Nearly half the tickets for Milan Cortina Olympics still unsold with 2 months to go

With exactly two months to go to the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics, there is another major area that local organizers are concentrating on: only slightly more than half of the 1.5 million tickets for the games have been sold. (X/@milanocortina26)
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Updated 06 December 2025
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Nearly half the tickets for Milan Cortina Olympics still unsold with 2 months to go

  • A Black Friday promotion last week included three days of 20 percent discounts on tickets
  • This week, more tickets for the Feb. 6 opening ceremony at the San Siro stadium and the men’s hockey gold medal game on Feb. 22 in Milan were put on sale

ROME: Construction on the main hockey arena is still not finished. Spectator and media areas at the controversial sliding venue also need to be completed.
And with exactly two months to go to the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics, there is another major area that local organizers are concentrating on: only slightly more than half of the 1.5 million tickets for the games have been sold.
As the torch relay began in Rome on Saturday, just over 850,000 tickets had been sold.
While sales abroad are meeting expectations, interest among Italians remains low.
“That’s normal. The local fans get interested closer and I think the beginning of the torch relay will be a very important moment for people realizing that,” local organizing committee CEO Andrea Varnier told The Associated Press moments before the relay began.

A Black Friday promotion last week included three days of 20 percent discounts on tickets. And purchasers of both Olympics and Paralympics tickets have the chance to get lift passes for eight euros ($9) valid at every ski area in Lombardy between Dec. 9-22.
This week, more tickets for the Feb. 6 opening ceremony at the San Siro stadium and the men’s hockey gold medal game on Feb. 22 in Milan were put on sale.
“We had some tickets on the market a couple of days ago and they were sold out in in just a couple of hours,” Varnier said. “So there is interest.”
If past precedence is any indicator, the atmosphere was memorable at the 2006 Turin Winter Games — the last time Italy hosted an Olympics.
Still, organizers would have hoped for more demand after the last Winter Games in Beijing in 2022 were held mostly without fans because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Varnier pointed out that sales have been strong at the recently opened Milan Cortina store in front of the city’s cathedral, Piazza del Duomo.
“People are really going in and buying our merchandise, which is also a good sign,” he said.
Hockey arena ‘has to be ready’
As for the Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena — the new, 16,000-seat venue on the outskirts of Milan — the scheduled test event for next week had to be pushed back to January.
“We knew about the delays of the hockey arena and we are working with it, but now we are following the right pace,” Varnier said. “It has to be ready.”
Next week, the secondary hockey venue that has been set up in the Rho Fiera convention center will be tested by hosting under-20 world championship games.
Multiple opening ceremonies
These games will be held across a large swath of northern Italy and athlete parades for the opening ceremony will also be held simultaneously in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Livigno and Predazzo besides Milan.
“It is quite an effort, it’s the first time ever,” Varnier said. “It’s a very important message to have the athletes also staying in the mountain Villages to be able to participate in the ceremony. This was very well received by the NOCs (National Olympic Committees). … Also, the communities are very happy to have a piece of the ceremonies in their towns.”

 


Colombia’s Rodriguez signs for Minnesota on short-term deal

Updated 58 min 10 sec ago
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Colombia’s Rodriguez signs for Minnesota on short-term deal

  • Rodriguez will occupy an international squad spot pending a medical and receipt of his visa.
  • “We’re excited to add his creativity and football intelligence to our group,” El-Ahmad said

MINNESOTA: Colombia captain James Rodriguez signed for Minnesota United on Friday, marking his seventh club since leaving Real Madrid in 2020 as the former World Cup Golden Boot winner continues his globe-trotting career.
The Major League Soccer club announced that the 34-year-old midfielder has signed a guaranteed contract through June 2026, with a club option to extend until December 2026.
Rodriguez will occupy an international squad spot pending a medical and receipt of his visa.


“James is a player whose quality, vision, and ⁠experience at the highest levels of the game are unquestioned. We’re excited to add his creativity and football intelligence to our group,” the club’s sporting director Khaled El-Ahmad said in a statement.
“At the same time, this move is about collective strength — not about putting everything on ⁠one individual.”
Rodriguez, who won the Golden Boot at the 2014 World Cup in a breakthrough tournament that earned him a move to Real Madrid, has become something of a footballing nomad in recent years.
Since the 2019-20 campaign, the playmaker has plied his trade across continents for Everton, Al-Rayyan, Olympiacos, Sao Paulo, Rayo Vallecano and Leon before landing in Minnesota.
“I’m very happy for this new chapter in my life. I hope ⁠to be at my best so I can bring joy to this city and to all of the people who are putting their faith in me,” Rodriguez said.
“I’m looking forward to meeting all of the passionate Minnesota fans because I’m also a passionate player who wants to give everything on the field and always wants to win.”
Rodriguez will get his first chance to impress when the new MLS season kicks off on February 21, with Minnesota taking on Austin.