Lindsey Vonn Plans to Compete in Winter Olympics With Ruptured ACL
The 2026 Olympic Athletes are ready to play their best—and look their best.
The athletes who will be competing in the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games gave fans a look at the new gear they were gifted upon their arrival to Italy—and it’s safe to say they’ll be showing up in style.
Unveiling their new swag bag in video hauls on their TikToks, athletes including Hahna Norman, Grace Henderson, Taylor Heise and Christina Carreira were all excited about their new clothing and accessories from Nike, SKIMS and Ralph Lauren.
Hahna, a member of the U.S. Olympic Snowboard Team, shared multiple videos of her gear haul on TikTok as she thanked Nike for their generous gifts.
“Massive shout out to Nike. All this stuff is so awesome,” she wrote in one video as she unpacked her USA duffle bag, which was filled to the brim with Nike items. “What the heck!”
Among the items in the bag were a media outfit—consisting of a puffy jacket, cargo pants, puffy pants and a base layer top—as well as a pair of zip-up lounging shoes and sneakers. There were also a variety of sports bras, sweatshirts, sweatpants, t-shirts and jackets. As expected, all of the items had “Team USA” or a similar logo embroidered onto the clothing.
“I’m in love with this,” Hahna, 21, said in her second video, showing off a red Team USA tanktop. “Holy smokes.”
The Truckee, Calif., native, who is competing in the Snowboard Pro Slopestyle event, also showed off the accessories that were packed inside the bag, including hats, beanies, socks, a headband, a scarf, a face warmer, gloves, a backpack, a hip pouch, stickers, keychains and a multitool.
Hahna Norman/TikTok
But perhaps the most notable item from Nike was a bald eagle skirt blanket, which Hahna couldn’t resist poking fun at. “We’ve got this crazy skirt thing,” she said, holding up the item, “which is a very unique piece but I don’t know, it has a big eagle with a National Park thing. I think it’s pretty cool.”
That specific item was also highlighted by ice hockey player Gwyneth Philips. Sharing a video of herself wearing the skirt blanket beside teammate Hayley Scamurra, Gwyneth joked about its practicality as she captioned the Instagram post, “Schhhwaagg.”
Gwyneth Philips/Instagram
Hahna also documented the gifts that SKIMS sent her way. From a fuzzy robe and sleep top to socks, sweatpants and tank-tops, the snowboarder was thrilled about all the gifts that were provided by Kim Kardashian’s brand—but there was one item in particular she was most pumped about.
“Last but not least, the thing I’m probably most excited for: underwear,” she said, showing off the box of SKIMS undergarments. “Some cool designs, three different pairs… I’m excited!”
Grace, a member of the Olympic Freeski Team, and Christina, an Olympic figure skater, also showed off their Nike and SKIMS items one by one in respective videos on TikTok.
@hahna.boards Team USA Olympic gear haul Nike edition. Lots of hauls coming soon so be prepared for some more vids!! #olympics #milancortina2026 #fyp #teamusagearhaul #nikeolypics
“This bag is huge, I’m very excited to open it,” Grace, 25, said in her clip, adding in the caption, “Wowowow.”
Meanwhile, Christina, 25, added in her video: “I’m obsessed… I love you so much @SKIMS”
In Taylor’s TikTok, she showed off the Ralph Lauren items she received, noting that she was “so obsessed with this stuff.” She went on to unbox various items, including a Team USA puffer jacket, sweatsuits, shirts, a bag and knit sweaters.
“Like what a dream hahah!” the 25-year-old ice hockey player wrote in the caption of her clip. “The opening and closing fits are gonna be AMAZING!”
Before the 2026 Winter Olympics officially kick off on Feb. 6, take a look back at the athletes who made history at the last Olympic games in Paris in 2024…
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Katie Ledecky
After notching a gold in 1500m freestyle, a silver in 4×200 freestyle relay and a bronze in 400m freestyle at the Paris Games, the American swimmer became the most decorated female Olympian in U.S. history.
With a career total of 13 medals, she is also the most decorated female swimmer in Olympic history.
Mustafa Yalcin/Anadolu via Getty Images
Léon Marchand
Marchand Mania was at an all-time high during the men’s 200m breaststroke final, when the French swimmer set an Olympic record of 2:05.85. The impressive time snagged Marchand his third gold medal at the Paris Games.
Manuel Reino/Shutterstock
Jessica Fox
By winning a gold medal in K1, the canoeist became the first Australian athlete to win four consecutive Olympic medals in the same event—having taken home bronze at Tokyo 2020 and at Rio de Janeiro 2016, as well as silver in London 2012.
Her C1 gold medal victory three days later made her the most-decorated Olympic slalom paddler in the world.
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Pan Zhanle
The Chinese swimmer set a new world record in men’s 100m freestyle with a gold medal-worthy time of 46.40 seconds, a full four tenths from his previous record.
Ryan Browne/Shutterstock
Cassandre Beaugrand
After braving the Seine, as well as streets of Paris on bike and foot, the Olympian claimed France’s first gold medal in triathlon with a time of 1:54:55.
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Adriana Ruano Oliva
Once an aspiring Olympic gymnast, the sports shooter notched Guatemala’s first-ever gold medal when she scored 45 points in the women’s trap event.
JEROME BROUILLET/AFP via Getty Images
Gabriel Medina
The Brazilian surfer set a new Olympic record—and went viral with this photo—when he came out of a huge barrel wave with a 9.90, the highest single-wave score in the sport since surfing made its debut at 2020 Tokyo Games.
YOAN VALAT/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Jose Torres Gil
With his golden win in the men’s park final, this BMX rider from Argentina rode his way into the history books by scoring the country’s first individual medal in the sport of cycling.
In addition, his medal was Argentina’s first in the 2024 Paris Olympics and the nation’s first gold in any sport since 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games.
Manuel Reino/Shutterstock
Simone Biles
She really is the GOAT! Biles became the most decorated U.S. Olympic gymnast in history after winning her eighth medal—her fifth gold—at the women’s gymnastics team all-around final.
Biles went on to win another gold in the individual all-around event.
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Italy Women’s Gymnastics Team
But Biles wasn’t the only gymnast who made history at the women’s all-around final: Angela Andreoli, Alice D’Amato, Manila Esposito, Elisa Iorio, Giorgia Villa nabbed Team Italy its first medal in the event since 1928 with their silver win.
Naomi Baker/Getty Images
Brazil Women’s Gymnastics Team
Rebeca Andrade, Jade Barbosa, Lorrane Oliveira, Flavia Saraiva and Julia Soares also made history on the podium, winning a bronze for Team Brazil’s first-ever medal in women’s gymnastics team all-around.
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Manu Bhaker
Just three days into the Paris Games, the sharpshooter entered the history books as the first Indian athlete to win multiple medals in a single edition of the Olympics since the nation gained independence in 1947.
She notched a bronze in the women’s 10m air pistol—making her the first female shooter from India to win a medal at any Olympics—before landing another bronze alongside teammate Sarabjot Singh in the 10m air rifle, the country’s first-ever shooting team medal.
Michael Steele/Getty Images
U.S. Women’s Rugby Team
With eight seconds left on the clock, Alex Sedrick caught a pass and scored as time ran out, leading to a conversion that resulted in a 14-12 game against Australia.
The dramatic victory gave the Women’s Eagles a bronze, Team USA’s first-ever Olympic medal in the rugby.
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David Popovici
The Olympian made history as the first Romanian man to win a gold medal for swimming when he took home the top prize in the 200m freestyle event.
Sarah Stier/Getty Images
Ryan Murphy
Just call it an American victory story! In scoring a bronze on July 29, the Team USA swimmer became the first man to win a 100m backstroke medal in three consecutive Olympics since 1972.
The prize was the latest addition to his already-impressive medal collection, which includes a bronze from Tokyo 2020 and a gold from the Rio de Janeiro Games 2016 for the same event.
FRANCK ROBICHON/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Mollie O’Callaghan
The Australian swimmer set an Olympic record with a time of 1:53.27 in women’s 200m freestyle, beating out defending champ and teammate Ariarne Titmus for the gold.
Naomi Baker/Getty Images
Hillary Heron
No other gymnast except Simone Biles has ever performed a double layout with a half-twist—a difficult move aptly dubbed “Biles I”—at the Olympics until Heron came along.
The Panamanian athlete successfully landed it while competing against the stunt’s namesake during the gymnastics qualifier.
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Christa Deguchi
Team Canada scored its first gold medal in judo thanks to Deguchi, who defeated Republic of Korea’s Huh Mimi in a heated July 29 match.
RONALD WITTEK/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock
Gretchen Walsh
In her first-ever Summer Games, the American swimmer broke the Olympic record in the 100m butterfly semifinal with a time of 55.38 seconds.
Christina Pahnke – sampics/Getty Images
South Sudan Men’s Basketball Team
South Sudan—the youngest country in the world—made its Olympics debut on July 28, with their men’s basketball team playing against Puerto Rico.
The South Sudan Bright Stars won their first-ever Olympic game with a final score of 90-79.
Clive Brunskill/Getty Images
Nino Salukvadze
The sharpshooter made Olympic history as the world’s first and only athlete to compete in 10 consecutive Summer Games when she pulled the trigger at the women’s 10m air pistol qualifers on July 27.
The three-time medalist made her Olympic debut back at 1988 Seoul.
CHINE NOUVELLE/SIPA/Shutterstock
Ahmad Abu Al-Soud
For the first time in Olympic history, Jordan was represented in men’s gymnastic when Abu Al-Soud competed on the pommel horse. He finished with a score of 12.466 during the qualification round.
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Lais Najjar
Syria also saw its first male gymnast compete in the Olympics during the Paris Summer Games, with Najjar raising the bar in the all-around event.
Daniela Porcelli/Eurasia Sport Images/Getty Images
U.S. Men’s Gymnastics Team
Stephen Nedoroscik, Frederick Richard, Brody Malone, Paul Juda and Asher Hong won Team USA’s first medal in men’s gymnastics in 16 years, earning a bronze.
Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images
Giannis Antetokounmpo
The basketball player made history as the first Black flagbearer for Greece during the Opening Ceremony.
Christian Petersen/Getty Images
Quincy Wilson
The track and field star, who turned 16 in January, “etched his name” in history, according to Team USA, when he became the youngest male athlete to make 4x400m relay squad.
Kyle Okita/CSM/Shutterstock
Hezly Rivera
As for the youngest athlete in any sport to make Team USA? That’ll be Rivera, who turned 16 just weeks before she was selected to join the women’s gymnastics team.
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