Record ticket sales mark Milano Cortina Winter Games opening

Singer Mariah Carey performs during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympics — Opening Ceremony — San Siro Stadium, Milan, Feb. 06, 2026. (Reuters)
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Updated 07 February 2026
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Record ticket sales mark Milano Cortina Winter Games opening

  • Organizers said everything worked smoothly in the San Siro adding it was too early to provide broadcasting figures
  • “It was a major challenge and we were very, very proud of our achievement,” Varnier said

MILAN: The opening ceremony of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, held on Friday night at Milan’s San Siro stadium, set a record with more than 61,000 tickets sold, the head of the local organizers said on Saturday.
Another 10,000 spectators watched the ceremony in other locations in a Games where events are being staged across a large area of northern Italy.
Organizers said everything worked smoothly in the San Siro, Milan’s famous soccer stadium, adding it was too early to provide broadcasting figures.
“It was a major challenge and we were very, very proud of our achievement. I am very pleased that everything went very well from an organizational point of view, which was not easy in ⁠such a unique context,” Andrea Varnier, CEO of the Milano Cortina 2026 Foundation, said at a press conference.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) said the only issue was the length of a show that went on for three and a half hours.

CEREMONY STRETCHED ACROSS FOUR LOCATIONS
For the first time, athletes paraded in four different locations. Two Olympic cauldrons — one of the Games’ key symbols — were lit simultaneously and ⁠will burn throughout the event.
One cauldron is at Milan’s Arco della Pace (Peace Arch) and the other in Piazza Dibona in co-host Cortina d’Ampezzo.
“The feeling I had at the ceremony? How elegant, how beautiful. The imagery, but also how profoundly Italian yet universal that ceremony was,” said Christophe Dubi, the Olympic Games executive director.
“The only remark we got was the length. It is a pretty complex operation. It will be analyzed,” Dubi added.
Thousands of people worked on the ceremony, including 1,400 performers — 1,200 of them volunteers — and many more deployed around the country.
“Our goal was to captivate the world and better ⁠showcase our country,” said Maria Laura Iascone, ceremonies director for the Milano Cortina 2026 Foundation.

MARIAH CAREY AND CO WORKED FOR FREE
Artists who performed on Friday, including US pop star Mariah Carey — who opened the show in a ceremony blending elements of both host regions, city and mountain — did not receive any compensation.
“We were honored that she was with us,” Iascone said.
Varnier also dismissed social media criticism that Italian rapper Ghali’s performance was not given enough prominence.
The inclusion of Ghali, born in Milan to Tunisian parents, in the cast had sparked a row in Italy because of his past criticism of Israel over its war in Gaza.
“The idea behind the television directing was to show the whole rather than the individual,” Varnier said.


Smylie wins on LIV Golf debut, leads Ripper GC to team title in Riyadh

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Smylie wins on LIV Golf debut, leads Ripper GC to team title in Riyadh

  • Jon Rahm and Torque GC finish second in the individual and team competitions respectively

RIYADH: Ripper GC captain Cameron Smith believes his new teammate Elvis Smylie can one day become the best golfer in the world. After the 23-year-old Australian produced four sizzling rounds to win on his LIV Golf debut, the rest of the league may very well share the same sentiment.

Smylie capped off an impressive first week under the lights at Roshn Group LIV Golf Riyadh, shooting a final-round bogey-free 8-under 64 on Saturday to hold off a hard-charging Jon Rahm by one stroke. He also led the Rippers to the team title, as the Aussies swept both trophies going into their biggest tournament of the season at LIV Golf Adelaide next week.

“It’s a dream come true,” said Smylie, who officially joined the team last month. “I really didn’t know what to expect this week. Playing at night is obviously a whole different ballgame out here. I wanted to come out here and make a statement. I wanted to prove that I’m one of the best out here, and I feel like I’ve done that. It’s only up from here.”

Smith agreed. “The crazy thing is I still think he’s got a lot of improving to go, which is pretty scary, really, for the rest of us, because he waxed us this week. I genuinely think he can be the best golfer in the world. He’s got all the tools of the trade. He just needs to keep doing what he’s doing and knuckle down.”

With the win, Smylie earns the projected points allotted by the Official World Golf Ranking to the winner of this week’s LIV Golf tournament. The OWGR announced earlier this week that points will be awarded for LIV Golf tournaments this season to the top 10 and ties. Smylie entered the week ranked 134th and is expected to move up significantly with the victory.

Smylie’s winning score of 24 under is the lowest in league history, a byproduct perhaps of the league’s adjusted format from 54 to 72 holes. He also beat the biggest field in LIV Golf history after an increase from 54 to 57 players this season.

But more impressive than the raw numbers was Smylie’s sublime play, especially with a new blade putter. “Everything looked like a bucket for me, which is nice,” said Smylie, who ranked third in the field in strokes gained putting.

He needed a hot putter down the stretch to create some separation from the field, then withstand the last-ditch rally by Rahm, the Legion XIII captain and two-time LIV Golf individual champion.

Rahm started the day two shots behind co-leaders Smylie and Peter Uihlein and was three strokes behind when Smylie birdied the par-4 12th. But the Spaniard closed fast with birdies on five of his last six holes, including the last four.

He drove the green at the 396-yard par-4 18th but could not convert the eagle putt. Still, his final birdie put the finishing touches on a 9-under bogey-free 63, the lowest round of the week, and reduced Smylie’s lead to one.

Smylie, however, was not aware of the slim margin until hitting his approach shot at the 18th that left him on the edge of the green.

“I actually didn’t know that I had to two-putt the last green,” he said. “I thought I would have had a two-shot lead going into 18. But as soon as I was walking up the green, I saw that I only had one, so I’m like, I’ve got to clutch up here and make sure to get this up-and-down.”

Rahm, who shot a final-round 11-under 60 in his last regular-season LIV Golf tournament in Indianapolis last year to clinch his second consecutive season-long title, pointed to his failure to make birdie at the par-5 sixth and a poor approach shot at the par-4 11th as missed opportunities. Even so, he was pleased with making a run to earn his fifth runner-up finish and 25th top-10 result in 27 regular-season LIV Golf appearances.

“It was a fantastic round of golf, shot 9-under,” he said. “Elvis had a great day and a two-shot lead. If anything, if there’s one or two shots to look at, I’ve got to go to earlier in the week.”

RangeGoats GC’s Uihlein finished third after shooting a 67 for 21 under, while Fireballs GC’s David Puig and 4Aces GC’s Thomas Pieters shot 65s to share fourth place with Torque GC’s Abraham Ancer.

The team competition turned into a battle between Ripper and Torque. The Australians started off fast, with Marc Leishman beginning his round with four straight birdies; the team collectively was 11 under through their first six holes.

Torque responded with Ancer, making his first start for his new team after four years with Fireballs GC, and Sebastian Munoz each shooting 66.

But the 64s by Smylie and Lucas Herbert were supported by Smith’s 65 and Leishman’s 69 to produce a fourth-round team score of 26 under, the third-best single round team score in league history. Ripper’s tournament total of 69 under is a league record as they won their fifth regular-season team title by three shots.