• Loading stock data...
Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Tattoo Marking Membership in the Most Exclusive Club in Sports

The Olympic rings tattoo is a hard-won badge of honor, no gold medal required.

Nicole Silveira
Nicole Silveira
Exclusive

Matt Jones, Myron Medcalf Leaders to Replace Clinton Yates on ESPN Radio

Jones and Medcalf currently host a Sunday morning ESPN Radio show.
Read Now
April 2, 2026 |

Heading into the Milan Cortina Games, Anthony Ponomarenko knew he wanted to mark his Olympic debut permanently. The American ice dancer had watched his friends return from the 2022 Beijing Games and get tattoos of iconic interlocking rings. At the time, he was recovering from major ankle surgery, unsure whether he would ever skate again. 

When he earned his spot at the 2026 Winter Games in Italy, the tattoo was non-negotiable. Fresh off the ice in Milan—like most Olympians, he was superstitious enough to wait until after he competed—he DMed a local fine-line artist, Picci Ink at The White Whale Tattoo Society, and he landed the studio’s only opening all month.

“I shot my shot,” Ponomarenko tells Front Office Sports. “He was really honored to do it as well. He said, ‘It’s my first rings tattoo.'” Over espresso, they designed the piece, and three hours later, the skater walked out with his first-ever ink.

The Olympic rings tattoo has become a rite of passage for athletes. It’s been a tradition since at least 1988, when American swimmer Chris Jacobs got a set of tiny rings inked after winning two golds and a silver at the Seoul Games. He later added a larger version on his bicep, and the mark soon spread from the pool deck to the broader Olympic world on shoulder blades, rib cages, wrists, and even necks. (Figure skater Amber Glenn already has her placement picked out coming off her team gold medal: “The ass cheek, right here,” she told fellow skater Adam Rippon.)

It’s certainly harder to see the tattoos at the Winter Games under speedskating suits and ski jackets, but athletes in Milan still flashed their rings: Spanish figure skater Olivia Smart revealed hers through the open back of her costume; curlers flashed tats on bare forearms. Other athletes showed off freshly inked rings on social media, including the French women’s hockey team, which took a group outing for matching body art.

The five interlocking rings mark membership in one of the most exclusive clubs in sports. At the Paris Olympics last summer, tattoo parlors inside the Olympic Village—and on the floating village anchored off Tahiti, where surfers competedoffered free ink to competitors. Many others waited until they got home, including LeBron James, who added the rings to his bicep in Los Angeles after winning gold.

Nicole Silveira (at top) got hers on vacation in Mexico. The Brazilian skeleton racer had wanted the rings for three years, ever since competing in the 2022 Beijing Games, but she’d been on Accutane, which ruled out tattoos during treatment and for months afterward.

“That waiting period made it more intentional,” she tells FOS. When she finally sat for the rings, she knew what she wanted: simple, classic black ink on the outside of her wrist, “somewhere that felt powerful but personal.”

Her wife, Belgian skeleton racer and fellow Olympian Kim Meylemans, was with her that day and got a different tattoo. Meylemans’s first two Olympic experiences hadn’t been positive enough to want them etched on her body. 

But after a meaningful Milan-Cortina Games, where Meylemans took sixth in her event, Silveira says she’s coming around. “It’s not just about competing at the Olympics,” she says. “It’s about everything it took to become the person capable of standing there. And for me, that’s something worth carrying forever.”

@m.gaiet

Thank you girls for your trust🤍 A once-in-a-lifetime experience! #tattoo #olympics #tattooartist

♬ Alright – Supergrass

Shannon-Ogbnai Abeda, an Eritrean Canadian Alpine skier who in 2018 became Eritrea’s first Winter Olympian, spent two years deliberating before getting his tattoo. He didn’t think his debut had gone well enough to justify the ink, he tells FOS, “but I didn’t know if I’d be going back to another Olympics, so I decided to get it done.”

The rings were his first tattoo, but below them on his forearm, he also added a line from Fight Club: “It’s only after we’ve lost everything that we’re free to do anything.” In the eight years it took to qualify for PyeongChang, he’d lost friends, drained his savings, and overhauled his life to chase a single goal. 

In 2023, he went back to add the official logos of PyeongChang and Beijing on his inner bicep. After competing in his third Olympics in Milan, he’s weighing the next addition. “It shows that I earned my place,” he says. “I can always look at it and be like, yeah, I accomplished my dream—not once, but three times.”

Former Olympic sprinter Ashleigh Nelson waited a full 15 years to get her rings after her debut at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Nelson, who now competes as a bobsledder for Team GB, reflected on the delay in a 2024 video. She’d held off because she never felt her previous results matched her potential, but while waiting for Achilles surgery, clarity hit. “I realized that even if I never got to compete again post-surgery, I am enough,” she said. “So shout-out to all my Olympians, don’t wait 15 years to celebrate yourself.”

Ponomarenko’s new tattoo from Milan—all black, shaded from dark to light so you can still see where the rings overlap—is on his bicep. It’s a daily reminder of the years it took to get there and of the responsibility of carrying the Games’ message forward. “I found the Olympics extremely life-changing,” he says. “I now have to carry myself differently—to represent not just myself but all Olympians.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

‘The Sonics Never Died’: The Long Afterlife of Seattle NBA Merch

Inside “the largest team shop for a team that doesn’t exist.” 
Mar 27, 2026; Washington, DC, USA;UConn Huskies forward Tarris Reed Jr. (5) dunks the ball against the Michigan State Spartans in the second half during a Sweet Sixteen game of the East Regional of the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Capital One Arena

March Madness Coaches Debate ‘Blueblood’ in NIL Era

The term’s meaning was up for debate at men’s March Madness.
Maxime Vachier Lagrave

The Planet’s Best Chess Players Are Having Their LIV Golf Moment

Chess’s most prestigious tournament is battling a splashy Saudi event.
Beau Brune/LSU

College Athletic Departments Are Becoming Media Companies

“There’s only so many tickets you can sell, but content is infinite.”

Featured Today

AI College Recruiting Reels Aren’t Fooling Scouts

College coaches and recruiters are way ahead of cheating athletes.
March 7, 2026

Alex Eala Has Become One of the Biggest Draws in Tennis

Eala will face Coco Gauff in the third round at Indian Wells.
Jun 9, 2021; Paris, France; The racket of Coco Gauff (USA) after she smashed it during her match against Barbora Krejcikova (CZE) on day 11 of the French Open at Stade Roland Garros
March 6, 2026

The ‘Rage Room’ Is the Hottest Place in Tennis

The idea came from a player podcast.
March 5, 2026

Mark DeRosa Is Still Baseball’s Swiss Army Knife

DeRosa is the sport’s utility player both on the field and off.
Feb 24, 2026; Washington, DC, USA; The United States Olympic Men’s Ice Hockey Team, Connor Hellebuyck in front, as President Donald J. Trump delivers the first State of the Union address of his second term to a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber of the United States Capitol in Washington on Tuesday

How U.S. Olympic Hockey Gold Medals Set Off a Culture War

The wins in Milan have quickly become political lightning rods.
Gaudreau family at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
February 25, 2026

The Real Story of How Johnny Gaudreau’s Family Got to Olympics

Network execs helped make one of the Olympics’ most heartwarming moments happen.
Oct 29, 2025; New York, NY, UNITED STATES; Hilary Knight, Hockey, speaks to the media during the U.S. Olympic Team Media Summit in preparation for the 2026 Milan Olympic Winter Games at Javits Center. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images
opinion
February 26, 2026

Hilary Knight’s Right: Not Her Responsibility to Explain Trump’s Joke

The Team USA captain called Trump’s comments “distasteful” and “unfortunate.”
Sponsored

Baseball Is Back: MLB Opening Day Prices Soar

MLB Opening Day ticket prices are at record highs. TickPick data breaks down demand, pricing trends, and where fans are paying the most.
MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 22: Jack Hughes #86 of Team United States celebrates after their gold-medal win during the Men's Gold Medal match between Canada and the United States on day 16 of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 22, 2026 in Milan, Italy
February 25, 2026

Behind the Iconic Jack Hughes Gold Medal Hockey Photo

Photographer Elsa explains the shot now ingrained in American sports history.
Casey Wasserman, Chairperson and President of LA28, during the media conference celebrating the 1000-day countdown to LA28 at Devon Park in Oklahoma City, Monday, Oct. 20, 2025.
February 23, 2026

As Attention Shifts to LA28, Focus on Casey Wasserman Intensifies

Marketing ramps up for Los Angeles while organizing committee questions persist.
Sep 17, 2025; Washington, DC, USA; FBI Director Kash Patel testifies in front of the House Judiciary Committee in Washington, D.C., on Sept.17, 2025. Mandatory Credit:
February 23, 2026

FBI Director Catches Heat for Drinking With USA Hockey Team

Kash Patel was in Italy on official business, a spokesman said.
Sponsored

A Head Start on History: Early Access to Olympic Hospitality for the LA28 Olympic Games

From private suites to curated experiences, On Location is redefining how fans and brands show up at LA28.