Ten of the weirdest and wildest moments we saw at the Milan Cortina Olympics
· Yahoo Sports
VERONA, Italy — Of course, there were the medals. The jaw-dropping feats of skiing, skating, sliding, flying. The close finishes and glassy eyes atop the podium and dreams achieved and all that.
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But, like any Olympics, there were also the breakout stars who often had nothing to do with the podium. With the Milan Cortina Games wrapping up, here are 10 of the weirdest, wildest things we saw at the 2026 Olympics.
Nazgul, a dog, runs the women’s cross-country team sprint
I watched this happen in person, and what impressed me the most about Nazgul’s performance in the women’s cross-country skiing team sprint was the way he ran down the finishing stretch like he belonged. Of course, he was disqualified — for missing the start, for only running the finish, for lacking a teammate to ski the other portion of the race, for his gender, for being a 65-pound Czechoslovakian Wolfdog. But they still gave him the photo finish.
DOG ON THE COURSE AT OLYMPIC SKIING. 🚨
The late entry closes strong at the cross country finish line! pic.twitter.com/o4mO28tXXW
— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 18, 2026
Ikuma Horishima wins silver … backwards
After losing control and crashing on a landing out of a jump, Japan’s Horishima slid into a mogul that set him upright and sent him towards the finish of the men’s dual moguls. He crossed the finish line backwards, missing out on gold but still notching silver.
“I CAN’T BELIEVE MY EYES.” 😳
Dual moguls madness as Nick Page skis out of the course for a DNF while his opponent, Ikuma Horishima, barely stays in control and skis over the line BACKWARDS for the win. pic.twitter.com/hFqqi5gnQE
— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 15, 2026
After winning bronze, Norwegian biathlete admits to infidelity
In sports, tears aren’t uncommon in a post-race interview. But tears after reaching the podium, declaring it “the worst week of my life” because of your own infidelity? A bit more eyebrow-raising. The moment launched Sturla Holm Lægreid and — without her say — his ex-girlfriend into the news all Olympics long. Lægreid ended up medaling in all five men’s medal events, winning three silvers and two bronzes.
French biathlete wins gold after conviction for teammate’s credit card theft
There’s just something about biathlon. In October, Julia Simon was found guilty of credit card fraud and theft of her teammate and a French team staff member and given a three-month suspended prison sentence. In Milan Cortina, Simon won three golds, including in the 15-kilometer individual race against the teammate she stole from, Justine Braisaz-Bouchet, who finished in 80th.
Canada’s curling controversy
During round-robin play, Sweden’s Oskar Eriksson accused Canada’s Marc Kennedy of cheating by touching the stone after releasing it. “You can f— off,” Kennedy said towards the end of the game. A day later, an official called Canada’s Rachel Homan for doing the same — allegations both athletes denied. The Canadian men went on to win gold, while the women took bronze.
Stoats’ moment in the spotlight
Milo and Tina, the Olympic and Paralympic mascots, quickly became breakout stars of these Games. The mini plush dolls quickly sold out in merch stores, and fans, volunteers and athletes hounded the mascots for photos all across Italy. I met one of the men inside the mascots: A 19-year-old student from Milan, who went looking for a job before re-enrolling in school come fall, and found himself inside the Tina costume.
Norwegian skier throws poles, walks into woods
A potential gold medal in his sights, those hopes disappeared for Norway’s Atle Lie McGrath — who was competing with a heavy heart after the recent death of his grandfather — when he straddled a gate in the slalom. Instead of finishing the run, McGrath threw his poles, took his skis off and went towards the woods to lie down.
“I thought I would get some peace and quiet, which I didn’t because photographers and police found me out in the woods,” he told the Olympic media service. “I just needed some time for myself.”
American snowboarder celebrates, then lands in last
Nathan Pare celebrated winning the quarterfinal in men’s snowboard cross, booking his ticket to the semifinals. Then, he saw the official results: last. That’s because, in following other snowboarders outside their designated lines, Pare made contact with another snowboarder who fell, with the race jury ruling that Pare’s line led to the incident. Instead of advancing, he was handed a “Ranked as Last.”
Chaos in men’s snowboard cross as Team USA’s Nathan Pare was disqualified for making contact with his opponent after a FURIOUS comeback. pic.twitter.com/WjEpt37Aad
— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 12, 2026
A Canadian and an Australian skier tie — but only one takes gold
What happens when two skiers tie for first? We learned the answer at these Games, with Australia’s Cooper Woods and Canada’s Mikaël Kingsbury both finishing with 83.71 points in men’s freestyle skiing moguls. The athletes’ turn score — calculated by judges evaluating technical execution — decided the tiebreaker, with Woods having the edge over Kingsbury for gold.
Norway’s curling trick shot
With the bronze medal match against Switzerland a lost cause, Norway’s Magnus Ramsfjell delivered his final stone in style, taking a 360 spin on the ice before releasing it. The shot went viral, but Norway lost, 9-1.
360 CURLING TRICK SHOT. HE TURNED HIS SWAG ON. 🥵😮💨🥌 #WinterOlympicspic.twitter.com/wRwXH0hhY9
— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 21, 2026
This article originally appeared in The Athletic.
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