ENHYPEN's Sunghoon on Being a Winter Olympics 2026 Torchbearer: "It Was Always My Dream to Be Part of the Olympics"

The figure-skater-turned-idol is officially on his way to Milan.
Sunghoon of ENHYPEN ahead of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics wearing a Team Korea jacket.
Courtesy of BELIFT LAB

The Olympic flame is inching closer to the final destination for the 2026 Milan-Cortina Winter Olympic Games, and ENHYPEN member Sunghoon is one of the lucky few in charge of bringing the torch relay to a close in its long-anticipated final stretch.

After over two months, the Olympic torch relay will enter its 60th and final stage on February 5, arriving in Milano one day before the Games are due to start, and the grand opening ceremony is set to take place at San Siro. 23-year-old Sunghoon is making the trek to Italy alongside thousands of athletes from all over the world; he's set to officially become a torchbearer at around 3 p.m. local time as the relay enters its final 24 hours.

Winter sports, both in fiction and in real life, are having a major moment, and the Winter Olympics are only pushing that momentum forward, something Sunghoon also wishes to help ignite. Sunghoon being named a torchbearer is a fitting nod to the idol’s past as a figure skater, and he's not taking the task lightly.

Ahead of his turn at the torch relay tomorrow, Teen Vogue sat down with Sunghoon to talk about why this task is such a special honor for him, his days as a figure skater, and who he's rooting for these Olympics.


Teen Vogue: Congrats on being named a torchbearer for the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics! Do you remember where you were when you found out you were going to participate in the torch relay?

Sunghoon: I was at my company! One of the staff members came to me and told me. I was just deeply touched and very happy because, as you probably know, I did figure skating for 10 years, and while training, it was always my dream to be part of the Olympics. Now I have a different job as an idol, I'm an artist, but to be still connected to my dream is a big, big honor for me.

TV: As you said, going to the Olympics was your dream. Maybe it's not as you had imagined, but you are going to the Olympics. Does it still feel like a dream come true? Does it still feel like a pinch-me moment for you?

Sunghoon: Yeah! Although I'm not an athlete anymore, and I'm not participating as an athlete, so it's a little bit different. When I was an athlete, it was my dream to showcase my performance. Now, I get to be part of the Olympics, cheering and rooting for the athletes. That still means a lot to me: I get to be part of this journey, in charge of energizing others, including the athletes, which, as someone who is an athlete-turned-artist, [feels special]. So it's in a different form, of course, but it feels like a big dream is coming true for me.

TV: The torch relay has been super popular this year, with many high-profile participants. From Formula 1 star Kimi Antonelli, to Jackie Chan, Snoop Dogg, actors Hudson Williams and Connor Storrie, and many more. You are only the second K-pop artist to participate in an Olympic torch relay overseas, after BTS’s Jin. How does that make you feel? Do you feel pressure at all?

Sunghoon: First of all, that was my first time hearing other names of torchbearers, and it's my profound honor to be part of this whole journey with these amazing people. Wow. I do feel a deep sense of responsibility, but I know that Jin did so well in the last Olympics, so I'm going to make sure that I run hard and do well too.

TV: Are you scared about any of the process? I know it's a little intimidating to be carrying the Olympic flame. What is your biggest fear coming into this?

Sunghoon: I do have my worries because it's such a meaningful event, and the weight of it is just so big, so, yeah, I do worry. I'm a bit scared, but this is such a big honor for me. Since I've never been to a torch relay, I don't know what the atmosphere is going to be like, but still, I'm just going to make myself feel at home and do a good job!

TV: I think it's going to be weighty both physically and metaphorically, but you'll ace it!

Sunghoon: Yeah, I know. [Laughs.] Even if the flame goes out somehow during the relay, I just know that I have to keep running!

Sunghoon of ENHYPEN ahead of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics wearing a Team Korea jacket.
Courtesy of BELIFT LAB
TV: On top of being a torchbearer, you've also been a promotional ambassador for the Korean Sports and Olympic Committee since last year. Why did you feel like it was important for you to take on that role? Why did it speak to you?

Sunghoon: As a former athlete, I know athletes' dedication and the effort that they always put into their work. I was a figure skater for quite a long time, and I thought that was a good reason for me to become an ambassador. I knew I could do a good job of it, and it was an honor to be appointed. As part of ENHYPEN, I think what we do best is share energy on stage with our fans and people around the globe, and make sure we have a positive influence. I think it actually works the same for athletes. While they also work for their records, many sports fans are moved by their performance and draw energy from them. So, in that sense, it's a very similar role: sharing energy, sharing good times together.

TV: You mentioned ENHYPEN. I know you're going to Italy on your own, but as a group, ENHYPEN also has ties to the Olympics this time around: your track "SHOUT OUT" was selected as Korea's official cheer song. What was your reaction when you found out that you were going to be the anthem for Korea during the Olympics?

Sunghoon: It's a profound honor for the group and me together that our track is going to be the official cheer song for the Korean team. We gave it a lot of thought, like, pondering which track of ours would make for a perfect cheer song, and “SHOUT OUT” was at the top of my list. The song is really about these boys shouting out, raising their voices to the world. It's a song that shows a lot of confidence, and the lyrics really go well with cheering people up. It was perfect for this, and I'm just thrilled and grateful that it will be the official cheer song for the Korean team.

TV: If you had to pick your own personal cheer song, ENHYPEN or otherwise, what would it be? What song do you listen to these days when you want a little bit of a mood boost when you're down?

Sunghoon: Oh! When I'm feeling a bit blue or down, I actually tend to listen to a lot of hardcore rock. For example, Metallica or Linkin Park. And recently, my remix of "Knife." I think that's a song that I listened to a lot recently.

TV: Going back to your relationship with winter sports, what's the fondest memory you have from your time skating?

Sunghoon: There are so many fond memories. The first winter sport I got into was actually ice hockey. I was a quiet, shy boy, so my parents recommended I take up a sport, so I started my journey with ice hockey. Looking back, I actually think that was a very good decision that I made in my life to start doing ice hockey and doing winter sports because that's something I feel like I really needed.

So it started with ice hockey, then I moved into figure skating, and that's when I really started to find sports fun. I would train every day, practice every day, and I learned that only practice makes perfect. You wouldn't be able to do a kind of technique, but after a lot of practice, you'll be able to nail that technique, and then you feel this immense sense of accomplishment. That was something I really loved, and I was ecstatic to score well in various competitions. I think that it is because I was a figure skater that I could become part of ENHYPEN and an artist as a whole.

ENHYPEN member Sunghoon figure skating
Courtesy of BELIFT LAB
ENHYPEN member Sunghoon figure skating
Courtesy of BELIFT LAB
TV: In another interview, you said that you started training as an idol because you thought it would help you improve your figure skating skills. Is that true? And obviously there's a lot of overlap between the two worlds, so I wonder what is the key aspect that you learned from your life as an athlete that you think made your idol career a little bit easier?

Sunghoon: Yeah! Well, I had many reasons for training to be an idol, but one was that I thought it would help me improve as a figure skater. Because figure skating is really all about expressiveness. It's crucial. So a lot of figure skaters learn modern dancing, K-pop dances, or vocals too, to make sure that they can express themselves, and that's part of the reason why I started training, because I thought it might help.

But another reason, lurking in the back of my mind, was that maybe this was another path I wanted to pursue going forward. So I had these different ideas in my head, then started training as an idol, and I think it turned out to be mutually beneficial for both sides. When you look at figure skating, they have very simple, clear-cut, and beautiful movements. I think that helped when I was learning to dance as a trainee. Many people tell me I am a bit of a perfectionist. I think it carries from time as a figure skater because athletes are really all about dedication, and they want to really perfect and hone in on their skills, and I did the same thing when I was a trainee, and I think that really helped me a lot.

So training to be an idol helped me become more expressive as a figure skater. And I have a lot of perseverance because I was once an athlete and a figure skater.

INDIO CALIFORNIA  APRIL 19   Niki Sunghoon and Sunoo of ENHYPEN perform at Sahara Tent during the 2025 Coachella Valley...
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images
TV: You were training for both simultaneously for two years. What was that like? Was it really hard?

Sunghoon: Being an idol trainee and a competitive figure skater at the same time was quite difficult. By day, I would be at a rink practicing my figure skating, and by night, I would head to the company, to the practice rooms. It wasn't easy but, again, it ended up being mutually beneficial. I had a lot of fun being an idol trainee. Maybe it was because it was something I was learning for the first time, or maybe I had something in me that clicked, or maybe it was because I was surrounded by friends my age with similar goals, and I loved training with them.

TV: When did you realize that your heart, or your head, was leaning more towards the stage rather than the ice rink?

Sunghoon: The moment when I made up my mind was, I think it was, BTS's Love Yourself album, when the track “Idol” came out. I went to their concert, watched them perform, and it was just amazing. I was overwhelmed. I thought they were just so cool, and they immediately became my role models. That was the moment when I made up my mind to become an artist.

TV: There are so many old videos online from your time as a skater, from when you were super young, and also from when you were a little bit older. Do you ever go back and watch them?

Sunghoon: [Laughs.] I barely do, but sometimes I'm on TikTok, and our fans, ENGENE, upload videos of my past competitions. When I'm monitoring ENGENE's online reactions, I sometimes come across them. I feel like my fans really enjoy watching little boy Sunghoon figure skate. I don't purposely look those videos up, but they do sometimes end up on my phone.

TV: That's funny. When you get the edit on your feed, how do you feel? Does it make you happy? Does it make you cringe? How do you feel about that part of your life being immortalized forever on the internet?

Sunghoon: I do feel a bit sheepish, but then I remember that it's only because I have that past that I was able to become a trainee, so it's definitely not a part of my life that I want to erase at all. And sometimes it does get a smile on my face too!

TALLINN ESTONIA  SEPTEMBER 29 Sunghoon Park of Korea competes during the Junior Men Short Program on day one of the ISU...
Joosep Martinson - International Skating Union/Getty Images
TV: You have done some skating for stages in the past. Is that something that you would want to try again? Would you be down to do another skating routine for one of ENHYPEN's performances?

Sunghoon: Skating requires being on skates and in an ice rink, [which is hard]. For the MAMA performance, I was on roller skates instead, but if there's an opportunity, why not? I think it's going to be fun. Maybe if there's an ice show and we can perform our music on the ice rink, that would be a good opportunity.

TV: Would you have all the members learn to ice skate, then?

Sunghoon: Yes! If we had that opportunity, I'd have to teach all of them, but I think they'll be very quick to learn!

TV: When was the last time you actually skated?

Sunghoon: It was actually quite recently! I think it was last month? Before our latest comeback, we shot a little video for the Olympics, actually, at an ice rink. So that's when I last put on my skates! Every time I put on my skates, I feel that it's so fun, and the memories come back to me. I immediately become the little boy Sunghoon, who used to really love skating. [Smiles.]

TV: Are you going to bring your skates with you to Milan? Do you still have them?

Sunghoon: I don't think I'll bring them, but I always have them with me! When we are shooting some videos, there are times when I have to put them on, so I do always have them around.

TV: I've noticed other people wear rentals, but you always wear your own…

Sunghoon: Yes! That's a key point. Because I used to be an athlete, I love being in my own pair of skates, not someone else's.

ENHYPEN member Sunghoon figure skating
Courtesy of BELIFT LAB
TV: What are you most looking forward to seeing at the Olympics, or who are you most looking forward to seeing at the Olympics?

Sunghoon: I always try to keep myself informed on what's happening in the figure skating world, so, of course, I'm looking forward to that. I'm also quite excited about short track! Because Korea is a powerhouse in short track. I think the games are so adrenaline-pumping, and that's why I like them. And also bobsledding! I really enjoy the speed … [Also,] there are two male figure skaters in Korea's national team, Cha Junhwan and Kim Hyungyeom. We used to train together when I was young. We go way back, so I'm always cheering for them! I hope that they do well.

TV: Last question for you. I know you just had a comeback, and you have some things planned with ENHYPEN for the rest of the year. Is there anything you're particularly excited about or looking forward to in 2026? What do you want this year to look like for you and ENHYPEN?

Sunghoon: Last year, we achieved one of our milestones by winning our first-ever Daesang (Grand Prize) at MAMA. That was a long-time goal for us, so we need to set new goals this year. We haven't listed the goals in detail! This year, we're just going to work very hard to promote our new album, or continue to do that, and then we have an upcoming tour and also other activities that are lying ahead of us. I just hope that ENGENE and ENHYPEN have a wonderful year and share our energy.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. Sunghoon spoke via an interpreter.