Christina Carreira’s journey to US citizenship and the Winter Olympics Today Us News


By DAVE SKRETTA

Christina Carreira made the trip across the Blue Water Bridge separating Port Huron in southeast Michigan from the Canadian town of Sarnia so many times that border officials came to know her by name.

There are many such cases in figure skating.

Anastasia Golubeva was born in Moscow but represents Australia in pairs with her partner, Hektor Moore. Olga Mikutina was born in Ukraine but has represented Austria for nearly a decade. Israeli-born Alexandra Feigin competes for Bulgaria, and pairs skater Deanna Stellato-Dudek, who still calls Chicago home, represents Canada in pairs with Maxime Deschamps.

Such nationality switches happen in plenty of other sports, whether it be American hockey players representing other, less powerful nations on Olympic ice, or San Francisco native Eileen Gu choosing to represent China in freestyle skiing.

Yet the movement of an athlete from another nation to the U.S. is relatively rare because its a long, tedious and time-consuming process.

“I’ve lived in the U.S. for almost 10 years at this point,” says Olympic ice dancer Vadym Kolesnik, who was born in Kharkiv, Ukraine, who gained his American citizenship last summer and will compete in Milan with his partner, Emilea Zingas.

“I have a car. I have a house. I have a dog. I feel very honored to represent the U.S. at such a high level,” Kolesnik says.

“He represents the American dream very well,” Zingas says. “When he got here he didn’t speak the language; he learned the language. He works here, he puts so much into representing the United States well. It is very special.”

Newly minted Americans such as Carreira and Kolesnik realize they’ve obtained their citizenship during a fraught geopolitical time. Many actions of the Trump administration, whether related to Greenland or domestic immigration, have been deeply unpopular, especially among Europeans preparing to welcome the world to the Olympics.

They frankly have no idea how they will be received when they perform at the Milano Ice Skating Arena beginning next week.

“No matter what,” Carreiera says, “it’s an honor for me to represent the U.S. I’ve lived here for half of my life. I really consider it my home.”

AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics


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