U.S. Women’s Hockey Overpowers Czechia in Opener (Image Credits: Upload.wikimedia.org)
The 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics launched competitions a day early, with American athletes delivering strong performances just before tonight’s groundbreaking opening ceremony at San Siro Stadium.[1][2]
U.S. Women’s Hockey Overpowers Czechia in Opener
Team USA’s women’s hockey squad wasted no time asserting dominance. The Americans secured a convincing 5-1 victory over Czechia on Thursday at Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena.[2]
Alex Carpenter opened the scoring at 4:05 of the first period on a power play, assisted by Laila Edwards and Megan Keller. Joy Dunne netted her first Olympic goal early in the second, followed quickly by Hayley Scamurra’s tally 1:23 later, both assisted by Tessa Janecke. Czechia pulled one back through Barbora Jurickova, but Hilary Knight restored the three-goal lead late in the frame, and Scamurra added an empty-netter to seal it.[2]
The U.S. outshot opponents 14-3 in the opening period and controlled play throughout. Captain Knight praised the team’s simplified approach afterward.[2]
Snowboard Big Air Qualifiers Deliver Thrills
Snowboarding marked the first qualifying action at Livigno Snow Park, where a stacked men’s big air field competed off a 25-meter kicker.[3]
Japan’s Hiroto Ogiwara topped the standings with 178.50 points, followed by Italy’s Ian Matteoli at 174.50 and teammate Kira Kimura in third. American teenager Ollie Martin advanced in ninth place, joined by other U.S. hopefuls like Red Gerard in the mix for Saturday’s final.[4][5]
The event showcased top talents, including 2022 gold medalist Su Yiming of China and Norway’s Mons Roisland. U.S. riders Martin and Gerard enter as medal contenders based on prior achievements.[3]
A Ceremony Unlike Any Other
Organizers promised a historic twist for the 8 p.m. CET start: the first multi-site opening across Milan and mountain venues in Predazzo, Livigno, and Cortina d’Ampezzo.[1][6]
Athletes parade locally to avoid travel hassles, converging on San Siro’s 61,000 seats. Two cauldrons – one at Milan’s Arco della Pace, the other in Cortina’s Piazza Dibona – light at the finale, designed with Leonardo da Vinci-inspired motifs that expand like sunflowers.[1][6]
Over 1,200 volunteers from 27 countries, aged 10 to 70, don 1,400 costumes amid 1,000 props. Directed by Maria Laura Iascone, the show blends urban flair and alpine spirit under a “Made in Italy” theme celebrating sport, peace, and brotherhood.[1]
Italian Icons and Global Stars Shine
Performances honor Italy’s heritage, from Teatro alla Scala dancers mimicking winter sports to tributes for composers Verdi, Puccini, and Rossini. Actor Pierfrancesco Favino recites Giacomo Leopardi’s “The Infinite,” accompanied by violinist Giovanni Andrea Zanon.[6]
- Mariah Carey delivers an Italo-American medley, including “Volare.”
- Laura Pausini sings the national anthem.
- Ghali raps, with nods to fashion giants like Giorgio Armani.
- Andrea Bocelli and Sabrina Impacciatore feature prominently.
The Parade of Nations follows Italian alphabetical order, Greece first, with flag-bearers like Benin’s Nathan Tchibozo making history. Olympic rings form via aerial acrobats in golden hoops, sparking with fireworks.[6]
As flames ignite across sites, the Games unite 3,500 athletes from 93 nations. Organizers described it as “an extended invitation, a shared embrace.”[1] Team USA’s fast start amplifies the buzz – what moments will define your viewing tonight? Share in the comments.
Key Takeaways
- U.S. hockey claims 5-1 win; Martin qualifies in big air.
- Multi-venue ceremony spans cities with dual cauldrons.
- Italian culture meets global stars in 3-hour spectacle.
