This is how the first week on Milano-Cortina Olympics went

  Articoli (Articles)
  Emma Zurru
  15 February 2026
  4 minutes

Translated by Silvia Toro

The first week of the 2026 Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics has come to an end. These are the first “widespread” Olympics in history and the fourth Olympic event hosted in Italy, after Turin in 2006, Rome in 1960, and Cortina in 1950.

The sporting event is proving to be a huge success, both in terms of sporting achievements and television ratings: Never before in the Winter Olympics has Italy won so many medals as it has in these six days, 18 in total on the eighth day of the games, placing it second behind Norway, which has won the same number but with two more gold medals; more than one million tickets have been sold for the competitions, with an average occupancy rate of 85% at the competition venues. According to Andrea Varnier, CEO of the Milano Cortina 2026 Foundation, the figures speak for themselves about the success of these Olympics. In terms of television ratings, Rai exceeded two and a half million viewers for most of the competitions, according to data released by Auditel for this first week.

However, on the first day of Rai's coverage of the Olympics, during the opening ceremony, the broadcast was anything but a success due to the poor commentary by Rai Sport director Giampaolo Petracca, who received a lot of criticism from the Rai journalists' union, opposition parties, and the Rai Sport editorial staff: From the start of the ceremony, when he welcomed viewers ‘from the Olympic Stadium’ (in Rome) instead of the San Siro stadium, he made gross errors, such as introducing actress Matilda De Angelis as Mariah Carey and mistaking the president of the International Olympic Committee, Kirsty Coventry, for the daughter of President Mattarella. He then used several problematic clichés, for example associating African athletes with voodoo rituals, proving himself inadequate for the role.

The ceremony was originally supposed to be led by deputy director Auto Burbarelli, but he was excluded shortly before February 6 for having anticipated the role of the President of the Republic at a press conference: Petracca insisted on taking over, despite some executives being opposed. USIGRai, the Rai journalists' union, called a strike for Friday, February 13, and announced the withdrawal of signatures from RaiSport journalists, followed by all Rai editorial offices, services, links, and commentary from February 9 until the end of the Olympics. This is Friday's statement:
"Rai journalists are today withdrawing their signatures from their reports in solidarity with their colleagues at Raisport who are protesting against the director's commentary during the opening ceremony of the Olympics, a task he assigned himself. Despite the serious damage to the image of Raisport and Rai, nothing has happened. We will continue to defend the authority of Rai's information to guarantee you, the citizens, a good quality public service."

The strike was supported by the EFJ, the European Federation of Journalists, which expressed its solidarity with the complaint about the “disastrous image” presented by Petracca in his commentary. The Rai union argues that the image and dignity of all Rai workers has been damaged, without anyone taking responsibility. There has only been talk of possibly excluding the director from the closing ceremony.
Another aspect of this Olympic week was the protest march against the sporting event, organized by the Comitato Insostenibili Olimpiadi (Unsustainable Olympics Committee), a group that brings together associations opposed to the impact of the Olympics on housing, employment, and the environment in Milan: On February 7, several thousand people marched (over 3,000 according to SkyTg24, more than 10,000 according to the organizers) to Corvetto, a neighborhood symbolically located between the Olympic Village and the Santa Giulia Arena. There were some clashes, with police charges and the use of water cannons, while fireworks and firecrackers were set off by some protesters, six of whom were detained for identification.

The march was led by a banner reading “Let's take back our cities, let's free our mountains,” followed by a symbolic “forest” of cardboard larch trees, created by the Proletarian Hikers Association to represent the 500 larch trees in Cortina that were cut down to build the new bobsleigh track. Many groups took part in the march, including environmentalists and mountain communities, housing committees, students, grassroots unions, and Milanese social centers.

Mondo Internazionale APS - Riproduzione Riservata ® 2026

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Emma Zurru

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Milano Cortina Olimpiadi Invernali 2026 proteste Corteo