● Badminton ● At the $1.45 million BWF World Tour All-England Open in Birmingham, Chinese Taipei’s Chun-Yi Lin won the men’s Singles in a 21-15, 22-20 sweep of Lakshya Sen (IND), while Olympic champion Se Young An (KOR) went down to China’s Zhi Yi Wang, 21-15, 21-19.

South Korea won the men’s Doubles, China took the women’s Doubles and Chinese Taipei won the Mixed Doubles title.

● Baseball ● Pool play continues in the sixth World Baseball Classic through 11 March, with defending champion Japan already clinching a spot in the playoffs with a 3-0 record in Group B.

The Japanese pounded Chinese Taipei (13-0) in their opener, then needed three runs in the seventh to squeeze past South Korea, 8-6 and then two runs in both the seventh and eighth innings to get a 4-3 win over Australia.

The U.S., runner-up in 2023, slammed Brazil by 15-5 in their opener and then cruised past Great Britain, 9-1 in their second game. They play Mexico on Monday in Houston. Italy is also 2-0 in Group B.

Puerto Rico, playing at home in San Juan, shares the Group A lead with Cuba, both with a 2-0 mark. In Group D, the Dominican Republic and Venezuela are both 2-0.

● Biathlon ● The seventh of nine stages in the IBU World Cup was in Kontiolahti (FIN), with wins for Olympic medal winners Eric Perrot (FRA) and Sturla Holm Lagreid (NOR). Perrot won the men’s 20 km Individual on Friday in 44:55.7 (0 penalties) over Lagreid (45:25.6/0), with Maxime Germain the top American in 22nd (49:13.5/2).

Lagreid won the 15 km Mass Start on Sunday in 34:39.7 (0), beating Perrot, who finished in 34:56.2 (1). Norway’s Vetle Christiansen was third in both races; Campbell Wright of the U.S. was 13th (35:56.7/3). Of course, it was Norway and France finishing 1-2 in the men’s 4×7.5 km relay.

As usual, it was Sweden and France dominating the women’s racing. Four-time Olympic medalist Elvira Oeberg (SWE: 41:46.4/0) won the 15 km Individual over sister Hanna Oeberg (42:27.7/1), then Olympic gold and silver winner Julia Simon took the 12.5 km Mass Start in 34:40.0 (1), with Elvira Oeberg second (34:45.6/2) second and Swedish teammate Anna Magnusson in third (34:48.9/1).

Sweden bested France in the 4×6 km relay, with the U.S. 12th.

● Cricket ● India defended its title in the ICC T20 World Cup held in Mumbai (IND) with a decisive victory over New Zealand, 255/5 (20 overs) to 159 (19 overs). It’s the third title overall for India in the 10th editions of the men’s T20 World Cup.

Cricket – T20 – will be played as a medal sport at the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

● Cross Country Skiing ● The amazing six-golds Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo continued his hot streak at the FIS World Cup in Lahti (FIN), taking two more wins, both times at the head of a Norwegian 1-2.

He won the Freestyle Sprint in 2:49.84, ahead of Lars Heggen (+0.42), the dominated the 10 km Interval Mass Start in 23:22.6, well ahead of Martin Nyenget (23:44.7). Gus Schumacher was the top American, in 15th (24:22.0).

Olympic Sprint runner-up Jonna Sundling (SWE) won the women’s Freestyle Sprint, 3:07.00 to 3:07.17 over teammate – and Olympic winner – Linn Svahn. Double Olympic winner Frida Karlsson won the 10 km Interval Mass Start in 25:57.6, beating Svahn (26:01.7) and American seasonal leader Jessie Diggins of the U.S. (26:03.8).

Diggins remains in the overall World Cup lead after 23 of 28 events: 1,898 to 1,634 over Swede Moa Ilar.

● Cycling ● The UCI Track World Cup season opened in Perth (AUS), with Germany’s Moritz Augenstein taking the men’s Elimination Race and the Madison, with Roger Kluge. The speed events were split with Paris 2024 runner-up Matthew Richardson (GBR) winning the Sprint over Leigh Hoffman (AUS) and Malaysia’s Mohd Awang, but Awang coming back to win the Keirin over Richardson.

The men’s Omnium went to Shunshuke Imamura (JPN), with the U.S.’s Graeme Frislie taking the bronze.

China’s Liying Yuan won the women’s Sprint and led a win in the Team Sprint, while home fans cheered Australian wins in the Team Pursuit and for Alessia McCaig in the Keirin. Mexico’s Yareli Acevedo won the Elimination Race and also took a bronze in the Madison, with Sophia Arreola.

The famed Strade Bianche road races ran Saturday in and around Siena (ITA), with Slovenian superstar Tadej Pogacar attacking with about 79 left out of the hilly, 203 km course and winning by 1:00 in 4:45:15. It’s Pogacar’s fourth win in this race, previously in 2022 and now three in a row in 2024-25-26.

France’s Paul Seixas overtook Mexico’s Isaac del Toro in the final km to get second by nine seconds (+1:00 to +1:09). Matteo Jorgenson was the top American, in eighth (+2:20).

The women’s route of 133 km ended up with eight contesting the medals, finally ending with Swiss Elise Chabbey getting the biggest win of her career, in 3:35:42. Her final sprint edged Kasia Niewiadoma (POL) and Franziska Koch (GER), both awarded the same time.

● Football ● The U.S. won the SheBelieves Cup with a final, 1-0 win over Colombia in Harrison, New Jersey, but it wasn’t easy.

The Colombians packed in their defense and the first half ended 0-0. After an hour, the frustrated U.S. had 67% of possession, but just five shots to eight for Colombia and both with just one shot on goal.

But the U.S. continued on the attack continuously, but got nowhere until the 82nd when sub forward Jaedyn Shaw sent a right-footed cross from the left side to substitute striker Alyssa Thompson at the top of the box. She had space and ripped a right-footed laser that found the net, just underneath the crossbar for the 1-0 lead.

That’s how it ended, with the U.S. finishing with 67% possession and nine shots to Columbia’s 10. The Americans won all three games in the tournament by 2-0, 1-0 and 1-0. Canada won on penalties over Argentina after a 0-0 draw, and finished second in the tournament (1-1-1) ahead of Colombia (1-1-1) and the Argentines (0-2-1).

● Gymnastics ● At the FIG Artistic World Cup in Baku (AZE), Algeria’s Paris 2024 Olympic Uneven Bars gold medalist Kaylia Nemour won her speciality, scoring 15.233. Russian “neutral” Anna Kalmykova won on Vault at 13.716 and Japan’s Mana Okamura swept the second day, taking the Beam gold (14.133) over Nemour (13.800) and Floor at 13.533.

The first-day men’s wins went to Belarusian “neutral” Yahor Sharamkou (14.533); Bulgarian David Ivanov on the Pommel Horse (14.066), Russian “neutral” Ilia Zaika on Rings (14.600).

The final day saw Ukraine’s two-time Worlds medal winner Nazar Chepurnyi win on Vault (15.549), then Colombia’s Paris 2024 Horizontal Bar silver man Angel Barajas won on the Parallel Bars (14.600) and Paris 2024 bronze winner Chia-hung Tang (TPE) won on the Horizontal Bar, scoring 15.366).

At the USA Gymnastics American Cup in Henderson, Nevada, China won the final round mixed-team title, scoring 57.250, ahead of the U.S. (54.700) and Japan (54.100).

In the Nastia Liukin Cup women’s competition, Josie Lynch won the All-Around at 39.125, also winning the Beam at 9.825. The other apparatus winners included Avery Schlichting on Vault (9.925), Elizaveta Grebenkova on the Uneven Bars (9.825), and Ariana Barksdale on Floor (9.900).

● Judo ● Japan was the big winner at the IJF World Tour Upper Austria Grand Prix in Linz with three women’s golds, from Mitsuki Kondo at 48 kg, Iroha Oi at 52 kg and Ayami Takano at 57 kg.

No other country won more than once. Georgia’s three-time World Champion Tato Grigalashvili won the men’s 81 kg class, Rio 2016 Olympic women’s gold medalist Rafela Silva won the 63 kg class and two-time Olympic medalist Michaela Polleres (AUT) won at 70 kg.

The U.S. won a medal in the men’s 73 kg division with a bronze for Jack Yonezuka.

● Luge ● The final FIL World Cup of the season was in Altenberg (GER), with German racers taking the Singles titles.

Felix Loch won the men’s Singles in 1:46.069 – his fifth win of the season – over Italian star Dominik Fischnaller (1:46.433) and David Gleirscher (AUT: 1:46.503). Loch clinched the seasonal title as well, with 801 points to 685 for Austria’s Jonas Mueller. Jonny Gustafson was the top American, in 15th (208).

Merle Fraebel got her third win of the season in the women’s Singles in 1:43.790, just ahead of Olympic winner Julia Taubitz (1:43.927) and Kendija Aparjode (LAT: 1:43.933). Summer Britcher of the U.S. was eighth 1:44.772. But Taubitz won the seasonal title – her fifth straight – 634 to 630 over Fraebel, with Britcher the top American, in fourth (482).

Austria was 1-2 in the men’s Doubles with Olympic runner-ups Thomas Steu and Wolfgang Kindl timing 1:45.154 and Juri Gatt and Riccardo Schopf close at 1:22.880. Germany’s Tobias Wendl and Tobias Arlt won the seasonal title with 636 points, over Steu and Kindl (605). Marcus Mueller and Ansel Haugsjaa of the U.S. were 12th (281).

Austria’s Selina Egle and Lara Kipp got their fourth win of the season in the women’s Doubles, 1:23.783 to 1:23.934 over Germans Dajana Eitberger and Magdalena Matschina. Egle and Kipp were seasonal winners as well, 795 to 653 for Eitberger and Matschina. Chevonne Forgan and Sophia Kirkby of the U.S. finished ninth at 350.

● Nordic Combined ● At the FIS World Cup in Lahti (FIN), triple Olympic winner Jens Oftebro (NOR) kept going, winning the Gundersen 130 m jumping and 10 km race in 22:48.9, barely ahead of brother Einar Oftebro (22:52.2) and home favorite Ilkka Herola (22:59.2).

The Finnish crowd was thrilled with the women’s Gundersen 130 m/5 km win for home favorite Minja Korhonen (18), who beat Norwegian star Ida Marie Hagen at the line, 13:48.8 to 13:49.3, for her seventh medal of the season, but first win! American Alexa Brabec was third in 14:07.5 to win her eighth medal of the season.

● Rugby Sevens ● The HSBC Sevens Series is in Vancouver (CAN) for the fifth of six stops this season, and South Africa and Fiji winning the men’s pools, and New Zealand and Australia winning the women’s pools with 3-0 records.

The playoffs produced no surprises on the women’s side, with New Zealand and Australia meeting for the title, and the Kiwis won a tight, 24-17 battle. The U.S. out-scored France, 35-21, for third. New Zealand leads Australia, 98-92, in the seasonal standings.

The men’s final was all South Africa, which raced to a 24-0 lead over Spain and finished with a 38-12 victory over surprise finalist Spain. Fiji won the third-place game, 29-10. Fiji and South Africa now lead the series, tied at 86.

● Ski Jumping ● The 15th stop on the FIS World Cup tour was in Lahti (FIN), jumping off the 130 m hill, with Olympic Normal Hill winner Philipp Raimund (GER) winning on Friday for the first time this season! He scored 129.3 points to edge Austria’s Daniel Tschofenig (128.6).

On Saturday, it was Tschofenig with his third win of the season, at 299.4, with Slovenian Olympic Large Hill winner Domen Prevc (SLO: 298.8) in second. Prevc had won six World Cups in a row before this weekend.

No such upsets in the women’s jumping, as younger sister Nika Prevc won twice. She won on Thursday, scoring 296. 7 to beat double Olympic winner Anna Stroem (NOR: 282.5), and then again on Friday at 282.0, with Stroem at 267.5. Japan’s Nozomi Maruyama was third in both events.

Nika Prevc now has 16 wins on the season and has clinched the FIS Crystal Globe with five events remaining.

● Snowboard ● The third of five stops on the FIS World Cup circuit in Snowcross was in Erzurum (TUR), with two-time World Junior Champion Leon Ulbricht (GER) winning the first men’s final over four-time World Juniors medal winner Aidan Chollet (FRA). On Sunday, Chollet got to the line first over Ulbricht, with younger brother Jonas Chollet getting the bronze.

Olympic Mixed Team medalist Lea Casta (FRA) was busy, winning the first women’s event with Chloe Trespeuch (FRA), a two-time Olympic medalist, second, and then Casta finished second on Sunday to Britain’s 2021 World Champion, Charlotte Bankes.

Home fans at the World Cup Halfpipe in Sapporo (JPN) were happy with the win for home favorite – and Olympic champion – Yuto Totsuka, who won at 91.50 over Valentino Guseli (AUS: 89.00) and Olympic bronzer Ryusei Yamada (JPN: 85.50).

Japan swept the women’s podium, with Olympic bronze winner Mitsuki Ono (87.00), Sena Tomita (78.50) and Sara Shimizu (78.00).

At the World Cup Parallel Slaloms were held in Spindleruv Myln (CZE), Italian star Maurizio Bormolini won his third World Cup race in a row and fifth of the season, beating Ryusuke Shinohara (JPN) in the final.

The women’s race went to Japan’s Tsubaki Miki for her third World Cup gold this season, over Zuzana Maderova (CZE), who won her fourth medal of the season.

● Speed Skating ● The home-standing Dutch and Norway were the big winners at the ISU Allround and Sprint Championships in Heerenveen (NED).

In the men’s Sprint, two-time Olympic runner-up Jenning De Boo (NED) won the first 500 m from Olympic champ Jordan Stolz of the U.S. and the first 1,000 m from Stolz, then the second 500 m as well. Stolz won the second 1,000 m but De Boo took the Sprint title with 134.670 points to 135.500 for Stolz.

Stolz was also in the men’s Allround, and won the 500 m easily, then finished 11th in the 5,000 m, won by Norway’s Olympic champ Sander Eitrem. Stolz came back to win the 1,000 m decisively over Eitrem, but in the 10,000 m, Stolz finished eighth while Eitrem was third and Czech Olympic winner Metrodej Jilek won by almost four seconds. Added up, Eitrem won the Allround title with 145.804 points to 146.117 for Jilek with Stolz fourth at 147.170.

The women’s Sprint was a showcase for Dutch star and Olympic 500 m champ Femke Kok. She swept the 500s and 1,000s and totaled 146.670 for a decisive win over Dutch teammate Suzanne Schulting (148.935) – second in all four races – and Marrit Fledderus (NED: 150.305) in third. Sarah Warren of the U.S. was 21st.

In the Allround, triple Olympic medalist Ragne Wiklund (NOR) was the most consistent. She was fifth at 500 m, third at 1,500 m, but won the 3,000 and 5,000 m races to total 157.457 and that was enough to win. Dutch Mass Start ace Marijke Groenewoud was fourth at 1,500 and then second in the 3,000 and 5,000 m to score 158.086 for second over Japan’s Miho Takagi (158.287).

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SWIMMING: Tyr Pro Swim triple wins for Walsh, Ledecky, Guiliano, Douglass, McIntosh and Short, among world leads in 22 events in Westmont

Another big splash for world-record holder Gretchen Walsh of the U.S.! (Photo: University of Virginia).

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≡ TYR PRO SWIM WESTMONT ≡

It’s early in the season, but there were world-leading performances for 2026 in 22 events at the Tyr Pro Swim Series that finished Saturday evening in Westmont, Illinois, especially from Americans Gretchen Walsh, Katie Ledecky and Chris Guiliano, and Canadian teen star Summer McIntosh and Australian distance star Sam Short.

Walsh swam five races and recorded five world-leading marks, including in the women’s 50 m Free, in the heats at 24.51 and then the final at 24.39. She swept her three rounds in the 50 m Butterfly, winning in 55.39 (heats), 55.31 (semis) and then 55.20 in the final, the sixth-fastest time in history.

Ledecky was just as brilliant, defeating McIntosh in the women’s 800 m Free on the first night in 8:08.37 (world lead) to 8:10.45, then winning the 1,500 m Free by more than 41 seconds in 15:40.86, and finally the 400 m Free in 4:00.54, equaling her own world lead from the Tyr Pro Swim Series in Austin in January.

McIntosh lost in the 800 Free, but she won the 200 Free in a world-leading 1:53.80, the 200 m Fly in 2:04.72 (world lead) and the 200 m Medley in a world-leading 2:08.21. Five-time Olympic medalist Kate Douglass won three events, in the 100 m Free (53.45), the 100 Breast (1:06.42 world lead) and 200 Breast (2:22.01 world lead).

Australia’s Short, the 2023 World 400 m champion, also dominated the distances, taking the 400 m Free in 3:43.49 (world leader), the 800 m Free over Tokyo 2020 Olympic champ Bobby Finke of the U.S., 7:40.98 (world lead) to 7:58.35, and the 1,500 m Free in a world-leading 14:52.33 to two-time Olympic champion Finke’s 15:08.27.

In the short men’s races, American Guiliano was supreme, winning the 50 m Free in a world-leading 21.43, as well as getting a world-leading 47.38 in the 100 m heats, then winning the final in 47.84. Guiliano won the 200 m Free in 1:45.53, just ahead of fellow American Gabriel Jett (1:43.54), after swimming a world lead of 1:45.38 in the prelims.

Paris Olympic 400 m Medley medalist Carson Foster won the two men’s medleys, both in world-leading times, in 1:57.39 (200 m) and 4:09.49 (400 m). U.S. Sprint star Michael Andrew won the 50 m Breaststroke in 27.00 and the 50 m fly in 23.10. French Olympic hero Leon Marchand was a two-event winner in the 200 m Backstroke in 1:57.56 and the 200 m Breast in 2:10.06.

Jett came back to get his own world lead in the men’s 200 m Butterfly in 1:55.07. Russian Ivan Tarasov won the 50 m Back in a world-leading 24.90, with Andrew second in 25.23. Canada’s Blake Tierney swam a world-leading 53.60 in the 100 m Back.

American star Regan Smith scored two wins as well, taking the women’s 200 m Back in 2:04.90 (world lead) and the 400 m Medley in 4:35.74. Katharine Berkoff, the 2025 World Champion, won the 50 m Back in 27.24, also a world-leading time, ahead of Isabelle Stadden (27.29). Stadden won the 100 m Back in 58.24, and was also second to Smith in the 200 m Back (2:05.91).

Quite a meet for March! The third Tyr Pro Swim is in 20-23 May in Sacramento.

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WINTER PARALYMPIC GAMES: Milan Cortina Games opened in Verona with hopes for peace, the strength of inclusion and a handful of athletes

From the opening ceremony of the 2026 Paralympic Winter Games at the Arena di Verona (Photo: OIS-Thien-An Truong).

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≡ OPENING CEREMONIES ≡

“When the first Paralympic Games took place in Rome in 1960 thanks to the work of Sir [Ludwig] Guttmann and Dr Antonio Maglio, athletes competed not for applause or headlines, but to prove a simple, powerful truth: that human potential is infinite.”

That introduction by International Paralympic Committee President Andrew Parsons (BRA) was the theme of the colorful opening of the 2026 Winter Paralympic Games at the ancient Arena di Verona, upgraded for much greater accessibility specifically with this moment in mind.

Parsons, noted, however, the reflection of the opening of the 2022 Winter Paralympics, just after Russia had started its invasion of Ukraine:

“Four years ago, I said I was horrified at what was happening in the world. Unfortunately, the situation has not improved.

“In a world where some countries are better known by the names of their leaders, I prefer to know countries by the names of their athletes.

“Sport offers the world, another way forward, another perspective.

“Here at Milano Cortina 2026, these Paralympic Games offer something truly different.

“Here, differences are not reasons for separation, but sources of strength.

“Here, nations gather as neighbors, and athletes compete with ferocity and fairness, united in respect for one another and of the rules of sport.

“The Paralympic Village is a living model of what society can and should be: free from politics, it is a place where everyone is welcome, everyone belongs, and everyone is valued. A barrier-free community where potential is realized and opportunity is open to all.

“And, tonight in this ancient arena – where gladiators once stood – we welcome a new generation of heroes.”

Organizing committee chief Giovanni Malago (ITA) underscored the Italian role in helping to create what is now the Paralympic Movement:

“Italy’s bond with the Paralympic Movement runs deep and is rooted in a defining chapter of our history. Together with Ludwig Guttmann, the father of the Paralympic Movement, it was the Italian physician Antonio Maglio who championed the first Paralympic Games. They were held in Rome alongside the 1960 Olympic Games, marking our nation’s rebirth in the eyes of the world after the devastation of the Second World War.

“All of this reminds us of a fundamental truth about the Paralympic Games: they represent an extraordinary opportunity to transform society – to make a country truly inclusive, and above all to inspire collective reflection on disability and inclusion within the public conscience.

“Yes, the Games are a powerful game changer. And we stand wholeheartedly for that change.”

As he did for the Olympic Winter Games, Italian President Sergio Mattarella opened the Games.

The parade of the nations was one of the most compact in history. A total of 55 nations were represented, with the flags carried – as approved by the International Paralympic Committee delegations last year – by volunteers and not by athletes. Owing to the spread-out nature of the Games and the competition schedule which got going in earnest on Saturday morning, only 45 athletes from 29 delegations actually marched; the U.S. was represented by alpine skier Laurie Stephens and sled hockey’s Josh Pauls.

The IPC said Czechia, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Ukraine did not attend the opening as a political statement.

Russia had its flag in the opening for the first time since the Sochi 2014 Games in view of doping issues and its invasion of Ukraine. It was re-admitted by a vote of the IPC General Assembly last September. More cheers were heard for the Ukrainian entry.

The Paralympic Flame entered the Arena di Verona via six-time Paralympic fencing medal winner Bebe Vio (ITA) and the cauldrons were lit in Milan by 15-time Paralympic medalist Francesca Porcellato (athletics, cycling, cross-country skiing), and by Turin 2006 Paralympic skiing winner Gianmaria Dal Maistro in Cortina.

The show closed with Domenico Modugno’s immortal “Volare” from 1958, perhaps the most celebrated Italian song of all, and as such, an invitation for everyone to enjoy the Winter Games.

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ATHLETICS: Grand Slam Track’s unsecured creditors blast proposed plan as legally inadequate, rips “shocking levels of incompetence”

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≡ “BLATANTLY DISCRIMINATORY” ≡

A no-holds-barred reply and objection from the more than 100 unsecured creditors of Grand Slam Track on Friday asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware to throw out a proposed plan to pay athletes about 85% of what they are owed and less than 1.5% to almost everyone else. It started with:

“The Plan (as defined below), as proposed, is not confirmable on its face because it violates the fundamental bedrock tenet of the Bankruptcy Code of treating similarly situated creditors equally and contains a coercive death trap provision if either class of creditors does not approve the Plan.

“In fact, through the Plan, Winners [Alliance], in partnership with Debtor’s senior management, are attempting to preserve their reputations among athletes at the expense of all other creditors. Winners does this by proposing to fund an blatantly discriminatory Plan with no business purpose. For Winners, this is a continuation of its bad faith conduct, commenced long before this case was filed.

“Winners apparent distain [sic] for ordinary trade creditors, who supported this company since its inception, is only rivaled by their contempt for the Bankruptcy Code’s requirement of treating similarly situated creditors equally.

“Rather than articulate a business purpose, outline a coherent vision or demonstrate how the reorganized Debtor would operate, the Plan only serves one purpose: to communicate to the world that Winners wants to take care of athletes, at the expense of everyone else. However, reality reveals a much different story.”

The filing goes on to cast Winners itself as a central actor in the financial failure of the Grand Slam Track project:

“Winners, while cloaking itself as a white knight savior of the Debtor, is actually one of, if not the, primary reason the Debtor has failed. As will be detailed in a forthcoming draft complaint that the Committee [of Unsecured Creditors] will be seeking standing to pursue, Winners is not an innocent bystander or simple investor in the Debtor.

“Rather, Winners orchestrated the Debtor’s every step from before the Debtor was even incorporated. The Committee’s investigation to date into the Debtor has identified shocking levels of incompetence, bad faith, self-dealing and failures to fulfill its fiduciary duty by the Debtor’s management and Winners as well as a failure to provide the committed financing promised to the Debtor and communicated to the broader trade community.”

“The proposed Plan is the final step for Winners to make the athletes close to whole while trying to bury all of the bad conduct under the rug. To add insult to injury, the Debtor attempts to blame its failures at the feet of the innocent trade creditors who supported the business throughout and have not been paid.

“For their troubles, Winners and the Debtor offered trade creditors with an estimate $13 million in claims a projected 1.50% distribution from a pool of $200,000, a small fraction of what the Debtor has allocated to the Debtor’s professionals in this case, and an even smaller fraction of what has been paid to the athletes prior to the case or the approximately $6 million offered to the athletes in the Plan.”

“At the end of the day, the Plan is nothing more than a disguised Bankruptcy Rule 9019 settlement among insiders where the settlement proceeds are earmarked for a select group of favored creditors.”

The filing notes its future action against Winners, asking the Court to dismiss any plan to settle the Grand Slam Track debts in the meantime:

“[I]t is important to understand that the Debtor has been under the control of Winners from before the Debtor was even formed. As will be detailed in the Committee’s forthcoming motion seeking standing to prosecute estate causes of action, Winners has unabashedly repeatedly directed the Debtor to ignore the valid claims of its trade vendors and prefer the athletes while at the same time failing to live up to its financing commitments.

“The Committee anticipates actively litigating significant and valuable claims against Winners, the Debtor’s Board, including its former directors, and Mr. [Michael] Johnson. Meanwhile, the Plan contemplates burying these valuable claims and causes of action by simply re-vesting the claims in the Reorganized Debtor, which will remain under Winners thumb after its debts have been discharged.”

The filing runs through a series of legal objections to the plan as offered, primarily on its unequal treatment of creditors and states:

“In the absence of a viable business plan, the Plan is simply a mechanism for Winners to ensure that their preferred athletes and vendors receive a near total recovery while shielding any estate claims from being prosecuted against them. This is the epitome of bad faith.”

The next scheduled hearing is on 12 March, for the court to consider the proposed reorganization plan, with the unsecured creditors asking for the plan to be thrown out now and a new, fairer plan to be created.

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LOS ANGELES 2028: Yaroslavsky asks Assembly committee about City and State monitoring of Olympic and Paralympic organizing finances

Former L.A. City Council member Zev Yaroslavsky at the 6 March 2026 hearing of the State Assembly committee on the 2028 Games (California State Assembly video screen shot).

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≡ ROLE OF THE BANKER ≡

A scheduled two-hour inaugural hearing of the California State Assembly Select Committee on the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games held Friday (6th) at the LA84 Foundation campus in Los Angeles ran long, thanks to many questions from 10 Assembly members and State Senators present.

Chaired by Assembly member Tina McKinnor (D-61st District), the focus was on the “Lessons and Legacy Impacts of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games,” and a summary of the history of the bid, planning and staging of that Games, which changed the Olympic Movement was offered, along with a detailed explanation of the legacy of the Games.

In specific, the LA84 Foundation, created with $93 million of the financial surplus left by the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee, continues work throughout the Southern California area, with more than $230 million distributed to more than $2,500 grantees over more than 40 years, with assets at the end of 2024 at $186.01 million.

LA84 Foundation President Renata Simril explained:

“Legacy for us is ultimately measured by how we positively impact the lives of young people. … So, yes, 1984 was a moment, but LA84 was what happened when a city decided that movement should be a mission. We were proof that you can celebrate a global moment and also build something that lasts after the world goes home.

“And that brings me to a simple idea: the Olympic Games weren’t just a successful event. It was a civic decision, a decision that proved Los Angeles could do something big and then to make sure that something good lasted after the Games went home. … The LA84 Foundation is just one expression of the many legacies that were left in the City of Los Angeles.”

Former Los Angeles City Council member Zev Yaroslavsky, later a longtime Los Angeles County Supervisor, spoke about the development of the Los Angles bid for the Games and the difficult in-city politics that ended with a City Charter amendment winning overwhelming voter approval to prohibit any City financing of the Games.

Yaroslavsky also spoke passionately about the impact the Games had on him, as he began running regularly after seeing American Joan Benoit’s spectacular victory in the first Olympic women’s marathon, and how the Olympic Arts Festival led to the founding of the Los Angeles Opera.

Known throughout his career as a budget hawk, Yaroslavsky also turned his attention to the Committee’s primary focus, the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games and the government guarantees against any deficits of the LA28 organizers. The City of Los Angeles is responsible for the first $270 million, then the State of California for the next $270 million and then back to the City for any more. Yaroslavsky’s warning was about vigilance:

“You’re the banker. The City of Los Angeles is the main banker, and – I’m not in the City [government]; I’m certainly not in the State – I don’t know what the City knows about the revenues are.

“We can sit here and say, ‘well, they [LA28] got a billion-two from Delta Airlines and this and that and that,’ but nobody knows for sure and … I don’t believe that anybody in the City knows exactly what the books are.

“Now, we didn’t know what the books were in 1984, but we didn’t need to know because we were protected, and that [LAOOC President Peter] Ueberroth would have to make it work, because he knew he couldn’t go to the City and say, ‘I’m broke.’ We can’t do anything for you, Peter, because we are precluded by the City Charter from doing that. And so he used that leverage with all of his sponsors …

“You guys, the State of California, whoever is responsible for this, whether it’s the Legislature of the Governor’s Office, or both, and the Mayor and the City Council need to know – and you should not jeopardize the confidentiality of bids and stuff like that – but somebody in the City has got to know where they stand.

“Otherwise, come July of 2028, there’s going to be a big bill put on the City’s desk, and probably on yours.”

The Assembly committee will have its second hearing in Sacramento on 6 April, combined with the Arts, Entertainment, Sports and Tourism committee, with the LA28 organizers expected to be in attendance.

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LANE ONE: My statement on the history and innovations of the organizing of the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles

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≡ ASSEMBLY HEARING ≡

On Friday (6th), I testified at the first hearing of the California State Assembly’s Select Committee on the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, titled “Lessons and Legacy Impacts of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games.”

Here is my prepared statement, giving a (very) short overview of the history and innovations of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee, which created and staged the Games of the XXIIIrd Olympiad: 

I am Rich Perelman and in 1984 I was the Vice President in charge of Press Operations for the 1984 Olympic Games and then Editor-in-Chief of the Official Report of the Games. It’s a pleasure to offer a very, very short summary of the Games that changed the future of the Olympic Movement.

After the murder of 11 Israeli athletes and officials at the 1972 Munich Games and a C$1 billion deficit at the 1976 Montreal Games, there was just one bid for the 1984 Games, in 1977. That was from Los Angeles, trying for the 10th time to bring the Games back after the success of the 1932 Olympic Games.

This unprecedented leverage allowed the volunteer Southern California Committee for the Olympic Games, in close cooperation with Mayor Tom Bradley, to force the International Olympic Committee to agree that the City of Los Angeles would have no financial liability for the Games, which would be organized strictly with private financing.

From the start, the Los Angeles idea for the 1984 Games was different, not only financially, but using existing or temporary sites for 18 of the 21 sports. Olympic Villages would use student housing at UCLA and USC.

With no other option, the IOC agreed in May 1978 to award the 1984 Games to Los Angeles. On March 26, 1979, travel industry entrepreneur Peter Ueberroth, was elected by a single vote as the President of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee. The LAOOC started out about $300,000 in debt from the bid.

Less than three weeks later, the LAOOC had $2.5 million in the bank thanks to a new television rights sales approach from bid committee member and noted television producer David Wolper. Within six months, Ueberroth signed the largest television deal in Olympic history: $225 million with ABC for U.S. rights and host broadcast services.

These were only the start of many more innovations:

● Ueberroth and marketing chief Joel Rubenstein revamped corporate opportunities around category exclusivity for the first time. Where Moscow 1980 received $5 million from 325 sponsors and suppliers, the LAOOC received $126.7 million from just 99. The “less is more” concept revolutionized the sports and event marketing world and continues to this day.

● Sports venues were almost all existing: the 23 sports at the 1984 Games — including two demonstration sports – took place at 27 sites, 24 of which were extant or temporary. The LAOOC built three venues: a cycling velodrome at Cal State Dominguez Hills, now the site of the Dignity Health Sports Park; a swimming and diving site at USC, still in use today, and a shooting range in Chino, also still in use today.

● The visual “Look of the Games” was reimagined in 1982, to incorporate bright, vibrant colors and use inexpensive materials such as construction scaffolding. Developed under the direction of Executive Vice President and General Manager Harry Usher, “Festive Federalism” unforgettably used three million square feet of colored nylon, 21,046 street banners and 35 miles of fence fabric to decorate the Games and the area.

● The organizing committee staff grew from 11 at the end of 1979 to 1,750 by June 1, 1984. But the revolution was using volunteers as the primary workforce, a concept met with disbelief by the IOC.

Some 33,500 volunteers helped the 1984 Games run superbly, and the use of volunteers has now become the norm for sporting events of all sizes and types.

● The LAOOC also ignored old ideas for arts and youth. The usual Games-time art program was expanded into a 10-week “Olympic Arts Festival” of 432 performances and 31 exhibitions attended by 1.26 million people. The usual, two-week “youth camp” for 300 was replaced by a four-year sports and educational program that touched 1.25 million youngsters from 1981-84.

● A never-before-tried national Olympic Torch Relay, beginning on May 8, 1984 and running 9,375 miles across the U.S. for 82 days, raised more than $10.95 million for three youth-sport organizations.

The LAOOC championed the addition of 11 new women’s events, including the marathon, sold a record 5.72 million tickets and staged a safe, secure and wildly-popular Games that revitalized the Olympic Movement.

It also made money. The original budget forecast $368 million in revenue and a $21 million surplus. In the end, there was $768.6 million in revenue and a surplus of $232.5 million, of which 40% went to the U.S. Olympic Committee, 20% to the National Governing Bodies and 40% to found the LA84 Foundation, where we are today.

I will be happy to answer any questions you may have.

The actual delivery was slightly spiced up with some asides, but the facts and statistics are here for the record. It was a pleasure to offer up a summary of what actually happened in an event which changed the trajectory of the Olympic Movement, sports marketing and a lot more.

Rich Perelman
Editor

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PANORAMA: NYC Marathon receives 240,000+ entry applications; Ledecky beats McIntosh in 800 m Free; TNT to show 2027 FIBA World Champs!

The greatest women’s swimmer ever: American Freestyle superstar Katie Ledecky (Photo: World Aquatics/Aniko Kovacs).

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Winter Paralympic Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● Two curling stones were stolen from the Cortina arena, but were being replaced. World Curling stated to The Associated Press:

“The spare stones from the set are now being used and have been brought to the same specifications as the rest of the set so there has been no impact on the competition.”

Police are investigating the thefts.

● Athletics ● The New York Road Runners said that the 2026 NYC Marathon received a record “240,000+ applicants from more than 160 countries – a near-20 percent increase from 2025.”

Only about 1% of the applicants will be selected to run; other options to join the race are through charity partners or through a series of other, small entry programs. The 2025 race once again set a record as the largest marathon ever with 59,226 finishers.

● Baseball ● The World Baseball Classic opened in Tokyo (JPN), with wins for South Korea, by 11-4 over the Czech Republic, and Australia, a 3-0 winner over Taiwan.

The Aussies got home runs from Robbie Perkins in the fifth and Travis Bazzana in the seventh to generate all three runs, while the Koreans got two home runs from Shay Whitcomb and homers from Bo-gyeong Moon – a grand slam in the first – and Jahmai Jones.

Defending champion Japan opens on Friday in Tokyo against Taiwan.

● Basketball ● FIBA announced a deal through 2029 for U.S. cable-caster TNT Sports to show the FIBA women’s World Cup in Germany in September 2026 and the FIBA men’s World Cup in 2027, being held in Qatar.

Games will be shown on TNT, TBS and truTV, with added events on the HBO Max streaming service. The first event to be shown is the FIBA women’s World Cup qualifying tournament in San Juan (PUR) from 11-17 March.

● Cricket ● Defending champion India faced off with prior winner England in a tight semifinal of the ICC men’s T-20 World Cup in Mumbai and the hosts came out on top, 253/7 (20) to 246/7 (20) and will play for a second straight title against New Zealand on Sunday (8th).

India won in 2007 and in 2024; New Zealand has been on one final, in 2021, and lost to Australia.

● Football ● FIFA was reported to release 800 of its 2,000 hotel rooms reserved in Mexico City (40%), citing no need for so many people for operations.

Alberto Albarran Leyva, the Executive Director of the Mexico City Hotel Association said that the current occupancy target for the opening of the tournament in Mexico City on 11 June is 85%.

● Swimming ● American Olympic relay gold medalist Chris Guiliano started off the Wednesday prelims of the Tyr Pro Swim Series in Westmont, Illinois with a sensational, world-leading 47.38 in the men’s 100 m Freestyle. And that signaled a meet with significant swims ahead on day one:

Katie Ledecky won the women’s 800 m Freestyle in another duel with Canadian superstar Summer McIntosh, 8:08.57 to 8:10.45. Ledecky pulled away in the second half of the race and produced the no. 13 time in history; she has 14 of the top 17. It’s McIntosh’s fourth-fastest time ever.

● Six-time Worlds gold medalist Regan Smith won the women’s 200 m Back in a speedy 2:04.90, fastest in the world in 2026, chased by Isabelle Stadden in 2:05.91, a lifetime best and no. 13 all-time (no. 7 all-time U.S.).

● Olympic champ Kate Douglass of the U.S. won the 200 m Breaststroke in a world-leading 2:22.01, winning by more than six seconds.

● French Olympic hero Leon Marchand won the men’s 200 m Back in 1:57.56, well ahead of Blake Tierney (CAN: 1:58.61), and took the 200 m Breast in 2:10.06 later in the same session!

● American Michael Andrew won the men’s 50 m Fly in 23.10, no. 3 in the world for 2026 and his fastest since 2024.

There were technical issues on the first night as well, with SwimSwam.com editor-in-chief Braden Keith scolding USA Swimming:

“[I]n spite of being a really good session by Pro Swim standards, anybody who wasn’t able to attend the meet wasn’t able to follow the meet in anything resembling real time. That means last night’s live recap conversation was almost entirely around the technical failures.

“The live stream didn’t work. It never does when it’s in the USA Swimming app.

“The live results didn’t work. The current systems seem to become somehow less reliable by the year.

“Even USA Swimming’s data hub didn’t work, which probably only we noticed, but was just the cherry on top of a mess of a night for America’s ‘professional’ swimming series. …

“So we’re left with a meet in an out-of-the-way place that makes it hard to attend in person, with an out-of-the-way app that makes it hard to stream, that didn’t work, and no results, for a professional swim meet where prize money is being awarded. China for darn sure isn’t going to have these issues when they pay the world’s best swimmers more money to go race there in a few months.

“I guess it could be worse. USA Track & Field recently didn’t even attempt to live stream a national championship event (the combined events championship), missed streaming women’s shotput, and they charge $100 per year for access to their streaming platform (albeit with a lot more events).”

● Volleyball ● The International Volleyball Federation (FIVB), following the path of the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) has renamed its men’s and women’s “World Championship” as the “World Cup,” to fall in line with the ultra-popular FIFA World Cup for men and women.

This will first apply to the FIVB men’s 2027 “World Cup” in Poland and the women’s “World Cup” in the U.S. and Canada.

FIBA changed the name of its championship in advance of the 2014 men’s tournament after the “FIBA World Championship” was held from 1950 to 2010. The 2014 women’s tournament was still called the “FIBA World Championship,” but this was changed to “World Cup” for the 2018 tournament.

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FAIR PLAY: American figure skater Ilia Malinin wins Milan Cortina Winter Games Fair Play Award on record voting

The “Fair Play” moment of the Milan Cortina Winter Games, as American Ilia Malinin congratulates Mikhail Shaidorov (KAZ) on winning the men’s Olympic figure skating gold (TSX photo by Karen Rosen).

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≡ MILAN CORTINA WINTER GAMES ≡

American figure skater Ilia Malinin lost what looked like a sure gold medal in the Olympic men’s Singles Free Skate due to an error-filled program that dropped him all the way to eighth place overall.

But his warm embrace of a shocked Olympic champion – Georgia’s Mikhail Shaidorov – following the announcement of the scores won him the International Fair Play Award for the Milan Cortina Games.

Malinin, 21, won over five other candidates, with the fan voting total surpassing that for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

The 2026 award is especially important as it comes 62 years after the very first Fair Play Award, given to Italian bobsled legend Eugenio Monti. During the 1964 Innsbruck Winter Games, he aided his direct rivals, the British Two-Man team with a replacement bolt that ultimately helped them win the Olympic gold, while Monti’s team ended up with the bronze.

Said Malinin:

“I am deeply humbled to receive this honour, especially given the incredible legacy of Eugenio Monti here in Italy. Congratulating Mikhail wasn’t about the results; it was about the shared journey we take as athletes. Knowing that fans worldwide connected with that moment means more to me than any medal.”

The men’s Free Skate was one of the great shockers of the Games. Shaidorov stood fifth after the Short Program at 92.94, more than 15 points behind Milanin, the leader at 108.16. In fact, Shaidorov was more than nine points out of the bronze-medal position.

Starting fifth from last, Shaidorov energized the crowd and claimed a lifetime best of 198.64 and shot into the lead with his all-time best score of 291.58. And then each of the remaining skaters had trouble. Finally, Malinin fell twice during his scaled-down routine and ranked only 15th in the Free Skate at 156.33 and missed the podium entirely at 264.49, in eighth place.

But rather than mope, he embraced the stunned Shaidorov, who was suddenly the Olympic champion.

International Committee for Fair Play President Sunil Sabharwal (USA) observed:

“The Milano Cortina 2026 Games have proved that the spirit of Eugenio Monti is more alive today than ever before. To see our global ‘fair play community’ engage in such record-breaking numbers – surpassing even the heights of Paris – shows that sportsmanship is a positive force to reckon with. Ilia’s gesture was the embodiment of ‘victory beyond the medal’, and we are honored to recognize him in the very mountains where this movement began over 60 years ago.”

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WINTER PARALYMPIC GAMES: IPC chief Parsons surprised at continued resistance to Russia after inclusion vote last September

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≡ IPC NEWS CONFERENCE ≡

International Paralympic Committee President Andrew Parsons (BRA) thought that the vote at the IPC General Assembly last September had ended questions about the re-admission of Russia and Belarus.

But it didn’t and he told reporters at a Thursday news conference in Milan, “yes, we were surprised to see that it has exploded again.”

IPC Chief Brand and Communications Officer Craig Spence (GBR) explained that for the Friday opening in Verona:

“Let me be very clear on the NPCs [National Paralympic Committees] who are not coming for political reasons. We have Czechia, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, and Ukraine.

“At the moment, the IPC is aware of seven National Paralympic Committees that are not coming for political reasons. We respect that decision.”

He also noted:

“Canada, Great Britain, Germany, France: they’re not boycotting the ceremony. They told us that they are not coming for performance reasons.”

Spence said that some of the selected flagbearers could not attend the ceremony since they had competitions beginning at 9:30 the following morning. So, during the opening, all of the actual flagbearers will be volunteers.

As for the Ukrainian “map” uniforms that were rejected:

“We have uniform guidelines for each Paralympic Games.

“Those uniform guidelines say that things like lyrics, slogans, mottos from your country are prohibited, and that includes maps.

“This piece of uniform in particular from Ukraine was presented to us in the middle of January.

“We went back and said, ‘I’m sorry, but this is in breach of the rules’. If any of the National Paralympic Committees had come to us with a piece of kit that featured within it a map of their borders, their country, we had the same answer. It was ‘No, can you change it?’.

“We had some great dialogue with NPC Ukraine. They said ‘Thank you for the feedback’. Within 24 hours, they provided us with an alternative design, and we approved it within 30 minutes. So, for us, that was cleared up three months ago.”

Parsons emphasized that even with the Russia-Ukraine war ongoing and the new conflicts in the Middle East, the purpose of the Paralympic Games means it need to go on:

“These Games are about sport, but not only sport. These Games are about inclusion, about 1.3 billion persons with disability out there.

“Sport is what we’re trying to protect here in these Games. Sport is our main focus here. It’s about the more than 600 athletes in six sports of a record number of nations. This will remain our focus. This and the message of it.”

Parsons said that the 612 qualifers for the 2026 Winter Games, from 56 national committees is a record, and that National Paralympic Committee athletes from El Salvador, Haiti, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Portugal will make their Winter Paralympic debut.

The Winter Paralympic opening will be shown on USA Network and NBC’s Peacock streaming service beginning at 1:30 p.m. Eastern time on Friday.

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SPOTLIGHT: Laurie Stephens and Andrew Kurka headline a U.S. Paralympic Alpine Team full of newcomers

U.S. Paralympic and World Championships Alpine medalist Andrew Kurka (Photo: Joe Kusumoto).

★ The Sports Examiner is delighted to present this important contribution from our patron, the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee, with a focus on American Paralympic stars. Opinions expressed are those of the USOPC. ★

Stephens and Kurka have combined to win nine medals in seven Paralympic appearances.

By Bob Reinert
Red Line Editorial

After bringing home one medal four years ago from Beijing, the U.S. Paralympic Alpine Ski Team will look to the experience and leadership of sit skiers Laurie Stephens and Andrew Kurka at the Paralympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026, which take place 6-15 March.

Stephens, who turns 42 a day before the Paralympics gets underway, returns for her sixth Games. The Wenham, Massachusetts, native, is a seven-time Paralympic medalist who has regularly won world championships and world cups over the years. She made her Paralympic debut at Torino in 2006, skiing to gold medals in the women’s Downhill and Super-G and a silver medal in the Giant Slalom.

Now in his 17th year on the national team, Kurka will be competing in his fourth Paralympics. The 34-year-old from Plamer, Alaska, owns two Paralympic medals and six world championships medals.

Kurka may have more Paralympic medals if it weren’t for some untimely injuries. In 2014, he qualified for the Sochi Games but didn’t compete after he broke his back in a training crash. Eight year later in Beijing, Kurka broke his arm, thumb and nose in a practice run but still finished in fourth in the men’s downhill. After that event, he pulled out of the Games.

With 23 athletes and one guide, the alpine ski team is the largest U.S. sport delegation for these Games. Those skiers hail from 13 different states, with five of them coming from Colorado, the only state with more than two athletes represented on the U.S. team.

While Kurka and Stephens are the only members of the team who have won a Paralympic medal, they are two of 10 athletes who have prior experience at the Games.

The only athlete that comes close to Stephens in terms of Paralympic experience is Jasmin Bambur. Now 46, Bambur made his Paralympic debut in 2010 for Serbia, becoming the country’s first Paralympian. After gaining U.S. citizenship in 2010, he eventually began competing for Team USA. The Granby, Colorado, resident is set to compete in his fourth Games for the U.S. and fifth overall.

Among the 13 Paralympic debutants on the U.S. alpine team, Audrey Crowley comes in with possibly the best chance to come home with a medal. The Eagle, Colorado, native – who just turned 19 on 1 March – won a bronze medal in the women’s Standing Giant Slalom at the 2025 World Championships, earning the only medal for the U.S. at the competition.

Like Crowley, Kelsey O’Driscoll competes as a standing skier and is another promising newcomer for Team USA. The 32-year-old from Caldwell, New Jersey, made her debut on the World Cup circuit in December 2025 in Steinach am Brenner, Austria. In only her third event, O’Driscoll won the women’s standing Super-G.

The U.S. will have plenty of competition for medals from the rest of the world at the Paralympics. Austria, China and Norway should be right in the middle of the podium chase. China led the way with 19 alpine ski medals on home soil four years ago, followed by Austria with 12, and France, Japan, Slovakia, Italy, Germany and Canada with six apiece.

The Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre will serve as the site for alpine events, which is where the Olympic women’s alpine races took place. The world-renowned venue hosted events during the 1956 Winter Olympics and is a regular stop on the World Cup circuit.

Para alpine skiing includes events for sitting, standing and visually impaired athletes. The skiers will compete in Downhill, Giant Slalom, Slalom, Super-G and super combined for a total of 30 medal events at the Games.

The first alpine medals will be handed out in Downhill on 7 March. The Super-G finals will take place on 9 March, followed by women’s Giant Slalom on 12 March, men’s Giant Slalom on 13 March, women’s Slalom on 14 March and men’s Slalom on 15 March.

NBC’s Peacock will stream every event live, while CNBC and USA will provide live coverage throughout the Games as well.

Bob Reinert spent 17 years writing sports for The Boston Globe. He also served as a sports information director at Saint Anselm College and Phillips Exeter Academy. He is a contributor to TeamUSA.com on behalf of Red Line Editorial, Inc.

For more, please visit the USOPC Paralympic Educational Hub.

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PANORAMA: L.A. City Council resolution on Wasserman leadership on Friday; World Baseball Classic starts Thursday!

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2028: Los Angeles ● The Los Angeles City Council has calendered Friday consideration of a resolution by member Monica Rodriguez from 11 February which includes:

“NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the Los Angeles City Council reaffirms its
commitment to the core values of the Olympic movement, including excellence, respect, integrity, accountability and transparency in leadership as the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games belong to the people of Los Angeles; and

“BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the City Council expresses concern regarding the potential conflict between the Olympic movement’s values and Casey Wasserman‘s association with the Epstein files, and calls for a thorough and transparent review of his involvement in the ongoing investigations into these matters; and

“BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the City Council urges the LA 28 Organizing Committee, and the International Olympic Committee, to ensure that all leadership roles are held by individuals who consistently reflect the Olympic movement’s commitment to integrity, accountability, and respect for all people; and

“BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the City Council pledges to work collaboratively with
community leaders, sports organizations, and stakeholders to ensure that the 2028 Games in Los Angeles serve as a global model of fairness, justice, and honor;

“BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that this Resolution be distributed to the LA28 Organizing Committee, the International Olympic Committee, and all relevant parties involved in the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games.”

The resolution is non-binding and two Council committees passed on discussing it and sent it to the City Council for direct review.

● Paralympic Winter Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee announced the selection of four-time Paralympic gold medalist Josh Pauls (sled hockey) and seven-time Paralympic medalist Laurie Stephens (alpine skiing) as flag bearers for Friday’s opening of the Milan Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games in Verona.

They were selected through a process led by the Team USA Athletes’ Commission. The opening of the Paralympic Games will be shown live on Friday on USA Network beginning at 1:30 p.m. Eastern time.

The Paralympics actually started on Wednesday; the U.S. won its Mixed Doubles opening in curling with an 11-6 win over Latvia.

● Baseball ● The best baseball you will see until October starts on Thursday in Japan as the 2026 – sixth – edition of the World Baseball Classic begins.

First held in 2006, this is the premiere national-teams tournament in the world and features 20 teams for the second time in a row, playing in four groups:

Group A: San Juan, Puerto Rico
● Canada
● Colombia
● Cuba
● Panama
● Puerto Rico

Group B: Houston, Texas
● Brazil
● Great Britain
● Italy
● Mexico
● United States

Group C: Tokyo, Japan
● Australia
● Chinese Taipei
● Czech Republic
● Japan ~ defending champion
● South Korea

Group D: Miami, Florida
● Dominican Republic
● Israel
● Netherlands
● Nicaragua
● Venezuela

Pool play continues through the 11th, with the quarterfinals on 13-14 March, the semis and finals in Miami on 15-16-17 March.

FOX has coverage of the tournament in the U.S., with most of the games to be shown on FOX, FS1 or FS2.

Japan won the 2023 WBC final with a dramatic final showdown between then-Angels teammates Shohei Ohtani for Japan and Mike Trout for the U.S., with Ohtani striking Trout out on a 3-2 slider for the 3-2 and the WBC title. Ohtani was named Most Valuable Player and will be back again for the Japanese team.

● Cricket ● At the ICC men’s T20 World Cup, New Zealand won the first semifinal, defeating South Africa, 173/1 (20 overs) to 169/8 (12.5), in Kolkata (IND).

Defending champion India faces 2023 winner England on Thursday in the second semi in Mumbai. Cricket T20 will be featured as a medal sport at the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles.

● Football ● The town of Foxborough, Massachusetts has demanded $7.8 million in security funding from the Boston 2026 World Cup host committee, or it will not approve the use of Gillette Stadium for the matches.

The deadline for the issuance of the license is 17 March and at a Tuesday evening meeting, host committee officials said invoices for reimbursement of all security amounts would be made within two days on presentation of an invoice. Town officials want payment guarantees and do not want to spend any of their own funds.

The host committee committed to the funding required and said that it has backing from the Kraft Group, owner of the stadium, as a guarantor.

Gillette Stadium is slated to host seven matches, starting on 13 June.

An undated post by the Los Angeles host committee for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, apparently from late January, predicts the event will bring $515 million in “direct visitor spending on lodging, dining, retail, transportation, and entertainment” and a total economic impact of $892 million counting indirect and induced spending over time.

No details, methodology or calculations were provided. SoFi Stadium will host five group-stage matches and three playoff matches, including a quarterfinal, between 12 June and 10 July.

/Updated/The U.S. women’s National Team had its second SheBelieves Cup match on Wednesday, in Columbus, Ohio against Canada. The first half was a defensive battle, with the U.S. controlling possession at 69% and a 9-3 edge on shots, but no goals. Striker Ally Sentnor had a couple of good looks, but both stayed outside the net.

Finally, a corner from midfield star Rose Lavelle sent a ball just outside the penalty area and Sentnor brought it down and sent a left-footed rocket into the net in the 55th minute for the 1-0 lead. Both sides had chances after that, but neither could score and the U.S. ended up with the 1-0 win, 65% possession, an 18-6 shots edge and a shutout streak of 715 minutes.

It’s the eighth straight win for the U.S. women, who have beaten Canada six straight after the loss at the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021.

Colombia (1-1) beat Argentina (0-2), 1-0, in the afternoon match; the final matches come on Saturday (7th), as the American women will face Colombia in Harrison, New Jersey.

● Speedskating ● US Speedskating announced that Executive Director Ted Morris will step down from his role on 31 August 2026. He has been with the organization since 2013.

The federation has grown during his tenure, with assets of just $401,375 in May 2014 and $2.669 million at the end of May 2024. Revenues are steadier now than in the past. In the year ended 31 May 2014, USS revenue was $5.142 million in a Winter Olympic year, but down to $3.939 million in May 2015.

For the fiscal year ending May 2022, revenues were $5.539 million and were $5.399 million in the non-Olympic fiscal year ended May 2024.

● Wrestling ● Mongolian wrestler and 2024 Worlds Freestyle 61 kg bronze medalist Tsogbadrakh Tseveensuren was banned for doping (testosterone) for four years by the Anti-Doping Division of the Court of Arbitration for Sport. His ban is from 19 June 2025 to 18 June 2029, but can be appealed.

Georgia’s 2024 Worlds Freestyle 79 kg gold medalist Avtandil Kentchadze accepted a 20-month ban for the anti-estrogenic Clomifene, and suspended from 25 May 2025 until 24 January 2027. His failed tests came in October 2024 during the World Championships and in January 2025. His victory at the 2024 Worlds is annulled.

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ATHLETICS: Atlanta Track Club explains USATF Half Marathon Champs women’s race error, to pay top-3 prize money to misled leaders

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≡ THE FOLLOW-UP ≡

Sunday’s USA Track & Field women’s Half Marathon Championships race went wrong about 11 miles in, when the lead car went off the course and the top four women in the race at the time followed it, to the detriment of all four.

At the 15 km split (9.3 miles), Emma Grace Hurley, Edna Kurgat and Jess McClain were running together at 49:11, with Carrie Ellwood fourth in 49:16 and then eventual “winner” Molly Born fifth in 49:32.

McClain – who was leading – Hurley and Kurgat had to turn around and rejoin the actual course around the 12-mile mark, with only a little more than a mile to go. At the 20 km split (12.4 miles), McClain was 11th and 1:46 behind Born, now the leader.

In the end, Born won in 1:09:43, with McClain ninth in 1:11:27, Hurley 12th (1:11:38) and Kurgat 13th (1:11:50). McClain said afterwards that her wrist GPS indicated she actually ran 21.9 km (13.6 miles), costing her more than two minutes.

The Atlanta Track Club, the race organizer, posted a statement on Sunday, taking responsibility for the error and promising to find out what happened and make the impacted runners – notably McClain, Hurley and Kurgat – “whole.”

On Tuesday (3rd), the ATC did exactly that. In a long post, the explanation and the remedy were provided:

● “Thirteen minutes before the lead women reached that intersection, a report of an officer down was broadcast across the assigned Atlanta Police Department frequency. The officer was reported to be down one block from the race course.”

● “As per their training, the police personnel assigned to the race responded to aid the officer down and to support the arrival of additional first responders around and through the race course.

“This action left a number of key race intersections, including the one where the wrong turn occurred, unattended for a brief period.”

● “In a well-orchestrated response, Atlanta Police Department backfilled this intersection with personnel who would help keep runners safe while helping first responders through the intersection to reach the officer down.

“The lead vehicle driver for the women’s race knew the course was to continue over the footbridge. But because the intersection and the traffic cones had not been reset for the race due to the arrival of emergency vehicles, the driver followed a police motorcycle off course – believing the race was being rerouted.

“The backfilled officer at that intersection, who was not assigned to the race, did not know that the race’s lead vehicles were going to use a footbridge that does not normally allow cars on it, so was not equipped to prevent the wrong turn.”

The resolution of the damage to the runners involved was also noted:

“We are responsible for the integrity of these championships. We regret that Jess McClain, Emma Grace Hurley and Ednah Kurgat were impacted by this incident and were unable to be recognized as the top three finishers reflective of their performance on the course.

“Atlanta Track Club has offered to match the prize money as follows: McClain to receive the equivalent of first-place prize money. Hurley and Kurgat will split the combined total of second- and- third-place prize money because they were shoulder-to-shoulder when they left the race course.”

That means McClain is to received $20,000 and Hurley and Kurgat will receive $9,750 each, half of the combined second and third-place prize money of $12,000 and $7,500. Ellwood, who veered off course for about 150 m, was passed by a surging Born and was second by 4.47 seconds, did not receive any added compensation.

The next step is up to USA Track & Field, which was using this race to select its team for the World Road Running Championships in Copenhagen (DEN) in September, and said Sunday:

“USATF will review the events from Atlanta carefully. While we understand athletes are eager to resolve this issue expeditiously, our process will ensure an ultimate decision is in the best interest of all the athletes involved.”

Born has already said she should not be selected.

Observed: This is a masterclass by the Atlanta Track Club and chief executive Rich Kenah – a former 800 m star himself – on how to handle a problem correctly.

It took immediate responsibility, promised to make it right and obtained and released (1) the facts and (2) the remedy in following two days.

Good for them. Now, it is up to USATF to do two things: (1) make a proper selection of McClain, Hurley and Kurgat for the World Road Running Championships and (2) set up a seminar at its December Annual Meeting for Kenah to explain how he dealt with this situation, so that others will know the right way to handle it in the future. This applies to not only road events, but track & field as well.

The other good news in the ATC post is that the Fulton County Sheriff’s deputy involved in the incident was transported to Grady Hospital and released later that day.

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PANORAMA: IOC “has no means” to enforce Olympic Truce; Grand Slam Track spent $617,935 in bankruptcy in January!

An official champagne for USA Fencing? Yes: Champagne Billecart-Salmon!

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● International Olympic Committee ● In view of the Middle East conflict especially, the IOC posted a statement on Tuesday, emphasizing its political neutrality, including:

“As a global organisation, the IOC has to navigate a complex reality. At every edition of the Olympic Games, the IOC has to deal with the consequences of the current political context and the latest developments in the world. At the same time, it must live up to its mission to preserve a values-based, truly global sporting platform that can give hope to the world. This objective depends on the ability of the IOC to bring athletes together to take part in peaceful competition, no matter where they come from.”

and

“The Olympic Truce Resolution is an aspirational and non-binding resolution which the UN Member States agree on for each edition of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. It is tabled by the host nation of the Games and is adopted by the UN Member States themselves. The IOC, with its Permanent Observer Status at the UN, has no means of enforcing the implementation of the resolution. We recognise that this is entirely in the remit of the UN system and outside the remit of the IOC.”

It closed with an appeal “to all UN Member States to support athletes who have qualified for the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympics, and who may be affected by the most recent conflicts, in their journey to these Games.”

There was no mention of sanctions, or other actions related to the Iran conflict or that between Pakistan and Afghanistan or Russia and Ukraine.

● Athletics ● It costs money to be bankrupt. That’s the message from the monthly statement filed with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware for the ongoing Grand Slam Track proceedings, showing $617,935 spent in the month of January 2026.

Most of the money – $440,000 – went to lawyers Levene, Neale, Bender, Yoo & Golubchik, L.L.P. in escrow, with another $25,000 to Freeman Advisors and almost $90,000 for payroll and medical insurance.

Grand Slam Track received $1 million of the $2.305 million loan available from Winners Alliance for bankruptcy support to pay for all of this, and now has a total indebtedness of $41.68 million.

The next step is consideration of a proposed reorganization plan that would pay athletes about 85% of what they are owed and almost nothing to the unsecured vendors and suppliers at a hearing on 12 March 2026.

● Fencing ● Another first for USA Fencing: the first-ever, formal sports sponsorship in the United States for the 208-year-old Champagne Billecart-Salmon of Mareuil-sur-Ay, France.

It’s now the “Official Champagne of USA Fencing,” and will be featured at the U.S. Fencing Foundation Gala on May 28 in New York and the Hall of Fame Dinner on June 30 in Portland, Oregon.

This is a cash-and-product deal, with Champagne Billecart-Salmon to have visibility at all U.S. Fencing Foundation events and receptions, with other federation sponsor-led events, and some branding presence at events with adult (21+) tournaments, starting with the April North American Cup in Richmond, Virginia.

Family-owned for seven generations, Champagne Billecart-Salmon is widely respected as a medium-sized Champagne house, producing about two million bottles annually. USA Fencing chief executive Phil Andrews (GBR) explained:

“Billecart-Salmon represents exactly the kind of partner we want associated with our sport. They’re a family-built institution defined by precision, heritage and an unwavering commitment to craft.

“And, just as importantly, I can personally attest that they make some of the finest Champagne on the planet.”

● Football ● FIFA unveiled the Official Tournament Poster for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, created by artists from the three host countries: Carson Ting (CAN), Minerva GM (MEX) and Hank Willis Thomas of the U.S.

It’s 24 by 36 inches in size and retails for $20 each, with poster to begin shipping by 23 March. No dynamic pricing is involved. The tournament poster adds to the gallery of 16 host city posters already announced.

U.S. Soccer announced a series of World Cup-related events, including a U.S. Soccer House at Venice Beach in Los Angeles that will open with the start of the tournament on 11 June. The programming is to feature “watch parties, appearances by U.S Soccer legends, exclusive fan moments, a dedicated stage for speaker sessions and celebrity appearances, and live podcast recordings. The Bank of America Vault will offer premium match viewing, hospitality amenities, and curated programing.”

Access to the facility “will be open to registered members of the U.S. Soccer Insiders program (complimentary registration available), with ADA accessible floors.”

A World Cup roster announcement event will be held in New York on 26 May, followed by four warm-up matches, against Belgium on 28 March and Portugal on 31 March, both in Atlanta, then on 31 May against Senegal in Charlotte, North Carolina and finally vs. Germany on 6 June in Chicago.

● Table Tennis ● World Table Tennis announced the postponement of two future youth events in light of the continuing actions against and by Iran, including a WTT Youth Contender tournament in Riyadh (KSA) from 31 March to 3 April and another in Sulaymaniyah (IRQ) from 22-25 April.

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SWIMMING: U.S. Olympic medalist Armstrong, feeling financial pressures, to compete in Enhanced Games, but without doping

Hunter Armstrong after the U.S. Swimming Trials for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games (Photo: Wikipedia via Invmanmom).

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≡ ARMSTRONG ROLLS THE DICE ≡

Two-time World Champion backstroker Hunter Armstrong announced Tuesday that he will swim at the Enhanced Games in Las Vegas on 24 May, but without taking any banned substances and expects to keep his eligibility.

In an Instagram post, he noted,

“I want to be very clear … I am joining the Enhanced Games as a clean athlete. I will NOT be taking any banned substances and I WILL be continuing my path to win gold on home soil in L.A.”

Armstrong, 25, won the 2023 Worlds 50 m Back and 2024 Worlds 100 m Back golds and has five more relay wins with the U.S. team. He has three Olympic medals, all in relays, with golds in the Tokyo 2020 4×100 m Medley and Paris 2024 4×100 m Freestyle.

He expects to contest the 50 m Back and 100 m Free at the Enhanced Games and told ESPN that his financial situation – he lost his primary sponsor last year – requires he take a chance:

“If I don’t join Enhanced, I lose everything. If I do join Enhanced, I have a chance at not losing everything.

“My back was against the wall, so I had to reopen that conversation to see if it was a plausible option.”

Enhanced Games is offering $500,000 in prize money for each event and a $1 million bonus for swimming faster than the World Aquatics-recognized world record.

Armstrong said that he spoke with World Aquatics officials about competing at the Enhanced Games without doping, but in June 2025, the federation adopted a by-law that makes ineligible anyone who participates in

“a sporting event or competition that embraces scientific enhancements that include the use of Prohibited Substances or Prohibited Methods (as those terms are defined in the Doping Control Rules) and/or the use of any illegal drug.

However, the by-law applies to “a time when they were not subject to the Rules and Regulations,” and Armstrong is saying he is subject to the doping rules even during the Enhanced Games. Further, the by-law says any affected swimmer’s situation will judged on a case-by-case basis.

So, it is not completely clear that Armstrong will be sanctioned. The Enhanced Games lost a court case against World Aquatics and USA Swimming, charging a monopoly and signing Armstrong could give them an opening to sue again.

There are opposite effects which can also be true, for example, World Aquatics can say that with Armstrong competing in a pro-doping event and maintaining his non-doping position, that the International Testing Agency must be allowed into the event and provided with adequate testing facilities in order to monitor Armstrong’s doping-free status.

Armstrong added:

“Nobody really knows what’s going to happen, and nobody will give me an answer on what’s going to happen.

“So all I can work off of is what the rules say and take a chance because I won’t get an answer by waiting.”

SwimSwam.com reported on a message sent by USA Swimming National Team Director Greg Meehan:

“We are aware that Hunter Armstrong has announced his plans to participate in the Enhanced Games as a clean athlete. I wanted to be sure you heard from USA Swimming immediately and directly. We are disappointed in this news, as Hunter has been a valuable member of our National Team for over five years, and we are not sure how the relevant regulatory bodies will respond to this unprecedented situation. If we learn more to address this uncertainty, we will share with you.”

The Enhanced Games suit against World Aquatics and USA Swimming claimed that their stance prevented them from recruiting swimmers; Armstrong is the 18th swimmer to agree to compete.

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WINTER PARALYMPIC GAMES: Int’l Paralympic Committee disallows Ukrainian parade uniform showing 1991 map borders

The now-banned Ukrainian ceremonial “map” uniform for the 2026 Winter Paralympic Games (Photo: Ukrainian National Paralympic Committee).

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≡ UKRAINE PROTESTS ≡

The International Paralympic Committee will not allow the Ukrainian Paralympic team to wear a ceremonial uniform which depicts a map of the country, showing its internationally-recognized borders from 1991, before the Russian invasion of the Crimea as well as the 2022 invasion.

Ukraine National Paralympic Committee President Valerii Sushkevych explained in an interview:

“The International Paralympic Committee said: ‘No, no, no – it won’t work like that!’ They said that this uniform was political. And they said that no one would allow us to go out in such a uniform. This uniform was very beautiful, very symbolic and very emphatically ‘shouted’ that there is Ukraine in the world, in Europe, with all its territories without occupation by Russia. …

“We barely had time to make a new uniform, barely had time. We urgently took this new uniform by bus to Italy, where our entire team is already located. And we could have dressed the boys and girls here in the uniform that was already ready, but they banned us from using it.”

Sushkevych said that the map design is a reaction to the increasing acceptance of Russian athletes back into international competitions, and that the continuing aggression against Ukraine must be remembered.

The Ukrainian National Paralympic Committee also posted a long message to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, thanking her for her support of Ukraine and noting with regard to the Winter Paralympic Games beginning Friday:

● “As of today, the Paralympic Committees of Ukraine, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Finland, Poland, the Czech Republic, Canada and the Netherlands have declared a boycott of the Opening Ceremony. The Government of Croatia declared a boycott of the official events of the Paralympics.”

● “The National Paralympic Team of Ukraine and the National Paralympic Committee of Ukraine with gratitude and respect received the information that the Government of Italy, which you head, expressed resolute objection to the IPC decision on the admission of russian and belarusian sports entities to the Paralympic Games 2026 with permission to use their national symbolism, including anthems.”

The message makes an argument that the admission of Russian athletes is against the International Paralympic Committee rules because Ukrainian territory is being occupied and states:

“According to Article 12.3.1 of the IPC Constitution a National Paralympic Committee has the right to enter its athletes only under condition of compliance with the Constitution and regulations of the IPC.

“IN CASE OF SYSTEMATIC VIOLATION OF THE PRINCIPLE OF TERRITORIAL EXCLUSIVITY THE RIGHT OF THE NPC TO ENTER ATHLETES IS LEGALLY UNLAWFUL!”

In the end, the message asks, “NOT TO ALLOW THE STATE AND POLITICAL IDENTIFICATION OF RUSSIA, WHICH, CONTRARY TO THE AFOREMENTIONED LEGAL NORMS, REPRESENTS THE OCCUPIED TERRITORIES OF UKRAINE AT THE WORLD SPORTING EVENT.”

The International Paralympic Committee’s General Assembly re-admitted Russia and Belarus as full members last September, so the request by the Ukrainian NPC is unlikely to go anywhere.

But the Ukrainians are making their presence felt and their cause known however they can, first with Skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych’s “memory helmet” at the Olympic Winter Games and now with their uniform attempt and appeal to the Italian Prime Minister for the Winter Paralympic Games.

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PANORAMA: 1896 Athens Olympic winner’s medal draws $140,945 at auction; Middle East conflicts causes canceled or postponed events in equestrian, fencing

An 1896 Athens Olympic champion’s medal, in excellent condition, sold by Danish auctioneers Bruun Rasmussen on 1 March 2026 (Photo: Bruun Rasmussen).

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● Olympic super-statistician Dr. Bill Mallon is back from his month in Milan and shared some of the critical numbers from the XXV OWG:

● “There were 2,807 competitors at MiCo26 – those who actually started in any event. Of these there were 1,446 men and 1,361 women.”

“Only Italy and the United States competed in all 16 disciplines. China and Germany competed in 15 of them.”

“92 nations competed + AIN (Individual Neutral Athletes by the French acronym). 89 nations had men competitors – only Malaysia, Malta, and Puerto Rico had only women compete. 70 nations + AIN had female competitors.”

● “There were 17 nations with only 1 competitor as follows: Benin, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Eritrea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Malaysia, Malta, Monaco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Puerto Rico, Singapore, San Marino, Uruguay, and Venezuela.”

● “Benin, Giunea-Bissau, and the United Arab Emirates made their Olympic Winter débuts (along with AIN, for what that’s worth).”

Mallon notes that results from the 2026 Games are now fully integrated into the comprehensive Olympedia.org database.

Looking to the future, his prediction is that Nordic Combined will be cut from the Olympic Winter Games program!

● Pan American Games ● Panam Sports announced an agreement for the German SPORTFIVE agency as “the exclusive global media rights partner of Panam Sports for the Pan American Games in Lima [2027] and Asunción [2031].”

As the international sports calendar has become more and more globalized, the Pan American Games have struggled to maintain their once-high profile and relevance. The move for rights to a European-based agency is hoped to expand interest in the Games beyond the Western Hemisphere.

● Memorabilia ● An Athens 1896 first-place winner’s medal – made of silver for the first modern Games – was sold at auction by the Danish house Bruun Rasmussen sold for DKK 900,000 (~$140,945 U.S.) as a single item on Sunday (1st).

The medal, picturing Zeus on the front and the Acropolis on the back, was in what appeared to be excellent condition and in an original presentation box. There were 42 bids.

This was a strong price for this medal, which is often seen in auctions. Recent sales of 1896 Athens first-place medals have included $103,713 by RR Auction in February 2026 and $111,960 by RR Auction in January 2024.

● Alpine Skiing ● Italian hero Federica Brignone, 35, who returned from a bad crash in just 10 months to win Olympic golds in the women’s Super-G and Giant Slalom, said Monday she is finished for the season.

“I asked a lot of my body over these months. I tried to continue the season but now my body is paying the price. So I’m taking advantage of the season being nearly over to give myself a break and then continue with my rehab.”

● Athletics ● Kenyan Rita Jeptoo, now 45 and who served a four-year doping ban from 2014-18, was provisionally suspended by the Anti-Doping Agency of Kenya, for whereabouts failures.

The Daily Nation reported Monday that 27 athletes were suspended, mostly for whereabouts failures, dating back to August 2025. Jeptoo won the Boston Marathon in 2006 and 2013 and in Chicago in 2013, was banned from 2014-18 and then began running again in 2022.

● Badminton ● At the BWF World Tour German Open in Mulheim, the all-French men’s final saw Christo Popov sail past older brother Toma Junior Popov, 21-16, 21-15, while the women’s final was all-China as Zhi Yi Wang defeated Qian Xi Han, 21019, 22-20.

China swept the men’s, women’s and Mixed Doubles.

● Basketball ● The U.S. moved to 3-1 in the Americas World Cup qualifying in Group A with a 123-88 win over Mexico in Oceanside, California on Sunday evening (1st).

The Americans were up, 40-14 at the quarter and 71-32 at the half and cruised for the win, and a second-place standing; the top three in the group will advance to the second round of qualifying play. Forward David Roddy scored 20 for the U.S., with forward Malcolm Hill scoring 18.

The third window for qualifying comes on 3 and 6 July, with the U.S. playing on the road at the Dominican Republic and Mexico, respectively.

● Cricket ● The Super-8 stage has been completed at the ICC men’s T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka, with the semifinalists now set.

Defending champion India (4-0), Zimbabwe (3-0), West Indies (4-0) and South Africa (4-0) won the groups and in the Super-8, South Africa went 3-0 in Group 1, ahead of India (2-1).

Group 2 had 2022 winner England at 3-0 and advancing, along with New Zealand at 1-1, with one match rained out.

The remaining matches are all in India. The semis will be played on 4-5 March with South Africa and New Zealand meeting in Kolkata (formerly Calcutta) and India vs. England in Mumbai. The final will be on 8 March in Ahmedabad.

Cricket T20 is on the Olympic program for the first time ever for Los Angeles in 2028.

● Equestrian ● The International Equestrian Federation said that any withdrawals from competitions due to the current Middle East conflict, will not be penalized. Two events for this week, in Qatar and the UAE, have been canceled.

● Fencing ● In a message to its national federations, the International Fencing Federation said Monday that it is postponing the 5-8 March men’s and women’s Foil World Cup in Cairo (EGY), and the 6-8 March men’s Sabre World Cup in Padua (ITA), women’s Sabre World Cup in Athens (GRE), as a consequence of the continuing conflict with Iran.

The decision “was taken to ensure, as a top priority, the safety of the entire fencing family and to ensure that delegations are not denied participation for reasons beyond their control.

“Furthermore, the FIE Executive Committee will continue to monitor the situation daily and collaborate with the organizers regarding possible new dates.”

● Football ● FIFA Secretary General Mattias Grafstrom (SWE) said Saturday of the U.S. and Israeli intervention in Iran:

“I read the news [about Iran] this morning the same way you did. We had a meeting today and it is premature to comment in detail, but we will monitor developments around all issues around the world.

“We had the Finals draw in Washington in which all teams participated, and our focus is on a safe World Cup with all the teams participating. We will continue to communicate as we always do with three [host] governments as we always do in any case. Everybody will be safe.”

● Judo ● The joint Israel and U.S. attacks on Iran caused the Israeli judo squad to leave the Tashkent Grand Slam in Uzbekistan and fly immediately to a central European location. Instructions from the Shin Bet security agency were to leave Uzbekistan as soon as possible, and 11 Israeli athletes who had already competed on Friday and Saturday left before the final weight classes on Sunday.

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LANE ONE: Strikes on Iran and Iran strikes elsewhere creating new headaches for Paralympics, but also the IOC and the Olympic Movement

Henri Vidal's Caïn venant de tuer son frère Abel (Cain, after having murdered his brother Abel), in the Tuileries Garden, Paris (Photo: Wikipedia)

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≡ CHAOS OR CONTAINMENT? ≡

An already troubled world is deeper in conflict now, with the American and Israeli strikes on Iran and Iran’s scattered response with missiles launched against neighboring countries such as Bahrain, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and, of course, Israel. An Iranian drone also hit a target in Cyprus. Israel has also acted against the Iranian proxy Hezbollah in Lebanon.

With the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympic Games opening on Friday (6th), the International Paralympic Committee issued a statement on Monday that included:

“[W]e are assessing the impact on Games operations, in particular on travel, while maintaining a clear focus on delivering the best Paralympic Winter Games and ensuring the event continues to serve as a platform to drive social inclusion for the world’s 1.3 billion persons with disabilities.

“We are in close contact with all delegations competing at the Games as well as other stakeholders. Many of the teams are already in Europe attending training or holding camps, but the closure of airspace in the Middle East is impacting the arrival of some stakeholders. We would prefer not to comment on the status of individual delegations or stakeholders at this stage but can provide assurance that we are working diligently with Milano Cortina 2026 to find solutions for those affected.”

In terms of the impact on teams, the U.S. announced a major squad of 72 to compete at the Winter Paralympics, probably the second-biggest at the Games behind China (77). For the 2022 Beijing Winter Paralympics, Iran sent four athletes and Israel sent one.

On Friday, the biggest issue for the Winter Paralympics was the diplomatic boycott of the opening ceremony in Verona over the inclusion – as the result of the Court of Arbitration for Sport ruling – of six Russian and four Belarusian “neutral” athletes. A half-dozen European nations said their officials would not attend the opening and Ukraine expects not to participate at all in protest of the inclusion of the aggressors in a four-year war against them.

Which leads to new issues now created for not only the International Paralympic Committee – trying to get through another difficult Games – but also the International Olympic Committee.

It has not escaped the attention of Russian officials that:

● Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022, two days after the close of the Olympic Winter Games in Beijing (CHN).

● The U.S. and Israel launched strikes against Iran on 28 February 2026, six days following the close of the Milan Cortina Winter Games.

Both came during the “Olympic Truce” period declared by the United Nations. So:

Dmitry Svishchev, First Deputy Chairman of the State Duma Committee on Physical Culture and Sports, told the Russian news agency TASS:

“The IOC needs a response here. If it doesn’t, then our athletes must be reinstated without any reservations. They quickly began suspending and condemning us four years ago, but there’s been no response yet. That’s how we’ll be able to assess their commitment to our country. And if there’s no response, then our athletes and organizations must be reinstated.”

● Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev, the Deputy Chairman of the Russian Security Council, went further, telling TASS, “The IOC and the Olympic movement must be disbanded and reassembled, remembering the legacy of Pierre de Coubertin.”

So much for Russian hopes in getting support from new IOC chief Kirsty Coventry (ZIM).

● The IOC did not respond Monday to a TASS inquiry about potential sanctions against Israel and the U.S.

The attacks aren’t anything that Coventry and the IOC are involved in, but they’re involved in a different now, somehow as moral judges of right and wrong.

The suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee is based on the Russian takeover of Ukrainian territory and control of formerly Ukrainian sports organizations, which the Russians state is – legally – not the case any more. But the Russians are still there.

The U.S. and Israel are taking out Iranian war-making capabilities and the people behind them, but don’t try and sell the differences to Russia or other Iranian allies (whoever they still are).

Complicating the situation is, of course, that the 2028 Olympic Games will be in Los Angeles. And they will be in Los Angeles, because there is nowhere else to go.

Not only does L.A. have all existing venues – some to be temporary – but its key difference with other sites are the essentially “permanent” Olympic Villages in the student housing at UCLA as well as the University of Southern California.

Prior Olympic Villages, such as in Tokyo and Paris are being used as housing in their communities and not subject to being instantly repurposed.

Nothing is easy.

The IOC has not scheduled an Executive Board meeting in the coming weeks, but has an extraordinary Session on 24-25 June, ostensibly to consider Coventry’s “Fit for the Future” proposals on a series of topics which seem somehow less important right now.

In truth, what happens in Iran and to the murderous regime which came to power in 1979 is far more important that any Olympic Games. But the IOC has a voice and especially under prior President Thomas Bach (GER) has insisted it can play a role for peace.

Russia’s clear objective in 2022 was to overrun all of Ukraine and take control of the country, as it had already done with the Crimea region of Ukraine in 2014. That’s clearly not the objective of the current U.S. and Israeli action against Iran, but no one can say for sure what the outcome(s) will be.

But the IOC needs to get ready to create a position, because it will be asked – as it always is – where it stands on the actions of governments over which it has absolutely no control.

Perhaps Coventry, who suffered some very public criticism during her tenure as Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation in Zimbabwe, might be better prepared than her critics think. She will have to be.

Rich Perelman
Editor

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WINTER PARALYMPIC GAMES: USOPC announces 72-member Winter Para team, including 44 returnees and 25 returning medalists

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≡ TEAM USA: 2026 WINTER PARAS ≡

The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee announced a 72-member team for the Milan Cortina Winter Paralympic Games that will start on Friday.

Per the USOPC announcement, it’s an impressive squad:

“The 2026 roster features 48 men and 20 women (not including [four] guides) and an impressive group of 44 returning Paralympians, including two seven-time Paralympians, one five-time Paralympian, three four-time Paralympians, eight three-time Paralympians, 12 two-time Paralympians, 18 one-time Paralympians and 24 athletes making their Paralympic debut.

“The resume of veterans includes 25 medalists who have earned a combined 54 gold medals from 89 Paralympic podium appearances. Twenty athletes have won multiple Paralympic medals with 14 winning multiple Paralympic gold medals.”

The most-veteran athletes include:

Oksana Masters (Nordic Skiing): winner of 19 Paralympic medals, including nine in Cross Country skiing (3-4-2), five in biathlon (2-3-0) and five in Paralympic Games sports, including cycling (3-0-0) and rowing (0-0-1), between 2012-24. This is her fourth Winter Paralympic Games and she has won the most medals of any American Winter Paralympic athlete.

Dan Cnossen owns seven Winter Paralympic medals, in Cross Country skiing (0-2-1) and biathlon (2-2-0).

Kendall Gretsch has seven Paralympic medals, in Cross Country skiing (1-0-0), four in biathlon (2-1-1) and two (1-1-0) in Para triathlon.

Laurie Stephens has also won seven career Winter Paralympic medals, all in Alpine skiing (2-2-3), in 2006-10-14-18.

The U.S. sled hockey team has won four Paralympic Winter Games golds in a row and five of the last six and will try for a fifth in a row, by far the most ever (more on the drive-for-five here).

Masters and Aaron Pike, primarily a wheelchair marathon racer, but who also competes in Cross Country skiing and biathlon, will both be seven-time Paralympians.

This is a pretty big team for the USOPC, only slightly smaller than the 2024 Sochi team; U.S. participation in this century includes (medal performance in parentheses):

● 65 in 2022 Beijing (20: 6-11-3)
● 68 in 2018 PyeongChang (36: 13-15-8)
● 74 in 2014 Sochi (18: 2-7-9)
● 50 in 2010 Vancouver (13: 4-5-4)
● 56 in 2006 Turin (12: 7-2-3)
● 57 in 2002 Salt Lake City (43: 10-22-11)

About 665 athletes are slated to compete in the Milan Cortina Paralympics, in 79 events across six sports.

NBC will have 270 hours of coverage, including on USA Network and CNBC, as well as its streaming service Peacock.

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ATHLETICS: Major error at USATF Half Marathon women’s race in Atlanta sent leaders off course, scrambled the results

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≡ USATF HALF MARATHON CHAMPS ≡

“In the women’s race, a pace vehicle left the official course during Mile 11. As Race Director, I take full responsibility for what occurred. Athletes should never have to make a split-second decision between following a pace vehicle or trusting the official course.

“We are conducting a full review to determine exactly how and why the vehicle left the course to strengthen safeguards moving forward. Atlanta Track Club will make best efforts to ensure the affected athletes – Jess McClain, Emma Grace Hurley, and Edna Kurgat – are made whole.”

That’s from Rich Kenah, the Atlanta Track Club chief executive, explaining the incident in which the three women leading the USATF National Half Marathon Championships race in Atlanta on Sunday (1st) were led off course by the lead vehicle.

At the 15 km split (9.3 miles), Hurley, Kurgat and McClain were running together at 49:11, with Carrie Ellwood fourth in 49:16 and then eventual “winner” Molly Born fifth in 49:32.

McClain, Hurley and Kurgat had to turn around and rejoin the actual course around the 12-mile mark, with only a little more than a mile to go. At the 20 km split (12.4 miles), McClain was 11th and 1:46 behind Born, now the leader.

In the end, Born won in 1:09:43, with McClain ninth in 1:11:27, Hurley 12th (1:11:38) and Kurgat 13th (1:11:50).

There were quite a lot at stake in the race, including selection for the World Road Running Championships in Copenhagen (DEN) in September, plus prize money for the top 10 finishers, of $20,000-12,000-7,500-5,000-3,000-2,500-2,000-1,500-1,000-500.

USA Track & Field issued a statement on Sunday that noted:

● “This race was a selection event for the 2026 World Road Running Championships. That team is not officially selected until May. USATF will review the events from Atlanta carefully. While we understand athletes are eager to resolve this issue expeditiously, our process will ensure an ultimate decision is in the best interest of all the athletes involved.”

“[A] protest was filed by athletes in the women’s field who followed a lead vehicle off course. That protest was denied and an appeal was submitted. The jury of appeals found that ‘the event did not meet USATF Rule 243 and that the course was not adequately marked at the point of misdirection.

“‘This violation contributed to the misdirection taken by the athletes within the top four at the time of misdirection. However, the jury of appeals finds no recourse within the USATF rulebook to alter the results order of finish. The results order of finish as posted is considered final.’”

Winner Born told Race Results Weekly, “I shouldn’t go to Copenhagen. I shouldn’t. I’m fine. I’m not going to fight for my spot.”

Ellwood also went slightly off course, but was re-directed by an official on a motorcycle onto the correct course. That official went and got the leader to turn around. McClain said afterwards that her wrist GPS indicated she actually ran 21.9 km (13.6 miles), costing her more than two minutes.

The men’s race had no such problems, won by Wesley Kiptoo in 1:01:15.

Observed: This stuff happens, unfortunately and the issues are magnified in championship races.

There is no solution other than preparation, but it points the way to more use of loop courses wherever possible to lessen confusion. The Atlanta course was a single, large loop for the Half, but two loops for the Atlanta Marathon. Signage also helps, but there are never enough signs to ensure everyone stays on course.

Painting lines on the streets is also a help, but cities dislike them as they confuse drivers and riders once the race is over.

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PANORAMA: Dutch skating star Leerdam sells speedsuit for $230,441! Kosgei fast in Tokyo in 2:14:29; Karalis vaults 20-3 in Greece!

Dutch speed skating star Jutta Leerdam finishing her winning 2026 Olympic 1,000 m effort in Milan (TSX photo by Karen Rosen).

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● Dutch speed skating star Jutta Leerdam won the women’s 1,000 m speed skating gold and a silver in the 500 m and became one of the most popular athletes at the Games.

That is translating into money. She put up two items that did especially well at matchwornshirts.com:

● $230,441: Skating competition suit (signed)
● $5,692: Medal ceremony jacket (signed)
● $1,797: Team NL hairband (signed)

It was reported that Leerdam intends to donate to De IJsvereniging, the skating club in Pijnacker, where she learned to skate.

Items from other stars also sold, but not for those prices. The skating suit from 500 m gold medalist Femke Kok brought $5,675, and Xandra Velzeboer’s competition suit for her 500 m gold on Short Track was sold for $3,309.

● Olympic Games ● Friday’s announcement that Paramount Skydance will acquire Warner Bros. Discovery for $31 a share for all outstanding shares, giving Paramount control, among many other things, of the Olympic streaming rights for 49 territories in Europe for the 2026-28-30-32 Games.

Over-the-air broadcast rights in Europe for these Games are held by the European Broadcasting Union group of national broadcasters.

As a result, NBC continues to hold the U.S. domestic Olympic television rights while the parent of CBS now has the European Olympic streaming rights.

● World Sports Rankings ● The 2025 edition of the World Sports Rankings have been published, compiled by the International Center for Sport Policy & Governance at Notre Dame University–Louaize in Zouk Mosbeh, Lebanon, beginning in 2014.

The leading index, the World Rankings of Countries in Elite Sport was led by the U.S., with 2,129,375 points, over Great Britain (1,303,155) and France (1,293,343). The rest of the top 10 included Italy, Japan, Australia, China, Spain, Germany and Brazil. Points were accumulated across 115 sports at the international level.

The U.S. has led this ranking in all 11 editions.

The World Fittest Countries Index has Japan on top at 94.19 points, over Italy, Germany, France and Switzerland. The U.S. was ninth (88.69).

● Football ● With the U.S. and Israeli offensive against Iran continuing, the hysterical headlines are already appearing about whether Iran will play in the 2026 FIFA World Cup, starting in June.

Bulletin: absolutely no one knows yet. Stay tuned. Calm down.

Player discipline was on the agenda at the meeting of the International Football Association Board in Hensol, Wales, with new rules to be implemented ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. FIFA President Gianni Infantino (SUI) explained:

“[T]he behaviour of players and coaches is absolutely fundamental. They are examples for children, for society in the world, and they should definitely behave in a respectful way. And for this reason, when it comes to incidents, such as incidents of racism and discrimination, we will not allow players to cover their mouths when they speak to an opponent any more.

“We will also not allow players or coaches to walk off the field of play because they disagree with a decision of the referee. This cannot happen. The referee has to be respected. The decisions of the referee have to be respected all the time, by the players and by the coaches, and for this a proposal will be presented by 30 April, so that we can take decisions before the FIFA World Cup.”

It was reported that FIFA is charging an average of $175 for parking passes for 2026 World Cup matches in the U.S., including as much as $600 for the England vs. Ghana match in Foxborough, Massachusetts.

● Weightlifting ● Ecuadorian women’s star Neisi Dajomes, the 76 kg gold medalist at Tokyo 2020 and 81 kg bronzer in Paris in 2024, was suspended by the International Testing Agency for 14 months, from 2 June 2025 until 1 August 2026.

She had a positive test for the banned, anti-estrogenic substance Clomifene in an out-of-competition test on 7 April 2025. Dajomes did not contest the positive and accepted a reduced penalty.

≡ RESULTS ≡

● Alpine Skiing ● Swiss star Marco Odermatt earned a couple of Olympic medals, but no wins on Cortina. But he resumed his winning ways on the FIS World Cup circuit, taking Saturday’s Downhill at Garmisch-Partenkirchen (GER) in 1:47.57 leading a Swiss sweep.

He was followed by Alexis Monney (1:47.61) and Stefan Rogentin (1:48.55); it was Odermatt’s ninth win of this season. The top Americans were Ryan Cochran-Siegle in seventh (1:49.07) and Erik Arviddsson in 11th (1:49.35). The sunday Super-G had to be canceled due to fog.

The FIS women’s World Cup resumed in Soldeu (AND) and Swiss star Corinne Suter grabbed her first win of the season in Friday’s Downhill in 1:31.62, slightly ahead of Nina Ortlieb (AUT: 1:31.73) and Italian star Sofia Goggia, the Olympic bronzer, in 1:31.86. Olympic champ Breezy Johnson of the U.S. finished fifth (1:32.23) and Jackie Wiles was eighth (1:32.65).

Super-Gs were held on the weekend, with Emma Aicher (GER), the Olympic Downhill runner-up, winning her third race of the season in 1:26.72, ahead of New Zealand’s Alice Robinson (1:27.60) and Suter (1:27.70). Keely Cashman was the top American, in 12th (1:28.66).

Sunday’s Super-G was a second win this season for Goggia in 1:25.95, beating Aicher (1:26.19) and Norway’s Kajsa Lie (1:26.26). Americans Mary Bocock and Cashman went 11-12 in 1:27.77 and 1:27.80.

● Athletics ● Kenya’s Brigid Kosgei ran the seventh-fastest women’s marathon in history and won by more than two minutes in Sunday’s Tokyo Marathon, the first of the World Marathon Majors for 2026.

The 2021 winner, Kosgei broke away at 30 km and cruised in at 2:14:29 for her 12th marathon win in 21 career races. Ethiopia’s Bertukan Welde finished second in 2:16:36, now no. 16 all-time. Hawi Feysa (ETH) and Sutume Asefa Kebede finished 3-4, both in 2:17:39.

The men’s race was a dash to the line for three men, with Ethiopia’s Tadese Takele – the defending champion – winning in 2:03:37, 14 seconds slower than in 2025. Geofry Toroitich Kipchumba (KEN) was second in the same time and countryman Alexander Mutiso Munyao was third in 2:03:38. Kenya’s Daniel Mateiko ran 2:03:44 and was fourth.

Wesley Kiptoo and Molly Born won the USATF Half Marathon Championships races in Atlanta, Georgia, each winning their first national title.

Ex-Kenyan Kiptoo, who ran at Iowa State and was on the U.S. World Cross Country team in January, had the lead from the start, running with two-time Olympic steepler Hillary Bor and finally breaking away only in the final kilometers to win by 1:01:15 to 1:01:20. Ahmed Muhamad was well back in third (1:01:51) and Charles Hicks was fourth in 1:02:10.

The women’s race was led by Emma Grace Hurley, Ednah Kurgat and Jess McClain at 10 km and 15 km, but Born charged from 21 seconds back in fifth place at the 15 km mark to get to the lead by 20 km and stayed there.

Carrie Ellwood was the only one in contact with a kilometer remaining and finished second, 1:09:43 to 1:09:47. Born, the former Oklahoma State All-American, was only in her second career Half, and got a lifetime best and qualified for the World Road Running Championships. Ellwood, the 2025 U.S. Cross Country champ, moved up from eighth in 2025 and was alone in second, with Annie Rodenfels in third in 1:10:12. Kasandra Parker was well back in fourth in 1:10:47.

Greek vault star Emmanouil Karalis zoomed to no. 2 on the all-time list with his victory at his national indoor championships in Paiania – outside Athens – winning at 6.17 m (20-3). Only Mondo Duplantis (SWE) has gone higher, indoors or out, and Karalis took a couple of shots at a world record of 6.31 m (20-8 1/2).

● Basketball ● The first stage of the FIBA World Cup 2027 Americas qualifying has reached the halfway mark with the U.S. losing to the Dominican Republic, 87-79, on Thursday, in Oceanside, California.

The Dominicans led, 39-33, at half and a 21-10 third quarter put them up, 60-43 going in the fourth. The U.S. made it closer – Brandon Knight led with 20 points – but it was not enough.

The U.S. is now 2-1 and tied for the lead in Group A, in which three of the four in the group advance.

● Cross Country Skiing ● As the FIS World Cup resumed in Falun (SWE), who else but six-time gold medalist Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (NOR) could be expected to win the Freestyle Sprint?

He won, of course, in 2:42.71, ahead of teammate Lars Heggen (+0.36) and Austria’s Ben Moser (+1.63). Klaebo then completed a weekend sweep by winning Sunday’s 20 km Skiathlon in 48:41.8, just ahead of teammates Harald Amundsen (48:42.5) and Olympic 50 km silver winner Martin Nyenget (48:42.6). Gus Schumacher of the U.S. was in seventh place (49:38.6).

Olympic women’s Sprint champion Linn Svahn (SWE) also won in front of the home crowed in the Sprint, in 2:56.75, just outdueling Norway’s Kristine Skistad (+0.29) at the line.

The women’s 20 km Skiathlon was a wild charge to the finish line, with Olympic bronze winner Heidi Weng getting the win in 54:42.8, barely ahead of American Jessie Diggins (54:42.9) and then Olympic winner Frida Karlsson (54:43.7). Fellow American Kendall Kramer was ninth in 55:51.2.

Diggins now has a 262-point lead for the overall seasonal title, after 21 of 28 events.

● Curling ● At the USA Curling National Championships in Charlotte, North Carolina, the top men’s teams were John Shuster’s rink at 7-0, with Andrew Stopera at 6-1. Those two met in a tight championship final, tied at 2-2 after five. Stopera scored two in the sixth, Shuster scored two in the seventh, for a 4-4 tie. Stopera’s 5-4 lead after eight evaporated as Shuster for two in the ninth for a 6-5 edge.

But Stopera got one back for a 6-6 tie after 10. Into the extra end, Shuster finally scored a championship point for the 7-6 win. It’s Shuster’s eighth title as skip– his first was way back in 2009 – and fifth in the last seven years.

The top women’s teams in round-robin play was Elizabeth Cousins’ rink at 6-1 and then Delaney Strouse was 4-3, with two other teams with the same record. Those two advanced to the title match, with Strouse up 5-2 after four ends, but Cousins closed to 5-4 after six. But two for Strouse in the seventh and ninth offset a deuce for Cousins in the eighth, on the way to a 9-6 win. It’s the first national title for Strouse.

● Cycling ● The UCI World Tour arrived in Europe for the start of the spring Classics series, with the 81st edition of the Omloop Nieuwsblad (BEL), and a 15.6 solo breakaway to win for Dutch star Mathieu van der Poel. He finished the 207.2 km ride from Ghent to Ninove in 4:53:55 and won by 22 seconds over countryman Tim van Dijke.

It’s van der Poel’s first win – and first medal – in this famous race.

The women’s race was also taken by a Dutch star, Demi Vollering, who won a sprint to the line over Poland’s Kasia Niewiadoma at the end of the 137.2 km course, in 3:35:51. They broke away with about 15 km left and the final sprint was over the last 200 m. Vollering was second in this race in 2022 and third last year, but now has the trophy.

● Diving ● China confirmed its worldwide dominance in the World Aquatics World Cup opener in Montreal (CAN), sweeping all nine events.

In the men’s program, Paris 2024 runner-up Zongyuan Wang won the 3 m Springboard over teammate Jiuyuan Zheng, 540.35 to 495.15. Yuming Bai won the 10 m Platform at 543.55, over three-time Worlds synchro gold medalist Junjie Lian (532.75). The 3 m Synchro went to 2024 Olympic champ Wang and Zheng, and the 10 m Synchro was won by Zhihao Yang and Renjie Zhao.

The women’s 3 m was another 1-2, for Paris Olympic champ Yiwen Chen (375.90) and Jie Chen (362.55), and the 10 m went to Linjing Jiang (428.10) over Jiaxi Cui (370.40).

The synchronized events were won by Chen and Chen for the 3 m, and the 10 m went to Wei Lu and Minjie Zhang. The Mixed Team went to China at 469.40 in a close contest with Mexico (460.85), with the U.S. sixth (404.85).

● Football ● The U.S. opened play in the 2026 SheBelieves Cup against Argentina in Nashville, Tennessee, and had control of play immediately. But after a scare in front of the U.S. goal in the 16th, midfield star Lindsey Heaps took a backwards pass from midfielder Emma Sears on the right side and from the top of the box, sent a left-footed liner into the top of the Argentine net for the 1-0 lead in the 19th.

Another U.S. goal was called back for offsides and Argentina’s defense came alive as the half continued. The half ended 1-0, with the U.S. holding 60% of possession, but Argentina had four shots to three.

U.S. keeper Claudia Dickey had to make a save on midfielder Florencia Bonsegundo in the 52nd, then a careful U.S. build-up kept the ball in the Argentina end and a knock-on from Heaps went to striker Jaedyn Shaw, who curled a right-footed shot from near the top of the box in the 56th that went off the hands of keeper Solana Pereyra, and into the net for the 2-0 lead.

That’s how it ended, with the Americans with 68% possession and a modest 6-5 shots edge. It’s the seventh win in a row for the U.S. women since last October and the sixth straight shutout.

● Freestyle Skiing ● At the FIS Ski Cross World Cup in Kopaonik (SRB), German Tim Hronek got his first win of the season, beating Kevin Drury (CAN) and Florian Wilmsmann (GER) in the first men’s race. On Saturday, Canada’s Reece Howden won for the fifth time this season, ahead of Wilmsmann and France’s Youri Duplessis-Kergomard.

The Friday women’s race went to Sweden’s Sandra Naeslund, the 2022 Olympic champion and 2026 bronze winner, winning her sixth race of the season. She crossed ahead of France’s Jade Grillet-Aubert and Marielle Berger Sabbatel. Saturday’s second race was another win for Naeslund, this time over Olympic winner Daniela Maier (GER) and Swiss Saskja Lack.

The FIS Moguls World Cup continued in Nanto-Toyoma (JPN), with two-time Olympic medalist Matt Graham taking Saturday’s men’s Moguls final at 78.42, barely ahead of American Landon Wendler, who won his second career World Cup medal, scoring 78.39. Japan’s Ikuma Horishima, the 2026 Olympic bronze winner, was third (75.63).

Horishima, the Olympic silver winner in Dual Moguls, won that event on Sunday, as Rasmus Stegfeldt (GER) did not finish in the final.

American Olivia Giaccio won the women’s Moguls on Saturday for her first gold of the season and is the only one to win medals in all five World Cup stops this season. She scored 75.64 to 75.31 for Japan’s Hinako Tomitaka and 75.01 for France’s Perrine Laffont, the 2018 Olympic winner and 2026 bronze medalist.

For the second time in two events this season, the U.S. swept the Dual Moguls, with Olympic silver winner Jaelin Kauf edging Giaccio, 20-15, and Tess Johnson winning the bronze-medal match against Laffont, 19-16.

● Judo ● Azerbaijan and Japan dominated the IJF World Tour Tashkent Grand Slam (UZB), each winning four golds. Two-time Olympic champ Hifumi Abe led Japan’s champions with a win in the men’s 66 kg class, plus Kokomo Fujishiro in the women’s 52 kg, Narumi Tanioka (63 kg) and Tokyo Olympic champ Akira Sone (+78 kg).

Azerbaijan cheered winners Ahmad Yusifov (men/60 kg), Omar Rajabli (men/81 kg), Murad Fatiyev (men/90 kg) and Kanan Nasibov (+100 kg).

The U.S. also won a medal, with Maria Celia Laborde taking a bronze in the women’s 48 kg class.

● Luge ● The penultimate FIL World Cup was in St. Moritz (SUI), with Olympic champions still shining.

Men’s gold medalist Max Langenhan (GER) won the men’s Singles title in 2:12.402 over two-time winner Felix Loch (GER: 2:12.749 and silver medalist Jonas Mueller (AUT: 2:13.160). Women’s Olympic champ Julia Taubitz won the women’s Singles in 1:48.144 ahead of teammate Merle Fraebel (GER: 1:48.265) and Verena Hofer (ITA: 1:48.369). Summer Britcher was the top American, in seventh, at 1:48.853.

The Italian women’s Doubles team of Andrea Votter and Marion Oberhofer repeated their Olympic win, this time in 1:48.506, ahead of Elisa-Marie Storch and Pauline Patz (GER: 1:49.101).

Olympic men’s silver winners Thomas Steu and Wolfgang Kindl (AUT: 1:46.693) won the men’s Doubles, just 0.04 ahead of Ivan Nagler and Fabian Malleier (ITA: 1:46.697).

● Nordic Combined ● The FIS World Cup resumed in Kulm (AUT) with a Compact event off the giant 235 m ski-flying hill and a 7.5 km race, won by Finland’s Olympic Large Hill bronze medalist Ilkka Herola at the line in 15:32.5 over seasonal leader Johannes Lamparter (AUT: 15:32.6).

It was Herola’s second career win, both in Compact races!

● Ski Jumping ● The resumption of the FIS men’s World Cup was in Kulm (AUT), jumping off the 235 m ski-flying hill and a resumption of the Domen Prevc win streak.

The Slovenian star won two Olympic Winter golds and won his fifth straight World Cup stage with a 433.0 point total, winning the second round and overtaking first-round leader Stephen Embacher (AUT: 431.9) on Saturday. American Kevin Bickner finished 10th (378.1).

On Sunday, Prevc dominated, winning both rounds and scoring 463.2 to 438.4 for Embacher, with Norway’s Johann Forfang third (405.0). Bickner was 27th.

The FIS women’s World Cup started up again in Hinzenbach (AUT) on the 90 m hill and once again, it was Nika Prevc with the win, scoring 258.6 to edge home favorite Lisa Eder (AUT: 255.6) and Norway’s Anna Stroem (238.3). It’s Prevc’s 14th win of the season, in 24 events.

Prevc had a tough time on Sunday, standing only 10th after the first jump and even winning the second round only brought her to third (230.3). Instead, it was Eder winning for home fans, at 247.1 points, ahead of Stroem (235.8). It’s Eder’s second win of the season.

● Snowboard ● The Parallel Giant Slalom season resumed at the FIS World Cup in Krynica (POL), with Italy’s Maurizio Bormolini winning the final over Korea’s 2018 Olympic silver winner Sang-ho Lee by 0.71 seconds. It’s Bormolini’s third World Cup gold of the season.

Bormolini then got his fourth win in Sunday’s final, beating Stefan Baumeister (GER) by 0.09 seconds. Swiss Dario Caviezel, the 2023 Worlds runner-up, won the bronze over Olympic champ Benjamin Karl (AUT), by 0.08.

Japan’s Tsubaki Miki, the 2023 World Champion, took the women’s final for her third win of the season, this time over Czech Zuzana Maderova, who did not finish.

Olympic silver winner Sabine Payer (AUT) was the winner on Sunday, just edging Olympic bronzer Lucia Dalmasso (ITA) by 0.03 seconds for her third win this season.

● Table Tennis ● The World Table Tennis Singapore Smash, with $1.55 million in prize money, concluded Sunday with China sweeping the Singles titles. Chuqin Wang, the 2025 World Champion, swept aside Yun-Ju Lin (TPE) in straight sets, 11-3, 11-8, 11-8, 11-9. Two-time Olympic silver winner Yingsha Sun won the all-China women’s final from Manyu Wang, the 2021 World Champion, by 4-2 (11-8, 11-9, 7-11. 6-11, 12-10, 11-9).

France’s Felix Lebrun and Alexis Lebrun won the men’s Doubles; Japan’s Miwa Harimoto and Hina Hayata took the women’s Doubles and Brazilians Hugo Calderano and Bruna Takahashi triumphed in the Mixed Doubles.

● Wrestling ● At the United World Wrestling Ranking Series Muhamat Malo tournament in Tirana (ALB), American entries scored two victories, with Spencer Lee winning the men’s 57 kg Freestyle class, and Macey Kilty dominated the women’s 62 kg Freestyle division, winning her four matches by a combined score of 41-2.

Mason Parris (125 kg Freestyle) and Dean Hamiti (79 kg Freestyle) both won silvers.

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ATHLETICS: Anthony and Sears star with sprint wins at USATF Indoor Nationals, as Hiltz wins fourth women’s 1,500 m title

U.S. sprint star Jacious Sears (Photo: USATF).

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≡ USATF INDOOR NATIONALS ≡

The USA Track & Field Indoor National Championships – first held in New York in 1906 – got going on Saturday in Staten Island, New York, also selecting the American team for the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Poland.

Paris 2024 Olympic 100 m champ Noah Lyles was running the 60 m for the first time this season in the Nationals, but had to deal with world leader Jordan Anthony. In the heats, Anthony won race one in 6.51, ahead of Lawrence Johnson (6.57). Lyles had to come from well behind in heat two, winning in 6.56, with Max Thomas in the same time. Trayvon Bromell, who won the 2016 World Indoors 60 m, dominated heat three, winning in 6.49, equal-5th in the world this season.

In the final, Bromell was in lane three, Lyles was in four and Anthony in five. Bromell was out strongly, but Anthony came on in the middle of the race and caught Bromell at the line. Anthony ran 6.45 with Bromell at 6.47, and Lyles at 6.51 in third.

Lyles gifted Anthony with a Pure Athletics championship belt for winning the title. Anthony and Bromell will head to Poland for the World Indoors; Lyles had said that even if he won, he would not be competing there.

The women’s 60 m heats saw hurdles winner Alia Armstrong win the first race in 7.18, then world no. 4 Jacious Sears, last year’s runner-up, won heat two easily in 7.05. Right behind her was Mia Maxwell of Atascocoita High School in Humble, Texas in 7.16!

In the final, Maxwell was out well, but Sears took over and won cleanly at 7.04 for her first national title. Behind her were the Maxwell twins, Mia and Mariah, in 7.13 and 7.14, both lifetime bests. Mia equaled the high school indoor mark of 7.13 by Lisa Raye (West Warwick in Rhode Island) from 2025.

Sears is coming on. She ran 10.77 at Tennessee in 2024 and got hurt, then returned to run 10.85 in 2025, but was only sixth at the USATF Nationals outdoors, but still ran on the U.S. relay prelims team at the Worlds. This could be a big year for her.

Lots of other action on a heavy final day:

● Men/400 m: In the first of the two sections, Elija Godwin got to the lead at the bell, but Jevon O’Bryant zoomed past on the second lap and won going away in 46.41 over Steven McElroy (46.65) with Godwin third (47.47).

Section two had new world-record man Khaleb McRae and he took the pole and led at the bell in 21.28. McRae kept pushing and won clearly over Chris Robinson, 45.01 to 45.36 and they finished 1-2 overall. T.J. Tomlyanovich (45.77) and Demarius Smith (45.89) went 3-4 and look to be on the relay in Poland.

● Men/800 m: Prep star Cooper Lutkenhaus came in as no. 3 in the world this season at 1:44.03 and he had the lead by 400 m in 53.18. Sean Dolan came up to challenge at the bell, but Lutkenhaus – 17 – pulled away around the final bend and won easily in 1:46.68. He was clearly in charge and ran masterfully. Dolan got second in 1:47.16, with Isaiah Harris third in 1:47.22.

It’s Lutkenhaus’ first U.S. title, but it won’t be his last. He said that his high school spring break period coincides with the World Indoors, so he expects to be in Poland.

● Men/1,500 m: Paris Olympic 1,500 m champ Cole Hocker was looking for a 1,500-3,000 m double, and he had the lead at 400 m at 58.43. Paris Olympic bronze winner Yared Nuguse took over at 800 m in 1:59.57, with Hocker close.

Luke Houser, the 2025 World Indoor bronzer, took the lead at 1,000 m and Hocker was sixth at the bell, with a lot of traffic. Houser pulled the field apart and was followed by Vince Ciattei and Nathan Green, the two-time NCAA champion from Washington.

Green got close and surged at the finish and won with a final lunge, 3:37.65 to 3:37.67 over Houser, with Ciattei third in 3:37.73. Nuguse was fourth (3:38.06) and Hocker was fifth (3:38.08).

● Men/High Jump: Last year’s runner-up, Eli Kosiba was the only one to clear 2.24 m (7-4 1/4) and wound up the winner for his first U.S. indoor title. Caleb Snowden and Kason O’Reilly finished 2-3, both clearing 2.21 m (7-3).

● Men/Long Jump: Jeremiah Davis had the early lead at 7.89 m (25-10 3/4), but Steffin McCarter took over in round four at 8.10 m (26-7), with Davis improving to 8.03 m (26-4 1/4) in round two and then 8.08 m (26-6 1/4).

McCarter, fifth at the 2022 World Championships but hampered by injuries since, got his first U.S. title. Cordell Tinch, the World 110 m hurdles champ, did some long jumping this season and finished sixth at 7.81 m (25-7 1/2).

● Men/Shot: Jordan Geist had the early lead at 21.72 m (71-3 1/4) from round one, but Roger Steen took over in round four, reaching 21.81 m (71-6 3/4). Steen did not imrpove and Geist had the final chance, but Geist fouled and Steen won his first U.S. Indoor gold. He will be out to move up from his Worlds silver in 2025.

Geist won the World Indoor Tour title and has a direct entry into the World Indoors, so Josh Awotunde, the 2025 USATF outdoor champ, can go to Poland as the third-placer at 21.06 m (69-1 3/4).

● Women/400 m: This was a two-section final, with Bailey Lear – fourth last year – holding off Shamier Little to win the first race, 51.60 to 51.78. Rosey Effiong had a slight lead at the bell in section two over qualifying leader Paris Peoples. Those two raced to the finish and Effiong got her first USATF title at the line, 51.53 to 51.65.

Effiong, sixth in the World Indoors last year, won the combined sections title at 51.53, with Lear second at 51.60. Little and Peoples will also be on the way to the World Indoors for relays.

● Women/800 m: Olivia Baker led at 400 m in 58.19 and then Addy Wiley took the lead at the bell and then had another gear into the final straight and won decisively in 1:59.43 for her first U.S. indoor title. A former NAIA champ at Huntington University, she’s on the way to her second World Indoors, also in 2024.

The fight for second was won by Valery Tobias in 1:59.77, ahead of Meghan Hunter (2:00.03). Tobias was second for the second straight year.

● Women/1,500 m: The race started slowly, and by 800 m, Gracie Morris – sixth last year – was in front at 2:23.12, with everyone bunched up. Sinclaire Johnson had the lead by 1,000 m, with defending champ Nikki Hiltz close. Lindsay Butler, the 2022 NCAA Indoor champ, took over and pulled the field apart, with Hiltz close at the bell, and Johnson closing.

Butler was rolling with 100 m to go, then Hiltz came through on the outside to win in 4:11.34. Morris came inside of Butler to get second in 4:11.39 to 4:11.52 and Johnson fourth at 4:11.59. It was Hiltz’s fourth straight U.S. Indoor title, the most consecutive wins ever.

● Women/Vault: Three got over 4.50 m (14-9), as Jessica Mercier cleared on her first trial, 2024 NCAA champ Chloe Timberg on her second and Emily Grove on her third. Gabriela Leon passed and all four cleared at 4.55 m (14-11), so the bar went up to 4.60 m (15-1).

Timberg got over right away, , but no one else could and she was the winner. But she needed 4.70 m (15-5) to get the World Indoor qualifying standard and made it on her second try!

● Women/Triple Jump: Olympic bronzer Jasmine Moore reached 13.89 m (45-7) in the second round, with Kayla Woods second with 13.50 m (44-3 1/2) in round four. The places didn’t change and neither improved, although Ryann Porter also jumped 13.50 m on her final try, but ended up third on her second-best jump.

● Women/Weight: A clear win for Jalani Davis, no. 2 on the world list for 2026, reaching 24.84 m (81-6) on her second throw. She moved up from third in 2025. Elisia Lancaster finished second at 22.78 m (74-9).

The top two finishers will be selected for the U.S. World Indoor Championships team if they wish to go and have met the entry standard.

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MILAN CORTINA 2026: Olympic “Fair Play Award” nominees selected and fan voting open through 3 March

U.S. skater Ilia Malinin embracing a stunned Olympic men's figure skating gold medalist Mikhail Shaidorov of Kazakhstan (TSX photo by Karen Rosen).

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≡ FAIR PLAY AWARD ≡

The thrills of the 2026 Olympic Winter Games were also accompanied by some remarkable demonstrations of sportsmanship and fair play. Fan voting is now open – through 3 March (Tuesday) – to select the Fair Play Award winner from the Games, presented by the International Olympic Committee and the International Committee for Fair Play.

From the nominations submitted during the Games, a jury selected six finalists, from three different sports:

Curling/Mixed Doubles: Julie Zelingrova (CZE)
“Zelingrova exemplified ‘playing by the rules’ when no one was watching. By self-reporting a nearly invisible rule violation (touching a running stone), she chose personal honesty over an easy advantage.”

Curling/Women: Italy and the U.S.
“When a disputed stone-touch threatened to cloud the match, the two teams chose honesty over advantage.”

Figure Skating/Men: Ilia Malinin (USA)
“After a heartbreaking drop from first to eighth place, Malinin didn’t retreat and genuinely celebrated gold medallist Mikhail Shaidorov (KAZ).”

Figure Skating/Men: Yuma Kagiyama (JPN)
“Kagiyama’s exuberant, heartfelt celebration of [countryman] Shun Sato’s medal showed that friendship and genuine joy for a peer can bridge the gap of any rivalry.”

Figure Skating/Women: Amber Glenn (USA)
“Despite her own disappointment, Glenn stepped in to shield Kaori Sakamoto (JPN) from intrusive cameras, prioritising mental health and human dignity over the spotlight.”

Ice Hockey/Women: Canada
“When a norovirus outbreak struck the Finnish team, Team Canada didn’t look for a forfeit; they looked for fairness by backing the postponement of their Olympic opener.”

Voting is available at this link.

The 2026 award is especially poignant as it comes 62 years after the very first Fair Play Award, given to Italian bobsled legend Eugenio Monti. During the 1964 Innsbruck Winter Games, he aided his direct rivals, the British Two-Man team with a replacement bolt that ultimately helped them win the Olympic gold, while Monti’s team ended up with the bronze.

Monti, who passed in 2003, won silver medals at Cortina d’Ampezzo in 1956 in the Two-Man and Four-Man and went on to win both Olympic golds at the 1968 Winter Games in Grenoble (FRA).

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ATHLETICS: Jackson extends U.S. women’s shot record, Hocker outduels Nuguse for 3,000 m title at USATF Indoor Nationals

Two-time World Champion Chase Jackson of the U.S. (Photo: Sona Maleterova for World Athletics).

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≡ USATF INDOOR NATIONALS ≡

The 2026 USA Track & Field Indoor National Championships – first held in New York in 1906 – got going on Saturday in Staten Island, New York, also selecting the American team for the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Poland.

One of the most anticipated events Saturday was the men’s 3,000 m, with World 5,000 m champion Cole Hocker in excellent form and he went to the front right away with Cooper Teare and 2024 World Indoor runner-up Yared Nuguse.

Hocker passed 1,500 m in 3:58.57, ahead of Teare (3:58.77). Olympic steepler Matthew Wilkinson took over at 1,800 m and then Nuguse went to the front at 2,400 m, with Paris Olympian Nico Young close, and then Young went to the front at the bell.

Young, Hocker and Nuguse were fighting for the win and it was Hocker, with his patented late rush, who got to the line for the win in a tactically-satisfying 7:39.25, just ahead of Nuguse (7:39.28) and Young at 7:39.29. Morgan Beadlescomb was fourth at 7:40.83 with a hard last lap, moving up from seventh.

It’s Hocker’s second 3,000 m national indoor title, also in 2022; he doubled that year in the 1,500 m and he will try for another double on Sunday.

There were also fireworks in the women’s Shot. Two-time World Champion Chase Jackson had been quiet indoors, competing in just one meet. But she was ready Saturday, unleashing a huge throw of 20.44 m (67-0 3/4) in round five to win and extend her own American Record of 20.24 m (66-5) from 2025. It moves Jackson to no. 2 on the 2026 world list.

Behind her was Abria Smith with a lifetime best of 19.23 m (63-1 3/4) for second, over Jaida Ross’s 18.43 m (60-5 3/4).

Lots more on Saturday:

Men/60 m hurdles: World leader Trey Cunningham led the qualifiers at 7.38, ahead of Dylan Beard (7.47), now equal-8th on the world list for 2026.

Beard – sixth in 2025 – didn’t miss the opportunity in the final, edging Cunningham, 7.37 to 7.40, to tie for the world lead and now equal-7th all-time. Jamal Britt was third in 7.46.

Men/5,000 m Walk: Nick Christie was an easy winner in an American Record time of 19:13.37, ahead of Jordan Crawford (21:15.02). For Christie, it’s his seventh indoor national title sine 2015; all of the others were at 3,000 m. He’s now no. 5 on the world list for 2026.

(Meanwhile, at the Italian indoor championships, Francesco Fortunato crushed the world 5,000 m walk record in 17:54.48, obliterating Russian Mikhail Shchennikov‘s 1995 mark of 18:07.08.)

Men/Vault: Zach Bradford, a two-time World Champs team member, equaled his seasonal best of 5.90 m (19-4 1/4) and was the only one to clear to win his first national title. American record holder KC Lightfoot cleared 5.85 m (19-2 1/4) for second and defending champion Chris Nilsen cleared 5.80 m (19-0 1/4).

Bradford wasn’t done and moved the bar to 6.01 m (19-8 1/2) and cleared on his second try for a lifetime best! He’s the 19th man to clear 6 m indoors and the fifth American. He’s now equal-8th all-time, and equal-second all-time U.S. with Sam Kendricks.

Men/Triple Jump: Russell Robinson, second last year, got to the lead early at 16.15 m (53-0) in the first round and improved to 16.59 m (54-5 1/4) in round three. Defending champ James Carter was the only other jumper to reach 16 m – in round five – and was second at 16.24 m (53-3 1/2) in the sixth round.

Men/Weight: Isaiah Rogers won his first national Weight title with his fifth-round throw of 23.29 m (76-5), then improved to 23.41 m (76-9 3/4) on his final toss. Konner Wood was second, with a final-round throw of 22.92 m (75-2 1/2).

Women/3,000 m: A spirited battle between Emily Mackay and two-time champion Elle St. Pierre came down to the final lap and Mackay – third in this race in 2023 – got her first national title in a meet record of 8:30.01 to 8:31.07 for St. Pierre. Margot Appleton was a distant third in 8:41.41. Mackay moves to sixth on the 2026 world indoor list with her time; St. Pierre has already run faster.

Women/60 m hurdles: Alia Armstrong, fourth last year, led the qualifiers at 7.90, with heptathlon World Champion Anna Hall also making it to the final (which she skipped).

Armstrong was in lane four for the final, with 2023 winner Alaysha Johnson and two-time winner Gabbi Cunningham to her right. Johnson was disqualified for a false start and on the second try, Armstrong came through with the win in 7.82, cleaning ahead of Danae Dyer (7.92) and Amber Hughes (7.98). Cunningham finished fourth (8.01).

Armstrong moved to equal-5th on the 2026 world list.

Women/5,000 m Walk: Lauren Harris, the defending champion from 2025 (3,000 m) won by more than a minute in 22:14.69, a lifetime best and an American Record, ahead of eight-time national indoor winner Maria Michta-Coffey (23:30.42).

Women/High Jump: Last year’s runner-up, Charity Hufnagel equaled her lifetime best at 1.96 m (6-5) on her third attempt won over Vashti Cunningham (1.93 m/6-4), who had won the prior nine U.S. indoor titles! World Hep Champion Hall took third at 1.90 m (6-2 3/4).

Women/Long Jump: Olympic bronzer Jasmine Moore took the lead at 6.69 m (21-11 1/2), then extended at 6.86 m (22-6 1/4) in round two, with 2025 World Indoor Champion Claire Bryant into second at 6.68 m (21-11).

Defending champ Monae Nichols, the 2024 World Indoor silver medalist, moved into second place in round four at 6.72 m (22-0 3/4) and equaled that mark in the sixth round. Bryant stayed third and improved to 6.69 m (21-11 1/2) in round six. But no one could touch Moore, who won her first national indoor title.

In the qualifying rounds:

Men/400 m: Khaleb McRae, who set the “world record” in the event at 44.52 earlier in February, led all qualifiers at 45.63, with Chris Robinson at 45.73, the only ones under 46 seconds.

Men/800 m: Cooper Lutkenhaus led the qualifiers at 1:47.00 to win heat three, ahead of Sean Dolan (1:47.17). 

Women/400 m: Paris Peoples won heat four with the fastest qualifying mark of 52.18 and Rosey Effiong took heat one in 52.20.

Women/800 m: Meghan Hunter was the fastest qualifier at 2:00.56 from heat one and the top five were bunched from 2:00.56 to 2:01.24.

The meet concludes on Sunday and will be televised by NBC from 1-3 p.m. Eastern time.

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PANORAMA: LA28 CEO Hoover backs Wasserman; double alpine gold medalist Brignone still in pain; race opens to follow Coe at World Athletics

LA28 chief executive Reynold Hoover testifying before a Senate Subcommittee hearing on 10 June 2025 (Senate video screen shot).

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games 2028: Los Angeles ● LA28 organizing committee chief executive Reynold Hoover told the Los Angeles Times that, as the LA28 Board Executive Committee has stated, Casey Wasserman should continue as Chair:

“Casey was here at the beginning of this whole project, and there’s nobody with the kind of business sense of the Olympics and how to put the partnerships together that you [need] to deliver on the Olympics. … Between him and I, we make a great team.”

He added that, “No sponsor has come to us and said that they don’t want to be associated with us or are concerned about the current controversy.”

Hoover also noted that more than 215,000 have registered to possibly volunteer for the Olympic and/or Paralympic Games and that he continues to work with Federal authorities for funding to cover the security elements of the Games.

The International Olympic Committee is expanding its “Olympic Qualifier Series” for 2028, creating showcase events for final qualifying for Los Angeles for smaller federations, in order to provide more support and a higher profile.

For the Paris 2024 Games, two events were held, focused in BMX Freestyle, breaking, climbing and skateboard. For 2028, three events will be staged between April and June, with BMX Freestyle, climbing and skateboard joined by 3×3 basketball, beach volleyball, and flag football, for a total of six sports or disciplines.

The Greater Orlando Sports Commission (GO Sports) said Wednesday that it is bidding for the third and final stop in the series. Orlando successfully hosted the 2024 U.S. Olympic Marathon Trials and the concept for is to use Camping World Stadium, home of the annual Florida Cirtus Bowl.

Orange County (Fla.) plans to assist with support of the proposed program via its Tourist Development Tax fund.

● Olympic Winter Games 2030: French Alps ● Edgar Grospiron, the 1992 Olympic Moguls champion and head of the French Alps organizing committee, told the French Senate Committee on Culture, Education, Communications and Sport that “All issues are moving forward, despite the governance challenges we’ve faced.”

The recent spate of senior executive departures – including chief executive Cyril Linette – had worried some observers, but Grospiron said the sponsorship sales effort is moving forward and “the decisions have been made and the processes to restructure our organization are underway.”

As for the sports and venues plan, he explained, “We’re roughly four months behind, but that’s four months of delay on only 15% of our venue map. We know 85% of our map and we’re working on it. The remaining 15% concerns the allocation of alpine skiing between Courchevel and Val d’Isère, the speed oval, the Paralympic events which we’re trying to consolidate at a single venue in Savoie, and finally, the additional sports.”

● Alpine Skiing ● Italy’s Federica Brignone was one of the best stories of the 2026 Winter Games, coming back from an April 2025 crash to win two golds. But her future is anything but assured. She explained from the World Cup in Soldeu (AND):

“Believing in something that seems impossible is a huge motivation. It’s difficult, but we are the architects of our own destiny. It was a personal challenge – I didn’t do it to receive gratitude. But if it can be a message for someone, then I’m happy. …

“Honestly, I hoped I would feel better. I’m still in quite a lot of pain and I struggle to put weight on it. That’s why you didn’t see me in training today.

“I’ll evaluate things day-by-day. We agreed that just being at the Olympics was already a ‘bonus’ and now even more so it must not become torture. It has to be something healthy and safe.

If I can’t truly stand on my leg, I have no intention of throwing myself down the mountain at 130 km [81 miles] an hour.”

And the future?

“It depends on my health. If it becomes torture, it will be difficult. If I feel good, why not? I haven’t made a decision. I don’t feel like I want to quit. I’m tired of the pain – not of racing.”

● Athletics ● The USATF National Indoors in on this weekend at the Ocean Breeze Athletic Complex in Staten Island, New York, with the meet selecting the U.S. team for the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Poland in March.

Sunday’s meet will be shown on NBC from 1-3 p.m. Eastern time.

The race to replace Sebastian Coe (GBR) as the head of World Athletics is starting.

Elections will be held prior to the 2027 World Athletics Championships in Beijing (CHN), with filings for office opening on 1 March 2026 and due at the latest by 1 June 2027. Selections will be made for World Athletics President, four Vice Presidents and 13 Council members.

An independent Vetting Panel is to ensure “only candidates who meet World Athletics’ high integrity standards are eligible to stand for election.”

The current World Athletics First Vice President is former Colombian 400 m star Ximena Restrepo, the 1992 Olympic women’s 400 m bronze winner, with a best of 49.64. She married Chilean shot star Gert Weil and lives in Chile and is expected to be a leading candidate.

“The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) has partially upheld an appeal by World Athletics against the Ethiopian National Anti-Doping Office (ETH-NADO) and middle-distance runner Diribe Welteji Kejelcha (Ethiopia).

“Ms Welteji is found to have committed an Anti-Doping Rule Violation (ADRV) and is sanctioned with a period of ineligibility of two years from 8 July 2025, with credit for provisional suspension served.”

Thursday’s announcement follows a 21 May 2025 charge by the Athletics Integrity Unit against Welteji, the 2023 World women’s Road Mile champion, for not providing a testing sample at an out-of-competition doping control on 23 February 2025. She was cleared by the Ethiopian anti-doping authority and was appealed with a request for a four-year ban.

Welteji was not allowed to compete at the 2025 World Athletics Championships, and the arbitrator found that she was negligent only and imposed a two-year ban with credit for time serviced. She will be eligible again on 1 July 2027.

Jeff Galloway, an American 10,000 m Olympian in 1972 and a running evangelist for his “run-walk-run approach” to training, passed away in Pensacola, Florida on 25 February, at age 80.

He was involved in the growth of the famed Peachtree Road Race in Atlanta, the Avon International Women’s Marathon and the Phidippides running shore chain, and for decades as a speaker, urging people to find joy and fitness in running and exercise.

Manteo Mitchell, 38, now a bobsledder, but formerly an Olympic 4×400 m relay silver medalist in athletics, was publicly warned by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency for attending an online USA Track & Field committee meeting last September.

This was in violation of his two-year doping ban from 2 February 2025, but Mitchell had been invited to the meeting and did not know that the ban extended to non-bobsled activities. It does, but no sanction was added.

● Boxing ● The International Boxing Association, the former governing body for Olympic boxing, said that if the International Olympic Committee does not pay prize money for the 2028 Olympic tournament, it will. The IBA claimed that it paid $100,000 to Paris 2024 gold medalists with $50,000 to the boxer, $25,000 to the coach and $25,000 to the national federation (which is now not affiliated with the IBA). Runner-ups were to have received $50,000, bronze winners $25,000 and fifth-placers $10,000.

● Diving ● Amid violence in the Mexican state of Jalisco, World Aquatics said Thursday that the Diving World Cup stage planned for 5-8 March in Zapopan has been cancelled:

“This decision follows travel restrictions issued by some international embassies and an overall evaluation of travel cautions, which have limited or advised against travel to Mexico at this time and, as a result, did not authorize their national teams to participate in the competition. The safety and participation of all athletes remains a fundamental priority for World Aquatics.”

● Football ● FIFA President Gianni Infantino (SUI) said on Wednesday concerning the violence in the Mexican state of Jalisco:

“We are analysing and monitoring the situation in Mexico these days, at this moment.

“But I want to say from the outset that we have complete confidence in Mexico, in its president [Claudia] Sheinbaum, in the authorities, and we are convinced that everything will turn out for the best.

“From my side, and from FIFA’s side, I have absolute confidence in President Sheinbaum. We are in regular contact with the Presidency and the authorities, and we are, in any case, monitoring the situation. The World Cup is going to be an incredible celebration.”

He noted confidence in the football situation in Mexico:

“We have some matches in Mexico in a month, the World Cup playoffs, and the new Azteca Stadium will also be inaugurated.

“Mexico is a great football country. Like in every country in the world, things happen; we don’t live on the moon or another planet. That’s why we have governments, police, and authorities who will ensure order and security.”

● Shooting ● The International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) “is seriously concerned about the recent dissemination by the European Shooting Confederation (ESC), of an article published on the outlet Inside The Games regarding Article 6.12.5.2 of the ISSF General Technical Rules and the ISSF Academy licensing system, which initially included various factual inaccuracies.”

The post criticizes the news site and the European confederation:

“ISSF believes that institutional positions and the discussions among the stakeholders should be made through official institutional channels and not via content produced by a media outlet which appears not to be in good standing with the IOC.” The ISSF is now asking for an “urgent institutional meeting with the full ESC Presidium” and closer monitoring of ESC meetings.

Back story: The ESC President is Russian Alexander Ratner, whose election is being challenged by runner-up finisher Karoliina Nissinen (FIN), for voting interference by former ISSF President Vladimir Lisin (RUS). The ISSF inquiry into the election is ongoing.

● Wrestling ● Sad news that two-time Olympian and National Wrestling Hall of Fame member Bobby Douglas passed away at age 83 on 23 February in Ames, Iowa.

He was a 1964 and 1968 U.S. Olympian and competed at the world championships six times, and won a 1966 silver at 63 kg and 1970 bronze and 68 kg. He had a stellar coaching career, winning the 1988 NCAA title at Arizona State, where he headed the program for 18 season, then moved to Iowa State for 14 years before retiring. He was an assistant or head coach for 10 U.S. Olympic or World Championships teams and the men’s Freestyle coach for the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona.

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LOS ANGELES 1984: California State Assembly hearing on 6 March looks back to ‘84 Games success with Graziano, Perelman and Yaroslavsky to testify

The magnificently-decorated peristyle end of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum for the Opening Ceremonies of the 1984 Olympic Games (Photo: Wikipedia)

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≡ MARCH 6 ASSEMBLY HEARING ≡

A unique hearing of the California State Assembly Select Committee on the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games will take place on Friday, 6 March at the LA84 Foundation in Los Angeles, on the topic of “Lessons and Legacy Impacts of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games.”

The LA84 Foundation, of course, is the living legacy of the Los Angeles Olympic Organizing Committee, which staged the ‘84 Games and turned an Olympic Movement saddled with terrorism, financial failures and boycotts into a worldwide power in sports marketing and presentation.

The two-hour session is slated from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and is free and open to the public in the LA84 Foundation pavilion. Chaired by Assembly member Tina McKinnor (D-61st District), short presentations are scheduled from people who were part of the effort that made the Games – and its legacy – a success:

Renata Simril, President of the LA84 Foundation and of the Play Equity Fund.

Renato Pavia, an LA84 Foundation grant recipient and member of the Access Youth Academy in San Diego, California.

Derek Fisher, former Lakers star and an Advisory Board member of the Play Equity Fund.

Bob Graziano, LAOOC ticket department manager and past LA84 Foundation Board Chair.

Rich Perelman, LAOOC Vice President/Press Operations and Editor, The Sports Examiner.

Zev Yaroslavsky, former Los Angeles City Council member (during the Games period), later Los Angeles County Supervisor; Director of the Los Angeles Initiative at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.

Not yet confirmed is Anita DeFrantz, the senior International Olympic Committee member in the U.S., and the long-time head of the LA84 Foundation, who served as a Vice President/Olympic Villages for the LAOOC, responsible for the USC Olympic Village.

Simril and Pavia will speak to the legacy efforts of the Foundation, chartered with $93 million (40%) of the LAOOC’s $232.5 million surplus from the 1984 Games. Fisher will focus on the continuation of legacy efforts into 2028 and beyond for all area youth. Graziano and Perelman will give brief talks on the delivery of the Games, especially in the planning, innovation, and execution phases.

Yaroslavsky, and if available, DeFrantz, will talk on the lasting impact of the 1984 Games on Los Angeles and beyond.

This is the first meeting of the Assembly Committee on the 2028 Games; the California State Senate’s Special Committee on International Sporting Events met in Sacramento in July 2025.

It is also believed to be the first hearing of any governmental body involved in oversight of the 2028 Games on the development, outcome and legacy of the Games of the XXIIIrd Olympiad in 1984.

The LA84 Foundation is located at 2141 West Adams Boulevard in Los Angeles (90018); parking availability is primarily on the surrounding streets; if you wish to attend, please give yourself time to park and walk.

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MILAN CORTINA 2026: NBC’s Winter Olympic ratings bonanza shows strength of broadcast TV for sports

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≡ ANALYSIS & OBSERVATIONS ≡

NBC breathlessly announced a considerable ratings success for its coverage of the 2026 Olympic Winter Games on Monday, posting in part:

“From the most-watched Opening Ceremony in 12 years through last night’s Closing Ceremony, the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics averaged 23.5 million viewers on NBC, Peacock, NBCUniversal Digital Platforms and Versant’s CNBC and USA Network across the combined live afternoon Milan Prime window (2-5 p.m. ET) and U.S. primetime (8-11 p.m. ET/PT) time periods. Milan Cortina viewership is the highest for a Winter Games since Sochi 2014 and up 96% from the 2022 Beijing Olympics (12.0 million).

“Viewership is based on official Nielsen Big Data + Panel viewership (through Thursday 2/19) and preliminary data from Nielsen (2/20-22), and digital data from Adobe Analytics. Final data will be available later this week.”

The release also noted that the “Milan Prime (live U.S. daytime) and Primetime in Milan (U.S. primetime) coverage posted a daily streaming TAD [Total Audience Delivery] of 3.3 million viewers across Peacock and NBCU Digital platforms.”

Thus, using the preliminary 23.5 million daily average, 20.2 million (86.0%) was on NBC broadcast and the USA and CNBC cable networks.

Some additional data is now available from TheTVRatingsGuide.com, which posts Nielsen broadcast and cable data on prime-time programming only:

06 Feb.: 13.26 million NBC only ~ opening
07 Feb.: 11.15 million NBC + 1.45 million USA Network

08 Feb.: 20.02 million NBC only ~ Super Bowl Sunday lead-in
09 Feb.: 10.85 million NBC + 2.39 million USA
10 Feb.: 10.20 million NBC + 2.04 million USA
11 Feb.: 10.75 million NBC + 1.60 million USA
12 Feb.: 9.78 million NBC + 1.66 million USA
13 Feb.: 8.87 million NBC + 2.49 million USA
14 Feb.: 8.01 million NBC + 3.02 million USA

15 Feb.: 9.45 million NBC + 2.92 million USA
16 Feb.: 9.03 million NBC + 2.69 million USA
17 Feb.: 9.75 million NBC + 2.12 million USA
18 Feb.: 9.63 million NBC + 2.00 million USA
19 Feb.: 11.66 million NBC + 2.31 million USA
20 Feb.: 9.48 million NBC + 1.73 million USA
21 Feb.: 7.86 million NBC + 1.91 million USA

22 Feb.: 4.76 million NBC only ~ closing

Your first question is, what happened to cause the increase on 19 February? Easy: the women’s Free Skate in figure skating and the U.S. women won the ice hockey gold-medal match against Canada, two of the highlights of the Games for Team USA.

By adding up the published numbers and doing some arithmetic, we can see:

● NBC averaged 10.26 million a day for its primetime shows;
● USA Network primetime shows averaged 2.17 million;
● NBC said its streaming platforms averaged 3.3 million;
● So, the daytime (live) shows averaged about 7.8 million daily on NBC, USA and CNBC.

(Sports Media Watch reported that when broadcast and streaming viewers were combined, the evening prime-time shows on NBC, USA and CNBC and digital averaged 13.8 million viewers, and the afternoon shows, with digital, averaged 9.7 million.)

This says:

(1) The power of live sports is demonstrated once again as a dominant “audience aggregator” and one of the last ways to bring people together around a television or a computer (or phone).

(2) The terrible ratings for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games and the Beijing 2022 Winter Games were due in part to the pandemic and due in part to being in Asia, a terrible time zone for U.S. viewers. The much-friendlier Central European Time Zone – six hours ahead of U.S. Eastern – creates far more interest in the U.S.

(3) NBC said this was its largest Olympic Winter Games audience since Sochi 2014. Comparing to the other Winter Games this century for the NBC primetime show only:

● 31.9 million 2002: Salt Lake City
● 20.2 million 2006: Turin
● 24.4 million 2010: Vancouver
● 21.3 million 2014: Sochi
● 19.8 million 2018: PyeongChang
● 11.4 million 2022: Beijing
● 10.3 million 2026: Milan Cortina

For 2026, the comparison showing a weak primetime audience in a bit unfair, as it does not include streaming – obviously a big factor now – and that many people watched events live during the day. The Nielsen ratings calculus also more inclusive now than it was in earlier years. But the shared Olympic evening experience on network television is down, substantially, reflecting the general decline in broadcast and cable vs. streaming. Nielsen reported that in January 2026, broadcast and cable accounted for only 42.7% of U.S. television viewing and streaming was 47.0%.

On that basis, the comparison with Sochi is pretty accurate.

One more thing: look at the split of ratings between the first week of the games – nine days from 6-14 February – and the remaining 8 days.

Week 1 (9 days): 11.41 million NBC; 2.11 million USA
Week 2 (8 days): 8.95 million NBC; 2.24 million USA

Acknowledging a boost from the NFL Super Bowl being on NBC, the first week still drew more attention – about 27.4% more – than the second week.

That metric will be well received in Monaco, at the headquarters of World Athletics, with track & field held during the first week in Los Angeles in 2028, with swimming now in the second week.

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PANORAMA: FIFA not moving World Cup matches out of Mexico, yet; U.S. men’s hockey team at White House; Paralympic flame lit in England

Voting for the 96th AAU Sullivan Award is now open (Photo: AAU).

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Games ● Speaking with the Hungarian Nemzeti Sport, International Olympic Committee Vice President Juan Antonio Samaranch (ESP) noted the gravitational pull of the Games that makes it impossible for politics to stay away:

“The success and visibility of the Games attract those who seek to articulate their own causes as loudly as possible here.

“But the Olympics are about unity, friendship, and the message that ‘another world is possible.’”

● Olympic Games 2028: Los Angeles ● U.S. superstar Kevin Durant won a fourth Olympic gold on the American team at the 2024 Paris Games and said he wants to be considered – at age 39 – for the 2028 L.A. Games as well:

“I didn’t want to just take my name out of consideration just because of the simple fact that I’m older and I did it before.

“[USA Basketball Managing Director] Grant [Hill] understands my love for Team USA. That’s my family. The level of love I have for Team USA and the whole organization over there is unmatched, so I’d love to be part of it until I’m done playing.

“I understand how tough that decision is for Grant, and how many great players are going to emerge the next year and a half, and I’m also very old compared to a lot of these players. I know I’ve got my work cut out for me to make that team.”

● Olympic Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● Members of the victorious U.S. men’s hockey team arrived in Miami from Italy on Monday night, and then flew to Washington, D.C., where they were received at The White House, in advance of attending the State of the Union address on Tuesday night.

Five members of the men’s team could not attend; the NHL schedule resumes on Wednesday. The gold-medal-winning American women’s team was invited, but declined, citing scheduling conflicts.

The International Ice Hockey Federation announced its awards for the Olympic men’s tournament, with Canadian star Connor McDavid named as Most Valuable. The Tournament Directorate choices for best position players selected McDavid as the Best Forward, American Quinn Hughes as Best Defender and American Connor Hellebuyck as Best Goalie.

The media-selected All-Star Team included those three, plus defender Cale Makar (CAN) and forwards Macklin Celebrini (CAN) and Juraj Slafkovsky (SVK).

● Winter Paralympic Games 2026 ● The Paralympic Flame was lit Tuesday in Stoke Mandeville (GBR), the site of the original event – the 16-athlete Stoke Mandeville Games of 1948 – that became the Paralympic Games.

The flame was kindled by three-time Paralypic alpine skier Millie Knight (GBR) and four-time ice hockey Paralympian Andrea Macrì (ITA). The Paralympic Torch Relay will comprise 11 days before arriving for the Paralympic opening in Verona (ITA) on 6 March.

Approximately 665 athletes from 50 nations will contest 79 medal events in six sports.

● AAU Sullivan Award ● Public voting has opened for the 96th AAU Sullivan Award – first awarded in 1930 – with a deadline of 5 March 2026. The 17 finalists comprise both collegiate (8) and Olympic (8) and Paralympic-sport (1) athletes in eight different sports:

● Olivia Babcock, Volleyball (Pitt)
● Cameron Boozer, Basketball (Duke)
● Evan Bates & Madison Chock, Figure Skating
● Azzi Fudd, Basketball (Connecticut)
● Hannah Hidalgo, Basketball (Notre Dame)
● Blake Horvath, Football (U.S. Naval Academy)
● Erin Jackson, Speed Skating
● Grace Lau, Karate
● Alysa Liu, Figure Skating
● Jeremiyah Love, Football (Notre Dame)
● Ilona Maher, Rugby
● Ilia Malinin, Figure Skating
● Tatyana McFadden, Para Track & Field
● Fernando Mendoza, Football (Indiana)
● Mikaela Shiffrin, Alpine Skiing
● Braden Smith, Basketball (Purdue)
● Zahid Valencia, Wrestling

Chock & Bates (silver), Liu (two golds), Malinin (gold) and Shiffrin (gold) all won medals at the recent Olympic Winter Games in Italy, although the award is for achievements during 2025.

The winner will be announced in a ceremony in New York on 7 April 2026.

● Fencing ● USA Fencing was happy to announce positive results from a safety study on Tuesday:

“The study, conducted by USA Fencing’s Data Resource Team using Fencing Time Live data collected between August 2019 and July 2025, found that medical withdrawals from direct elimination bouts occurred at a rate of just 0.338% – roughly one withdrawal for every 296 bouts. Of the 44,527 unique competitive fencers analyzed, only 3.9% experienced even a single medical withdrawal over the entire six-season period, and 83% of those fencers withdrew just once.”

This was across 637,283 bouts from 26,930 events. Foil bouts had the highest withdrawal rate, Sabre was in the middle and Epee was the lowest. Age was a factor: the lowest withdrawal rate was among 10-and-under fencers and the highest was for those at 30+ years and in the age 13-14 categories.

● Football ● For some time, the chatter around the 2026 FIFA World Cup was about possible “relocation” of matches due to safety concerns by U.S. President Donald Trump, then about moving matches out of the U.S. to protest the Trump Administration.

Now, after a firefight that killed a cartel leader in state of Jalisco – where the Estadio Guadalajara will host four matches – the talk is suddenly about moving matches out of Mexico.

A media statement which was reported by The Athletic included:

“At FIFA Mexico, we are closely monitoring the situation in Jalisco and remain in constant communication with the authorities.

“We will continue to follow the actions and directions from the different government agencies, aimed at maintaining public safety and restoring normalcy, and we reiterate our close collaboration with federal, state, and local authorities.”

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Tuesday that there is “no risk” for the World Cup matches in the country and that in Jalisco, “little by little the situation is returning to normal.”

Further reporting indicates that FIFA would only consider moving matches as a “last resort,” and depending on the safety and security situation. The tournament begins on 11 June, in Mexico City.

At a hearing of the House Committee on Homeland Security, dealing with preparations for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Miami Host Committee Chief Operating Officer Ray Martinez pointed to the stall in funding from the Federal government due to the continuing shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security as its funding has been held up in Congress. Said Martinez:

“We are 107 days out from the tournament, but more importantly we are about 70-something days out from starting to build the [Miami 23-day] fan fest. These decisions have to be made, generously, within in the next 30 days. Our local agencies are very anxious. Without receiving this money, it would be catastrophic for our planning and coordination.”

Asked if events surrounding the tournament will be subject to cancellation, Martinez explained:

“That is correct. We have to start making some really tough decisions, and that starts with our fan festival. Obviously the matches up at the stadium will take place, but preparing for the other impromptu events and all the watch parties we’re expecting to see, that will be in jeopardy.”

The Miami Host Committee has asked for $70 million in funding, out of a $625 million allocation in last summer’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act. But the agency distributing the funds – the Federal Emergency Management Agency – is part of the Department of Homeland Security and is on hiatus amid the funding showdown in Congress.

Host cities are under heavy financial pressures due to FIFA’s requirements, and a major fan festival program planned for Liberty State Park in New Jersey, for which tickets had been sold, has been cancelled in favor of some smaller, free events. The town of Foxborough, Massachusetts, site of Gillette Stadium, has said it will not issue permits for the matches until its security costs of $7.8 million are covered.

● Sport Climbing ● The World Climbing Executive Board reinstated the Russian and Belarusian federations during its 10-11 February meeting, maintaining neutral status for all of their competitors and continuing the ban on the hosting of any events in those countries.

The ban against Russia and Belarus had been in place since 2022.

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MILAN CORTINA 2026: While 92 National Olympic Committees attended the Winter Games, 29 won medals and only 38 had a top-8 finish

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≡ 2026 GAMES TEAM SCORING ≡

The Olympic Games draw competitors from across the globe, but only a very few win medals. A few more finish in the top eight in their events and earn a diploma from the International Olympic Committee.

While the medal table is the most-often used metric of “team” success, it’s wholly inefficient to measure achievement at any Games. So, The Sports Examiner uses the familiar 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 scoring system used in NCAA track & field scoring and by some International Federations, such as World Aquatics.

For the Milan Cortina Winter Games, The Sports Examiner tracked the top-eight placers. While there were 92 National Olympic Committees, there were 38 that scored points from places 1-8 (scores shown with the number of place winners in parenthesis after):

● 493.5: Norway (87) ~ 41 medals
● 449: United States (92) ~ 33 medals
● 385.5: Italy (78) ~ 30 medals
● 338: Germany (68) ~ 26 medals
● 314.5: France (64) ~ 23 medals

● 284: Switzerland (56) ~ 23 medals
● 282: Canada (62) ~ 21 medals
● 249.5: Austria (58) ~ 18 medals
● 248.5: Japan (48) ~ 24 medals
● 237: Netherlands (39) ~ 20 medals
/10/
● 211: China (49) ~ 15 medals
● 199: Sweden (32) ~ 18 medals
● 113: South Korea (23) ~ 10 medals
● 93: Great Britain (18) ~ 5 medals
● 87: Finland (22) ~ 6 medals

● 85: Australia (18) ~ 6 medals
● 73: Czech Rep. (18) ~ 5 medals
● 58: Poland (16) ~ 4 medals
● 47: Slovenia (8) ~ 4 medals
● 38: Latvia (8) ~ 2 medals
/20/
● 34.5: New Zealand (11) ~ 3 medals
● 29: Spain (5) ~ 3 medals
● 27: Belgium (8) ~ 1 medal
● 23: Russia “neutrals” (5) ~ 1 medal
● 22: Kazakhstan (8) ~ 1 medal

● 19: Bulgaria (4) ~ 2 medals
● 15: Estonia (4) ~ 1 medal
● 13: Georgia (2) ~ 1 medal
● 10: Brazil (1) ~ 1 medal
● 10: Denmark (2) ~ 1 medal
/30/
● 9: Ukraine (4)
● 8: Hungary (3)
● 5: Slovakia (1)
● 4: Belarus “neutrals” (2)
● 4: Romania (1)

● 2: Hong Kong (1)
● 2: Lithuania (1)
● 1: Ireland (1)
/38/

It’s worth noting that 29 National Olympic Committees and a Russian “neutral” won medals at the Games, compared to 38 who scored points, a very close match.

Still, the International Olympic Committee will be pleased with a small expansion of the number of teams that scored points: 38, up from 35 for Beijing in 2022, and 35 in PyeongChang in 2018.

The U.S. improvement was shown quite clearly when comparing these three Games:

2018: 23 medals ~ 357.5 points ~ 79 place-winners (1-8)
2022: 25 medals ~ 369.0 points ~ 82 place-winners
2026: 33 medals ~ 449.0 points ~ 92 place-winners

This is real improvement, with the caveat that the absence of the Russians in Milan Cortina certainly influenced some of the scoring totals in 2026.

The IOC is currently considering what to do about the Winter Games program and whether to include historically winter sports – such as cross country running and cyclo-cross – in addition to the current rule which limits Winter Games sports to those on snow and ice.

Given the very slow growth in NOC scoring – 35 in 2018 and 2022 and 38 in 2026 – it might be time to give other sports a try.

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LANE ONE: Milan Cortina Winter Games outcomes, nos. 5 to 1 show the power of home cooking and politics are part of the game(s)

A young fan is all set to cheer on the Azzurri during the Milan Cortina Winter Games (TSX photo by Karen Rosen).

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≡ MILAN CORTINA IN REVIEW II ≡

The memorable XXV Olympic Winter Games provided a lot of thrills, chills and disappointments among the many brilliant moments of sport. Some of the world’s best athletes found out that the Games are a lot different than their own world championships, as explained in the first part of our recap and review yesterday.

On now to the five most prominent lessons from the Games:

● No. 5: Home cooking really does help
One of the best things that can help an organizing committee sell tickets is for the host country to win a lot of medals right from the start of a Games.

Cue the Italian team for Milan Cortina, which shattered all records for medals at a Winter Games, in front of thrilled crowds in every venue. The Azzurri won nine medals in the first two days of the Games and kept piling it on to a record of 30 total (10-6-14), 50% more than it had ever won at any prior Winter Games!

Updating our 8 February look at the impact of “home cooking” since the 1998 Nagano Games (the 1992-94 cycle change skews the results too much to be used):

1998 Nagano: Japan went from 5 medals in 1994 to 10 (+100%)
2002 Salt Lake City: U.S. from 13 to 34 (+162%)
2006 Turin: Italy from 13 to 11 (–15%)
2010 Vancouver: Canada from 24 to 26 (+8%)
2014 Sochi: Russia from 13 to 29 (+123%, after 4 doping disqualifications)
2018 PyeongChang: Korea from 8 to 17 (+113%)
2022 Beijing: China from 9 to 15 (+67%)
2026 Milan Cortina: Italy from 17 to 30 (+76%)

(Yes, the increase in events from 61 in 1998 to 116 now must be noted, but do not explain all of these increases. Note that Italian medal production actually went down for Turin in 2006!)

It’s not a record increase, but by far the best Italy has done at a Winter Games and the story of Short Track ace Arianna Fontana moving up to no. 2 all-time among Winter Games medal winners (she has 14 now) and the amazing comeback story of skier Federica Brignone, returning from injury to win two golds, drove attendance and interest. Broadcast reports indicated that two-thirds of the Italian public watched at least some part of the Games.

That helped to sell about 88% of the tickets available for the Games, after loud concerns over sales were voiced just prior to the Games.

● No. 4: The best are still the best
Thanks in part to the continuing expansion in events and to its continuing domination on skis, Norway shattered records again by winning the most-ever medals at a Winter Games with 41 and for gold medals, with 18.

The Norwegians held the prior record with 39 meals at PyeongChang 2018 and the most golds with 16 at Beijing in 2022. Here, they rode dominance in two sports: cross country skiing and biathlon, to 61% of their record totals. Their medals came in seven sports and disciplines:

● 14: Cross Country Skiing
● 11: Biathlon
● 5: Ski Jumping
● 4: Speed Skating
● 3: Nordic Combined
● 2: Alpine Skiing and Freestyle Skiing

Norway brought 80 athletes to the Games and won 41 medals. The U.S. brought 232 and won 33 medals, its best-ever showing outside of North America and no. 3 ever, behind Vancouver 2010 (37) and Salt Lake City 2002 (34).

The U.S. won medals in 11 sports and disciplines with the most – 8 – in Freestyle Skiing. And the Americans won 12 golds, its most ever in a Winter Games, despite disappointments in several events.

When Lindsey Vonn crashed in the women’s Downhill, Breezy Johnson won gold. When Mikaela Shiffrin failed in the Team Combined, she won the Slalom. Where Ilia Malinin fell in the men’s Free Slate, he won the Team Event. And figure skating winner Alysa Liu and Monobob champ Elana Meyers Taylor were not favored going into their events. And there were more like them in other events.

The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee expected to improve on 23 medals in 2018 and 25 at Beijing 2022. A rise to 33 was both satisfying and points to even greater possibilities with Utah 2034 on the horizon.

The International Olympic Committee will be disappointed that the number of nations winning medals remained at 29, down from the high of 30 from 2018.

● No. 3: Politics are part of the Games
Over time, the most consequential athlete of the 2026 Winter Games may be one who never competed: Ukrainian Skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych.

His insistence on wearing his “memory helmet” which pictured 21 Ukrainian athletes – one just nine years old – killed in the Russian invasion that started on 24 February 2022, caused him to be disqualified for violations of the IOC’s Guidelines on Athlete Expression. The guidelines state:

[E]xpressions are not permitted in the following instances … During competition on the field of play.”

And Heraskevych was making a statement. The artist, Iryna Prots, explained in a story in The Art Newspaper:

Prots explains she is a family friend of Heraskevych, and has known him since he was a boy. He had come to her, she says, ‘not as an athlete to an artist’ but ‘as a person to a person’, with a wish to commemorate Ukrainian athletes who had fallen in the war. ‘He said, ‘I want them to be with me. Those who did not reach this start’. And I understood: this will not be a drawing; it will be a presence.’”

But what he did was to raise once again – and loudly – the issue of Russian and Belarusian participation. The IOC signaled growing acceptance of Russian and Belarusian re-integration into international sport last December with agreement to allow “youth” athletes to participate openly, with national colors and anthems.

It was left up to the International Federations to decide how to implement this. United World Wrestling is allowing “youth” wrestlers up to 22 years old; have they not checked to see that the age of conscription into the Russian Army is 18? And World Rowing announced that despite the IOC’s continuing ban on teams, Russian and Belarusian SENIOR athletes – as “neutrals” – can compete in Fours and Eights.

Perhaps these formulations will be revisited. But the impetus will have to come from the IOC and President Kirsty Coventry (ZIM), who met with Heraskevych and was unable to dissuade him from wearing his helmet in competition.

● No. 2: In the biggest market, the Games are still big business
NBC announced Monday that its Milan Cortina coverage “averaged 23.5 million viewers on NBC, Peacock, NBCUniversal Digital Platforms and Versant’s CNBC and USA Network across the combined live afternoon Milan Prime window (2-5 p.m. ET) and U.S. primetime (8-11 p.m. ET/PT) time periods.”

While the measurement metrics differ from prior Games – NBC says this was the biggest audience since Sochi 2014 – what the viewership numbers make clear is that the Olympic Games remain highly relevant to the American market, by far the most consequential for the IOC and the Olympic Movement.

About half of all of the International Federations depend on the IOC’s television rights sales dividend every four years – mostly powered by NBC’s billion-dollar fees – to keep afloat. So it is critically important that the Games stay popular in the U.S.

And they are. NBC sold out of its ad spots and is looking for an even bigger bonanza coming in 2028 in Los Angeles … for which the promotion has already started.

● No. 1: Doubted all along, the MiCo organizers won
Despite sometimes hysterical predictions of failure, the Fondazione Milan Cortina 2026 organizing committee made the Games work, and work well. A Winter Games that was spread out from the city of Milan throughout the northern Italian mountains was tied together by television.

The genesis of this concept came from the IOC in 2014 with the adoption of prior President Thomas Bach (GER) and his “Agenda 2020″ and “Agenda 2020+5,” which insisted on using existing venues and temporary facilities wherever possible and keeping new construction to a minimum. The prior insistence on new buildings (and the attendant spending) had crippled interest in the Games.

The new initiative has created boundless enthusiasm to host the Games among cities, regions and countries that had never seriously considered it before. And the Milan Cortina plan stretched the concept to its limits, using famous winter sports venues that were well known to the competitors already, and had in-place organizations to help run the events.

It worked. The issues ended up being with those venues being built with the Games in mind – the sliding track in Cortina, built by the government at the last moment – and the new Milan arena, privately built, but suffering from delays. Both got done late, but they worked, and worked well.

The Olympic Village in Milan was reportedly excellent and will be used for student housing, which is much needed in the city.

There was some backlash on how widely the Games were spread out and this will be an issue for the IOC going forward. But the Milan Cortina team, led by chief executive Andrea Varnier, showed that it can work.

The cooperation between the organizers and the multiple levels of government in Italy appeared to be very strong and beyond some early demonstrations that received a lot of publicity, there were no threats to the Games (even as some other demonstrations took place).

That coordination is a key to success, and will be a focal point for Los Angeles across the fractious American political scene over the next two years.

Perhaps that is the point to be stressed most, and is the biggest lesson from the 2026 Winter Games. Working together is better.

Rich Perelman
Editor

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PANORAMA: NBC says 23.5 million daily watched Milan Cortina; Vonn lucky not to lose her left leg; Rivera takes Winter Cup All-Around title

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≡ THE 5-RING CIRCUS ≡

● Olympic Winter Games 2026: Milan Cortina ● NBC announced that preliminary data shows “the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics averaged 23.5 million viewers on NBC, Peacock, NBCUniversal Digital Platforms and Versant’s CNBC and USA Network across the combined live afternoon Milan Prime window (2-5 p.m. ET) and U.S. primetime (8-11 p.m. ET/PT) time periods.

“Milan Cortina viewership is the highest for a Winter Games since Sochi 2014 and up 96% from the 2022 Beijing Olympics (12.0 million).”

More data is expected by the end of the week, but there was an important sidenote:

“Over the full Games, Milan Prime (live U.S. daytime) and Primetime in Milan (U.S. primetime) coverage posted a daily streaming TAD [Total Audience Delivery] of 3.3 million viewers across Peacock and NBCU Digital platforms.”

So, on average, 21.2 million watched on television and 3.3 million watched online, daily.

A report from the Olympic Villages at the Games noted that across the Games period, 785 pounds of pasta, 10,000 eggs, 8,000 cups of coffee, and 12,000 slices of pizza were served every day.

● International Olympic Committee ● The IOC said Saturday that FIFA President – and IOC member – the appearance by Gianni Infantino (SUI) at the Board of Peace meeting in Washington, D.C. last Thursday is not in violation of any rules on political neutrality.

Infantino announced an agreement for FIFA to invest as much as $75 million in Gaza for “50 FIFA Arena mini-pitches located near schools and residential areas, five full-size pitches across multiple districts, a state-of-the-art FIFA Academy and a new 20,000-seat national stadium” in the next 36 months.

The IOC noted that this development effort is “entirely in keeping with the role of an international sport federation.”

● World Anti-Doping Agency ● WADA announced that Cote d’Ivoire’s national anti-doping agency is now in compliance as the required changes to its procedures to line up with the World Anti-Doping Code have been adopted.

● Alpine Skiing ● American star Lindsey Vonn said her left leg was saved because of her crash in Switzerland right before the Games, causing Dr. Tom Hackett to be at the Winter Games able to perform surgery that saved her left leg from amputation. Per The Associated Press:

“Vonn, who said she is ‘very much immobile,’ is confined to a wheelchair at the moment, but has turned her attention to her rehab and is working her way toward being able to use crutches. She estimated it will take about a year for the bones in her left leg to heal. Only after that will doctors be able to go in and repair the torn ACL, which played no role in the crash.

“‘It’s going to be a long road,’ she said. ‘I always fight and we keep going.’”

● Athletics ● The 2026 world pole vault season really began on Sunday with the All-Star Vault meet in Clermont-Ferrand (FRA) with the top stars in attendance, led by Olympic and World Champion Mondo Duplantis (SWE).

He did not disappoint, taking the world lead at 6.06 m (19-10 1/2), which he made on his first try. He did take three shots at a world record of 6.31 m (20-8 1/2), but failed on each.

Australia’s Kurtis Marschall, the 2025 Worlds bronzer, got a lifetime best of 6.00 m (19-8 1/4) for second, the 18th man to clear the 6 m mark indoors. Third was Greek Emmanouil Karalis, the 2025 World Champs runner-up, at 5.90 m (19-4 1/4) and then American Sam Kendricks (5.80 m/19-0 1/4).

American record holder KC Lightfoot was sixth, also at 5.80 m.

Pari Olympic fifth-placer Amalie Svabikova (CZE) won the women’s vault with a lifetime best of 4.76 m (15-7 1/4) over Slovenian Worlds bronze winner Tina Sutej, Imogen Ayris (NZL) and Marie-Julie Bonnin (FRA), all at the same height.

The Athletics Integrity Unit is back on the prowl, stating Monday:

“The AIU has banned Mathew Samperu (Kenya) for 3 years from 23 January 2026 for Presence/Use of Prohibited Substance (Testosterone). DQ results from 23 November 2025.”

Samperu is a 2:07:25 marathoner from February 2025, a mark which will stand.

● Gymnastics ● U.S. national All-Around champion Hezly Rivera triumphed in the women’s competition at the USA Gymnastics Winter Cup in Louisville, Kentucky on Sunday, winning on Beam (14.200) and Floor (14.100) on the way to a 56.750 total.

That was ahead of Charleigh Bullock (55.200), who won on the Uneven Bars (14.400) and Claire Pease (54.350). Reese Esponda was the winner on Vault (14.300).

At the FIG Trampoline World Cup in Baku (AZE), Russian “neutral” Iana Lebedeva won the women’s Trampoline final, 57.310 to 56.440 over Seljan Mahsudova (AZE), with American Kennedi Roberts in fifth (52.400).

The men’s Trampoline winner was won by Russian “neutral” Andrei Builou over Olympic champ – and Belarus “neutral” – Ivan Litvinovich, 63.550 to 59.520. Isaac Rowley of the U.S. was fourth at 59.110.

● Volleyball ● The International Volleyball Federation (FIVB) slapped Brazilian beach star Carol Solberg Salgado – the 2025 Worlds bronze winner – with a

“one-tournament suspension on Carolina Solberg Salgado for a demonstration of a non-sporting nature based on the political statements that she made during her post-match interview on the field of play after the third place match at the Beach Volleyball World Championships Adelaide 2025.”

Salgado, 38, said she was “celebrating” the arrest of former Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro in late November 2025, a political position she has held for years.

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WINTER PARALYMPIC GAMES: IPC chief Parsons explains Russian, Belarusian entries are allowed; asks for no boycotts

Emblem of the International Paralympic Committee.

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≡ MILAN CORTINA PARALYMPICS ≡

At the Beijing 2022 Winter Paralympic Games, opened less than 10 days after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine had started, the International Paralympic Committee was forced to turn away Russian and Belarusian athletes entered in the event. At the time, IPC President Andrew Parsons (BRA) explained:

“In the last 12 hours an overwhelming number of members have been in touch with us and been very open, for which I am grateful. They have told us that if we do not reconsider our decision, it is now likely to have grave consequences for the Beijing 2022 Paralympic Winter Games. Multiple NPCs, some of which have been contacted by their governments, teams and athletes, are threatening not to compete.

“Ensuring the safety and security of athletes is of paramount importance to us and the situation in the athlete villages is escalating and has now become untenable. First and foremost, we have a duty as part of the Paralympic mission, enshrined in the constitution, to guarantee and supervise the organisation of successful Paralympic Games, to ensure that in sport practiced within the Paralympic Movement the spirit of fair play prevails, violence is banned, the health risk of the athletes is managed and fundamental ethical principles are upheld.

“With this in mind, and in order to preserve the integrity of these Games and the safety of all participants, we have decided to refuse the athlete entries from [Russian Paralympic Committee] and NPC Belarus.

“To the Para athletes from the impacted countries, we are very sorry that you are affected by the decisions your governments took last week in breaching the Olympic Truce. You are victims of your governments’ actions.”

Russia, of course, is still in Ukraine, four years later and boycott talk – at least on the ceremonial level – has started again.

Parsons spoke Monday at a news conference in Milan and voiced his concern:

“We have not received any official communication about any boycott. What we’ve heard, we heard from the media.

“What I am afraid of is that sometimes this situation can be used to politicise sports. I’ll give you an example. We have National Paralympic Committees who are saying to the media, and I can quote one, Czechia. They mentioned a couple of days ago that they are boycotting the Opening Ceremony. In December, during their Pre-Delegation Registration Meeting, they had already informed us that they did not want to attend the Opening Ceremony because they were focusing on the athletic performances of the athletes who have to participate in competitions the following day. So that kind of attitude is a concern.

“We were also informed about people who told the media that they were not participating in the Games, when the same person refused the invitation to come to the Paralympic Games, saying that they would be on private holidays. And then they say that it is because they are boycotting. That is why I am afraid.”

Unlike the Olympic situation, where the Russian Olympic Committee is still on suspension, the IPC General Assembly last September voted against the suspension of the Russian Paralympic Committee by 111-55 (11 abstentions) and then against a partial suspension by 91-77 (eight abstentions). Belarus was also fully re-admitted.

Then, the Russian Paralympic Committee won Court of Arbitration for Sport cases to force several International Federations to accept entries, despite the qualifying deadline having passed. Russia will have six athletes and Belarus, four.

Ukraine, of course, was outraged and announced it would not participate in the ceremonial opening of the Winter Paralympics. Parsons commented:

“Every National Paralympic Committee whose athletes qualified is invited to take part in the Opening Ceremony Parade.

“Again, the decision was to treat both National Paralympic Committees [Russia and Belarus] as any other National Paralympic Committee. So we don’t have a legal way to not have Russia and Belarus, if they want to attend the Opening Ceremony Parade. We don’t have it.

“Ukraine, as any other NPC participating, they are invited to attend and to be there with their flags. For different reasons, NPCs can decide not to attend. We strongly encourage them to attend. The Opening Ceremony should not be politicised, in our view. We respect and we understand different views. If they don’t want to participate, we regret, but we respect. We will not punish, we will not do anything negative, we will just accept the fact.”

Meanwhile, governments of 33 countries have opposed the Court of Arbitration for Sport decision, and Ukraine, the Czech Republic and Poland and a European Union Commissioner will not attend the opening ceremony on 6 March.

Importantly, there is no indication, thus far, of athletes or teams not competing in the Paralympic Games.

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LOS ANGELES 2028: Ticket lottery sign-ups pass 5 million; City Council motion on LA28 “leadership” waived by committees

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≡ LA28 NOW IN FOCUS ≡

The LA28 organizing committee announced Monday that registrations for its opening ticket purchase program “draw” have surpassed five million entrants, with registration still open until 18 March.

LA28 had previously only said that it received 1.5 million registrants on the first day of sign-ups on 14 January. Entries have come from all 50 states and 194 countries and territories. According to the statement:

“Fans must register at tickets.la28.org by March 18 for an opportunity to secure a time slot for Drop 1, (April 9–19), and if applicable with a relevant postal code, the LA & OKC [Oklahoma City] Locals Presale (April 2–6).

“Fans registered for the first draw will be notified via email about time slots between March 31 and April 7.”

A limit of 12 tickets will be available for the first purchase window.

A Los Angeles City Council resolution introduced by member Monica Rodriguez on 11 February made a statement concerning the leadership of the LA28 organizing committee, including:

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the City Council expresses concern regarding the potential conflict between the Olympic movement’s values and Casey Wasserman’s association with the Epstein files, and calls for a thorough and transparent review of his involvement in the ongoing investigations into these matters; and

“BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that the City Council urges the LA 28 Organizing Committee, and the International Olympic Committee, to ensure that all leadership roles are held by individuals who consistently reflect the Olympic movement’s commitment to integrity, accountability, and respect for all people.”

The matter was referred to the Ad Hoc Committee on the 2028 Olympic & Paralympic Games and the Rules, Elections and Intergovernmental Relations Committee, both chaired by Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson.

Last Thursday (19th), both committees waived consideration of the motion, sending it back to the City Council. It has not yet been scheduled for consideration.

The resolution is significant in that it did not call for the removal of Wasserman as the LA28 Chair, indicating there may not be enough support for this on the Council. In any case, the City cannot force any decision by the LA28 organizing committee, which is a private, not-for-profit California corporation.

The LA28 Board Executive Committee made its own inquiry, including assistance from an outside law firm, and announced that Wasserman would continue as Board Chair.

A City Council motion “establishing Brisbane, Australia as an Olympic Friendship City” was passed on 20 February by a 14-0 vote.

The motion is the first action to tie Los Angeles with the host city of the 2032 Olympic Games and to “develop extensive exchange programs, particularly those linked to the upcoming Olympic and Paralympic Games and future initiatives.”

At last week’s Los Angeles Metropolitan Transportation Authority Executive Management Committee meeting (19th), it was noted that Metro – in addition to its continuing lobbying for billions of dollars in Federal support for the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, is also asking for money from the State of California.

A 21 January request was made to the heads of the State’s Assembly and Senate committees on the Olympic and Paralympic Games, with a “total ask of just shy of $380 million” for money for improvements related to Metro’s Games transit plan, which will also have legacy impacts beyond 2028.

Advocacy is continuing at the Federal level, with the hope for funding requests in the Fiscal Year 2027 Federal budget, which is generally released in March.

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LANE ONE: Milan Cortina Winter Games outcomes, nos. 10 to 6, show the weight of the Games is real, especially on the ice

A golden finish for U.S. star Mikaela Shiffrin in the Olympic women's Slalom in Cortina! (Photo: Emily Tidwell/U.S. Ski Team)

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≡ MILAN CORTINA IN REVIEW I ≡

The Olympic Winter Games in Milan, Cortina and elsewhere have closed, with a considerable level of success, despite many challenges. There will be a lot of post-Games discussions about what was good and what was not, but as for a quick look back, here are 10 impressions, starting with today’s no. 10 to no. 6:

● No. 10: The weight of the Olympic Games is real
No one was a heavier favorite going into the Games than American figure skating star Ilia Malinin, who had won two World Championships golds in a row and looked utterly unbeatable.

But he had a rough time in the Short Program of the Team Event, then rebounded somewhat to win the Free Skate and earn a gold for the U.S. He then led the men’s Singles Short Program by almost five points and said afterwards that the Games is a different experience:

“I did not think it would be that heavy. I thought that I could come into this like any other competition, but honestly I definitely underestimated it.

“Now that I’ve gotten three performances under Olympic ice, I think that I’ve really tamed the Olympic ice.”

He hadn’t and he fell apart in the Free Skate, finishing 15th with a modest – for him – four quadruple jumps, but with two falls. He ended up eighth. He said prior to the Free Skate:

“It felt different than any other competition. Sometimes it still overwhelms you, and I definitely felt that in the Team Short Program.”

He was not the only one who felt the weight of expectations. U.S. audiences didn’t see some of these, but consider China’s Eileen Gu, who came in as the reigning Olympic champion in two events, but won only the Freestyle Skiing Halfpipe and settled for silvers in Big Air and Slopestyle. She was looking for three golds.

She’s still just 22 and Malinin is just 21. They have long careers ahead of them. Swiss ski star Marco Odermatt came in leading the FIS World Cup standings in the Downhill, Super-G and Giant Slalom; he won a Super-G bronze and Giant Slalom silver and was fourth in the Downhill.

The Games is different.

● No. 9: King Klaebo supreme, thanks to Putin?
For all the difficulties many stars had, Norway’s Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo had none. He won six gold medals at the 2025 FIS World Nordic Championships, sweeping the cross country skiing events. He did the same in the Games, setting a new record for the most golds by a single athlete in a single Games, breaking the mark of five by American speed skater Eric Heiden from way back in 1980.

But he had help, specifically from Russia. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, which started two days following the close of the 2022 Beijing Winter Games, removed his chief foreign rival, Alexander Bolshunov, who won the 2022 Olympic golds n the 30 km Skiathlon and 50 km Classical and also on the Russian team in the 4×10 km relay.

Bolshunov, like Klaebo, is 29, and was not going to be allowed in as a “neutral” for sure, and he can thank Russian President Vladimir Putin for keeping him from trying to stand in Klaebo’s way.

Sometimes even winning medals isn’t enough. Norwegian biathlete Sturla Holm Laegreid won five medals (0-3-2), but said he was sad because he lost his girlfriend … because he cheated on her.

● No. 8: Don’t give up, don’t ever give up
The ups and down of champion athletes was no better demonstrated than on the U.S. Ski Team.

Downhill favorite Lindsey Vonn, 41, suffered a bad crash 13 seconds into her race, had to be lifted off the mountain and is now recovering from multiple surgeries on her left leg. Instead, teammate Breezy Johnson – the shock 2025 World Champion – won again!

A few days later, Johnson won the Downhill portion of the women’s Team Combined and turned the lead over to the best Slalom skier in history, teammate Mikaela Shiffrin. Shiffrin had trouble, ranked 15th in the Slalom and she and Johnson finished fourth overall and out of the medals.

Eight days later, Shiffrin was back on the Slalom course in Cortina … and crushed the competition, winning by a huge – in skiing – 1.50 seconds and earned her first Olympic gold since 2018. She wrote in a cathartic post on Instagram, in part:

“I questioned all that I’ve learned in life, multiple times this week. I questioned what kind of grit I have in my heart and I wondered if I should be doing this at all. I questioned my toughness and tenacity. I questioned it all. And then I left those questions behind, and stepped into the arena anyway.

“I won.”

The late basketball coach Jim Valvano’s lesson of “Don’t give up, don’t ever give up” was on display again and again. American Short Track skater Corinne Stoddard apologized in an Instagram post, also noting the weight of the Games:

“I’m not sure what’s been going on. Part of me thinks I haven’t been able to handle the pressure and expectations I put on myself. The other part of me feels so physically drained every time I try to race.

“This whole experience has been incredibly unfortunate, and I feel embarrassed by how many times I’ve crashed, especially since I’m not an athlete who’s known for falling often. I also feel embarrassed by how much I’ve choked on the Olympic stage over and over again. This isn’t what I planned to show the world I was capable of.”

She came back and won a bronze medal in the 1,500 m after two earlier crashes.

● No.7: The Olympics and AI can’t come fast enough
The ugly head of favoritism and questionable judging popped up again in 2026, and not just in figure skating.

There were multiple questions raised about scoring in the Ice Dance final, where France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron won by 1.43 points over Americans Madison Chock and Evan Bates. A French judge scored the U.S. pair far less than everyone else on the panel, and an Italian judge scored that country’s pair, Marco Fabbri and Charlene Guignard, in the top three; they finished fourth.

In the women’s Singles Free Skate, it was noted that Kazakh judge Nadezhda Paretskaia gave her highest score to Russian “neutral” Adeliia Petrosian, even though she fell and had issues with two other jumping sequences.

This was a substantial problem for the International Skating Union in 2002 in Salt Lake City and forced a change in the scoring program to try and eliminate outlier scores. But they are obviously still around.

Then there was the “double touching” scandal in curling, where a high-decibel argument between teams was heard worldwide and Canadian and British teams had stones removed from competitions. World Curling added judges, then removed them.

This is where the warp-speed advances in artificial intelligence can help. World Gymnastics, another federation in deep need of judging and meet management help, is already working on an automated-scoring project. The ISU made a big announcement of a “strategic partnership” with IOC professional services sponsor Deloitte during the Games.

Deloitte did an impressive job overseeing the results reporting and integration systems during the Milan Cortina Games. Now it needs to talk with the gymnastics folks and help the ISU and World Curling to take the prejudice out of judges in all three sports.

The sooner, the better.

● No. 6: Opportunity dawns for USA Hockey
USA Hockey is considered one of the best-run of the National Governing Bodies, servicing 577,864 player-members and 67,253 coaches during its 2024-25 fiscal year. It also now has the Olympic champion men’s and women’s hockey teams.

The thrilling overtime wins for both of the U.S. creates a sensational, rare opportunity for further growth in this sport, especially on the women’s side.

It is not lost on longtime observers that the rise of the WNBA has been the support of the NBA, which has also extended to the National Governing Body level at USA Basketball, for both men and women.

The National Hockey League has had its eyes toward European expansion, to the concern of the International Ice Hockey Federation, whose finances largely depend on its World Championships, mostly played in Europe.

Is there an opportunity for USA Hockey and well-respected chief executive Pat Kelleher to bring the NHL owners’ attention to the possibilities for a women’s league on the same model as the WNBA was founded?

The existing Professional Women’s Hockey League is a Mark Walter Group project, which has interests in the Los Angeles Dodgers, controlling ownership of the Los Angeles Lakers and a partial ownership of the WNBA Los Angeles Sparks. The structure is there to do much more in hockey.

Next up: the key lessons of Milan Cortina 2026, from no. 5 to no. 1.

Rich Perelman
Editor

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MILAN CORTINA 2026 Review & Preview: Memorable Winter Games close with historic U.S. men’s hockey gold and medal records for Norway, Italy

The Olympic Rings above a stylized mountain during the Milan Cortina 2026 closing ceremony (TSX photo by Karen Rosen).

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= MILAN CORTINA 2026 =
From Lane One

The record-setting and emotional XXV Olympic Winter Games closed on Sunday evening at the Arena di Verona, a spectacular setting in a venue built in the year 30, at a time when the original Olympic Games were still being held.

The show opened with a panorama of Italian performers through the centuries – especially from opera – with Giuseppe Verdi’s Rigoletto as the guide.

The Olympic Flame, in a glass vase, entered, ahead of the massed flags of the 92 competing National Olympic Committees, who entered from outside the venue, followed by the athletes, entering as a single group rather than behind their national colors.

The operatic salute gave way to a modern, hip-hop dance routine and a performance by the blue-and-gold-clad dancer Ramon Agnelli, a graduate of the Ukrainian Academy of Ballet in Milan, spotlighting a country that made a deep impact on the Games via a Skeleton racer who never competed.

Following the victory ceremonies for the 50 km cross country races, a disco salute to the 18,000 volunteers and a remembrance of those who have passed, a salute to water and the environment led to the handover ceremony to the organizers of French Alps 2030.

A brilliant light show was the centerpiece of the program, “A New Dawn,” followed by the obligatory video presentation and bathing of the stage in light.

Organizing committee chief Giovanni Malago (ITA) spoke of what was achieved and looked to the future:

“What we have witnessed over the past two weeks demonstrates just how much the Winter Games matter to the Olympic Movement.

“An extraordinary kaleidoscope of sporting achievements and personal journeys, where passions and emotions come together, alongside some of the contradictions of our deeply divided world.

“My thoughts turn to the many young people who embraced these Games. To them, we affirmed that another world is possible through sport. I believe that this message has resonated powerfully and will endure.

“In just two weeks’ time, we will do it all again together, when Milano Cortina 2026 hosts the Paralympic Games. …

“Our Olympic mission has been accomplished.”

International Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry (ZIM) celebrated the assembled athletes, but also those who helped bring the Games to life, the Italian people, government and the organizers:

“From alpine villages to elegant cities and snow-covered mountains: your warmth, your hospitality, your passion made every single one of us feel at home.

“To the organising committee, my dear friend Giovanni Malago – and your incredible team, everyone behind the scenes across every single venue: You did it! Whenever there was a challenge, you found a way. You delivered a new kind of Winter Games and you set a new, very high standard for the future. You can be so proud. …

“And to the volunteers: where do I even begin? You are amazing. Your smiles, your kindness, your energy – you gave these Games your passionate vibe. Grazie ai volontari!

“The flame may soon go out, but its light will stay with us: in every child inspired to dream big. In every person reminded that courage and kindness still matter.

“The Olympic Games will continue to be a space where the athletes can inspire the world through sport: freely, safely and proudly.

The Olympic flame in the vase and the giant outdoor cauldrons went out and the lights went down. But Rigoletto came back, and the dance party and light show revved up for a final 10 minutes. And a final performance from Achille Lauro led to Rigoletto closing the door on the Games.

The ceremony ran for two and a half hours, but even so, it was too short. That’s always the way a great Olympic Games ends.
~ Rich Perelman

● The Rosen Report ● American speed skating star Jordan Stolz finished his Milan adventure with two golds and a silver – at age 21 – and is looking ahead for more. He talks about his Olympic experience here.

● Scoreboard ● Norway set records for the most medals in a Winter Games and the most golds, but the big winner was Italy. Coming in with a high of 20 medals in a Winter Games, the home team scored 30! Amazing; the top 10 (actually 11):

● 41: Norway (18-12-11)
● 33: United States (12-12-9)
● 30: Italy (10-6-14)
● 26: Germany (8-10-8)
● 24: Japan (5-7-12)

● 23: France
● 23: Switzerland
● 21: Canada
● 20: Netherlands
● 18: Sweden
● 18: Austria

The U.S. team had a historic Games. The 12 golds is the most ever in a Winter Games, bettering the 10 in 2002 at Salt Lake City. The 33 total medals was the third-most ever, just short of 2002 (34) and 2010 in Vancouver (37). It’s by far the most outside of North America, which had been 28 in Sochi in 2014. And, as noted below, the American depth was outstanding.

A better indication of team performance has to go beyond three places, so The Sports Examiner returns our eight-place scoring, using the NCAA track & field format of 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 to score each event. The top 12:

● 493.5: Norway
● 449: United States
● 385.5: Italy
● 338: Germany
● 314.5: France

● 284: Switzerland
● 282: Canada
● 249.5: Austria
● 248.5: Japan
● 237: Netherlands

● 211: China
● 199: Sweden

In terms of total scorers from places 1-8, the U.S. ended with 92, over Norway’s 87, followed by Italy at 78, then Germany (68) and France (64). A full list and analysis is coming in the following days.

● Television ● Another embarrassment for Italian national broadcaster RAI, this time at the Cortina Four-Man bobsled competition, just prior to the start of the racing. In a possibly “open mic” moment, a RAI announcer said: “Let’s avoid crew 21, which is Israeli,” then a “no, because …” and then the actual coverage started.

The announcers were quite aware of what had just happened. RAI commentator Dario Di Gennaro said on-air, “Our sincere apologies for what was broadcast a moment ago. The comment made during the off-air segment before the four-man bobsleigh race was completely inappropriate and in no way reflects the values of sport, respect, and inclusion that should guide public service and our work. We renew our apologies to the athletes involved, the Israeli delegation, and all those who felt offended.”

RAI Sport Interim Director Marco Lollobrigida apologized in a statement:

“The off-air remark that was broadcast before the four-man bobsleigh race at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics on RAI 2 contained an unacceptable expression that in no way represents the values of public service broadcasting or of RAI Sport.

“On behalf of the directorate, I extend sincere apologies to the Israeli athletes, the delegation, and all viewers. Immediate internal reviews have been launched to determine responsibility. Sport must unite, not divide.”

RAI Managing Director Giampaolo Rossi, also issued a statement:

“The incident that occurred during the live broadcast on Rai 2 represents a serious matter, contrary to the principles of impartiality, respect, and inclusion that must characterize the public service. Rai has therefore initiated an internal investigation aimed at opening disciplinary proceedings to ascertain any responsibility as quickly as possible.”

This came after Radio Television Suisse commentator Stefan Renna’s berated Israeli bob pilot Adam Edelman in a lengthy comment, for his support of Israel’s response to the 7 October 2023 invasion by Hamas. RTS removed the video that included Renna’s diatribe.

● International Olympic Committee ● The 145th IOC Session concluded on Sunday, with two athlete members elected, Yunjong Won (KOR: bobled) and Johanna Taliharm (EST: biathlon). Including retirements, this brings the IOC membership to 106, with 42 of these being Olympic athletes at some point in their careers.

IOC chief Coventry opened the 83-minute meeting with a thanks to those who put on the show:

“We want to thank the Milano Cortina team and the organizers and our dear friends – [President] Giovanni [Malago] – I have no words, really.

“At the start of the Games, we were talking and you spoke about the goals for the Italian team, which you so surpassed, it’s been amazing. But also, the Italian fans, the spectators, the way they have taken in all countries and they’ve cheered for everybody. …

“Thank you for bringing that alive. We’re eternally grateful for the hard work that you and your team have done in the last few months and especially during these Games and we’re very appreciative of that.”

MiCo President Malago added in brief remarks:

“Thank you for never ceasing to believe in us. For showing us the way. For supporting us in the most difficult moments, and there were not a few. For so generously walking this path with us every step of the way, and, above all, for the climate of harmony and genuine cooperation that you fostered in our daily work and for the mutual respect that guided every discussion. …

“Together, we were truly stronger.”

A survey done for the IOC in eight countries led to a projection that “local awareness” of the Games was almost 90% and “about 1 in 2 internationally.” Television audiences in Italy were about two-thirds of the country.

At the end of the meeting, it was announced that an extraordinary IOC Session will be held in Lausanne on 24-25 June 2026. There was no indication of the agenda, but look for a series of decisions on new policies coming out of Coventry’s “Fit for the Future” working groups project. A shake-up could be coming.

● Milan Cortina 2026 ● The organizing committee gave a final briefing on Sunday morning, with chief executive Andrea Varnier summarizing the effort:

“We pioneered an organisational model, that of the widespread Games, which has proven to be successful. We covered an area of about 22,000 square kilometres, where 224 sports sessions were held with 740 medals awarded in about 900 hours of competition.

“As for the athletes, there were 93 delegations, with three ?countries – Benin, Guinea Bissau and the United Arab Emirates – participating in the Winter Games for the first time. There were 2,880 athletes, with a record 47% of women: we welcomed them in three Olympic Villages, those of Milano, Cortina and Predazzo, to which are added eleven hotels, for a total of 5,560 beds prepared for athletes, staff and companions.”

He added that 1.3 million tickets were sold, about 88% of the total available. A later statement noted that 63% of spectators were foreign: 37% were Italian, with the largest contingents from Germany (15%), the U.S. (14%), Switzerland (6%), Great Britain (6%), the Netherlands and France (4.5%), and Canada (3.5%).

Malago also saluted two special contributors to the success:

“There are two parties that deserve to be remembered for their importance in the success of these Games. The first is the Ministry of the Interior and the Ministry of Defence with the JTF [Joint Task Force], which ensured an extraordinary level of security. We received compliments and thanks from everyone for the extraordinary support we received from the police.

“The second person is [IOC Olympic Games Executive Director] Christophe Dubi (SUI). I would like to thank him publicly because without him the Games would not have been such a success, because he dedicated himself to our project with professionalism, skill and great passion.”

Malago and Varnier and their team are not done, of course. The Winter Paralympic Games are now on tap, from 6-15 March.

= RESULTS: SUNDAY, 22 FEBRUARY =
(5 finals across 5 sports)

● Bobsled: Four-Man
German sleds were 1-2-3 after the first two runs on Saturday, but Michael Vogt’s Swiss sled was close, just 0.12 off the medals. But in front were German stars Johannes Lochner – the Two-Man winner – and two-time defending champion Francesco Friedrich.

Lochner simply shut the door with the fastest third and fourth runs in the field, finishing at 3:37.57, ahead of Friedrich (3:38.14). It’s the third straight Olympic win for the Germans and Lochner moves up from silver in Beijing in 2022.

Behind them was a fight for third, with Vogt trying to catch German Adam Ammour’s sled. He gained 0.03 on the third run, but still down 0.09 going into the fourth. But the Swiss was faster by 0.13 and grabbed the bronze in 3:38.64 to 3:38.68 for Ammour. It’s the first Swiss medal in this event since a bronze in 2006 in Turin.

Kris Horn had the fastest U.S. sled, finishing 11th in 3:39.94, then Frank Del Duca in 12th in 3:40.06.

Israel’s sled was 24th out of 27 after the first two runs and then was disqualified by the Israeli National Olympic Committee for faking illness. According to a statement from the NOC:

“The bobsleigh team asked to include Ward [Fawarseh], the substitute, in the competition.

“According to the rules, this is only permitted if one of the athletes is injured or ill. In order to make this possible, one of the team members – encouraged by his teammates – declared that he was unwell. He even went for a medical examination and signed an affidavit so that the Olympic Committee could request approval for a substitution.”

Brakeman Uri Zismanadmitted to the head of the delegation that he had acted improperly. This forced the Olympic Committee of Israel to withdraw the request and disqualify the move.”

● Cross Country Skiing: Women’s 50 km Classical
With Sweden’s Frida Karlsson, the 10 km and 20 km Skiathlon winner out with illness, teammate and silver winner Ebba Andersson was the logical choice for the 50 km gold.

Logic held.

Andersson was in front of the start and ran away from the field to win in a dominating 2:16:28.2, some 2:15.3 ahead of Norway’s Heidi Weng (2:18:43.5), the favorite for silver. It’s the first win for Sweden in this event and only its second medal, ever, and ended a three-Games Norwegian win streak.

A half-dozen skiers fought for the bronze, including Jessie Diggins of the U.S., silver winner in 2022. Over the final 5 km, Swiss Nadja Kaelin moved into third and stayed there to take the bronze medal in 2:23:09.7. Norway’s Kristin Fosnaes was close behind in 2:23:12.1 and Diggins, in her final Olympic race – at 34 – was fifth in 2:23:14.6.

It was the first medal in this event ever for the Swiss. The Swedes dominated the women’s cross-country skiing, winning five of six events and placing second in the other. They won 10 of the 18 medal available. By contrast, Norway won 11 of the 18 men’s medals.

Fellow Americans Rosie Brennan (2:29:30.8) and Hailey Swirbul (2:32:09.7) and Kendall Kramer (2:35:00.4) finished in 15th, 19th and 26th, respectively.

● Curling: Women’s final
A clash of the titans produced a brilliant final as 2018 Olympic winner Anna Hasselborg’s rink from Sweden tangled with four-time World Champions Silvana Tirinzoni from Switzerland.

The Swedes broke on top immediately with two points in the first end, but neither side could score in the second or third. The Swiss got a point back in the fourth and two in the sixth saw them tied, 3-3.

Sweden put up points in the seven and eighth, but the Swiss scored twice in the ninth to tie at five. In the 10th end, the Swedes managed a point and took the gold at 6-5.

The victory continued Sweden’s streak of Olympic medals to six straight Games, including two for Hasselborg. The Swiss got their first Olympic medal since a 2006 Turin silver and third silver all-time.

● Freestyle Skiing: Women’s Halfpipe
Postponed a day due to heavy snowfall on Saturday, defending champion Eileen Gu (CHN) shook off a bad first run to take the lead from Britain’s Zoe Atkin in the second round and then crush the field with a brilliant final run to repeat as Olympic champion.

Atkin, the leading qualifier, took the lead as the last skier in the first round, scoring 90.50. That held up for eight more skiers until Gu came up in the second round and nailed a 94.00 routine that looked like it might be the winner. Three skiers later, China’s Fanghui Li – the 2025 World’s runner-up – put up a 91.50 and moved into second place.

No one challenged the top three; Canada’s Amy Fraser scored 88.00 in the final round to move into fourth, then Gu stormed to a 94.75 which looked very much like the winning ride.

It was. Li improved to 93.00 as the next-to-last rider and solidified her silver position and Atkin also improved to 92.50, but stayed third. Impressively, all three medalists got their best scores in the final round!

American Svea Irving finished 11th, at 22.50.

Gu repeated her 2022 gold in this event, the first repeat winner in the four times it has been held. Britain got its first medal in the event.

Gu finished with a gold and two silvers, in Big Air and Slopestyle. There was an enormous political fuss about Gu competing for China as she was born in San Francisco, but it was barely mentioned that Atkin, 23, was born in Newton, Massachusetts, of an English father and Malaysian mother who both worked at the World Bank in Washington, D.C.

● Ice Hockey: Men’s final
The titanic Canada vs. U.S. final was a struggle as anticipated, with the Americans taking a 1-0 lead in the first period on a Matt Boldy goal at 6:00, but the Canadians tied it in the second on a Cale Makar score at 18:16 after the U.S. fought off a 5-on-3 situation earlier in the period.

The Canadians were the attackers in the second, with 19 shots to eight, after 8-8 on shots in the first period. And they continued in the third, starting with a 9-1 shots edge before the U.S. got in gear. But the U.S. was the aggressor in the late stages, ending 10 shots to 14 for Canada (41-27 for the first three periods). It was keeper Connor Hellebuyck’s acrobatics who kept the Canadians off the board.

There was no scoring, so the game – like the women’s final – moved on to a 3×3 overtime period. Canada had control in the first minute, but with the puck in the Canadian zone, the U.S.’s Zach Werenski got control of the puck, backed up to get clear and passed across the ice to Jack Hughes.

Hughes had a clear shot at keeper Jordan Binnington and wound up for a low blast that skipped under his left pad and into the net for the gold-medal goal and a 2-1 win at 1:41 of the overtime period.

This has been a long time coming for the U.S.; its only two Olympic ice hockey golds were on home ice in 1960 and the “Miracle on Ice” team in 1980. Now a gold in Europe … and on the same date as astonishing U.S. win over the USSR 46 years ago!

This was the third Olympic final meeting between the teams with NHL players, with Canada winning in 2002 and 2010 (overtime). Canada has not won the Olympic gold now in three straight Games, last in 2014.

= INTEL REPORT =

● Athletics ● At the World Athletics Indoor World Gold Copernicus Cup in Torun (POL), Italy’s 2025 World Indoor women’s bronze winner Zaynab Dosso equaled the world lead, winning the 60 m final in 6.99, becoming the 15th woman to break seven seconds. Luxembourg’s Patrizia van der Weken was a close second at 7.01.

In the women’s 60 m hurdles, world-record holder Devynne Charlton (BAH) took the 2026 world lead at 7.77 in the final, just ahead of the 100 m hurdles World Champion Dita Kambundji (SUI: 7.78) and Dutch star Nadine Visser (7.80). American Alaysha Johnson was fifth (7.85).

The speedy men’s 1,500 m was won by Botswana’s Olympic 800 m finalist Tshepiso Masalela in 3:32.55, but he was disqualified for unsportsmanlike conduct at the finish line, giving the win to France’s Azeddine Habz, the 2024 European Indoor runner-up, just behind in 3:32.56! Habz now stands no. 3 in the world for 2026; Samuel Chapple (NED) was close in second in 3:32.68.

Poland’s Jakub Szymanski won the men’s 60 m hurdles in 7.48, over Jamal Britt of the U.S. (7.52) and Devion Wilson in fifth 7.62). Two-time American World Champion Joe Kovacs won the men’s shot at 21.92 m (71-11), beating Roger Steen at 21.62 m (70-11 1/4).

The USATF Indoor Combined Championships were in Indianapolis, Indiana, with Health Baldwin, sixth at the 2025 Worlds Decathlon, leading after six events, but in the concluding 1,000 m, it was 2025 runner-up Hakim McMorris winning by 2:35.72 to 2:39.94. That was enough to give McMorris his first USATF title with 6,255 points to 6,245. They now stand nos. 3-4 on the 2026 world list.

World Hep Champion Anna Hall won the women’s Pentathlon for her second national title in the event, scoring a world-leading 4,831, ahead of defending champion Timara Chapman (4,603) and Erin Marsh (4,432).

● Badminton ● USA Badminton was de-certified by the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee as the National Governing Body for the sport, but on Wednesday (18th), the badminton organization issued a status update that included:

“[Badminton World Federation’ has expressed that it does not view a long-term divergence where one organization is recognized domestically by the USOPC (which might happen in the near to medium term future) while another is recognized internationally by BWF as a desirable outcome for the sport. …

“To that end, BWF and the USOPC have been working collaboratively, with input from USAB, on a proposed “RESET” plan intended to outline a pathway for USAB to regain NGB recognition.”

So far, the BWF and USA Badminton have met and the BWF is to discuss a plan with the USOPC in the coming weeks. However, the USOPC will not be satisfied until the USA Badminton “administrative compliance concerns” are resolved.

● Cycling ● Mexico’s Isaac del Toro had the lead in the UCI World Tour UAE Tour after the first stage, then lost it, then regained it by winning the sixth stage and finished with a 20-second win after the seventh and final stage in 21:10:30.

Del Toro finished second in the 2025 Giro d’Italia and this was his first UCI World Tour full-race victory. Italy’s Antonio Tiberi was second (+0:20) and Luke Plapp (AUS: +1:14) was third.

Del Toro erased Tiberi’s 12-second lead after the fifth stage with a 12-second win in the sixth over Plapp, with Tiberi fourth at +0:31.

● Gymnastics ● Familiar faces on the podium at the first FIG Artistic World Cup of 2026, in Cottbus (GER), with Israel’s Tokyo 2020 Olympic Floor champion Artem Dolgopyat taking his specialty at 14.500, and two-time Worlds Vault bronze medalist Nazar Chepurnyi of Ukraine winning his event at 14.176.

Italy’s Gabriele Targhetta, the 2025 European bronzer, won the Pommel Horse (15.000) and Armenian star Artur Avetsiyan, also a 2025 European bronze winner, winning Rings at 14.366. American Kam Nelson was third, scoring 13.866.

Japan’s Shohei Kawakami, the 2025 Universiade All-Around runner-up, won the Parallel Bars at 14.866 and then the Horizontal Bar at 14.966.

The women’s Vault went to Russian Anna Kalmykova (13.816) and Italian Elisa Iorio, the 2024 European runner-up won on the Uneven Bars (14.266). On Sunday, Japan’s 2025 Worlds bronze medalist, Agio Sugihara took the Beam title at 14.066, ahead of 2025 Worlds silver winner Kaylia Nemour (ALG: 13.833). Kalmykova won on Floor at 13.333, over Sugihara (13.133).

At the USA Gymnastics Winter Cup in Louisville, Kentucky, Olympic and Worlds medal winner Fred Richard took the men’s All-Around title at 84.359 over Tokyo 2020 Olympian Yul Moldauer (79.710), returning from a 16-month suspension for “whereabouts” failures. Stanford’s David Shamah was third at 79.608.

Richard won on Floor at 14.355 and Moldauer took the Parallel Bars title at 14.955. The other apparatus winners were Parker Thackston on Pommel Horse (15.325); Danila Leykin on the Horizontal Bar at 14.658; Garrett Schooley on Vault (14.135) and Christopher Hiser on Rings, scoring (14.352).

The women’s Winter Cup competition was held Sunday evening.

● Rowing ● World Rowing announced that it is allowing all Russian and Belarusian athletes, regardless of age and in both individual and team events, to compete in its competitions “subject to strict neutrality and independence conditions.”

The federation states that “World Rowing’s approach is aligned with the principles reaffirmed by the Olympic Summit,” but in fact goes well beyond it, as the Summit proposed admitting only “youth” athletes and maintaining the ban on teams.

Rowing is now among a small, but growing number of International Federations which are allowing the re-entry of full Russian teams. No mention is made of any “neutrality” verification or checks for senior-level athletes, a condition continued by the International Olympic Committee for the Milan Cortina Olympic Winter Games.

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MILAN CORTINA 2026/ROSEN REPORT: American speed skating star Stolz finishes with two golds and a silver – at 21 – and is looking ahead

U.S. speed skating star Jordan Stolz meets his family in Milan after his 2026 Olympic 1,500 m bronze; coach Bob Corby is behind him (TSX photo by Karen Rosen).

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≡ THE ROSEN REPORT ≡

MILAN, Italy – “What’s Jordan Stolz going to do?”

That’s sure to be the question in speed skating for a long time, but on Saturday it referred only to the men’s Mass Start.

After two skaters broke away from the field in the 16-lap race, Stolz knew his competitors were depending on him to lead the chase. Nope. He’s too smart for that.

“We could have probably made that all back if we would have all attacked, but they were more so expecting me to do it,” Stolz said. “If I would have done that for the amount that they wanted me to, I would have had no legs at the end of the race.”

No one wanted to share the load, and five laps to go “they were all sitting on me,” Stolz said. “It was kind of depressing actually when it got to the point where it’s like everybody’s settling for third place.

Only Andrea Giovannini of Italy, however, was third. Stolz, who eventually did take over and lead the sprint, finished fourth. Forty-year-old Jorrit Bergsma of the Netherlands and Viktor Hald Thorup of Denmark secured the gold and silver.

Stolz still leaves the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Games as the most decorated U.S. athlete with two golds and a silver. He set Olympic records in the 1,000 and 500 m and it took an Olympic record to beat him in the 1,500 m.

Not bad for a couple of weeks in Milan. “I would say it’s pretty successful,” Stolz said. “There’s things that could have gone better, but two golds and a silver, I’m pretty happy with that.”

Stolz is only 21 and yet he is a veteran with two Winter Olympic Games under his belt. From here, he will go to the ISU World Championships in the Netherlands from 5-8 March, where he will attempt an unprecedented schedule in the sprints and Allround over four days.

“He’s a phenom,” Dan Jansen – the 1994 Olympic 1,000 m gold medalist – told The Sports Examiner.Two golds and a silver, anybody would be happy with that. He should be, because he skated awesome.”

Jansen said that the other skaters didn’t want to lead the Mass Start because they knew Stolz would outsprint them in the end. Skaters who sit back save 40 percent of their energy.

“He knew it was him against the field,” Jansen said. “If he would have gone with the two guys at the start, it might have been different, but it’s easy to say after the event.”

Jansen said Stolz, a fellow Wisconsin native, is still getting better and will be a force in the sport for a long time.

“He might even go up in distance (to 5,000 m),” Jansen said. “He can do it all. Technically he’s better than anybody, his turns are much better than anybody’s and his endurance – not only can he sprint, but he’s got endurance for the last lap in the 1,500. That’s pretty rare.”

Yet Stolz’s 1,500 m in Milan was an anomaly. After Zhongyan Ning of China posted an eye-popping, Olympic record time of 1:41.98, Stolz, skating in the final pair, saw only red next to his time. That signifies a skater is behind the winning pace, not green for ahead.

Stolz said the early stages of the race weren’t good. “I didn’t have it today, not sure why,” he said. “I knew Ning’s time was 1:41. I thought that was a super fast time for him, probably the best race of his life. And I didn’t have my best race, so it was kind of hard to compete with his.”

Coach Bob Corby said it had been a long time since the usually consistent Stolz had a race like that. “Just not performing well, that hasn’t happened in a couple of years,” he said. “He didn’t have it in his legs from the start.”

On the podium, Stolz was disappointed, but gracious. “I was thinking it would have been nice to have gold,” he said, “but if anybody was going to win, I thought Ning would be the one to do it and I was happy for him.”

Going into the next Olympic cycle, Stolz plans to stick with these four events – the 500 m, 1,000 m, 1,500 m and Mass Start – but said, “in four years you don’t know what could happen.”

Upon his arrival in Milan, Stolz was the favorite to win four gold medals, possibly five if he skated in a heat of the relay (he did not skate in an early round and the relay eventually won the silver medal).

His quest brought comparisons to American Olympic icon Eric Heiden, who won five individual skating golds in Lake Placid from the 500 m to the 10,000 m.

“Oh yeah, nobody’s able to do what Heiden’s done,” Stolz said. “And probably will never happen again. Five gold medals is insane.”

He also marveled at the 1,500 m bronze medal won by 36-year-old Kjeld Nuis of Norway.

“That’s pretty impressive for his age,” Stolz said.

Could he see himself still going strong at age 36?

“I don’t know about that,” Stolz said. “That’s a little bit too long.”

And it’s a question for another day.

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MILAN CORTINA 2026 Review & Preview: Norway on track, U.S. up from 2025 Worlds medal projections, as King Klaebo wins sixth gold

The Milan Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games medals (Photo: Milan Cortina 2026).

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= MILAN CORTINA 2026 =
From Lane One

Last July, The Sports Examiner picked up on the quadrennial effort by Turin 2006 Winter Games chief operating officer Luciano Barra (ITA) and compiled the results of the winter-sport world championships in Olympic events to project what the outcome of the 2026 Winter Games might be.

What the numbers showed then in terms of medals:

● 41: Norway (17-13-11)
● 35: Germany (8-15-12)
● 33: United States (15-10-8)
● 31: Switzerland (12-9-10)
● 27: Canada (9-9-9)

● 22: Japan
● 21: Netherlands
● 18: France
● 17: Italy
● 16: Sweden

With five events left on Sunday, here’s where we are today, after 111 of 116 events:

● 40: Norway (18-11-11)
● 32: United States (11-12-9)
● 30: Italy (10-6-14)
● 24: Germany (7-9-8)
● 24: Japan (5-7-12)

● 23: France
● 20: Netherlands
● 20: Switzerland
● 20: Canada
● 18: Austria

Norway has set Olympic record for medals and golds with 40 and 18, just about where the 2025 Worlds results placed them. For all of the well-deserved attention to the record six gold medals for star Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo in cross country skiing … that simply duplicated what he did at the 2025 Worlds! The Norse will have a chance to add another medal in the women’s 50 km Classical on Sunday.

Where Germany has performed well in some sports, its production is down from the 2025 Worlds, while the U.S. is right where it was projected, albeit with fewer golds than hoped for, but still a record for most golds in a single Winter Games.

And there could be more American gold in the men’s hockey final and even perhaps Jessie Diggins in the 50 km Classical. It’s the best Winter Games ever for the U.S. outside of North America and could equal the 2022 Salt Lake City total of 34, the second-best ever. That would be special.

The shocker is Italy, with 30 total medals, vs. 17 during the 2025 Worlds. The country’s old high at a Winter Games was 20, so this has been a sweet Games for the home team.

A better indication of team performance has to go beyond three places, so The Sports Examiner returns our eight-place scoring, using the NCAA track & field format of 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 to score each event. After 16 of 17 days, the top 12:

● 480.5: Norway
● 430.0: United States
● 381.5: Italy
● 314.5: France
● 312: Germany

● 261: Canada
● 257: Switzerland
● 247.5: Japan
● 246.5: Austria
● 237: Netherlands

● 190: China
● 177: Sweden

The U.S. took the lead in top-8 placers with 89, to 85 for Norway, then 77 for Italy in its dream Games. Fourth are France and Germany at 64 each and then Austria (57).

How does this compare with 2022? Here are the top five (remember that the number of events increased from 109 to 116):

● 415: Norway
● 394: Russia
● 369: United States
● 340: Germany
● 312: Canada

In 2018 in Korea:

● 441 1/2: Norway
● 377 1/2: Germany
● 357 1/2: United States
● 352: Canada
● 208: France

The absence of Russia has made a significant impact in multiple events, but should not dim the brilliance of the Norwegian athletes in 2026. But the U.S. is also on the move and the overall improvement anticipated by the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee has indeed shown up.

With Utah 2034 coming sooner than everyone thinks, the U.S. push for winter stardom is continuing as planned, even with the well-publicized disappointments early in the Games. That’s impressive.
~ Rich Perelman

● Il Tempo Olimpici ● The final day of the Winter Games in Milan is expected to be cloudy, as usual, with a high of 55 F and a low of 39 F, with just a mild breeze of two miles an hour. All calm for the closing.

In Cortina, more clouds with a 40 F high and 25 F low; also very little wind at 3 miles per hour.

● Milan Cortina 2026 ● The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee announced that figure skater Evan Bates and hockey star Hilary Knight will be the flag bearers for the American team at the closing ceremony at the Arena di Verona on Sunday.

● Alpine Skiing ● American star Lindsey Vonn posted on X after her latest procedure on Friday (20th) following her crash in Cortina:

“Just a quick update… my last surgery went well. It took a little over 6 hours. I have been recovering from the surgery but pain has been hard to manage. Making slow progress but I hope I can be out of the hospital soon. Thank you all for the support.”

She posted ax x-ray of her repaired left leg with the new hardware inside, and the caption, “I’m bionic for real now.”

● Short Track ● Polish skater Kamila Sellier suffered an accidental facial injury in the sixth quarterfinal of the women’s 1,500 m on Friday, when she and American Kristin Santos-Griswold slid out.

Santos-Griswold’s skate caught Seiller in the face and she was removed to a hospital for treatment. The Polish team said she was cut on the cheek and left eyelid and had to have stitches. She had considerable swelling on her cheekbone, with further examinations needed to determine if there was a deeper injury.

● Memorabilia ● A strong sale of Olympic memorabilia by RR auction ended Friday, bringing $1.08 million in total sales, including $128,066 for a Moscow 1980 “Stadium Torch,” designed to be fail-safe even in bad weather. The first-known sale of a 2026 Milan Cortina Olympic Torch also concluded, bringing $34,879. Full details here.

= RESULTS: SATURDAY, 21 FEBRUARY =
(9 finals across 7 sports & disciplines)

● Biathlon: Women’s 12.5 km Mass Start
France finished off a superb Olympic performance with Sprint silver medalist Oceane Michelon winning her third medal of the Games with a tight victory over teammate Julia Simon, 37:18.1 (2) to 37:24.7 (1). The French took three of the five women’s golds and seven of the 15 medals available!

Czech Tereza Vorbornikova was a surprise bronze winner, just behind Simon in 37:25.5 (1) and well ahead of fourth-place Anna Magnusson (SWE: 37:44.7/0). The U.S. had no qualifiers.

All together, France won 13 medals in biathlon, Norway had 11 and everyone else had nine. Amazing.

● Bobsled: Two-Woman
After two rounds on Friday, it was Germany’s Laura Nolte and Deborah Levi leading at 1:53.93, then teammates Lisa Buckwitz and Neele Schuten at 1:54.11. Americans Kaillie Armbruster Humphries – a two-time Olympic champ for Canada – and Jasmine Jones were third at 1:54.16, with Kaysha Love and Azaria Hill fifth at 1:54.55. Monobob winner Elana Meyers Taylor and Jadin O’Brien were 12th at 1:55.13.

The third round belonged to the Germans, with defending champion Nolte, 2024 World Champion Buckwitz and 2023 World Champion Kim Kalicki the top three and Armbruster Humphries, Love and Meyers Taylor 4-5-6.

That left Nolte at 2:51.19, then Buckwitz at 2:51.54 and Armbruster Humphries in third at 2:51.74, with Kalicki (2:51.82), Love (2:52.12) and Meyers Taylor (2:52.73) trailing. On the fourth runs, Love took the overall lead (3:49.71) from Swiss Melanie Hasler, who had passed Meyers Taylor (3:50.49).

Kalicki went next and despite some bumps, took the lead at 3:49.36, but Armbruster Humphries gathered speed throughout and guaranteed at least a bronze at 3:49.21. Buckwitz was next to last and despite some bumps, built up great speed and took over the lead in 3:48.99.

Nolte was last and rolled through the course, taking the gold in 3:48.46 and matching Armbruster Humphries’ back-to-back Olympic wins in 2010 and 2014. Armbruster Humphries won her fourth Olympic medal in this event – two golds, two bronzes – and sixth overall.

Love – who at 28 has a brilliant future ahead of her – ended up fifth and Meyers Taylor seventh.

● Cross Country Skiing: 50 km Classical
He did it! It wasn’t easy, but he did it.

Norway’s Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo repeated his six-event sweep of the 2025 World Championships and set the record for the most gold medals ever won at a single Olympic Winter Games with his sixth win, in the 50 km Classical on Saturday.

He and teammates Martin Nyenget and Emil Iversen broke away from the pack by the halfway point and then Iversen dropped back with about 4 km left. Nyenget and Klaebo were side by side into the final kilometer, but Klaebo made a push on the final climb and broke away to win clearly in 2:06:44.8, then collapsed past the finish line.

Nyenget was an easy second in 2:06:53.7 and Iversen took the bronze in 2:07:15.5. Fourth was France’s Theo Schely in 2:09:44.5. American Gus Schumacher was 13th in 2:14:11.6, then Hunter Wonders in 35th (2:22:34.3).

Klaebo now owns the record book: most golds in a single with six, and most golds in Winter Olympic history with 11. At, 29, he’s good for at least one more Games, in 2030 and perhaps even to Utah in 2034. He has 13 total Olympic medals, with the record in sight at 15 by Norway’s Marit Bjorgen from 2006-18, also in cross country. But he has to wait to 2030.

Six Olympic golds for Norway’s Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo, shown in 2019 (Photo: Wikipedia via Granada)

● Curling: Men’s final
The final between 2014 Olympic champ Brad Jacobs‘ Canadian rink and two-time World Champion Bruce Mouat’s British rink – the Beijing 2022 silver winners – was as tight as expected.

The Canadians went up 1-0 after the first end, but the Brits got two in the second, one in the fourth and two more in the sixth for a 5-4 lead. Canada got one to tie in the seventh, but Britain won a point in the eighth for a 6-5 lead.

The ninth was chaotic, but a couple of missed placements for Britain allowed Jacobs to clear their stone and take three points for an 8-6 lead heading to the 10th end. The Canadians got one more in the 10th and finished with the gold and a 9-6 victory.

It’s Jacobs’ second gold and a second-straight bronze for Mouat. It’s the fourth gold for Canada in men’s curling, the most ever and first since Jacobs won in 2014.

● Freestyle Skiing: Men’s Ski Cross; Mixed Team Aerials
Upsets started quickly in the men’s Ski Cross, as World Cup star Reece Howden (CAN) was eliminated in the quarterfinals. Defending champion Ryan Regez (SUI) was last in his semifinal and would not race for medals.

Instead, Italy had 2023 World Champion Simone Deromedis in the final, along with 2022 Olympic silver medalist Alex Fiva (SUI). Deromedis got off quickly and was never headed, winning the gold cleanly. Meanwhile, Fiva was edged by Italy’s unheralded Federico Tomasoni for the silver and had to settle for bronze.

While Fiva won a medal for the second Games in a row, Deromedis and Tomasoni won italy’s first-ever medals in this event.

This was the second appearance for the Mixed Team Aerials, with the U.S. the defending champion and Chris Lillis returning from that squad and he and Kalia Kuhn were back from the 2025 World Champion team.

And they showed, with Connor Curran as the third member, that they were the favorites, scoring 351.23 to lead the first final by more than 36 points and head to the medal round.

Once there, Switzerland managed 296.91 points, China scored 279.68 and Australia had 256.04. Kuhn scored 94.44, Connor added 113.72 and in the third round, Lillis came up for the final jump of the event and stuck the landing on a back double full-full-full for 117.19 points, and a gold-medal-winning 325.35 total.

Lillis was eighth in the men’s final and Connor was 12th; Kuhn – the 2025 World Champion – finished sixth. So this was their shot at redemption, as Kuhn noted afterwards:

“All of us came in so motivated after the individual events because it didn’t really go any of our ways. And so we came in today motivated, strong as ever, we adjusted our jumps. We did some of the best jumps we’ve ever done, and we put it down when it counted, so we are so ecstatic right now.”

● Ski Mountaineering: Mixed Relay
No surprise as French medal winners Emily Harrop (silver) and Thibault Anselmet (bronze) led throughout and won in 26:57.44. Sprint winner Marianne Fatton and Jon Kistler had the Swiss in second by halfway and they won the silver in 27:09.30, about 12 seconds back.

Third was clearly the Spanish, with men’s Sprint winner Oriol Cardona Coll and Ana Alonso, in 27:23.94, ahead of the U.S. pair of Ana Gibson and Cameron Smith, in 27:40.43 in fourth.

This was the first appearance of ski mountaineering in the Games; the question now is whether it will stay in for 2030, or disappear.

● Speed Skating: Men’s Mass Start; Women’s Mass Start
Chaos is always promised in the Mass Start races, but in the men’s race, a wily veteran broke away and gained control. Dutch star Jorrit Bergsma, the 2014 10,000 m gold medalist and the 2026 bronzer, put the pedal down early in the race with Denmark’s Viktor Hald Thorup and were 1-2 after three laps and continued to break away.

Bergsma won going away in 7:55.50, with Thorup taking silver in 8:00.52. Their tactics took the race away from the kickers, like American star Jordan Stolz. He was left to battle for the bronze and was third with a lap to go, but Italy’s 2025 World Champion Andrea Giovannini had a faster last lap – 23.16 to 23.68 – and won the bronze, 8:04.42 to 8:04.51, with Korean Jae-won Chung in fifth in 8:04.60.

At 40, Bergsma is the oldest speed-skating gold medalist in Olympic history!

The women’s Mass Start has been dominated by Dutch ace Marijke Groenewoud, the 2021, 2023 and 2025 World Champion, and a two-time winner and two-time runner-up on the World Cup circuit.

She was near the front of the final early, then moved back in the middle laps. But she knew when to move and was fourth after 14 laps and first at the bell. She finished with a brilliant 24.66 lap (for 400 m) and crossed with the gold in 8:34.70.

American Mia Manganello, the World Cup seasonal winner, had her eyes on Groenewoud and was second at the bell, but was passed on the final lap by Canadian star Ivanie Blondin. Who put up a 24.72 final lap and got the silver in 8:35.09.

But Manganello, 36, who won a Team Pursuit bronze in 2018, finally got her individual Olympic medal in third in 8:35.39. She held off a late charge from double Olympic winner Francesca Lollobrigida (ITA), who finished in fourth in 8:35.95.

It was the fourth win in the women’s skating for the Dutch, across seven events, to go with one win – Bergsma – in the men’s events.

Elsewhere:

● Curling: In the women’s bronze-medal match, three-time World Champion Rachel Homan’s Canadian rink was down 3-2 in the fifth to Tabitha Peterson and the U.S., but scored three in the sixth, three in the eighth and two in the 10th to offset American deuces in the seventh and ninth for a 10-7 win.

The medal for Canada is its first in women’s curling since 2014; the U.S. has never won a women’s Olympic curling medal.

● Ice Hockey: Defending champion Finland faced 2022 Olympic bronzers Slovakia for the bronze in Milan, and had a 2-1 lead after two periods, thanks to scores from Erik Haula and Thomas Tatar at 8:05 and 19:30 of the second stanza.

The Finns pulled away in the third, scoring a power-play goal at 8:27 by Roope Hintz and then a fourth 42 seconds later by Kaapo Kakko. It was 5-1 after Joel Armia scored at 15:32 and the final was 6-1 after an empty-netter by Haula at 18:42. The Finns had 35 shots to 31 for Slovakia.

It’s the fourth medal in the last five Games for the Finns, with bronzes in 2010 and 2014 and then the 2022 gold.

= PREVIEWS: SUNDAY, 22 FEBRUARY =
(5 finals across 5 sports)

● Bobsled: Four-Man
German star Francesco Friedrich has won the last two Olympic titles, and the last seven World Championship golds in a row. But it was countryman Johannes Lochner who won the Two-Man, tied Friedrich for the 2017 Worlds gold and has been the Worlds runner-up three times since.

In the 2025-26 World Cup season, it was a three-way fight between Friedrich (two wins), Lochner (two) and Adam Ammour with two. German sleds swept the medals in four of the seven races and must be favored to do so again.

The three World Cup medals not won by German sleds in the World Cup were bronzes for Jin-su Kim (KOR), Patrick Baumgartner (ITA) and Swiss Michael Vogt. Candidates for a surprise bronze start with British driver Brad Hall, with a 2023 Worlds silver and 2025 bronze. American Frank Del Duca drove to an impressive fourth-place finish in the Two-Man.

In the first two races on Saturday, German sleds were, yes, 1-2-3. Lochner won the first run and was 0.01 behind Ammour on the second run, to stand first at 1:48.61, followed by Friedrich at 1:49.04, then Ammour at 1:49.20. Vogt’s Swiss sled was fourth, but in striking distance at 1:49.32.

Kris Horn was the fastest U.S. sled in ninth at 1:49.61, then Frank Del Duca was 12th in 1:50.02.

There were some unfortunate crashes, including Austrian pilot Jakob Mandlbauer, who had to be removed on a stretcher and was treated at a Cortina hospital, happily without serious injury. His brakemen were uninjured. Sleds from France and Trinidad & Tobago also crashed and did not finish, but no injuries were reported.

● Cross Country Skiing: Women’s 50 km Classical
Sweden has dominated the women’s skiing, with Frida Karlsson winning the 10 km, and the 20 km Skiathlon, both times over teammate Ebba Andersson.

But now Karlsson has withdrawn from the 50 km Classical due to illness; she was the 2025 World Champion, with Norway’s Heidi Weng second.

That helps American Jessie Diggins, the 10 km bronze winner, but who also shocked everyone in 2022 with her Olympic silver in the 30 km. If she is feeling good enough – after a first-day crash in the Skiathlon and multiple races since – she will be a factor, in her final Games.

During the World Cup season, two 20 km Mass Starts were held, with Swede Jonna Sundling – better known as a sprinter! – won over Diggins and Weng in November and then Finland’s Johanna Matintalo was victorious in the last pre-Games race, ahead of Diggins and Astrid Slind (NOR).

Not to be counted out is Austria’s Teresa Stadlober, a 20 km Pursuit bronze winner during the World Cup season.

● Curling: Women’s final
Two titans of the sport collide in the gold-medal match as Swede Anna Hasselborg’s rink faces the four-time World Champions from Switzerland and skip Silvana Tirinzoni.

These are no strangers to each other; Hassleborg won the 2018 Olympic title, 2022 Olympic bronze and Worlds silvers in 2018 and 2019. Tirinzoni’s rink won the 2019 Worlds gold against Hasselborg and also won in 2021, 2022 and 2023 and finished second in 2024 and 2025.

In the round-robin, it was the Swedes with a 6-4 win back on 16 February. The Swedes have already kept their Olympic medal streak going, winning a women’s medal in six Games in a row. The Swiss are looking for their first Olympic medal since 2006, and first win.

● Freestyle Skiing: Women’s Halfpipe
This was postponed to Sunday due to heavy snowfall. China’s Eileen Gu was a spectacular winner of this event in 2022, over 2018 gold medalist Cassie Sharpe (CAN) and teammate Rachel Karker. Since then, Karker (2023) and Sharpe (2025) both won Worlds bronzes.

At the 2023 Worlds, it was Britain’s Zoe Atkin second, and Atkin moved up to Worlds gold in 2025. China’s Fanghui Li took the 2025 Worlds silver, and Gu, Atkin and Li all won World Cup events this season.

In the qualifying round, Atkin put up 91.50 right away and qualified first, with Li at 85.00 and 90.00. Sharpe (88.25), Gu (86.60) and World Cup medalist Svea Irving of the U.S. made it in at 80.75.

Qualifying fourth was the wild card, Australia’s Indra Brown (87.50). At age 16, she won a World Cup gold, silver and bronze in four events this season. She is dangerous.

● Ice Hockey: Men’s final
The Canada vs. U.S. match-up has been keenly anticipated since the 2025 Four Nations Face-Off final in Toronto, where the Canadians won by 3-2 in overtime, on 20 February 2025 on a Connor McDavid score at 8:18. In the round-robin portion, the U.S. won by 3-1, using an aggressive style.

Most of the players on both sides were on those Four Nations teams.

In terms of Olympic play where NHL players have been involved, this is the third gold-medal match between the two:

2002: Canada 5, U.S. 2
2010: Canada 3, U.S. 2, in overtime

Canada owns nine Olympic titles, with the last in 2014. The U.S. has two golds, in 1960 in Squaw Valley and in 1980 in Lake Placid. Another classic could be in store.

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MEMORABILIA: Moscow 1980 “Stadium Torch” brings $128,066, a 2002 Sports Emmy $4,038 at RR Auction’s $1.08 million winter sale

The 1980 U.S. Olympic Team commemorative ring (Photo: RR Auction).

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≡ MILAN CORTINA TORCH SOLD ≡

A very successful RR Auction winter sale of Olympic memorabilia finished on Thursday evening and close with total sales of $1.08 million across 191 items, including a very unique “Stadium Torch” from the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games.

Designed to be used for actual lightings of Olympic Flame cauldrons Leningrad, Minsk, Kiev and in the opening ceremony in Moscow, it was engineered to be fail-safe, even in difficult weather, and only 20 were made. Ultra-rare, it brought the highest price in the sale, with 25 items reaching $10,000 or more, including the buyer’s premium:

● $128,066: 1980 Moscow Olympic “Stadium” Torch
● $103,713: 1896 Athens winner’s medal and case
● $50,001: 1952 Oslo Winter gold medal, framed, with pins
● $45,384: 1932 Lake Placid Winter bronze medal and badges
● $34,879: 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Torch

● $33,752: 2024 Paris bronze medal
● $27,468: 2024 Paris Olympic Torch
● $26,173: 1956 Cortina Winter Torch
● $25,469: 1988 Calgary Winter Torch and safety lamp
● $25,005: 1972 Sapporo Winter gold medal

● $22,651: 1896 Athens Olympic invitation letters (3)
● $21,889: 1972 Sapporo Winter Torch
● $20,725: 1904 St. Louis Olympic participation medal
● $19,134: 1994 Lillehammer Winter Torch
● $18,809: 1956 Melbourne Olympic Torch

● $18,301: 1932 Los Angeles gold medal and case
● $16,643: 1948 St. Moritz Winter IOC President’s badge
● $16,250: 2006 Turin Winter silver medal
● $15,313: 2006 Turin Winter silver medal (unawarded)
● $13,753: 1964 Innsbruck Winter gold medal

● $12,501: 1976 Innsbruck Winter silver medal
● $12,501: 1896 to 2010 participation medal collection (41)
● $12,104: 2008 Beijing silver medal and case
● $10,358: 1936 Berlin bronze medal and case
● $10,005: 1988 Calgary Winter medal display

How much value was placed on the 1980 “Stadium Torch” vs. a standard Moscow Games torch? One was available in the auction and went for $2,500.

The first known sale of a Milan Cortina Olympic Winter Torch, offered during the Milan Cortina Games, brought an excellent price of $26,173 and a Paris 2024 Torch, produced in limited numbers, sold for $27,468!

The 1904 St. Louis participation medal is generally considered the most rare and valuable and the winning price of $20,725 reflects its scarcity.

There were also some really unique items, including unissued, duplicate accreditation badges from the 2004 Athens Games, of U.S. swim star Michael Phelps (where he won six golds), a then-19-year-old LeBron James and diplomatic guest, ex-U.S. President George H.W. Bush! This was an Olympic collector’s auction and Phelps’ badge brought $9,000, to $4,654 for James and $2,275 for Bush.

It really is all about the athletes.

One of the best-performing items at the sale was a stainless-steel 1980 U.S. Olympic Team ring, produced for the winter and summer teams. Expected to sell for about $400, the size-12 ring brought $7,500!

A 2002 Sports Emmy, won by NBC feature producer Nicholas Worth for Outstanding Live Sports Special sold for $4,038 and a Paris 2024 Olympic Flame Lighting Priestess dress and sandals for the ceremony at Olympia went for $2,505.

The auction had a well-timed pin from the never-held 1944 Winter Games originally assigned to Cortina d’Ampezzo (ITA), but cancelled due to World War II. It sold for $833; Cortina later held the 1956 Winter Games and, of course, is a major site in 2026.

A plethora of items from the estate of the late Canadian International Olympic Committee member James Worrall were sold, including his collection of 39 Olympic-related ties. They went for $165, a little less than the projected $200.

Whoever got those has an Olympic tie for every occasion!

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