logo
Olympics-Sliding centre for Italy's 2026 Games on track, icing to start in February, says IOC

Olympics-Sliding centre for Italy's 2026 Games on track, icing to start in February, says IOC

Yahoo31-01-2025
By Karolos Grohmann
BERLIN (Reuters) - The sliding centre of the Milano-Cortina 2026 winter Olympics will be delivered on time, with the icing of the track to start next month, the International Olympic Committee said on Friday.
With Feb. 6 marking one year to go until the Games, the sliding venue for the bobsleigh, luge and skeleton competitions remains on an extremely tight deadline.
It has been on one ever since the construction started after Italy opted to build a new facility instead of using an existing one in a neighbouring country.
The IOC had repeatedly voiced concerns over the planned new track, saying the use of an existing sliding centre outside Italy would keep costs down and cut preparation time.
"We have a very clear action plan: icing of the venue by the end of February and pre-homologation by the end of March," Olympic Games Executive Director Christophe Dubi told Reuters in an interview.
Pre-homologation in this case means the international bobsleigh and skeleton federation and the luge federation familiarising themselves with the track, testing the venue and making any necessary modifications before actual test events with competing athletes are held there prior to the Games.
Dubi said the test events in the venue would be held as planned to deliver the project for the Feb. 6, 2026 start of the Olympics.
Milano-Cortina Games organisers, however, raised eyebrows earlier this month, announcing that they had picked Lake Placid in the United States as their Plan B for next year should anything happen to the sliding centre project's timelines.
Several of Italy's neighbouring countries have existing sliding centres.
Dubi said the IOC had wanted a Plan B but the Italian organisers' choice of location was not one that needed the Olympic body's approval.
"We did not need to sign off on the location. That's not our responsibility," Dubi said.
"We signed off on a Plan B. We asked for a Plan B because we knew the schedule was incredibly compressed. Being where they are (with progress on the sliding centre) considering when they started is something to be pleased about," Dubi said.
Organisers are also racing to complete the multi-purpose Arena Santa Giulia which will be used for ice hockey.
Part of a wider development of the area, the arena has also been on a tight deadline since the start of its construction just over a year ago. It is planned to be delivered to organisers in the second half of 2025, just a few months before the Games start.
"It started when it started. As a result it was a tight delivery timeline," Dubi said. "We will get there on time but it is a venue that will be delivered to the organising committee towards autumn. That's why I am speaking about a tight timeline."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Thanks Casey Wasserman For Olympic Medals: 'Can I Say That I Won Them Athletically?'
Trump Thanks Casey Wasserman For Olympic Medals: 'Can I Say That I Won Them Athletically?'

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Thanks Casey Wasserman For Olympic Medals: 'Can I Say That I Won Them Athletically?'

It's not the Nobel Prize, but Donald Trump was still pretty excited when Chairman of the 2028 L.A. Olympics organizing committee Casey Wasserman handed him a box of Olympic medals at a White House ceremony today. During the event, he president signed an executive order establishing a task force on the 2028 Games in Los Angeles, a group that features the president as its chairman. More from Deadline Donald Trump Says He'd Use National Guard Or Military To Keep 2028 L.A. Olympics Safe Former Disney TV Chief Peter Rice To Oversee Los Angeles Olympics Opening & Closing Ceremonies 'South Park' Trolls Donald Trump's DHS Ahead Of ICE Barbie Episode: "Wait, So We ARE Relevant?" In presenting the medals, the Wasserman founder and CEO invoked Ronald Reagan, who he said presided over the 1984 games in Los Angeles. 'You'll preside over our games,' he told Trump and the event. 'And so, we have for you a full set of the '84 original medals.' After applause, Trump asked, 'Can I say I won them athletically?' Trump later posted about the event no less that five times on Truth Social, including one video of the medal presentation with the caption, 'Thank you to Casey Wasserman, Chairman of 2028 LA Olympics…' Trump was criticized last month when he stayed on the winners dais as English soccer club Chelsea collected their medals and celebrated winning the FIFA Club World Cup. Chelsea captain Reece James appeared to ask Trump, 'Are you going to leave?' To which the president smiled and clapped his hands. Trump was not only seen pocketing one of the medallions that all the Chelsea players received, but the president also said FIFA had gifted him the original Club World Cup trophy and that the hardware held aloft by Chelsea was a copy. Some have expressed concern that Trump, who has repeatedly claimed credit for landing the L.A. Games, will attach himself to them in a similar way. Many have encouraged him to do so. During an appearance at a Morgan Stanley media conference earlier this year, Endeavor and TKO exec Mark Shapiro said, 'President Trump is going to walk out of office with the trophy that is the L.A. Olympics, that 'I did it, I brought it back, I was behind it, I put the resources, the support,'' the exec said. 'He'll be sitting front and center. I'm a true believer that this will be his Olympics as much as anything else.' Trump has for years been obsessed with medals of all kinds, especially the Nobel Peace Prize, which has been given to four other presidents. Asked in 2018 whether he deserved the prize, Trump answered, 'Everyone thinks so, but I would never say it.' He seemed to change his mind on such self-assertion when queried about the prize again earlier this year. 'They will never give me a Nobel Peace Prize,'' Trump said in response to a reporter's question. 'It's too bad. I deserve it, but they will never give it to me.' Best of Deadline Celebs Supporting Zohran Mamdani In New York's Mayoral Race: From Ramy Youssef To Cynthia Nixon The Fox News To White House Pipeline: TV Personalities Who Joined The Trump Administration Milano Cortina Winter Olympics 2026 Preparations In Full Swing: Photos

Diego Lopes responds to Jean Silva's 'very silly' comments questioning identity
Diego Lopes responds to Jean Silva's 'very silly' comments questioning identity

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

Diego Lopes responds to Jean Silva's 'very silly' comments questioning identity

Jean Silva has had a lot to say about Diego Lopes in the buildup to their main event bout next month. Silva, who was born and fights out of Brazil, has been questioning Lopes' national identity, stating that he plans on beating up "on a guy that doesn't know if he's Mexican or Brazilian" ahead of Noche UFC on Sept. 13 in San Antonio. Lopes was born in Manaus, Brazil, but has been living and fighting out of Puebla, Mexico for a decade. He walks out with both the Mexican and Brazilian flags for his UFC fights and been very vocal about his love for Mexico, and feeling identified with the country. While many fans have embraced Lopes (27-7 MMA, 6-2 UFC) as a representative for both Mexico and Brazil, Silva (16-2 MMA, 5-0 UFC) has taken issue with that. "I find that very silly," Lopes told MMA Junkie in Spanish reacting to Silva's comments. "Apart from it all, we're in a sport that's global. If we were in the Olympics, where you have to literally represent your country, OK, fine. But that's not the case in MMA. Believe me: I've been hearing this nonsense for so many years from people like, 'Oh, he's not Mexican. He's not Brazilian.' I've heard it from both sides, from Hispanic people to Brazilians. It's all good. I don't care. I know the people who support me and that are with me. I remember the people who were with me when I literally had nothing. I let people talk. One thing is certain, though: The day of the fight I will walk out with the flag of Brazil and Mexico – whether they like it or not. It's that simple." Lopes – who fought for the UFC featherweight title this past April, losing to Alexander Volkanovski – is not paying much mind to Silva's comments. Not only has he heard them before from fellow UFC contender Yair Rodriguez, but he's also not interested in engaging in online beefs. "I don't like to be talking on the internet. I did with 'El Pantera (Rodriguez),' but he looked for it, and then he didn't want to fight," Lopes said. "Jean Silva is talking bad about me, and that's fine. He's trying a lot of things, and even saying that I disrespected him, but to this day, I'm still trying to understand when I disrespected him. I saw an interview come out where he was like, 'Oh, no. I think maybe I got things confused, and this is all childish, but I'm going to break him anyway.' that's fine if he wants to sell the fight that way. It doesn't affect me in any way."

Aboriginal group launches legal bid to stop Brisbane Olympic stadium
Aboriginal group launches legal bid to stop Brisbane Olympic stadium

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Aboriginal group launches legal bid to stop Brisbane Olympic stadium

An Indigenous group has launched legal action to stop a 63,000-seat stadium for the 2032 Brisbane Olympics being built on culturally significant land. The Queensland government announced in March that a new A$3.8bn ($2.5bn; £1.8bn) stadium would be built - with federal funding - at Victoria Park, a 60-hectare site. The Yagara Magandjin Aboriginal Corporation (YMAC) and Save Victoria Park group are requesting the federal environment minister to determine the park as a culturally significant site, which could protect the land from development. Victoria Park is "of great significance and history" for Indigenous and non-Indigenous people, YMAC spokeswoman Gaja Kerry Charlton explained. "We are very concerned there are ancient trees, artefacts and very important ecosystems existing there. There may be ancestral remains." A spokesperson for the federal government confirmed it had received the request to designate the site under the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act. "The department is currently reviewing this application and will take all standard steps to progress it, including engaging with the applicant, the proponent and the Queensland government," they said. If the stadium is built, it will host the opening and closing ceremonies of the Olympic and Paralympic Games in 2032. After the Olympics, the stadium will become the home of AFL and cricket in Queensland. Brisbane to build 63,000-seater stadium for 2032 Games Infrastructure plans for the 2032 Olympics have become a heated political issue in Queensland in recent years. Labor's Annastacia Palaszczuk led the successful Olympic bid, and announced plans to redevelop the ageing Gabba stadium for the games, at a cost of about A$3bn. But the plan was unpopular with locals who feared being displaced, and taxpayers dismayed at the price tag. A review commissioned after she quit as premier in 2023 recommended an even more expensive plan, a brand new stadium in Victoria Park. However, amid a cost-of-living crisis, the state's new leader Steven Miles opted instead to upgrade existing venues to host the games events, a decision some criticised as an embarrassment for Australia on the world stage. Months later, he lost an election to the Liberal National Party which campaigned on a promise of no new stadiums. But after the new government's own review, premier David Crisafulli adopted the plan to build a venue in Victoria Park, and has since introduced laws exempting new Olympic venues from planning rules in a bid to fast-track their development. However the plans have been met with protests in Queensland, with some locals concerned about losing a large inner-city green space, and other worried about potential damage to cultural heritage. The state and federal governments have signaled they will engage with Indigenous groups on the development plans at Victoria Park. Brisbane's Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner told the Brisbane Times that there was strong support for the stadium. "Ultimately, this is going to happen," he said. "No doubt there will be attempts to thwart the project and slow it down."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store