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A white stoat, known as an ermine, holds prey, in Ormea, Italy in this photo from December of 2011.

Tina and Milo — the sibling mascots representing the 2026 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, respectively — have bounced aroundMilan and Cortina, chopping it up with Snoop Dogg and cheering onathletes from the stands.

Grinning, plushie variations are coveted items of Olympics merch, and the organizers have assigned the slender, sharp-eyed creatures distinct personalities and pursuits: Tina, along with her cream-colored fur, has developed an affinity for curling; the brown-coated Milo, whose official biography says he was born lacking one paw, is liable to taking part in sensible jokes.

MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 13: Vladimir Samoilov of Team Poland reacts with his team in the Kiss and Cry zone after competing in the Men Single Skating on day seven of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on February 13, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Matthew Stockman/Getty Images)

Why a pierogi and the mascot stoats are promoting out on the Winter Olympics

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In Italian, Tina and Milo are referred to as “ermellini.” For English-speaking Olympic followers, although, the phrase getting used is “stoats.”

“Stoat” — a phrase first recorded in the 1400s and which stems from the Middle English “stote” — is likely one of the English names for a small predatory mammal, Mustela erminea, with a brief, black-tipped tail, discovered not solely in the Italian Alps however throughout a broad stretch of Europe, Asia and North America. Stoats are six to 12 inches lengthy, with brown coats that, in some subspecies, flip white in the winter besides for the black tail tip.

Small although they’re, stoats belong to the famously fierce mustelid household, a carnivorous classification that additionally contains otters, ferrets and wolverines. They are very smart, voracious predators who can take down prey six instances their dimension, says Andrew Veale, a wildlife geneticist and ecologist who has mapped the stoat genome.

As for their Olympic credentials, Veale calls them “the greatest athletes of the animal world.”

Read more about stoats here.



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