After four long years, the Winter Olympics are back, and already, we’ve borne witness to huge wins, heartbreaking disappointments, and everything in between. The festivities kicked off six days ago, on February 6, with the Opening Ceremony held at Milan‘s historic San Siro Stadium, one of the greatest sporting structures in the world. There, everyone from Mariah Carey to Andrea Bocelli performed, setting the tone for the excellence to come.

The following day, medals were doled out at the men’s snowboard big air final, where China’s Su Yiming returned to defend his gold medal from 2022 and American newcomer Ollie Martin got his first taste of the Olympic event. (The latter competed with a broken arm, ending up just off the podium, and fellow first-time Olympian Kira Kimura from Japan took gold.) On the 8th, Lindsey Vonn, a legend in the world of alpine skiing, competed in her first and biggest event of the Games, women’s downhill, a feat in and of itself after she ruptured her ACL just days before heading to Italy. Unfortunately, after an early crash, we’re unlikely to see Vonn compete in her other Olympic events, but her determination will live on as one of the biggest storylines of the Games, not to mention all of sports in 2026. The days that followed saw medals handed out at the women’s and men’s freeski slopestyle final, champions crowned at the curling mixed doubles gold medal game, and a podium decided in ice dance, where the U.S. duo of Madison Chock and Evan Bates battled against Canada’s Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier, as well as France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron.