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The cities of Milan and Cortina d'Ampezzo are joining forces to host the next Games. Here are all the details. Everything to Know About the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy
The 2026 Winter Olympics (Italian: Olimpiadi invernali del 2026), officially the XXV Olympic Winter Games and commonly known as Milano Cortina 2026, is an upcoming international multi-sport event scheduled to take place from 6 to 22 February 2026 at sites across Northern and Northeast Italy.
Sara Conti (born 2 August 2000) is an Italian pair skater.With her skating partner, Niccolò Macii, she is the 2023 World bronze medalist, the 2023 European champion, a two-time ISU Grand Prix Final medalist, five-time ISU Grand Prix medalist, and a two-time Italian national champion (2023 and 2025).
Team points. Points Team points. Points Team points. Points Team points. Points Rank Points Team points. Points Team points. Points Team points. Points Team points. Points Rank Daniel Grassl Lara Naki Gutmann Nicole Della Monica / Matteo Guarise Charlène Guignard / Marco Fabbri: Team event: 88.10 6: 58.52 2: 60.30 4: 83.83 8: 20 7 Did not advance
The team event is the newest Olympic figure skating event, first contested in the 2014 Games. It combines the four Olympic figure skating disciplines (men's singles, women's singles, pairs, and ice dance) into a single event; gold is awarded to the team that earns the most placement points.
2026 Milano Cortina: Total 42 43 56 141 12; Medals by sport. Update to Beijing 2022. [2] ... Figure skating: 0: 0: 2: 2
Tina and Milo are the official mascots of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic and Winter Paralympic Games. [1] They are two anthropomorphic stoats. Tina and Milo were the winners of a public poll with more than 1,600 entries for the designs of the 2026 Milano Cortina mascots. The designs were all drawn by Italian students aged 6 to 14.
Olympic Ice Stadium in Summer 1971. Stadio Olimpico del Ghiaccio (English: Olympic Ice Stadium) was built between 1952 and 1954, primarily as an open air Figure skating arena in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, to hold between seven and eight thousand spectators, with the possibility of making temporary arrangements to accommodate twelve to fifteen thousand for the period of the Olympics.