Why Inter vs. Torino Coppa Italia clash moved for 2026 Winter Olympics

Why Inter vs. Torino Coppa Italia clash moved for 2026 Winter Olympics

Tonight’s Coppa Italia quarter-final is technically Inter hosting Torino, but the 2026 Winter Olympics mean it is moved to neutral turf in Monza.

It kicks off this evening at the U-Power Stadium in Monza at 20.00 GMT (21.00 CET).

Inter are the ‘home’ team, but will not have that advantage for this one-off fixture, which is to be decided after 90 minutes, or go directly to the penalty shoot-out.

This is because San Siro, officially known as the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza, is being prepared for Friday’s massive opening ceremony of the 2026 Milano-Cortina Winter Olympic Games.

The local authorities required several days before and after the event to prepare the venue, which will be under extraordinary security arrangements and transmitted all over the world.

There is going to be a moving platform with several different stages attached to the centre for the ceremony, which can then have athletes from every competing nation walking through.

Both Inter and Milan use this stadium as their home venue, so these two clubs are forced to change their schedules to fit around the ceremony’s preparations.

This is also why the planned Milan vs. Como Serie A match will not be played on February 8.

It had initially been identified as an opportunity to play the first ever Serie A game outside of Italy, specifically moving it to Perth in Australia.

When those negotiations broke down over the demands of the Australian authorities, it was instead simply rescheduled for San Siro on Wednesday February 18.

Inter will be able to host Juventus as normal in Serie A on February 14.

Meanwhile, several Calcio figures have been acting as torch bearers in the build-up to the Games, including Inter vice-President Javier Zanetti, and Como coach Cesc Fabregas.

⚪️🔥🔵 @milanocortina26 @Olympics @cesc4official pic.twitter.com/hz9HVPANFk

— Como1907 (@Como_1907) February 4, 2026

Quick take: Match context: momentum and small details could decide this one, especially set-pieces and transitions. Form and fitness will matter; expect managers to rotate carefully around the congested schedule. We’ll keep an eye on confirmed details as the story develops from official sources.

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