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After all the scandals, protests, confessions and crashes, Italy sticks its Games landing

Billie Eder, Vince Rugari, Jake Niall and Bronte Gossling
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 10.05am on Feb 23, 2026
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Against the odds, Italy closes in style

By Jake Niall

In sporting terms, Italy took on an Olympic challenge with a high degree of difficulty. The nation hosted a Winter Games scattered over several venues, headed by Milan and Cortina, but with high-calibre events in other mountain towns, such as Livigno, where Australia reaped an unprecedented six medals.

There were doubters – could Italy pull off this quadruple pike?

The ice hockey stadium was hastily finished, just before the Games, there were protests and concerns about the whole concept of spreading Olympics across northern Italy.

Well, Italy did pull it off.

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The Winter Games did not suffer for decentralisation. Rather, the diversity of venues added to the allure, to the drama, the most compelling of which occurred early: American Lindsey Vonn’s horrific crash in her attempted comeback.

There were scandals, weird moments – such as a confession of infidelity by a Norwegian skier – and daily sporting dramas, culminating in USA’s ice hockey upset of Canada in the final hours of competition.

Cooper Woods and Danielle Scott fulfil their duties as Australian flag-bearers.Getty Images

But as the Games moved to Verona, one wondered, after breaking audience records and averting the calamities some had predicted, if Milan-Cortina could stick the landing?

The closing in Verona was a low-key event. The most spectacular aspect of the ceremony was the venue – the Verona Stadium, built in ancient Roman times (between first and third centuries) and preserved enough to host a smaller scale ending.

The Milan-Cortina 2026 organising committee didn’t botch the landing, but it wasn’t perfect either.

It was a much less ambitious and entertaining event than the epic opening ceremony, before 60,000 plus at Milan’s San Siro Stadium, which had spectacular, high-scale operatic performances, exceptional dancing and a potent, perhaps pointed, speech from actress Charlize Theron, who quoted her nation’s former president, Nelson Mandela, and called for world peace.

Milan also contained controversy, such as the booing of US vice president JD Vance.

No such friction visited Verona, where Australian flag bearers and medallists Danielle Scott (silver) and Cooper Woods (gold) were among the many Australians escorted by police from Livigno and other locations to the stadium.

Thirty athletes comprised the Australian contingent at the closing ceremony.

Joan Thiele performs at the closing ceremony.Getty Images

There were, of course, operatic performances (nods to La Traviata and Madame Butterfly) – some staged in another venue and beamed in – ballet from a local troupe, and the catchy Eiffel 65 by Gabry Ponte.

It lacked the star power of Paris 2024, notable for Tom Cruise descending from the roof, or Snoop Dogg, who’d reprised his role an ambassador for Team USA at these Games. Snoop, paid millions by the AFL for 20 minutes of rap, was likely too expensive for Verona.

One highlight – and there weren’t many – was the rendition of a classic Italian song by Italian Joan Thiele of Il mondo (The World) by Jimmy Fontana.

The Verona audience spent much of their time standing while the national anthems of Italy, Greece (original Olympians), France (slow version), the Olympics, and Sweden and Norway (for belated medal presentations for the men’s and women’s 50km classic cross country skiing) were played.

IOC president Kirsty Coventry closes the Milano Cortina Games.Getty Images

It ended with the flame’s extinguishment in Milan and Cortina, the handover to France for 2030, and the formality of platitudinal speeches by the organisers and IOC President Kirsty Coventry.

Fair Verona couldn’t repeat the pizzazz of metropolitan Milan’s big-budget opening.

It was a subdued end to a superb Winter Games, in all.

Yet the landing did not define Milan-Cortina. Italy had done more than enough to ensure that the ending wasn’t so important.

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The 2026 Winter Olympics have come to a close

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Well, there you have it, Milano Cortina 2026 is officially over.

The athletes now get a 20-minute performance from uh, not Italian group Major Lazer.

Can we just say, a big thank you to everyone who has read along these past few weeks. It’s been a blast.

We’ve had highs, we’ve had lows, we’ve had stunning victories, and heartbreaking defeats, but all in all, the 2026 Winter Olympics have been sensational.

Now, it’s time to recover before we jump back into reality. And by reality, I mean the NRL and AFL seasons.

Signing off from Livigno, Verona and Milan.

Australian Winter Olympic medallists Jakara Anthony, Josie Baff and Cooper Woods (top), Matt Graham and Scotty James at Livigno, on day 8 of the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy last Sunday.AAPIMAGE

Rigoletto is my new sleep paralysis demon

By Bronte Gossling

As the Olympic flames extinguished to pianist Gloria Campaner’s dulcet rendition of Ludovico Einaudi’s Experience, Rigoletto returned to the stage and danced around it.

In addition to haunting my dreams, he was tasked with reinvigorating Arena di Verona for Major Lazer’s 20-minute “Life is Beautiful” final celebration, which will see the DJ group perform their greatest hits and close out the closing ceremony.

Each athlete on Team Australia, meanwhile, can officially shout out “Ho finito!” . Our mission has been accomplished.

The lights are out

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And there we have it.

The cauldrons in both Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo have gone out, and that’s the ceremony done.

The Olympic flame before it is extinguished.dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images
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Already missing the Winter Olympics? There is more action to come

By Bronte Gossling

There are roughly 1439 days until French Alps 2030, but you don’t have to wait that long to see some more winter sports action.

The Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Paralympic Games start on March 6, and considering this was Australia’s most successful Winter Olympics ever, hopes are high for our Paralympians.

It’s officially over

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IOC president Kirsty Coventry has just declared these Olympic Games closed. Now I am sad.

“In accordance with tradition, I call upon the youth of the world to assemble four years from now in the French Alps, to celebrate with all of us the 26th Olympic Winter Games,” she said.

All right, fine, twist my arm ... I’ll be there.

IOC president Kirsty Coventry gives her speech to end the Games.AP

Speeches can mean only one thing ...

By Vince Rugari

... we are close to the finish line.

Right now, we’re hearing from Giovanni Malagò, head of the Milano Cortina 2026 organising committee, who is effusively praising everyone involved with the delivery of the Olympics in the manner that blokes like him are wont to do in moments like this.

Once he wraps up, we’ll hear from IOC boss Kirsty Coventry, then we’ll extinguish the Olympic flame and that will be that.

And when that finally is that, I’ll be a bit sad because this has all been great, the whole way through.

Giovanni Malagò gives his speech.Getty Images
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Bonjour, France!

By Bronte Gossling

It’s ciao for now to Italy – a new dawn is rising on the French Alps, which will be host to the Winter Olympics in 2030.

International Olympic Committee president Kirsty Coventry was handed the Olympic flag by Milan mayor Giuseppe Sala and Cortina mayor Gianluca Lorenzi.

Coventry then presented the flag to representatives from French Alps 2030 as French mezzo-soprano Marine Chagnon performed the French national anthem.

Renaud Muselier ,President of the Provence-Alpes-Cote d’Azur region, and Fabrice Pannekoucke, president of the Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes region, wave the Olympic flag to signify a handover to French Alps 2030 during the closing ceremony.Getty Images

No Tom Cruise this time

By Bronte Gossling

Milano Cortina 2026 was already going into this closing ceremony with a handicap … Paris 2024 notably handed over to Los Angeles 2028 with a slew of Hollywood cameos, including Tom Cruise literally flying into the stadium.

Considering the next Winter Olympics will be in the French Alps … I don’t know how they could possibly top that with this handover.

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Joan Thiele steals the show

By Bronte Gossling

It’s a tribute meant to signify respect for the environment and nature, but all I can focus on is Joan Thiele.

The Italian singer-songwriter is performing Il mondo (The World) by Jimmy Fontana, strumming a guitar as Roberto Bolle, a key dancer from Torino 2006’s opening ceremony, dances around her. But all I’m looking at is her chic spiky headpiece. How is it attached to her hair?

Joan Thiele performs at the closing ceremony.AP
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