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A part-time job and DJ gigs helped Lara Hamilton reach the Winter Olympics. Now she wants to put Australia on the map

about 8 hours ago
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When Lara Hamilton started skiing as a child her parents would not let her join them on the slopes until she could keep up.Off she went to ski school, while her mum and dad traversed the New South Wales ski town of Perisher unshackled by children.Her dad raced World Cup Nordic skiing, so they didn’t dawdle.Now, Hamilton is about to make her Winter Olympics debut, and she is solely focused on keeping pace with the best ski mountaineers in the world.“It was just in the family and we had a lot of old gear and he taught me and my sister how to Nordic ski,” Hamilton says.

“Then I found backcountry skiing when I moved to the US for college in 2019, and then slowly the backcountry skiing turned into ski mountaineering because I saw a way to do what I was doing on a heavy setup, much faster.I invested in the lighter stuff and made friends who taught me what they knew, and off I went.”Ski mountaineering, or skimo, is making its Olympic debut at Milano Cortina 2026.Skimo involves a combination of ascending a mountain on skins (sticky synthetic strips on the underside of skis that give traction), hiking or “boot-packing” with the skis stowed on your back, and descending on skis.Transitioning quickly between the three elements is the key to success in the sprint formats that will be showcased at the Games.

But Hamilton’s snow-capped upbringing and college influence are only part of her journey to skimo and Milano Cortina,Another significant factor, common across many skimo athletes, is running,“I randomly decided to enter a race when I was 17 and I happened to win,” Hamilton says, “And I was like, ‘OK, maybe I’m actually good at running’,”She is better than good,Winning that Sydney Harbour 5km race in 2015 was a step towards a US college scholarship for track and cross-country (to complete a master in opera singing, no less), which has been interspersed with success in trail running, including representing Australia at the World Mountain and Trail Running Championships.

“My trail running results are arguably still to this point better than my mountaineering results, although I’m starting to catch up,” she says,“So I know I’m good at the highly aerobic stuff,And I think it’s so cool to try and put Australia on the map in that shorter distance trail running,”Skiing and trail running converge perfectly at ski mountaineering,Add into the mix that skimo can take you off piste and into the wild without the need for a life pass and Hamilton was quickly hooked.

“There’s a feeling of home just being in the forest or, as we say, the bush,” she says.“When you go out before the lifts open, and you’re watching the sun come up, and you hear the birds, it’s a feeling that you can get at any Alpine area.Everything’s just calm and you’re just immersed in nature.It’s the best way to start the day.”A specialised skimo coach was not even in the picture until October 2025.

Since then, Hamilton’s results have drastically improved and while she is undeniably excited for the Games in Italy, finding out what she could achieve beyond them is an equally strong motivator.But there are two challenges that are constantly causing her progress to falter: the state of her bank balance and the state of her spine.The first is a perennial problem for Australia’s winter athletes.Hamilton constantly feels like she is “living off the smell of an oily rag”, a fitting idiom which reminds her of home from her French base.Sport costs are covered by donations, minimal government funding, and her income from a minimum-wage part-time job, DJ gigs and Nordic ski coaching.

“The Olympics are funded, and then nothing,” she says.“And there’s still five more races in the season.Right now, I’m actually a little bit stressed because the Olympics are important, but I’m committed to this sport … what about the rest of my season? So there’s a bit of a conflict there.”The second challenge is uniquely Hamilton’s: an inflammatory condition called ankylosing spondylitis (AS) which affects her sacroiliac joints.It can cause pain and stiffness and the progression of the disease is not linear, which can make training and competition hard.

“I just have a course of treatment that I take a couple of times every month, but the problem is the immunosuppression component and constantly having to time it around competitions,” Hamilton says.Fortunately, the skimo events at Milano Cortina line up “pretty well” with her treatment schedule – the individual competition runs on Thursday – so she is optimistic that it won’t upend her preparations at the last minute.In the long-term the picture is murkier but Hamilton does not seem like one to linger too long on unknowns.“Is there a point where I’m going to be stuck to just low impact sports?” she asks.“I don’t know, but I’m just going to keep going as long as I can and try not to predict the future because honestly, none of us know if there’s going to be cure.

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Surging prediction markets face legal backlash in US: ‘Lines have been blurred’

State lawmakers and gaming regulators across the US are escalating their fight against prediction markets, arguing that the fast-growing platforms are “basically gambling but with another name”.At least 20 federal lawsuits have been filed nationwide, disputing whether companies such as Kalshi and Polymarket should be treated as federally regulated financial exchanges, as they maintain, or as gambling operations that should be regulated like state-licensed sportsbooks.The row escalated this week, when the chair of the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which oversees these platforms, announced that it was filing a friend-of-the-court brief in defense of “its exclusive jurisdiction over these derivative markets’”.The legal battle comes as the sector surges. More than $1bn was traded on Kalshi alone during Super Bowl Sunday, and Bloomberg reported that Kalshi’s January trading volume reached nearly $10bn, most of it tied to sports

about 10 hours ago
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Boohoo and Debenhams owner raises £35m, risking Mike Ashley clash

The owner of Boohoo and Debenhams is raising £35m from shareholders in a move that could open a fresh conflict with Sports Direct founder Mike Ashley.The company, which also owns Oasis, Warehouse, Pretty Little Thing and Karen Millen, said on Tuesday that the new cash would help reduce debts and fund its turnaround plans. These involve slashing costs, selling off a distribution centre and operating Debenhams as an online marketplace for other brands.The fund raise, backed by the Boohoo founder, Mahmud Kamani, comes less than 18 months after the group raised £39m from shareholders as it battles to revive sales amid heavy competition from rivals such as Shein and Vinted.Debenhams, which changed its name from Boohoo last year, posted a share price fall of 16% on Tuesday

about 10 hours ago
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TikTok creator ByteDance vows to curb AI video tool after Disney threat

ByteDance, the Chinese technology company behind TikTok, has said it will restrain its AI video-making tool, after threats of legal action from Disney and a backlash from other media businesses, according to reports.The AI video generator Seedance 2.0, released last week, has spooked Hollywood as users create realistic clips of movie stars and superheroes with just a short text prompt.Several big Hollywood studios have accused the tool of copyright infringement.On Friday, Walt Disney reportedly sent a cease-and-desist letter to ByteDance which accused it of supplying Seedance with a “pirated library” of the studio’s characters, including those from Marvel and Star Wars, according to the US news outlet Axios

1 day ago
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Google puts users at risk by downplaying health disclaimers under AI Overviews

Google is putting people at risk of harm by downplaying safety warnings that its AI-generated medical advice may be wrong.When answering queries about sensitive topics such as health, the company says its AI Overviews, which appear above search results, prompt users to seek professional help, rather than relying solely on its summaries. “AI Overviews will inform people when it’s important to seek out expert advice or to verify the information presented,” Google has said.But the Guardian found the company does not include any such disclaimers when users are first presented with medical advice.Google only issues a warning if users choose to request additional health information and click on a button called “Show more”

1 day ago
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England turn to Henry Pollock in bid to banish Murrayfield blues

A week can be a long time in the Six Nations, never mind in politics. One minute England are contemplating title showdowns in Paris, the next they face a must-win game against Ireland to remain in contention. A swift riposte to the defeat in Scotland last weekend is required urgently and Steve Borthwick’s team selection reflects the management’s desire for a significant gear change.It has clearly played straight into the hands of Henry Pollock, whose ambition to start for England is about to be realised after seven caps off the bench. His promotion reflects the need to re-energise all involved in the Murrayfield meltdown, as does the starting return of Tom Curry and Ollie Lawrence, Tommy Freeman’s shift back to the wing and Marcus Smith’s bench resurrection

about 2 hours ago
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Borthwick backs ‘superstar’ Pollock to deliver euphoria when England host Ireland

Steve Borthwick has backed Henry Pollock to thrive in the face of any wind-up tactics from Ireland on his first England start on Saturday, tipping his rising star to bring “euphoria” to Twickenham.Pollock comes into the side at No 8 as England seek to get their Six Nations campaign back on track and goes up against a raft of players and coaches with whom he rubbed shoulders on the British & Irish Lions tour of Australia last summer. Borthwick, however, has challenged the 21-year-old player to express himself in front of the Twickenham crowd.Pollock’s excitable nature and his penchant for try celebrations has regularly made him a target for opponents in the past, most notably for Northampton against Bordeaux, and he was involved in a post-match scuffle with the French prop Jefferson Poirot after the Champions Cup final last season. Bordeaux players rubbed salt into the wounds on social media after their victory and when the two sides met again in the competition this season, Pollock came in for further targeted treatment

about 3 hours ago
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UK shelves £110m frictionless post-Brexit trade border project

about 11 hours ago
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Hyatt chair Thomas Pritzker steps down over Epstein links

about 11 hours ago
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EU to investigate Shein over sale of childlike sex dolls and weapons

about 11 hours ago
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UK unemployment rate hits five-year high of 5.2% as wage growth cools

about 13 hours ago
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Gloom for UK workers as incomes flatline and jobs market falters

about 13 hours ago
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Coles tells court its Down Down promotions were ‘fair dinkum’ and did not mislead shoppers

about 17 hours ago