×
Winter Olympics 2026: Meet the oldest and youngest athletes

Winter Olympics 2026: Meet the oldest and youngest athletes

The 2026 Winter Olympics are right around the corner.

And the Milano Cortina Games could be the biggest yet.

According to the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, “[n]early 3,000 athletes from more than 93 National Olympic Committees will take to Milano Cortina to compete on the world stage.” And Team USA could be the biggest contingent yet. “With 232 athletes, and dependent on the number who compete, this will be the largest ever winter U.S. Olympic Team, surpassing the 228 athletes who competed for Team USA at PyeongChang 2018, and the 222 who competed at Sochi 2014.”

“It’s an honor to present the 2026 U.S. Olympic Team, a team full of proven champions and fearless newcomers that have the potential to take Team USA’s winter performance to a new level – and inspire a nation in the process,” said Rocky Harris, USOPC chief of sport and athlete services and Team USA Chef de Mission for the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026. “These athletes earned their places through years of disciplined focus, competitive excellence, and consistent performance at the highest level of their sport. We are proud to support them alongside our National Governing Bodies as they finalize their preparation and get ready to compete in Milano Cortina against the best in the world.”

These athletes range the gamut from collegiate stars, club sport athletes, and even some with a profession away from their particular discipline.

Their ages run the gamut as well.

Here are the oldest and youngest athletes headed to the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Who are the oldest and youngest athletes on Team USA in 2026?

Let’s start on the younger end of the spectrum.

The youngest member of Team USA? That would be 15-year-old freeskier Abby Winterberger from California. But her path is a rather unconventional one, beyond her age. Winterberger bypassed the traditional U.S. Ski & Snowboard Rookie and Pro Team pathway, and is the only club-level freeski athlete to qualify for the 2026 Winter Olympics.

But she has secured three top-ten finishes this competitive season, and heads to Italy as the Freeski Halfpipe U.S. National Champion. She secured that crown due to her performance at the Aspen Grand Prix, where she finished sixth in a deep field, and the leading U.S. skier.

It is an accomplishment her OVFree Head Freeski Coach Cooper Davidson has expected since she joined the club at just seven years old.

“Abby’s dedication, progression, and fearlessness in the pipe have been incredible to watch,” said Davidson. “She’s earned this nomination through grit, consistency, and an ever-growing competitive presence.”

On the other spectrum of Team USA are an elite group of veterans marking their fifth Games, including Lindsey Vonn — who will ski with a torn ACL after a practice injury — Evan Bates (figure skating), Nick Baumgartner (snowboarding), Faye Thelen (formerly Faye Gulini, snowboarding), Kaillie Humphries (bobsled), Hilary Knight (ice hockey), and Elana Meyers Taylor (bobsled). Humphries has raced in four Olympic Winter Games, and additionally served as an alternate athlete at Torino 2006.

Of those athletes, Baumgartner is the oldest. The snowboarder won gold at the 2022 Beijing Olympics at 40 years old, and admits that he is competing against “children” this cycle.

“I’m in a sport against children,” Baumgartner said. “Snowboarding is dominated by youth, and to have a guy like me, the elder statesman, I love it, man. It makes me proud.”

However, Baumgartner is not the oldest member of Team USA.

That would be Rich Ruohonen, a member of Team USA’s curling team. Ruohonen is an alternate, and thus not guaranteed to compete, but at 54 years old he is officially the oldest member of Team USA. If Ruohonen does compete, he will be the oldest Team USA athlete in Olympic history.

He is also a trial lawyer, and a partner at a law firm.

But after years of falling short of the Olympics, he is finally on his way to the Games, where he is excited to embrace the “old guy” role on the team. “I was thinking about getting a shirt that says, ‘I’m not the dad, and I’m not the coach,” said Ruohonen recently.

But he will bring the dad jokes.

Update: Ruohonen entered a match against Switzerland during round-robin play, officially becoming the oldest Team USA athlete in Olympic history:

Who are some other athletes from around the world?

Beyond Team USA, there are some other athletes on both ends of the age spectrum headed to Italy.

Australia’s Indra Brown will arrive in Italy as the youngest member of their team, having just turned 16 years old.

But her rapid rise up the World Cup ranks has Brown considered a potential medal winner in freestyle skiing. While she only began World Cup competition in December of 2025, she has secured finishes of third, second, first, and fourth in just four halfpipe starts. Those finishes have her at the top of the World Cup standings on points heading into the Winter Olympics.

She also secured a silver medal at the X Games in Aspen, becoming the youngest medalist in the event’s history at 15 years old.

In the sliding sports, after celebrating her 17th birthday in late January, skeleton athlete Marta Andžāne from Latvia is the youngest athlete. Bobsledder Edson Bindilatti of Brazil, born in 1979, will turn 47 in March and is the oldest participant in that event.

Source link
#Winter #Olympics #Meet #oldest #youngest #athletes

Aryna Sabalenka shook off some rust to post her first victory of the season on clay and extend her winning streak to 13 matches on Thursday at the Madrid Open.

The world number one, who was playing her first match since she completed the Sunshine Double by winning Indian Wells and Miami last month, committed 26 unforced errors in her 7-5, 6-3 win over American Peyton Stearns in the second round in the Spanish capital.

The defending champion, in search of a fourth career title at the Caja Magica, converted four of 12 break points against Stearns, double-faulted five times, and dropped serve twice, before she made it over the finish line to set up a third-round meeting with Romanian Jaqueline Cristian.

Madrid Open 2026: Sabalenka, Swiatek enter third round  Aryna Sabalenka shook off some rust to post her first victory of the season on clay and extend her winning streak to 13 matches on Thursday at the Madrid Open.The world number one, who was playing her first match since she completed the Sunshine Double by winning Indian Wells and Miami last month, committed 26 unforced errors in her 7-5, 6-3 win over American Peyton Stearns in the second round in the Spanish capital.The defending champion, in search of a fourth career title at the Caja Magica, converted four of 12 break points against Stearns, double-faulted five times, and dropped serve twice, before she made it over the finish line to set up a third-round meeting with Romanian Jaqueline Cristian. Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka in action during her round of 64 match against Peyton Stearns of the United States of America.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                REUTERS
                            

                            Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka in action during her round of 64 match against Peyton Stearns of the United States of America.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                REUTERS
                                                    “I’m super happy to start with a win, even though maybe the tennis wasn’t that good, but I felt like with every game I was playing, the better I was playing, so I really hope in the next one I bring a better performance,” said Sabalenka, who has won a remarkable 24 of her 25 matches so far in 2026.Earlier, Iga Swiatek made quick work of her opening test in Madrid, breezing past Daria Snigur 6-1, 6-2 at the Caja Magica.The Polish fourth seed needed just 61 minutes to move past Snigur, who was coming off the first tour-level main draw victory of her career on clay over Daria Kasatkina.The Ukrainian qualifier saved four match points against Kasatkina on Wednesday, and secured the win by clinching the longest first-to-seven tiebreak at tour-level in eight years with a 15-13 scoreline.Snigur had little fight left in her for her clash with Swiatek, who barring a brief blip early in the second set was in fierce form as she continues her quest for a first clay-court title since she claimed a fourth Roland Garros crown nearly two years ago.“I’m very happy. Madrid is a special place to play, because of how special the tournament is, but also because of the conditions, so I’m happy that I adjusted well to them and was solid and just playing my game,” said Swiatek, who is contesting her second tournament under the guidance of her new coach Francis Roig. Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AP
                            

                            Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AP
                                                    Swiatek, a champion in Madrid in 2024, swatted away three break points to open up a 5-0 lead inside 23 minutes and closed out the set eight minutes later after Snigur finally got on the board.Snigur enjoyed a much stronger start to the second set, finding the rhythm on her backhand to put pressure on Swiatek, who got broken for the first time in the contest to fall behind 0-2.The Ukrainian’s advantage was short-lived though as Swiatek struck right back and swept the next six games to book a third-round meeting with Ann Li.Meanwhile, Hungarian world number 63 Anna Bondar upset seventh-seeded Elina Svitolina 6-3, 6-4 to claim the first top-10 victory of her career.Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three.Ex-world number one Naomi Osaka began her clay-court campaign with a 6-2, 7-5 win over Colombia’s Camila Osorio. She’ll play Ukrainian qualifier Anhelina Kalinina for a spot in the last 16.Unheralded Paraguayan starsIn men’s action, Paraguayan qualifier Adolfo Daniel Vallejo said he felt like he was living “a movie” after he dispatched former world number three Grigor Dimitrov 6-4, 6-4.The 21-year-old cracked the top 100 for the first time last month – following a 14-1 start to the season at the Challenger level – and is making his Masters 1000 debut this week. He is the first Paraguayan to compete in Madrid Open history and will next take on American 17th seed Learner Tien.“For me this is unbelievable. It looks like a movie, I don’t know what’s happening,” Vallejo told        Tennis TV. “The other day I played on Manolo Santana centre court. Today I played here. I used to watch him (Dimitrov), all the highlights. The points that he did against me today, I used to watch it on TV and to play against him… wow, I can’t understand what’s happening. I’m just trying to enjoy all this.”Former world number three and 2019 Madrid runner-up Stefanos Tsitsipas eked out a 3-6, 7-6[6], 7-6[4] win against American lucky loser Patrick Kypson.Currently ranked 80 in the world, the two-time Grand Slam finalist will square off with eighth-seeded Alexander Bublik in round two.The soon-to-be-retiring Gael Monfils lost his opener 6-3, 6-4 to Camilo Ugo Carabelli, marking his last time competing at the Madrid Open.Published on Apr 23, 2026  #Madrid #Open #Sabalenka #Swiatek #enter

Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka in action during her round of 64 match against Peyton Stearns of the United States of America. | Photo Credit: REUTERS

lightbox-info

Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka in action during her round of 64 match against Peyton Stearns of the United States of America. | Photo Credit: REUTERS

“I’m super happy to start with a win, even though maybe the tennis wasn’t that good, but I felt like with every game I was playing, the better I was playing, so I really hope in the next one I bring a better performance,” said Sabalenka, who has won a remarkable 24 of her 25 matches so far in 2026.

Earlier, Iga Swiatek made quick work of her opening test in Madrid, breezing past Daria Snigur 6-1, 6-2 at the Caja Magica.

The Polish fourth seed needed just 61 minutes to move past Snigur, who was coming off the first tour-level main draw victory of her career on clay over Daria Kasatkina.

The Ukrainian qualifier saved four match points against Kasatkina on Wednesday, and secured the win by clinching the longest first-to-seven tiebreak at tour-level in eight years with a 15-13 scoreline.

Snigur had little fight left in her for her clash with Swiatek, who barring a brief blip early in the second set was in fierce form as she continues her quest for a first clay-court title since she claimed a fourth Roland Garros crown nearly two years ago.

“I’m very happy. Madrid is a special place to play, because of how special the tournament is, but also because of the conditions, so I’m happy that I adjusted well to them and was solid and just playing my game,” said Swiatek, who is contesting her second tournament under the guidance of her new coach Francis Roig.

Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three.

Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three. | Photo Credit: AP

lightbox-info

Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three. | Photo Credit: AP

Swiatek, a champion in Madrid in 2024, swatted away three break points to open up a 5-0 lead inside 23 minutes and closed out the set eight minutes later after Snigur finally got on the board.

Snigur enjoyed a much stronger start to the second set, finding the rhythm on her backhand to put pressure on Swiatek, who got broken for the first time in the contest to fall behind 0-2.

The Ukrainian’s advantage was short-lived though as Swiatek struck right back and swept the next six games to book a third-round meeting with Ann Li.

Meanwhile, Hungarian world number 63 Anna Bondar upset seventh-seeded Elina Svitolina 6-3, 6-4 to claim the first top-10 victory of her career.

Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three.

Ex-world number one Naomi Osaka began her clay-court campaign with a 6-2, 7-5 win over Colombia’s Camila Osorio. She’ll play Ukrainian qualifier Anhelina Kalinina for a spot in the last 16.

Unheralded Paraguayan stars

In men’s action, Paraguayan qualifier Adolfo Daniel Vallejo said he felt like he was living “a movie” after he dispatched former world number three Grigor Dimitrov 6-4, 6-4.

The 21-year-old cracked the top 100 for the first time last month – following a 14-1 start to the season at the Challenger level – and is making his Masters 1000 debut this week. He is the first Paraguayan to compete in Madrid Open history and will next take on American 17th seed Learner Tien.

“For me this is unbelievable. It looks like a movie, I don’t know what’s happening,” Vallejo told Tennis TV. “The other day I played on Manolo Santana centre court. Today I played here. I used to watch him (Dimitrov), all the highlights. The points that he did against me today, I used to watch it on TV and to play against him… wow, I can’t understand what’s happening. I’m just trying to enjoy all this.”

Former world number three and 2019 Madrid runner-up Stefanos Tsitsipas eked out a 3-6, 7-6[6], 7-6[4] win against American lucky loser Patrick Kypson.

Currently ranked 80 in the world, the two-time Grand Slam finalist will square off with eighth-seeded Alexander Bublik in round two.

The soon-to-be-retiring Gael Monfils lost his opener 6-3, 6-4 to Camilo Ugo Carabelli, marking his last time competing at the Madrid Open.

Published on Apr 23, 2026

#Madrid #Open #Sabalenka #Swiatek #enter">Madrid Open 2026: Sabalenka, Swiatek enter third round  Aryna Sabalenka shook off some rust to post her first victory of the season on clay and extend her winning streak to 13 matches on Thursday at the Madrid Open.The world number one, who was playing her first match since she completed the Sunshine Double by winning Indian Wells and Miami last month, committed 26 unforced errors in her 7-5, 6-3 win over American Peyton Stearns in the second round in the Spanish capital.The defending champion, in search of a fourth career title at the Caja Magica, converted four of 12 break points against Stearns, double-faulted five times, and dropped serve twice, before she made it over the finish line to set up a third-round meeting with Romanian Jaqueline Cristian. Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka in action during her round of 64 match against Peyton Stearns of the United States of America.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                REUTERS
                            

                            Belarus’ Aryna Sabalenka in action during her round of 64 match against Peyton Stearns of the United States of America.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                REUTERS
                                                    “I’m super happy to start with a win, even though maybe the tennis wasn’t that good, but I felt like with every game I was playing, the better I was playing, so I really hope in the next one I bring a better performance,” said Sabalenka, who has won a remarkable 24 of her 25 matches so far in 2026.Earlier, Iga Swiatek made quick work of her opening test in Madrid, breezing past Daria Snigur 6-1, 6-2 at the Caja Magica.The Polish fourth seed needed just 61 minutes to move past Snigur, who was coming off the first tour-level main draw victory of her career on clay over Daria Kasatkina.The Ukrainian qualifier saved four match points against Kasatkina on Wednesday, and secured the win by clinching the longest first-to-seven tiebreak at tour-level in eight years with a 15-13 scoreline.Snigur had little fight left in her for her clash with Swiatek, who barring a brief blip early in the second set was in fierce form as she continues her quest for a first clay-court title since she claimed a fourth Roland Garros crown nearly two years ago.“I’m very happy. Madrid is a special place to play, because of how special the tournament is, but also because of the conditions, so I’m happy that I adjusted well to them and was solid and just playing my game,” said Swiatek, who is contesting her second tournament under the guidance of her new coach Francis Roig. Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AP
                            

                            Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AP
                                                    Swiatek, a champion in Madrid in 2024, swatted away three break points to open up a 5-0 lead inside 23 minutes and closed out the set eight minutes later after Snigur finally got on the board.Snigur enjoyed a much stronger start to the second set, finding the rhythm on her backhand to put pressure on Swiatek, who got broken for the first time in the contest to fall behind 0-2.The Ukrainian’s advantage was short-lived though as Swiatek struck right back and swept the next six games to book a third-round meeting with Ann Li.Meanwhile, Hungarian world number 63 Anna Bondar upset seventh-seeded Elina Svitolina 6-3, 6-4 to claim the first top-10 victory of her career.Swiss 11th seed Belinda Bencic eased past Petra Marcinko 6-4, 6-2 and will next take on Russian 18th seed Diana Shnaider in round three.Ex-world number one Naomi Osaka began her clay-court campaign with a 6-2, 7-5 win over Colombia’s Camila Osorio. She’ll play Ukrainian qualifier Anhelina Kalinina for a spot in the last 16.Unheralded Paraguayan starsIn men’s action, Paraguayan qualifier Adolfo Daniel Vallejo said he felt like he was living “a movie” after he dispatched former world number three Grigor Dimitrov 6-4, 6-4.The 21-year-old cracked the top 100 for the first time last month – following a 14-1 start to the season at the Challenger level – and is making his Masters 1000 debut this week. He is the first Paraguayan to compete in Madrid Open history and will next take on American 17th seed Learner Tien.“For me this is unbelievable. It looks like a movie, I don’t know what’s happening,” Vallejo told        Tennis TV. “The other day I played on Manolo Santana centre court. Today I played here. I used to watch him (Dimitrov), all the highlights. The points that he did against me today, I used to watch it on TV and to play against him… wow, I can’t understand what’s happening. I’m just trying to enjoy all this.”Former world number three and 2019 Madrid runner-up Stefanos Tsitsipas eked out a 3-6, 7-6[6], 7-6[4] win against American lucky loser Patrick Kypson.Currently ranked 80 in the world, the two-time Grand Slam finalist will square off with eighth-seeded Alexander Bublik in round two.The soon-to-be-retiring Gael Monfils lost his opener 6-3, 6-4 to Camilo Ugo Carabelli, marking his last time competing at the Madrid Open.Published on Apr 23, 2026  #Madrid #Open #Sabalenka #Swiatek #enter

Deadspin | South Carolina lands 5-star recruit Oliviyah Edwards  Mar 30, 2026; Goodyear, AZ, USA; Oliviyah Edwards hangs upside down from the rim as she celebrates after dunking the ball during the McDonalds All American Jam Fest at Millennium High School. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images   Five-star forward Oliviyah Edwards of Washington committed to South Carolina’s 2026 recruiting class on Thursday.  The 6-foot-3 Edwards reopened her recruitment earlier this month after originally signing with Tennessee in November.  The No. 5-ranked prospect by the 247Sports composite joins Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley’s No. 2-ranked incoming class.  “I chose South Carolina because it felt like home,” Edwards told ESPN. “Coach Staley, the staff and the team showed me a level of love and belief that stood out. I know I’ll be pushed every single day, and being surrounded by that kind of energy and support means everything to me.”   The McDonald’s All-American also considered Southern California, LSU, Florida and Washington.  Edwards averaged 30 points, 22 rebounds, five blocks and four assists per game last season at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, Wash.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #South #Carolina #lands #5star #recruit #Oliviyah #EdwardsMar 30, 2026; Goodyear, AZ, USA; Oliviyah Edwards hangs upside down from the rim as she celebrates after dunking the ball during the McDonalds All American Jam Fest at Millennium High School. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Five-star forward Oliviyah Edwards of Washington committed to South Carolina’s 2026 recruiting class on Thursday.

The 6-foot-3 Edwards reopened her recruitment earlier this month after originally signing with Tennessee in November.

The No. 5-ranked prospect by the 247Sports composite joins Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley’s No. 2-ranked incoming class.


“I chose South Carolina because it felt like home,” Edwards told ESPN. “Coach Staley, the staff and the team showed me a level of love and belief that stood out. I know I’ll be pushed every single day, and being surrounded by that kind of energy and support means everything to me.”

The McDonald’s All-American also considered Southern California, LSU, Florida and Washington.

Edwards averaged 30 points, 22 rebounds, five blocks and four assists per game last season at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, Wash.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #South #Carolina #lands #5star #recruit #Oliviyah #Edwards">Deadspin | South Carolina lands 5-star recruit Oliviyah Edwards  Mar 30, 2026; Goodyear, AZ, USA; Oliviyah Edwards hangs upside down from the rim as she celebrates after dunking the ball during the McDonalds All American Jam Fest at Millennium High School. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images   Five-star forward Oliviyah Edwards of Washington committed to South Carolina’s 2026 recruiting class on Thursday.  The 6-foot-3 Edwards reopened her recruitment earlier this month after originally signing with Tennessee in November.  The No. 5-ranked prospect by the 247Sports composite joins Gamecocks coach Dawn Staley’s No. 2-ranked incoming class.  “I chose South Carolina because it felt like home,” Edwards told ESPN. “Coach Staley, the staff and the team showed me a level of love and belief that stood out. I know I’ll be pushed every single day, and being surrounded by that kind of energy and support means everything to me.”   The McDonald’s All-American also considered Southern California, LSU, Florida and Washington.  Edwards averaged 30 points, 22 rebounds, five blocks and four assists per game last season at Lincoln High School in Tacoma, Wash.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #South #Carolina #lands #5star #recruit #Oliviyah #Edwards

Post Comment