- Nissan shares plunge as report says Honda merger talks off
- China holds out hope last-minute deal can avert US trade war
- LeBron relishing 'special' Doncic double act
- Tatum shines as Celtics down Cavs, Lakers thrash Clippers
- Myanmar junta bid to sell Suu Kyi mansion flops for third time
- Australia bans DeepSeek AI program on government devices
- Olympics on horizon as China hosts Asian Winter Games
- Tatum, White shine as Celtics down Cavs
- Google pledge against using AI for weapons vanishes
- African football has the platform for historic World Cup success
- France prop Gros happy to go 'under radar' for Dupont's benefit
- Bove's future uncertain after heart attack horror as Fiorentina finish Inter clash
- Race against time to complete contested Milan-Cortina bobsleigh track
- Speed queen Goggia pursuing Olympic dreams with 2026 Winter Games on horizon
- Asian markets stutter as traders weigh China-US trade flare-up
- French PM set to survive no confidence vote
- Trump says US will take over Gaza, create 'Riviera of the Middle East'
- Google shares slide on spending plans despite sales jump
- Honda shares jump on reports it wants Nissan as subsidiary
- Trump says US will 'take over' Gaza as he welcomes Netanyahu
- Netflix drops 'Emilia Perez' star Oscar bid over offensive posts: reports
- Sirianni embraces emotions ahead of Chiefs rematch
- Top climate scientist declares 2C climate goal 'dead'
- US Treasury says Musk team has 'read-only' access to payments data
- Leaders 'should respect' wishes of Palestinians to stay in Gaza: Palestinian UN envoy
- Paris Saint-Germain, Brest, Dunkerque advance to French Cup last eight
- Simeone brace helps Atletico thrash Getafe, reach Copa del Rey semis
- Trump hosts Netanyahu for pivotal Gaza ceasefire talks
- Atletico thrash Getafe to reach Copa del Rey semis
- Stocks recover but tariff uncertainty lingers over market
- Shiffrin to sit out world team combined, dashing Vonn hopes
- Mahomes avoids 'G.O.A.T' talk as history beckons
- Undav sends Stuttgart into German Cup final four
- Alcaraz battles through in first match since Australian Open
- Trump backs jailing Americans in El Salvador if has 'legal right'
- What Elon Musk's Twitter tactics may bode for US government
- Trump signs order withdrawing US from UN bodies
- 'Bodies on the ground': mass shooting shocks Sweden's Orebro
- Rubio brushes aside aid uproar
- Rubio accuses Cuba, Nicaragua, Venezuela over migration crisis
- Ex-world number one Halep announces retirement after home defeat
- Trump taps 'Sharpiegate' meteorologist to lead top science agency
- US flying detained migrants to Guantanamo
- Netanyahu to meet Trump on Israel-Hamas truce
- Trump says Palestinians would 'love' to leave Gaza
- Trump in 'no rush' to speak with China's Xi despite tariff battle
- 'Rare earths' for aid: Ukraine's minerals threatened by war
- Taliban suspend women's radio station in Afghanistan
- Trump ally known for racist comments gets top State Dept job
- Trump seeks species protection rollbacks to promote US drilling
Race against time to complete contested Milan-Cortina bobsleigh track
With a year to go until the start of the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, organisers are racing against time to ensure the sliding events are held in Italy and not moved over 6,000 kilometres away to Lake Placid.
Twelve gold medals will be awarded for bobsleigh, luge and skeleton, events held on a track which is costly and difficult to build and has frequently caused headaches for organisers of the 2026 Winter Games.
In Cortina d'Ampezzo in the Dolomite mountains, where the women's alpine skiing events will also be held, 190 workers are working around the clock, seven days a week, to deliver a winding 1,650-metre (5,413-foot) track with 16 bends and complex refrigeration systems in time for an approval deadline in March.
Milan-Cortina's winning bid for the Olympics included the refurbishment of the Eugenio Monti track as part of its broader strategy to make use of existing sites.
But the old concrete structure, built in 1923 and immortalised in the 1981 James Bond film "For Your Eyes Only", hasn't been in use since 2008 and no longer conforms to environmental and safety regulations.
- IOC skepticism -
Italy was left without an initial bidder for the complicated renovation project and with no active bobsleigh track in despite Turin hosting the Winter Olympics in 2006.
The president of the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI), Giovanni Malago, unwittingly set off a political firestorm by announcing in October 2023 that the sliding events would be held outside the host nation.
Italy's hard-right government made a patriotic political stand against Malago's announcement, with deputy prime minster Matteo Salvini insisting that the sliding events be held in Cortina.
Italian construction company Pizzarotti ended up being the only bidder for a second tender launched by Simico, the Games' construction delivery company, worth around 120 million euros ($124.4 million).
The decision was heavily criticised by the International Olympic Committee, which pointed out that a bobsleigh track had never been built in such a short space of time, and local environmental groups who blasted the felling of hundreds if trees and questioned the track's usefulness after the Olympics.
Regardless work began in February last year, with Simico, the Games' organisers, the IOC and the bobsleigh and luge federations carrying out nervous monthly inspections.
Last month organisers and Simico admitted that getting the track ready for ready for the start of ice-making at the beginning of March and the pre-homologation of the track at the end of March was "tight and challenging".
- "150 metres a day" -
However on Friday, Simico told AFP: "We are on schedule, the pre-homologation will take place over March 24-30."
Olympic Games Executive Director Christophe Dubi was also positive, telling AFP that "nothing indicates that they will not get it done on time".
"But time is running out, they are completing little more than 150 metres of track per day," Dubi added.
A source with access to the inspection reports, who spoke under condition of anonymity, also told AFP that "pushing back the pre-homologation of the track to April is a possibility".
However organisers have also had to prepare a back-up plan that could be implemented in the event that the Cortina track is not completed on time, as required by the IOC, with Lake Placid in New York state surprisingly picked ahead of Innsbruck and St. Moritz, which are both a stone's throw from Italy.
"It's the most economically practical solution (...) because the other tracks needed a firm commitment from us as early as last year in order to undertake renovation work," Milano Cortina 2026 boss Andrea Varnier explained to AFP.
"But we're pretty sure and optimistic that there will be no need for any Plan B."
J.Horn--BTB