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L.A. now waits for the flame to return
Los Angeles Times
|February 23, 2026
In just over two years, the U.S. will host its first Summer Olympics since 1996.
ANDREAS RENTZ Getty Images THE OLYMPIC RINGS are illuminated during the closing ceremony. The next winter host will be France.
In fair Verona, L.A., unofficially, takes the torch.
While the Olympic flag passed from Italy to France at Sunday's closing ceremony, handing off the Winter Games from Milan-Cortina to the French Alps, the flame will burn next in L.A.
In just over two years, the United States will host the country’s first Summer Games since 1996, welcoming an Olympic movement that is surging in popularity but unsteady in a changing world, as the Games return to Los Angeles for the third time.
The Milan-Cortina Olympics are expected to rake in record TV numbers for NBC. They already produced the most-watched women’s hockey game on record as an average of 5.3 million viewers took in the United States’ thrilling overtime win over Canada. The rivalry game contributed to the largest weekday audience for a Winter Games since 2014 with an average of 26.7 million viewers who also watched U.S. star Alysa Liu win the country’s first Olympic gold medal for women’s singles figure skating in 24 years.
The smiling 20-year-old with horizontal stripes in her hair became a sensation in Milan just as 41-year-old mother of two Elana Meyers Taylor did in Cortina d'Ampezzo after the five-time Olympian won her first gold medal in bobsled, jumping into the arms of her nanny and, through tears, signing to her deaf children, "Mommy won."
No matter protests, politics or planning hurdles, the Olympics sought to remain a stage for those athletes to shine.
"You showed us what excellence, respect and friendship look like in a world that sometimes forgets these values,” International Olympic Committee President Kirsty Coventry said to the Olympians in her speech while standing on a platform in the stands placed in front of the Italian delegation.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der February 23, 2026-Ausgabe von Los Angeles Times.
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