IOC chief Coventry in tears as 2026 Winter Games torch relay sets off
Executive Board and the IOC President Kirsty Coventry in the flame lighting ceremony of the Olympic flame, for the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026, at the Museum of ancient Olympia, in Olympia on November 26, 2025. (Photo by Aggelos NAKKAS / AFP)
Audio By Vocalize
New International Olympic Committee chief Kirsty Coventry
fought back tears on Wednesday as she urged nations to come together in the
2026 Winter Games, as the torch relay set off from ancient Olympia in Greece.
Addressing guests during the torch ceremony at the Olympia
archaeological museum as the first woman to head the Olympic movement, a
tearful Coventry stressed the power of sport to unite.
"These Games come at a critical part in our history,"
she said, her voice cracking.
"I wasn't supposed to get emotional," she added to
applause.
"In a divided world that we live in today, the Games
hold a truly symbolic place. It is our duty, our responsibility, to ensure that
the athletes from around the world can come together peacefully," she
said.
Carried initially by Greek rower Petros Gaidatzis and then
jointly with Italian cross-country skiing champion Stefania Belmondo, the relay
began the countdown to the Milan-Cortina Winter Games, which will open on
February 6.
The pair ran from the museum to the grove in Olympia, the
birthplace of the ancient Games, where the heart of modern Olympics founder
Baron Pierre de Coubertin is kept, and handed over the torch to Italian luge
great Armin Zoeggeler.
The flame ceremony was flanked by sculptures from the Temple
of Zeus, the patron god of the ancient Olympics.
The ceremony to light the Olympic flame is usually held
among the ruins of the 2,600-year-old Temple of Hera, near the stadium where the
Olympics were born in 776 BC.
But a rainy weather forecast -- which proved mistaken --
raised concerns that the sun's rays would not be able to sufficiently heat up
the parabolic mirror used by actresses dressed as ancient priestesses to light
the flame.
That forced organisers to head indoors for Wednesday's
ceremony where they used a flame lit on Monday, during an outdoor rehearsal
under the sun.
Following a December 4 handover ceremony at the Panathenaic
Stadium in Athens, where the first modern Olympics were revived in 1896, the
flame will head to Rome for a 63-day, 12,000-kilometre (7,500-mile) course
through Italy's major cities and the archaeological site of Pompeii.
The Games themselves will take place at various venues
spanning a vast area from Milan to the Dolomite mountains in Italy's north-east.
Ice sports will be held in Milan while Bormio and Cortina
will host alpine skiing.
Across the Dolomites, the biathlon will be in Anterselva and
Nordic skiing in Val di Fiemme, with Livigno in the Italian Alps hosting
snowboarding and freestyle skiing.


Leave a Comment