Nordic combined - the only event in which women cannot compete
American Nordic combined skier Annika Malacinski dreams of becoming an Olympic athlete.
Instead, she must watch from the sidelines as her younger brother, Niklas, realises that dream at the 2026 Winter Games.
The event has been a feature of the Winter Olympics since the first edition in Chamonix in 1924 but has only ever been open to men, despite there being women's World Cup and World Championship events.
A similar proposal was made before the Beijing Olympics four years ago - both were denied.
"For years my team-mates and I have been speaking up, protesting and fighting for the chance to stand on the same Olympic start line as the men," she said. "We're still here, we're still pushing, we're not giving up. "
This year 36 athletes are taking part in the men's event in Italy, down from 55 at Beijing 2022.
IOC spokesman Mark Adams said: "To all intents and purposes we are gender balanced.
We are taking a look at this [Nordic combined] here, the participants generally are from a small number of countries - it needs to be more universal and we will take a look at it for the next Winter Games. "
If Nordic combined stays, women will be part of it
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