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how long has skeleton been in the olympics

Skeleton has had a very on‑again, off‑again relationship with the Olympics: it was contested in 1928 and 1948, then disappeared for decades, and has been a permanent Winter Olympic sport only since 2002.

Quick Scoop: How long has skeleton been in the Olympics?

  • Skeleton first appeared at the Winter Olympics in 1928 in St. Moritz, Switzerland.
  • It came back once in 1948 , again only in St. Moritz.
  • After 1948, skeleton vanished from the Games for more than 50 years.
  • It was finally reintroduced permanently in 2002 at the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics, this time with both men’s and women’s events.

So if you mean “continuous, regular presence” on the Olympic program, skeleton has been in the Olympics from 2002 to today (including the build‑up to Milano Cortina 2026), which is about two decades of uninterrupted inclusion.

In short:

  • Total appearances so far: 1928, 1948, and every Winter Games from 2002 onward.

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Meta description: Wondering how long skeleton has been in the Olympics? Learn how the head‑first sliding sport debuted in 1928, vanished after 1948, and returned as a permanent event in 2002, plus the latest Winter Games context. Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.