
THE 2026 Winter Olympic Games, currently under way in Milan and Cortina, Italy, have drawn global attention, with a growing number of Chinese apparel brands and technology products supporting the event’s operations, turning the Games into a key window for showcasing China’s manufacturing and technological strengths to the world.
Chinese sportswear brands such as Anta and Li-Ning have expanded their presence beyond the Chinese delegation to outfit teams from countries including Italy and Greece, while technology firms such as Alibaba and TCL have joined the Olympics Games as technology partners.
Experts said that Chinese brands’ proactive push into overseas markets reflects a shift toward deliberate global positioning and growing confidence in their product strength, technological capabilities and brand value.
China’s winter sports equipment landscape has come into sharp focus. At this year’s Winter Olympics, Anta Group, through its three brands Anta, FILA and Descente, is providing professional competition and training gear for as many as 13 Chinese teams, a representative of Anta told the Global Times.
Anta is equipping 10 national teams across core speed disciplines. Fila is providing gear for China’s national freestyle skiing aerials team while Descente is supporting both the national snowboard half-pipe team and the alpine skiing team, covering key snow events from technical to speed-based disciplines.
Chinese outdoor apparel brand Tanboer signed a sponsorship deal with Austria’s national snowboard team.
At the Olympics, the podium and opening ceremony are prime stages for exposure and national images. At this year’s Winter Games, Li-Ning supplied the Chinese delegation’s opening and medal-ceremony uniforms.
Developed in collaboration with the China National Space Administration, the uniforms utilize aerospace thermal-lock insulation and basalt-based far-infrared technology in Winter Olympics medal-ceremony wear, improving both warmth and breathability.
What athletes wear has become prime real estate for brand exposure. On Saturday, Chinese snowboarder Su Yiming won bronze in the men’s big air final. He competed in gear from Anta while close-ups of his Burton snowboard effectively doubled as high-credibility advertising within the sport.
Off the slopes, Adidas gained visibility through his training, daily life and social media accounts, while Li-Ning’s medal-ceremony outfit appeared on the podium, where athletic achievement and brand value briefly converged.
Chinese technology firms are taking on deeper roles in the Games’ digital backbone. Alibaba Cloud has a partnership with Olympic Broadcasting Services and the International Olympic Committee to deploy cloud and artificial intelligence technologies for the Milano-Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics, according to Alibaba.
TCL has a partnership with Olympic Broadcasting Services to supply hundreds of TVs, digital signage and LED screens for Olympic broadcasts, with its display products also deployed across key venues including competition sites, broadcast centers and the Olympic Village.
Wang Peng, an associate research fellow at the Beijing Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times that Chinese brands’ faster push into overseas sporting arenas marks a shift from resource integration to standards-setting.
Unlike earlier appearances that leaned more on the spillover of the national image at home events, their deeper engagement in international competitions is now underpinned by core technological capabilities and supply chain strength, signaling participation in global competition at a higher level.
Zhang Yi, CEO of the iiMedia Research Institute, told the Global Times that Chinese brands have shifted from home-stage exposure to direct competition across multiple national delegations, where performance, delivery and commercial acceptance matter more than symbolism.
The change highlights growing maturity in global operations and signals that Chinese brands are being tested and judged within the core of the global sports industry.


