Even without coming to the Winter Olympics in Italy, Donald Trump and his polarising policies and provocations are dominating, even distracting.
Of all the security agents chosen to protect the official US delegation, ICE is in Milan for the expected opening ceremony visits by vice president JD Vance and secretary of state Marco Rubio.
They are the Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel called a "militia that kills" by Milan mayor Beppe Sala following the deaths of two Americans last month in Minneapolis.
There have been attempts by the Italian government to allay fears about their deployment, insisting they won't have powers to conduct policing in the streets.
But just their presence here has been a concern for protesting locals in Milan.
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Add in how tensions have been stoked in recent weeks between Mr Trump and Europe over his threats to capture Greenland, and it all raises the potential for a hostile atmosphere greeting American officials and athletes in the opening ceremony at the San Siro home of AC and Inter Milan on Friday night.
So, I asked International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Kirsty Coventry: would jeering be freedom of expression, or is there a need for spectators to show respect?
"I hope that the opening ceremony is seen by everyone as an opportunity to be respectful of each other," Ms Coventry said, reflecting on seeing athletes from different countries mixing in the official Olympic village in Milan.
"It was a real opportunity to put into perspective how we could be.
"And so I hope that the opening ceremony will do that and will be a reminder for everyone how we could be."
US Games on the horizon
Ms Coventry is yet to meet Mr Trump despite the Los Angeles Olympics being just two years away.
But Olympic chiefs are facing pressure from IOC members in Africa to tackle concerns about the impact of Mr Trump's travel bans on delegations.
Officials from Ethiopia and Djibouti challenged LA 2028 chiefs during meetings in Milan about the need for equal access for all countries to the games - beyond athletes.
Ms Coventry's own Zimbabwe is subject to restrictions for some citizens for entry to the US.
Her lack of contact with Mr Trump after a year leading the IOC contrasts with the US leaders' regular meetings with FIFA president Gianni Infantino, although his World Cup is sooner - coming this summer.
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For now, the IOC moving towards a ban on transgender women competing in women's sport is a policy that will placate Mr Trump.
And Ms Coventry has said: "As we get closer to the Olympics you will see the relations continue… and only get stronger."
But first she has to get through a Winter Olympics that could be a tricky and challenging environment for American athletes in Milan-Cortina.
(c) Sky News 2026: Winter Olympics: Show respect rather than jeer the Americans, says IOC boss
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