Olympic Covid restrictions are gone, but some athletes still self-quarantining toggle caption Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP For most people, if not everyone, the pandemic days of masking are behind us. In certain corners of the Winter Olympics in Italy, though, things still look a lot like they did in Covid times. Some athletes are taking extreme measures to stay healthy. When members of the U.S. women's...
Olympic Covid restrictions are gone, but some athletes still self-quarantining toggle caption Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP For most people, if not everyone, the pandemic days of masking are behind us. In certain corners of the Winter Olympics in Italy, though, things still look a lot like they did in Covid times. Some athletes are taking extreme measures to stay healthy. When members of the U.S. women's cross-country ski team walked into a news conference in a packed room at the start of the Olympics, each of them wore a mask. Jessie Diggins, the team's top athlete, said the same rules apply if she's inside with her husband, who's staying not with Diggins at the Olympics, but with family. Sponsor Message "He wants to protect my health, too. And he knows how important this is," America's most decorated cross country skier said. "And it's like, we've been waiting 10 years to have the rest of our lives together all the time, and not worrying about sickness. We can wait two more weeks. It's okay." Locked down, but that's okay At the last Olympic Games, in China, a positive coronavirus test could put athletes in an isolation hotel. Things aren't that serious this time around. But athletes in cross-country skiing are among the most susceptible to respiratory viruses, and many are being extra cautious to stay healthy during the most important competitions of their lives. Not only are many skiers and coaches wearing masks indoors. America's cross-country team, and some from Scandinavia, have dispensed with the Olympic village altogether and are renting out their own hotels, where they can avoid busy cafeterias and control who comes in and out. "We're pretty locked down trying not to get sick, and trying not to waste energy," said Ben Ogden, another star on the U.S. team. "But that's okay, because, like, we have six, seven of our best friends, like, that are inside the bubble." Not every team, though, can afford a setup like the Americans. Cross-country skiers from nations with sm...