Sunday, March 8, 2026
Trusted by millions worldwide
The Milan Cortina 2026 Paralympics opening ceremony made history on Friday, March 6 — staged for the first time ever at a UNESCO World Heritage site, the 2,000-year-old Arena di Verona, as 611 Para athletes from 55 delegations prepared to contest 79 medal events across the Italian Alps.
No Paralympic Opening Ceremony has ever been held at a venue like this one. The Arena di Verona a Roman amphitheatre that predates the Colosseum in Rome and has stood for over 2,000 years became the stage for the Milan Cortina 2026 Paralympics on the evening of Friday, March 6. The theme was “Life in Motion,” and from the first moment, it lived up to its name.
The ceremony wove together Italian cultural heritage and contemporary performance musical renditions of Italian classics, and a modern retelling of Romeo and Juliet set in Verona itself. Italy’s national anthem was performed by Mimì, a rising star raised in Lombardy, to a crowd that filled the ancient stone amphitheatre to capacity.
Today, Italy once again stands at the heart of Paralympic history as we celebrate 50 years of the Paralympic Winter Games. From 1976 to 2026, these Games will honour our past, celebrate our present and shape a more inclusive future.
IPC President Andrew Parsons, Opening Ceremony, Milan Cortina 2026
Team Italy was led into the arena by Para Alpine skiers Chiara Mazzel and Rene De Silvestro — welcomed by a roaring home reception. For Italy, this is the second Paralympic Winter Games on home soil, following Torino 2006, and the stage could not be more dramatic: five competition venues spread across Milan, Cortina d’Ampezzo, and Val di Fiemme.
The most politically charged moment of the Milan Cortina 2026 Paralympics opening ceremony came not from the athletes, but from the flags. The Bipartite Commission awarded invitations to six Russian athletes and four Belarusian athletes including Russian Para Alpine skier Alexey Bugaev, a three-time Paralympic gold medallist to compete under their national flags.
The decision drew immediate and sharp condemnation. Ukraine’s Sports Minister Matvii Bidnyi announced officials would boycott the Opening Ceremony, and several European nations joined the protest by not

attending. Bidnyi’s statement was direct: in Russia, he said, Paralympic sport has been made “a pillar for those whom Putin sent to Ukraine to kill and who returned with injuries.”
Also notable by their absence: Iran. The country was scheduled to participate, but its only athlete withdrew hours before the ceremony began unable to travel to Italy due to the ongoing 2026 Iran war. In a Games defined by resilience, the empty space where Iran’s delegation should have stood was a stark reminder that sport and geopolitics cannot be separated.
Saturday, March 7 brought the first medals of the Milan Cortina 2026 Paralympics 12 medal events across Para Alpine skiing and Para biathlon, with the Para ice hockey tournament beginning simultaneously at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena.
Austria’s Aigner siblings delivered one of the opening day’s most extraordinary stories. Veronika Aigner skiing with replacement guide Lilly Sammer after a late change won the first Para Alpine skiing gold of the Games in the vision impaired category. Minutes later, her younger brother Johannes Aigner, guiding with Nico Haberl, claimed the men’s equivalent gold. A golden double for one family, on the same day, at the same Games.
Norway’s Jesper Pedersen completed a personal mission years in the making. Having won gold in every Paralympic discipline except downhill at Beijing 2022, he finally claimed that final medal at Milan Cortina calling the downhill “probably the coolest event” and his gold “a dream come true.” Switzerland’s Robin Cuche added another emotional moment his first Paralympic podium gold since Sochi 2014, after five world championship silver medals. “I had the feeling I always finished second in my whole career until this moment,” he said.

In Tesero, American Para biathlete Oksana Masters achieved a milestone that places her among the greatest Para athletes in history. Masters won gold in the Para biathlon women’s sitting sprint her 20th Paralympic medal overall and her 10th gold, across a career spanning both Winter and Summer Games.
Masters finished 16.0 seconds ahead of US teammate Kendall Gretsch, with both athletes achieving a perfect clean sweep of all 10 shooting targets. Germany’s Anja Wicker took bronze. The American dominance in the sitting sprint gold and silver was a powerful opening statement from the US Paralympic team.
When the Day 1 medals were tallied, Ukraine sat at the top of the table three golds, one silver, two bronzes. For a nation competing while simultaneously enduring an active war, the statement was both sporting and deeply human. Ukrainian biathlete Taras Rad claimed gold in the men’s sitting sprint biathlon, returning to the top step of the podium eight years after his last Paralympic gold.
In Para ice hockey, the opening round results were emphatic: the United States overwhelmed host nation Italy 14–1, China defeated Germany 12–0, Canada beat Slovakia 8–0, and the Czech Republic edged Japan 3–2. American Para ice hockey star Jack Wallace a double Paralympic champion told Olympics.com he feels no pressure in the team’s pursuit of a third consecutive gold, with his sights already on a Summer-Winter double at Los Angeles 2028.

| NATION | 🥇 GOLD | 🥈 SILVER | 🥉 BRONZE | TOTAL |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UA Ukraine | 3 | 1 | 2 | 6 |
| AT Austria | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| US United States | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
| CH Switzerland | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| NO Norway | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Milan Cortina 2026 marks the Winter Paralympic debut of five nations: El Salvador, Haiti, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Portugal. Of these, El Salvador stands out as the only nation competing at the Winter Paralympics that is not competing at the 2026 Winter Olympics — remarkable distinction.
The Games also mark 50 years since the first Winter Paralympics were held in Örnsköldsvik, Sweden in 1976 a half-century of Paralympic Winter sport celebrated at the very venues that hosted the Olympic Winter Games just weeks earlier.
The Milan Cortina 2026 Paralympic Winter Games run from March 6 to March 15, 2026. The Opening Ceremony was held on March 6 at the Arena di Verona. The Closing Ceremony will take place at the Cortina Olympic Ice Stadium on March 15.
A record 611 Para athletes from 55 delegations are competing — the largest field in Paralympic Winter Games history, surpassing the previous record set at PyeongChang 2018.
Ukraine and several European allies boycotted the Opening Ceremony to protest the return of six Russian athletes and four Belarusian athletes competing under their national flags, amid the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Six sports are contested: Para Alpine skiing, Para biathlon, Para cross-country skiing, Para ice hockey, Para snowboard, and wheelchair curling — across 79 medal events at five venues in Milan, Cortina d’Ampezzo, and Val di Fiemme.