Remi Chauveau Notes
Team France enters Milano‑Cortina 2026 carrying the weight of its winter legacy and the fire of a new generation ready to turn effort, elegance, and national pride into Olympic medals.
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🥇🇫🇷 Team France at Milano‑Cortina 2026: Ready to Bring Medals Home 🏂🏔️❄️

4 February 2026
@lestrepublicain Lou Jeanmonnot, Éric Perrot, Guillaume Cizeron ou encore Perrine Laffont... À Milan-Cortina, la délégation française s’annonce plus forte que jamais. Avec 166 athlètes, c’est un record absolu pour des Jeux d’hiver. Avec un effectif aussi large, l’ambition est claire : viser le top 5 au classement des nations. #ebrainfo ♬ son original - L'Est Républicain

In many ways, Team France’s journey to Milano‑Cortina echoes the spirit of “Au bout de mes rêves”, carried first by Jean‑Jacques Goldman and reborn through the voices of Amandine Bourgeois and Emmanuel Moire on Génération Goldman, a song about pushing past limits, trusting the climb, and believing that effort shapes destiny — a philosophy that mirrors Pierre de Coubertin’s Olympic vision and the quiet fire driving every French athlete toward the Italian mountains. As France steps into 2026 with its blend of legacy and promise, the anthem’s message feels almost tailor‑made for this moment: a reminder that what matters most is the courage to chase the summit, the resilience to keep rising, and the certainty that, at the end of their dreams, something extraordinary might be waiting.

🎶 🇫🇷 ❄️ 🏔️🎿 🏂⛷️ ⛸️🥇 🔥🌟 🎧 🌠 🔊 Au bout de mes rêves - Amandine Bourgeois, Emmanuel Moire




“L’important dans la vie ce n’est point le triomphe, mais l’effort.” — Pierre de Coubertin

Those words feel especially resonant as Team France arrives at Milano‑Cortina 2026 with a delegation built not only on talent, but on resilience, precision, and the desire to transform years of preparation into Olympic brilliance. Across biathlon, snowboard cross, freestyle skiing, alpine, figure skating, and bobsleigh, France steps into these Games with a rare balance of established champions and rising stars — a team ready to give everything on every course, every track, and every sheet of ice the Italian mountains will offer.

🇫🇷 Biathlon

Biathlon remains France’s most powerful medal engine at Milano‑Cortina, and the team arrives with the confidence of a nation that has shaped the World Cup landscape for years. On the women’s side, Justine Braisaz‑Bouchet and Julia Simon form a fearsome duo: Braisaz‑Bouchet’s explosive skiing and Simon’s icy, almost surgical shooting make them contenders in every race format, from sprint to pursuit to mass start. Lou Jeanmonnot adds depth with her rising consistency and podium‑level calm. The men’s team is just as formidable, led by Quentin Fillon‑Maillet, already a double Olympic champion, and Émilien Jacquelin, whose pursuit world titles prove he thrives under pressure. Together, they anchor relay teams that France expects to see fighting for medals again, making biathlon the discipline where the nation could realistically collect multiple podiums.

🏂 Snowboard Cross

Snowboard cross has become a French signature, and Milano‑Cortina offers another chance to extend that legacy. Chloé Trespeuch, already decorated with Olympic silver and bronze, enters the Games as one of the most experienced and reliable riders in the field. Her ability to read chaotic races, anticipate collisions, and stay composed in the pack makes her a constant medal threat. On the men’s side, Merlin Surget brings raw acceleration and a string of recent World Cup podiums that position him as a genuine contender. Together, they form one of the most balanced and dangerous SBX squads in the world.

🎿 Freestyle Skiing

Freestyle skiing blends artistry, risk, and instinct — and France has athletes capable of turning that volatility into medals. Antoine Adelisse, when fully healthy, remains one of the most technically gifted Big Air skiers on the planet, capable of tricks that can instantly shift the outcome of a final. Kim Dumont Zanella adds a fresh spark in slopestyle, her amplitude, fluidity, and creative line choices marking her as one of the discipline’s rising names. In a sport where momentum can flip in a heartbeat, France has the kind of athletes who can seize the moment and turn it into something spectacular.

⛷️ Alpine Skiing

In alpine skiing, France leans on precision, experience, and the ability to deliver under pressure. Clément Noël remains one of the world’s most elegant and controlled slalom skiers, and his Olympic title proves he can rise to the occasion when everything is on the line. His clean, economical technique makes him a medal favorite once again. On the speed side, Romane Miradoli brings real potential in Super‑G, her World Cup victory demonstrating her ability to attack technical sections with confidence and authority. While the alpine field is always fiercely competitive, France enters with athletes capable of podium‑level runs in both technical and speed events.

⛸️ Figure Skating

Figure skating has never been France’s primary medal source at the Winter Games, but the team heading to Milano‑Cortina carries quiet, intriguing potential. Camille and Pavel Kovalev have developed into a polished, expressive pairs team capable of climbing into the top tier with a clean skate. Lorine Schild, still young, brings freshness and promise to women’s singles, with the ability to deliver sharp, elegant short programs. While medals are less certain here, the French delegation has the talent to reach finals and capitalize on any opening.

đź›· Bobsleigh

In monobob, Margot Boch represents France’s hopes with a steady upward trajectory. Her progression on the World Cup circuit places her among the athletes who could break into the top tier, especially in a discipline where tiny margins can reshape the standings. With clean lines, a strong push, and the composure she has shown in recent seasons, Boch has the potential to fight for a podium spot and deliver a surprise for France.

#TeamFrance 🇫🇷 #MilanoCortina2026 ❄️ #EspritBleu 🔥 #JeuxOlympiques 🏔️ #BleuBlancRouge 💙

France 2026 Winter Olympics

France’s Winter Spirit: A Legacy of Triumph, A Future of Fire
France’s ambitions for Milano‑Cortina don’t exist in a vacuum; they’re built on a lineage of winter triumphs that have shaped the nation’s sporting identity, from Jean‑Claude Killy’s legendary triple gold in 1968 to the modern biathlon dynasty forged by Martin Fourcade and carried today by a new generation. That history isn’t just nostalgia — it’s a foundation that gives this 2026 delegation a sense of continuity and purpose, a belief that France doesn’t just participate in the Winter Games, it leaves a mark on them. With biathlon at full power, snowboard cross at its most explosive, alpine and freestyle skiing entering with real podium threats, and even figure skating and bobsleigh showing fresh promise, France stands at a moment where past victories and present potential converge. Milano‑Cortina isn’t just another chapter; it’s a chance for France to extend its legacy and write the next line in a story that has always been defined by elegance, precision, and the quiet certainty that more medals are within reach.

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