Women's Nordic combined seeks Olympic inclusion amid sport's uncertain future

Nordic combined remains the only Winter Olympic sport without women's events, despite the International Olympic Committee's push for gender balance in the 2026 Milan Cortina Games. Athletes like Annika Malacinski express frustration over the exclusion, while the entire discipline faces potential removal from the program. A crucial vote in June will decide its fate.

Nordic combined, featuring ski jumping followed by cross-country skiing, has been a men's event in every Winter Olympics since 1924. The International Olympic Committee describes the upcoming Milan Cortina Games as the most gender-balanced in history, with women comprising 47 percent of athletes. Yet, for competitors like 24-year-old Annika Malacinski, the progress feels incomplete. "It really feels like they’re just spitting in our face," she said, reacting to the lack of women's events despite advancements in other sports.

Historically, women's participation in Winter Olympics has expanded slowly. In 1956, the last Games in Cortina, women competed only in figure skating, Alpine skiing, and cross-country skiing. Women's bobsled arrived in 2002, ski jumping in 2014, and for 2026, 15 of 16 sports will include women, with female cross-country skiers racing the men's 50-kilometer distance for the first time.

The push for women's Nordic combined is complicated by the sport's overall viability. A June vote will determine if it remains in the Olympic program, amid concerns over declining participation and medal dominance by Norway, Germany, Finland, and Austria, which have claimed over 75 percent of awards. In the United States, USA Nordic Sport ceased funding the discipline in June 2024, prompting Jill Brabec and other parents to form Nordic Combined USA. They have focused on fundraising to sustain a training partnership with Norway's national team, started in 2022.

Progress is evident on the World Cup circuit. Brabec's daughter, Alexa, 21, secured the U.S.'s first medal in five years this season, followed by two more podiums and a gold on Friday, placing her second globally. Malacinski achieved eight top-15 finishes, including a personal-best sixth on Friday, ranking 12th. She started the sport at 16 in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, and Finland, her parents' homeland. The International Ski Federation added women's World Cup events in 2020, with Tara Geraghty-Moats winning the inaugural race.

Of 837 global Nordic combined athletes as of January 2025, 217 are women, showing growing parity on the women's side. However, the IOC's 2022 decision not to include women for 2026 has hindered sponsorship and visibility. Despite this, women's event viewership rose 25 percent in the 2024-25 season. Malacinski uses her social media—nearly 50,000 TikTok followers and 30,000 on Instagram—to advocate, drawing support from fans and sponsors.

She plans to attend the Olympic events in Predazzo and Tesero, Val di Fiemme, starting February 11, to support her brother Niklas (ranked 29th) and Ben Loomis (41st). The U.S. last medaled in 2010 Vancouver, winning four. "The Olympics just doesn’t see the quality of what the women could bring," Malacinski said. Brabec views inclusion as a "huge win" for the IOC, now led by its first female president, Kirsty Coventry, appointed in 2025. Efforts continue to build awareness, urging fans to watch the men's events without boycotts.

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Diverse Team USA athletes from skiing, snowboarding, and hockey pose excitedly against the snowy Italian Alps for the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics preview.
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Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics preview features diverse U.S. athletes

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The 2026 Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina, Italy, begin on February 6, promising record gender balance with women comprising 47% of participants. Team USA boasts athletes from states like Colorado, Washington, and Michigan across disciplines including alpine skiing, snowboarding, and hockey. Norway leads predictions for most gold medals at 63%, followed by the U.S. at 18%.

Nordic combined stands at a pivotal moment ahead of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, where women remain barred from competing. U.S. athlete Annika Malacinski is spearheading efforts to highlight the sport's precarious future. The International Olympic Committee has cited a lack of universality for the exclusion, putting the entire discipline at risk.

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American skier Mikaela Shiffrin will compete in slalom, giant slalom and team combined at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, halving her program from Beijing 2022 after serious crashes. U.S. head coach Paul Kristofic says the streamlined approach will aid her preparation in her strongest disciplines. Meanwhile, Lindsey Vonn plans to race downhill despite a recent ACL tear.

The French National Olympic and Sports Committee has selected Marco Heinis and Laurent Muhlethaler to represent France in Nordic combined at the Milan/Cortina 2026 Olympic Games. The duo earned their spots through strong early-season performances, leaving other contenders to watch from afar. The event is set for February 6-22 in Italy.

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Alpine skiing events at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics begin with training sessions on February 4, featuring top athletes like Mikaela Shiffrin and Lindsey Vonn from Team USA. The competitions, held across challenging slopes in Bormio and Cortina d'Ampezzo, include 10 medal events from downhill to slalom. Viewers in the US can stream all events live on Peacock, with select broadcasts on NBC and USA Network.

Dr. Regina Martinez Lorenzo has become the first woman from Mexico to qualify for Olympic cross-country skiing, joining a small group of compatriots at the 2026 Milano Cortina Games. Meanwhile, Allan Corona, a former triathlete, has also earned a spot after reinventing himself in the sport. Both athletes highlight Mexico's growing presence in winter sports.

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Minnesota is sending 24 athletes to represent Team USA at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games, second only to Colorado's 30. The delegation includes stars like Jessie Diggins and Lindsey Vonn in their final Olympics, competing in events from hockey to curling. The opening ceremony is set for February 6, 2026.

 

 

 

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