Article

See the Adorable Moment a Dog Crashed a 2026 Winter Olympics Race — and more

See the Adorable Moment a Dog Crashed a 2026 Winter Olympics Race

A wolfdog crashes a women's cross-country skiing event at the 2026 Winter Olympics, February 18, 2026.
A wolfdog crashes a women's cross-country skiing event at the 2026 Winter Olympics, February 18, 2026. - NBC Sports/YouTube

A surprising competitor joined in on a women’s cross-country skiing event at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

As skiers reached the end of the Wednesday, February 18, event, a dog found its way onto the course and crossed the finish line. “Racing to the line there, the crowd clearly enjoying this,” one commentator quipped in a clip of the race shared via the NBC’s Olympics social media pages. A second commentator joked, “The biggest cheer of the day is not for any of the skiers so far.”

On Wednesday’s episode of Today, Peter Alexander clarified that the animal is a Czechoslovakian wolfdog who belongs to a local native.

In a statement to Today.com, Fondazione Milano Cortina 2026 said they were “aware that during the Cross-Country Skiing Women’s Team Sprint Free qualification at the Tesero Cross Country Stadium, a domesticated wolfdog briefly entered the lanes behind the athletes, shortly before they crossed the finish line.”

According to the statement, “The episode did not interrupt or interfere with the competition in any way. The animal was promptly secured and returned to its owner, from whom it had accidentally slipped away.”

Croatian skier Tena Hadzic recalled seeing the dog on the course in an interview with NPR on Wednesday. “I was like, ‘Am I hallucinating?'” she joked. “I don’t know what I should do, because maybe he could attack me, bite me.”

Hadzic said the incident was “not that big [a] deal,” and that she was not “fighting for medals or anything big.” She added, “But if that happened in the finals, it could really cost someone the medals, or a really good result.”

Per NPR, the 2-year-old dog, named Nazgul, was returned to his home at a nearby bed-and-breakfast shortly after the race. Nazgul’s owners are reportedly related to an event official.

“He was crying this morning more than normal because he was seeing us leaving — and I think he just wanted to follow us,” the owner, who remained anonymous, told the outlet. “He always looks for people.” The owner affectionately described the dog as “stubborn, but very sweet.”

Needless to say, Nazgul’s Olympics debut sparked strong reactions from viewers online. “How cute is he! A little ‘nosey’ but adorable,” one X user wrote, referring to how the dog sniffed one of the athletes after the race. Another person tweeted, “You cross the finish line – one of the greatest achievements you could ever hope for as an athlete. And the moment is absolutely stolen by a dog that just was out for a stroll. ��.”

Someone else shared, “They deserve a medal, and a treat.” A separate person posted, “We demand dogs and cats in all Olympic sports! Cats in curling next! ������.” A different user dubbed the cameo as “the bestest winter Olympic moment ��.”

Read the latest entertainment news on TV Insider.

Hornets’ LaMelo Ball crashes custom Hummer in Uptown

Charlotte Hornets star LaMelo Ball was in a wreck Wednesday afternoon in the heart of Uptown Charlotte.

Chopper 9 SkyZoom flew over the scene of Trade and Tryon streets where a sedan was damaged and in the middle of the intersection. Ball’s custom 2022 GMC Hummer EV Edition 1 was on the side of the street missing a front wheel.

Witnesses told Channel 9 a gray Kia sedan was going east on Trade Street. Ball was going west on Trade when he tried to take left onto the one-way Tryon Street, which was when the collision happened.

Witnesses said they saw Ball get out of the Hummer and get in a Lamborghini.

One person had non-life-threatening injuries, MEDIC said.

Expect delays along the Gold Line due to the crash that’s blocking the eastbound and westbound tracks at Trade and Tryon. Streetcars will operate between CTC and Sunnyside stations.

No additional details have been made available.

This is a developing story. Check back with wsoctv.com and watch Eyewitness News for updates.

Get to Know a College Basketball Mid-Major: Big West

You know all about the Power 6 conferences in college basketball. You hear about those more than any other, and those groups often dominate the March Madness conversation. There are 31 other conferences out there, however, and our goal is to get you up to speed on the teams, players and fights in the standings to know before the conference tournaments, Selection Sunday and the official start of March Madness. It’s time for you to get to know a mid-major: this time, it’s the Big West. The Big West name works in a couple of different ways. For one, most of it is located in California, which is about as big and west as you can get — for the purposes of this wordplay, Alaska is more like the big northwest. Hawaii is there, too, and while that isn’t big, it’s more west than the rest. While there have been plenty of other non-California schools in the Big West over the years and decades, in the present, it’s all California besides Hawaii. And next year, it will be all California besides Utah Valley, but that’s a 2026-2027 discussion. As of now, there are 11 teams in the conference, and the top eight will qualify for the Big West conference tournament in March. The top two seeds receive byes straight to the semifinals, awaiting whichever teams come out of the battles of the first two rounds, while seeds three and four get a pass to the quarterfinals. In both men’s and women’s basketball, the automatic bid has been the only way into March Madness over the last three years. Given the makeup of the conference in 2025-2026, that is unlikely to change, either, but that isn’t the same thing as saying that we already know who is going to represent the conference in March. That is an open question for both the men and women. Big West — Men’s College Basketball Leaders: Hawaii and UC Irvine are tied at 10-4 atop the Big West, and have already played each other twice: the Rainbow Warriors won the first matchup by the narrow score of 67-66, and the Anteaters took the second in overtime, 87-76. Behind these two in the standings is UC Santa Barbara, at 10-5, Cal State Northridge (9-5), UC Davis (9-6), Cal State Fullerton (8-7), UC San Diego (8-7) and Cal Poly (7-8). The other teams — all below the Big West tournament qualification as of now — are Long Beach State (4-10), UC Riverside (3-12) and Cal State Bakersfield (2-12). The lone top-100 team in the NCAA Evaluation Tool is Hawaii, just sneaking in at 99th. UC Irvine is 119th, UC San Diego 126th, UC Santa Barbara 135th, rounding out the top-150 teams. Hawaii has four of the conference’s top-20 players in Player Efficiency Rating (PER), with senior center and seven-footer Isaac Johnson second at 25.6, senior guard Quandre Bullock (18.2), senior forward Harry Rouhliadeff (18.1) and senior forward Gytis Nemeiksa (17.0) 15th, 17th and 18th in PER — no one else in the conference has more than three (UC San Diego has the 4th, 14th and 20th players), while UC Irvine has two. Top-rated senior forward Kyle Evans (26.5) sophomore guard Jurian Dixon, at 19th (16.5). Hawaii, UC Irvine and UC San Diego are much closer together in KenPom, at 103, 115 and 118, respectively, with Hawaii’s defense being the reason the Rainbow Warriors are first up. While adjusted for strength of schedule Hawaii doesn’t stack up against the competition, on the season it has allowed 99.9 points per 100 possessions, the 36th-best Defensive Rating in Division I. The offense, however, comes in at 216th. UC Santa Barbara is best in class there, at 70th with 116.3 points per 100 possessions, basically making it the opposite of Hawaii because of its own defensive issues. Given the stacking at the top and the relative closeness of these teams in NET and KenPom, just who will emerge from the Big West tournament is unclear. Hawaii and UC Irvine have the best chance through Feb. 17, however, almost entirely because of seeding: getting a pass right to the semifinals as one of the top two seeds is the path of least resistance, and that is going to matter in a conference where so many teams stack up well against each other. Big West - Women’s College Basketball Leaders: Things are a little less clustered, though not entirely so, on the women’s side of the Big West. UC San Diego is in first at 13-2, with 12-2 UC Irvine holding the second seed. UC Davis is half-a-game back at 12-3, with Cal State Fullerton 11-4. Some space begins to open up for the teams looking at byes, however, as UC Santa Barbara is two games back at 9-6 and Hawaii 8-6. Then the last two teams currently qualifying for the Big West tournament are the under-.500 UC Riverside (6-9) and Cal State Northridge (4-10). Cal State Bakersfield and Long Beach State are both 2-12, while Cal Poly is 1-14. UC Irvine is in bubble territory, at 71st in NET: it’s the lone school in the conference with that designation. UC San Diego might be first in the conference, but NET has it 132nd overall. UC Santa Barbara (143), UC Davis (159), Hawaii (166) and Cal State Fullerton (198) are all within the top-200 in the NCAA Evaluation Tool. After that, the rest of the teams are in or near the bottom-100 in Division I. So, plenty of competition at the top, even if UC Irvine sticks out more than the rest as a potentially genuine tourney-caliber team, but it gets thin. The Anteaters are the lone team in the Big West with an Offensive Rating putting them at over 100 points per 100 possessions (100.34). UC Davis is next up, at 93.33, and again, it thins out in a hurry. Hawaii has the 91st-best Defensive Rating, however, best in the conference, at 87.91 points per 100 possessions. UC Irvine is right behind it, then UC San Diego, so it’s not much of an advantage — there is a reason the Anteaters are on top in more ways than one, basically. UC Irvine is 22nd in made 3-pointers per game in D-I women’s basketball, with 8.76, and 26th in 3-point shooting percentage at 35.8%. It’s a top-100 rebounding school, too, and while it doesn’t stack up fantastically defensively against the larger Division I landscape, within the Big West its 53.1 points per game allowed is the best mark in the conference. UC Riverside’s Hannah Wickstrom is a legitimate scoring threat, currently sixth in D-I at 23.2 points per game. She’s also first in PER, and it isn’t close — 35.2 to Cal State Fullerton’s Cristina Jones, at 28.4. (Jones, in addition to being one of D-I’s best thieves, is scoring 16.5 points per game as a freshman guard while pulling down 9.4 rebounds). It hasn’t helped UC Riverside to a great record, but the presence of the star sophomore guard and a potential big scoring game does make the Highlanders a potential threat in every conference tourney game regardless. Then there is Megan Norris, out of UC Davis: the 6-foot-3 senior center is third in all of Division I in rebounds per game, but she’s also managed 12.6 points, 2.6 assists, over a steal and 1.5 blocks per game, and is seventh in the Big West in PER, as well.

Game on?! Bueno curls in sensational strike to halve Wolves' deficit against Arsenal

Bueno curls in sensational strike to halve Wolves' deficit against Arsenal in the Premier League.

In brief

USA Winter Olympics star swaps a medal for a ring as she proposes to her speedskater girlfriend in Italy Knight, the women's hockey captain, posted a video on Instagram on Wednesday of the moment she proposed to speedskater Bowe.

Boston Red Sox fans in meltdown over major problem with their 2026 jerseys Boston Red Sox fans are accusing MLB's apparel partner of everything from sloppiness to crimes against humanity after the team's jerseys were unveiled at spring training.

Giannis Antetokounmpo has message for fans after All-Star Weekend Coming off of Giannis Antetokounmpo's 10th NBA All-Star Weekend – a break from a season that's been riddled with injury and noise – the Milwaukee Bucks superstar had this message for his fans.

El primer gran examen del Real Madrid de Scariolo: "Se acerca lo que siempre me ha gustado" Líder sólido en ACB pero irregular en Europa, los blancos buscan la reconquista en la Copa, un torneo al que el italiano regresa 12 años después. Contra Unicaja en cuartos. Leer

Patriots named as potential landing spot for $25 million sack monster This would be a big move for New England.

Mark Cuban's viewpoint on tanking ignores the impact of gambling Former Dallas Mavericks majority owner Mark Cuban, who still has a piece of the team, has an interesting take on tanking.

Dani Miret, entrenador del Joventut: "Con Ricky me ha tocado la lotería" El joven técnico de la Penya, que este jueves abre la Copa contra el anfitrión Valencia, reflexiona sobre el retorno del base al club en el que se formó. "Me impacta cómo se sienta con un compañero después de un mal partido: '¿Qué necesitas? Yo te voy a ayudar'". Leer