32 U.S. Olympians to watch at the Milan Cortina Games

32 U.S. Olympians to watch at the Milan Cortina Games

On Friday, the opening ceremonies of the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics will kick off and, for the first time, include simultaneous cauldron lightings in Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo and athlete parades in four locations. The Games will showcase more than 2,900 athletes, in 15 venues throughout northern Italy. Some Olympians you’ll remember — and some you’ll want to know. Here are 32 U.S. Olympians to watch.


Ilia Malinin, figure skating

Glenn is the oldest woman to make the U.S. team in singles in 98 years. A three-time national champion, Glenn has become famous for her triple axel and is one of just a few women capable of completing the jump. She’s expected to also compete in the team event, in addition to the individual competition. — Maine


Alysa Liu, figure skating

she uncharacteristically DNF’d in three of her six races and left Beijing without a medal. In the years since, she’s been unbelievably consistent, including winning six of seven World Cup slalom races this season. Ā«There’s a lot of expectations around the Olympics.Ā» Shiffrin, 30, said. Ā«My job is to focus on my skiing and put expectations aside. That can be hard at the Olympic Games. That’s my challenge in the coming weeks.Ā» — Alyssa Roenigk


Lindsey Vonn, alpine skiing

can become the oldest alpine skier to win any medal at an Olympics. (In 2018, she became the oldest woman to medal in ski racing at an Olympics.) The 2010 Olympic downhill champion, Vonn has reached the podium in four of four World Cup races this season, including two wins, and leads the World Cup downhill standings. Ā«It’s impossible not to think of how it would feel to cross the finish line [in Cortina] and be in a similar place as I was in Vancouver in 2010,Ā» Vonn said. Ā«But I can’t put my goals ahead of the work.Ā»

Vonn sustained a ruptured ACL in her left knee last week during a race in Switzerland, but said she still plans to compete at the Olympics. Ā«This would be the best comeback I’ve done so far,Ā» Vonn said in a news conference on Tuesday. Ā«Definitely the most dramatic.Ā» — Roenigk


Hilary Knight, hockey

one of the most marketable faces who helped grow the game. Milan will be Knight’s fifth Olympics — the most ever for a U.S. hockey player — and as she announced last year, her last. Knight isn’t resting on laurels. The winger is still as clutch as they come. Knight led the PWHL in scoring last season, and in April, also led Team USA with nine points as she won her record 10th gold medal at the world championships. — Emily Kaplan


Laila Edwards, hockey

Edwards is set to make history as the first Black woman to represent the U.S. in Olympic hockey — and she’s going to make a huge impact. The Cleveland native switched from forward to defense, and somehow made the transition look easy. At 6-foot-1, Edwards stands out not just for her size, but for how complete her game is. As Edwards’ Wisconsin and Team USA teammate Caroline Harvey explains: Ā«She’s the whole package. In any scenario you can trust her. With her reach she can shut down plays. Power play, she can finish.Ā» — Kaplan


Kendall Coyne Schofield, hockey

is a true hockey unicorn. She leads NCAA hockey in both goals and penalty minutes. After bypassing the PWHL draft for one more year at Minnesota and a chance for a national championship, Murphy has elevated her game even more — and has found ways to agitate opponents while (mostly) staying out of the box. She went viral this season for a ridiculous assist dribbling the puck over the sticks of defenders that most players wouldn’t dare to try even in practice. Murphy is expected to be a top pick in the 2026 PWHL draft and a future face of the sport thanks to her play and personality. — Kaplan


Brady and Matthew Tkachuk, hockey

at last year’s electric 4 Nations tournament because of their brash, unafraid personalities. While the Tkachuk brothers helped stage the memorable three fights in nine seconds to open the USA versus Canada game last February, remember that there is no fighting in Olympic hockey. Nonetheless, both agitators — who have a knack of finding their way around the net — will set the tone for the Americans. Brady is the captain of the Ottawa Senators while Matthew has won the last two Stanley Cups with the Florida Panthers. — Kaplan


Quinn and Jack Hughes, hockey

is now a contender to win his first Olympic gold in an event he has mastered in just a few years. Any medal would make Goepper the first freeskier to win four medals in four Olympics. If he’s leading the field when he drops in to take his final run — Ā«I’m doing it in jeans,Ā» he said — as an homage to his midwestern roots. — Roenigk


Alex Hall, freeskiing

When to watch: Men’s freeski slopestyle finals, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 6:30 a.m. ET; Men’s freeski big air finals, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 12:30 p.m. ET

What to know: The 2022 season was a big one for Hall: He became the first skier to land a 2160 — six rotations — to win X Games Big Air and earned slopestyle gold in his first Olympics. He missed the big air podium in Beijing, but the 27-year-old has both the big, technical tricks and the creativity to leave Livigno with medals in both events this time around. Ā«I enjoy the individuality of skiing, and that’s brought me success in the past years,Ā» Hall said. Ā«That’s what helped me win Olympic gold and it’s what brings me joy.Ā» — Roenigk


Kaillie Humphries Armbruster, bobsled

When to watch: Women’s monobob heats 3 and 4, Monday, Feb. 16, 1 p.m. ET; Two-woman heats 3 and 4, Saturday, Feb. 21, 1 p.m. ET

What to know: Humphries Armbruster competed for Canada for three Olympics — winning back-to-back gold medals and then a bronze in two-woman bobsled — before becoming a U.S. citizen in 2021. Just a few months later, she earned another Olympic gold medal, this time in monobob, for the United States. Now back for a fifth Games, she is the only woman to win an Olympic gold medal for two different countries. At 40, she could also become the oldest woman to win an Olympic bobsled medal. — Amy Van Deusen


Mystique Ro, skeleton

When to watch: Women’s heats 3 and 4, Saturday, Feb. 14, noon ET; Mixed team, Sunday, Feb. 15, noon ET

What to know: A versatile track-and-field athlete in college, Ro, now 31, impressed officials at a Team USA bobsled combine with her speed in 2016. Ultimately, because of her smaller stature at 5-foot-4, she was encouraged to try skeleton — and has been steadily rising ever since. She won gold alongside Austin Florian in the mixed event at the 2025 world championships, where she also took home silver in the individual event and became the first American to claim a medal in the race since 2013. She will make her Olympic debut in Milan and will contend for medals in the individual race, as well as with Florian once again in the mixed competition. — Maine


Jordan Stolz, speedskating

When to watch: Men’s 1,000m, Wednesday, Feb. 11, 12:30 p.m. ET; Men’s 500m, Saturday, Feb. 14, 10 a.m. ET; Men’s 1,500m, Thursday, Feb. 19, 10:30 a.m. ET; Men’s mass start, Saturday, Feb. 21, 9 a.m. ET

What to know: There is perhaps no one in long-track speedskating with higher expectations for these Games than the 21-year-old Stolz, who has collected seven world championship titles in the past three years. Competing in the 500 meters, 1,000 meters, 1,500 meters and mass start, Stolz looks to become just the second American in history to win three or more Olympic gold medals in a single Winter Games and the first since Eric Heiden won all five speedskating events in 1980. — Maine


Brittany Bowe, speedskating

When to watch: Women’s 1,000m, Monday, Feb. 16, 5 a.m. ET; Women’s team pursuit finals, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 8:30 a.m. ET; Women’s 1,500m, Friday, Feb. 20, 2:15 p.m. ET

What to know: The unofficial leader of the U.S. speedskating team, the 37-year-old Bowe is gearing up for her fourth and final Olympic appearance. Already the winner of two Olympic bronze medals and a current world record, Bowe will be competing in the 1,000 meters, 1,500 meters and team pursuit events in Milan before retiring from the sport. Bowe is also half of a Team USA power couple with longtime partner and hockey star Hilary Knight. Bowe has spoken about her dilemma of potentially attending the women’s hockey gold medal game, because it takes place the night before the 1,500m competition. — Maine


Erin Jackson, speedskating

When to watch: Women’s 500m, Thursday, Feb. 12, 2:15 p.m. ET; Women’s 1,000m, Monday, Feb. 16, 5 a.m. ET

What to know: The 33-year-old became the first Black woman in history to earn gold in an individual event at the Winter Olympics in 2022 when she won the 500m event, and the first American woman to be victorious in that race since Bonnie Blair in 1994. Jackson will be competing in both the 500 meters and 1,000 meters and will attempt to become the first American woman to repeat as 500m champion since Blair claimed her third consecutive title 32 years ago. — Maine


Jessie Diggins, cross-country skiing

When to watch: Women’s 10km+10km skiathlon, Saturday, Feb. 7, 7 a.m. ET; Women’s sprint classic finals, Tuesday, Feb. 10, 5:45 a.m. ET; Women’s 10km interval start free, Thursday, Feb. 12, 7 a.m. ET; Women’s 4×7.5km relay, Saturday, Feb. 14, 6 a.m. ET; Women’s team sprint free finals, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 5:45 a.m.; Women’s 50km mass start classic, Saturday, Feb. 22, 4 a.m. ET

What to know: Diggins is the most dominant cross-country skier in U.S. history, and the 34-year-old has announced that this will be her final season in the sport. She and teammate Kikkan Randall became the first Americans to win Olympic gold in cross-country skiing with a victory in the women’s team sprint in 2018 — and Diggins followed that up with two more Olympic medals in 2022. For the first time in Olympic history, men and women will race the same distances in every cross-country event at this Games, and Diggins is likely to race in all six women’s events. — Van Deusen


Deedra Irwin, biathlon

When to watch: Mixed relay 4x6km, Sunday, Feb. 8, 8:05 a.m. ET; Women’s 15km individual, Wednesday, Feb. 11, 8:15 a.m. ET; Women’s 7.5km sprint, Saturday Feb. 14, 8 a.m. ET; Women’s 10km pursuit; Sunday, Feb. 15; 8:45 a.m. ET; Women’s 4x6km relay; Wednesday, Feb. 18; 8:45 a.m. ET; Women’s 12.5km mass start, Saturday, Feb. 21, 8:15 a.m. ET

What to know: Irwin, 33, competed in cross-country skiing, cross-country running and track and field at Michigan Technological University, and didn’t begin training in biathlon until age 25. In her Olympic debut in 2022, her seventh-place finish in the women’s individual 15km event was the highest individual result ever for an American. Biathlon remains the only Winter Olympic sport in which the U.S. team has never won a medal — and Irwin aims to change that this year. — Van Deusen

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