National Olympics 2026: Ahome Launch & Report

Los Mochis, Sinaloa, (By The Corridors)

With the eliminatory of the tennis discipline, next Thursday the State of the National Olympiad Conade 2026 will officially start.

The facilities of the Los Mochis Country Club will host until Saturday the competition that will award medals and classifications for the Macro Regional stage that will take place between the months of March and April.

Tennis, which was initially scheduled for February 6 and 7 in Culiacán, becomes the fourth discipline that our city will host, after women’s artistic gymnastics, breaking and climbing, whose activity will be on the 21st of next month.

The Ahome delegation is now fully ready for the competition, with Javier Arturo López, Daniel Artola and Óscar Torres in the 14 Years Boys category, María Regina Quiñónez and Luisa Alejandra Nava in 14 Girls, Guillermo Nava, Ramón Amado Beltrán and Mateo González in 16 Boys, Sara Orduño, Lucía González and Allegra Balderrama in 16 Girls.

The coaches are Emilio Caire, Manuel Fierro, Gonzalo Montero and José Carlos Martínez.

Culiacán will host 30 disciplines, starting on February 5 and 6 with basketball, on the 5th, 6th and 7th it will be sports shooting, chess and fronton, on the 6th and 7th it will be beach volleyball, while on the 7th it will be handball, weightlifting, associated wrestling, judo, 3×3 basketball, table tennis and skates (speed).

The activity will continue on the 11th and 12th of the same month with men’s volleyball and athletics; 20 and 21 soccer and baseball 5, and on the 21st archery (first check). The second check of the latter sport is scheduled for March 14.

The remaining eight disciplines will be in Mazatlán, starting on February 19 with mountain biking and open water, on the 19th and 20th there will be skateboarding, on the 20th time trial cycling, on the 20th and 21st triathlon and surfing, and on the 21st freestyle cycling and road cycling.

James Whitfield

James Whitfield is Archysport's racket sports and golf specialist, bringing a global perspective to tennis, badminton, and golf coverage. Based between London and Singapore, James has covered Grand Slam tournaments, BWF World Tour events, and major golf championships on five continents. His reporting combines on-the-ground access with deep knowledge of the technical and strategic elements that separate elite athletes from the rest of the field. James is fluent in English, French, and Mandarin, giving him unique access to athletes across the global tennis and badminton circuits.

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