Miami Herald (Sunday)

Back to Beijing: Chinese capital hosts 2022 Winter Games

- BY GEORGE DICKIE

Anyone who tuned into the Opening Ceremony of the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing bore witness to an event they wouldn’t soon forget.

The four-hour, nine-minute display of special effects, lights and ingenuity set a new standard for an Opening Ceremony and drew raves from internatio­nal media for being spectacula­r and spellbindi­ng, a show that no host city has since matched in imaginatio­n and magnitude.

Almost 14 years later, the Chinese capital is once again in the spotlight as the host of the 2022 Winter Olympics, which get underway Wednesday, Feb. 2, two days before the official Opening Ceremony on Friday, Feb. 4. NBC, Peacock, USA Network, CNBC, NBCOlympic­s.com and NBC Sports app will again team up to provide 3,000-plus hours of coverage over 17 days of a record 109 medal events in 15 sports, among them figure skating, alpine skiing, snowboardi­ng, ice hockey, speed skating, freestyle skiing, biathlon and luge.

Internatio­nal athletes expected to vie for hardware at these Games include Mikael Kingsbury (freestyle skiing, Canada), Hanyu Yuzuru (figure skating, Japan), Mikaela Shiffrin (alpine skiing, U.S.), Francesco Friedrich (bobsled, Germany), Suzanne Schulting (short track speed skating, Netherland­s), Charlotte Kalla (cross-country skiing, Sweden), Nathan Chen (figure skating, U.S.), Eileen Gu (freestyle skiing, China), Sara Takanashi (ski jumping, Japan), Tina Hermann (skeleton, Germany) and Ester Ledecka (snowboardi­ng, alpine skiing, Czech Republic).

Of course, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic will also play into the storylines as conditions continue to change. For their part, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and Olympic organizers have made clear that these Games will go on and the athletes will be subject to strict protocols, including requiring vaccinatio­ns, keeping them isolated inside the Olympic “bubble” and not allowing them out among the citizenry.

One interestin­g thing to watch is the performanc­e of athletes from the host country at these Games. China is not known for winter sports and in the lead up to these Olympics have hired internatio­nal coaches to coach its athletes in hopes of inspiring more Chinese to try skiing, snowboardi­ng, figure skating and other winter sports and thus make the country a more significan­t presence on the internatio­nal stage.

As for opening week sports to watch, curling kicks things off on Wednesday, Feb. 2, with the U.S. facing Australia. Women’s hockey then faces off on Thursday, Feb. 3, with Team USA opening its defense of its 2018 gold medal with a preliminar­y contest against Finland.

Figure skating then gets going Friday, Feb. 4, with men’s short program, ice dance rhythm dance and pairs short program prior to the Opening Ceremony. And on Saturday, Feb. 5, freestyle skiing makes its first appearance with the final in men’s moguls, in which Canada’s Kingsbury will attempt to defend his gold medal from 2018 in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea.

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