Surprise 4-legged Olympic competitor wows cross-country fans

11 hours ago 8
A dog wanders on the snow in front of a barrier with the Olympic rings on it.

A dog wanders on the ski trail during the women's team cross-country free sprint qualification event of the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics in Lago di Tesero, Italy, on Wednesday. Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images

LAGO DI TESERO, Italy — A local dog made a bid for Olympic glory Wednesday morning, breaking out of his doghouse and onto the homestretch of the cross-country ski course in the middle of a race.

Two-year-old Nazgul was quickly collared by race officials and returned unharmed to his home at a nearby bed-and-breakfast, but not before his genial presence lit up television sets and social media channels around the world — even if he perplexed some of the athletes who encountered him.

Amber Glenn reacts to her score in the women's short program event on Tuesday. She got docked for landing a double loop instead of a triple loop, despite an otherwise strong performance.

"I was like, 'Am I hallucinating?" said Tena Hadzic, a 21-year-old Croatian skier who encountered the dog on her trip down the homestretch. "I don't know what I should do, because maybe he could attack me, bite me."

A dog races across the snow toward athletes on skis in front of a barrier that has the Olympic rings on it.

A dog later identified as a local named Nazgul sprints across the snow at the Winter Games.
Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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Anne-Christine Poujoulat/AFP via Getty Images

Race organizers did not make Nazgul available for questions after his capture.

U.S. cross-country ski team coach Matt Whitcomb with Yolanda the wax truck and some of the 600 pairs of skis it holds at a World Cup race in Goms, Switzerland Jan. 23, 2026

But his owners are related to an event official, who connected them with NPR for a brief interview while they were driving to watch an Olympic biathlon race at another venue.

"He was crying this morning more than normal because he was seeing us leaving — and I think he just wanted to follow us," said the owner, who was granted anonymity because of the intense media scrutiny of Nazgul's escape. "He always looks for people."

Nazgul is a "stubborn, but very sweet" Czechoslovakian wolfdog, the owner said.

Nazgul's saunter down the homestretch didn't appear to have a significant impact on the cross-country team sprint: A preliminary qualifying round was unfolding at the time, and the top medal contenders had already finished.

But Hadzic, the Croatian, said her initial reaction likely did cost her "some seconds."

"It's not that big deal, because I'm not fighting for medals or anything big," she said. "But if that happened in the finals, it could really cost someone the medals, or a really good result."

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