Testing Begins At Cortina's Controversial Olympic Sliding Track For Bobsled, Luge And Skeleton

testing begins at cortinas controversial olympic sliding track for bobsled luge and skeleton

When Italian skeleton competitor Mattia Gaspari became the first athlete to test the controversial sliding track for next year's Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, he did so in a sort of tunnel under a temporary roof built of wooden beams and white plastic paper.

That's because the sliding center in Cortina d'Ampezzo is still under construction and the only part that is really finished is the track structure.

Still, getting to this point little more than a year after construction began is a big achievement for the Italian government, which rebuilt the century-old track despite calls from the International Olympic Committee to hold bobsled, luge and skeleton athletes at a venue in nearby Austria or Switzerland instead.

"It's really been quite an adventure," Infrastructure and Transport Minister Matteo Salvini said Tuesday.

"I want to thank the construction firm, which was the first one to believe in this, and the journalists who motivated us," said Salvini, who is also the deputy premier, citing articles claiming that the project would never be done. "Well, here we are."