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2026 Olympic Winter Games
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Hurtling head first down an icy chute on a sled – skeleton at the Winter Olympics

The sport, which has been in the Olympics since 1928, will be the event for thrill-seekers to watch during the Milano Cortina Games

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Britain’s Matt Weston is seen in action during the men’s skeleton heat 1 at the IBSF World Championships in Switzerland on Monday. Photo: Reuters
Associated Press

Former United States skeleton athlete John Daly was once asked why anyone would decide to hurl themselves, head first, down an ice-coated mountainside chute on a thin sled with no safety equipment other than a helmet.

Daly laughed. “If I knew that, I probably wouldn’t be out here,” he said.

Skeleton will be the sport for thrill-seekers to watch during the Milano Cortina Olympics. Not everyone can skate, not everyone has been on skis, very few would dare to try ski jumping, but anyone who has ever played in the snow probably knows the feeling of what skeleton athletes get on race day.

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It is the thrill of being on a sled, picking up speed, trying to figure out how to steer without having anything to steer with, then getting up and doing it all over again.

It has been in the Olympics since 1928, but took two long hiatuses and returned to the programme in 2002.

American Katie Uhlaender at the IBSF World Championships at Lake Placid last year. Photo: Reuters
American Katie Uhlaender at the IBSF World Championships at Lake Placid last year. Photo: Reuters

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