By Jeremy Wilson
February 6, 2026 — 7.46am
Every Event. Every Medal in 4K.
Watch live & on demand.
Anti-doping chiefs at the Winter Olympics are ready to investigate extraordinary suggestions that ski-jumpers are gaining a performance advantage by enlarging their penises.
Reports in the German newspaper Bild have raised fears that professional ski-jumpers are enlarging their genitalia by injecting hyaluronic acid to boost crotch dimensions.
The stadium in Predazzo where ski jumping will take place for the 2026 Milano Cortina Olympics.Credit: Getty Images
This could be highly significant in ski-jumping because that would permit jumpers to wear a larger suit which would in turn improve their flight lift and thus overall distance.
A study in the journal Frontiers found that, for every two-centimetre increase in the circumference of a ski suit, there is a corresponding increase in lift of 5 per cent and increase in drag of 4 per cent. This was estimated to equate to a 5.8-metre increase in jump distance.
World Anti-Doping Agency president Witold Banka.Credit: Getty Images
As well as unfair performance advantage, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) can prohibit substances on the basis of safety and violations of the “spirit of sport”.
“Ski-jumping is very popular in Poland, so I promise you I’m going to look at it,” Witold Banka, the WADA president, said. There was a broad smile as Banka spoke, but Olivier Niggli, WADA’s director general, did also confirm that they could potentially investigate substantiated reports that athletes were injecting themselves with hyaluronic acid.
“I’m not aware of the details of ski-jumping – and how this can improve [performance] – but, if anything was to come to the surface, we would look at anything if it is actually doping related,” Niggli said at a press conference in Milan on Thursday.
“We don’t do other means of enhancing performance, but our list committee would certainly look into whether this would fall into this category. But I hadn’t heard about that.”
World Anti-Doping Agency director general Olivier Niggli at a press conference.Credit: Getty Images
Ski-jumpers are measured before each season with a body scanner, with dimensions taken from the lowest part of the genital area, and used as the basis for their suit’s design. Concerns have previously been raised over the potential use of padding inside a suit, but the use of a 3D scanner ensures that outside objects cannot now be inserted beneath the material.
Loading
Dr Kamran Karim, a senior consultant at Maria-Hilf Hospital in Krefeld in north-west Germany, told Bild: “It is possible to achieve a temporary, visual thickening of the penis by injecting paraffin or hyaluronic acid. However, this does not lengthen it. Such an injection is not medically indicated and is associated with risks.”
Mathias Hafele, from the International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS), told Bild that there had been no enlargement with “visible aids”, but the use of injections was not specifically ruled out. “Currently, no further measurements are planned,” Hafele said. “However, we are already working behind the scenes on methods to improve this complex issue.”
It all follows an 11-month (FIS) investigation and then ban earlier this month of two coaches and a former equipment manager of Norway’s ski-jumping team.
Loading
They had admitted conspiring to manipulate the suits of the team’s top jumpers at the Nordic World Ski Championships in Trondheim, Norway, last year. Video evidence of them inserting illegal stitching into the crotch area of their two star jumpers was anonymously posted on social media after an official inspection had taken place.
Banka has also outlined his concern at the presence in Milan of Eteri Tutberidze, the former coach of the Russian skater Kamila Valieva, whose positive doping test was revealed during the Beijing Games in 2022. Valieva was then 15. Tutberidze is now working at the Olympics with the Georgian skater Nika Egadze.
“It is not our decision – the investigation found no evidence that this particular person was engaged in this doping so there is no legal basis to exclude her,” Banka said. “But, of course, if you ask me personally about my feelings, I didn’t feel comfortable with her presence here at the Olympic Games for sure.”
The Telegraph, London
The Winter Olympic Games will be broadcast on the 9Network, 9Now and Stan Sport.
News, results and expert analysis from the weekend of sport sent every Monday. Sign up for our Sport newsletter.
Most Viewed in Sport
Loading


























