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Salt Lake’s love for Olympics an increasingly rare global phenomenon

Soon-to-be 2-time host displays a zest for staging the games that few other cities are showing
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FILE - First-place finisher Mikael Kingsbury, of Canada, competes in the men’s dual moguls at the World Cup freestyle skiing competition at Deer Valley resort Saturday, Feb. 4, 2017, in Park City, Utah. Salt Lake City’s enduring enthusiasm for hosting the Olympics will be on full display Wednesday, April 10, 2024, when members of the International Olympic Committee come to Utah for a site visit ahead of a formal announcement expected this July to name Salt Lake City the host for the 2034 Winter Olympics. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)

Reminders of the 2002 Winter Olympics are nestled in every nook and cranny of Utah’s capital city, from a towering Olympic cauldron that overlooks the Salt Lake Valley to an Olympic emblem stamped on manhole covers downtown.

As visitors leave the airport, they are greeted with a can’t-miss Olympic arch amid snow-capped mountains in a message essential to Salt Lake City’s bid to host the Games again: You are entering an Olympic city.

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