Access Issues Leave 2026 Winter Olympics Alpine Skiing Schedule Unclear

Efforts to view the official alpine skiing schedule for the 2026 Winter Olympics ran into technical roadblocks, leaving athletes, broadcasters and fans without a definitive timetable. Error messages surfaced when visitors tried to load pages that normally carry the full event calendar, creating confusion as the Games approach.
What went wrong and what’s missing
Users attempting to reach the schedule encountered messages such as “ERROR: The request could not be satisfied” and “429 Too Many Requests, ” preventing access to the detailed alpine skiing timetable. The interruptions affected pages that typically list competition dates, start times and the order of disciplines, so the full schedule — including run orders for men’s and women’s events and the mixed team relay — is not currently available in a reliable, central location.
Key missing elements include confirmed dates for each alpine discipline, published start times in Eastern Time (ET), and any adjustments for weather contingencies. Without those items, broadcasters cannot finalize windows, national teams cannot lock down warm-up and training timelines, and ticketed spectators lack clarity on when to arrive.
How athletes, teams and fans should respond
Teams and athletes should operate under contingency planning: maintain flexible travel and training schedules and keep open lines to national federation communications. Expect last-minute timetable releases in the days before competition in the event pages are restored. National team coordinators typically receive internal briefings that precede public schedule postings, so athletes should remain in close contact with their federation representatives.
For fans planning travel or broadcast viewing, take a cautious approach. Delay nonrefundable travel commitments where possible, or confirm change and cancellation policies. When the schedule is restored, event times will be published in local time and should be converted to Eastern Time for viewing and travel arrangements.
Typical sequencing of Olympic alpine events historically includes downhill, super-G, alpine combined, giant slalom, slalom and a mixed team event, though exact ordering and spacing vary by Games. Broadcasters and event organizers often schedule speed events earlier in the Olympic window and technical events later, but that pattern is not a guarantee for 2026.
Practical tips until the schedule is confirmed
– Keep alert subscriptions enabled for official communications and email lists from your national federation or ticket vendor so you receive schedule updates immediately in ET.
– Check competition start-time notices once pages are restored and adjust plans with the understanding that morning local starts typically translate to late-night or early-morning ET viewing windows.
– If you purchased tickets, review refund and rebooking terms; many organizers offer flexibility for schedule shifts caused by weather or operational issues.
– Broadcasters and stream providers will post final start times once they receive the official schedule; plan viewing parties or broadcasts with contingency timing in mind.
Filmogaz will publish updates as soon as the alpine skiing timetable is available and verified. Until then, expect intermittent restorations of schedule pages and possible rapid revisions depending on weather forecasts and logistical checks carried out by event organizers.




