Summary

  • Winter Olympics day eight - watch live coverage (UK only): Eight gold medals to be won

  • NOW: GB's Niall Treacy penalised for lane infringement in 1500m short track speed skating final after crash mid-race

  • NOW: Men's ice hockey - USA v Denmark

  • Freestyle skiing: GB's Kirsty Muir qualifies in fourth for big air final on Monday

  • Women's skeleton: Austria's Janine Flock wins gold with GB's Tabby Stoecker (5th), Freya Tarbit (7th) and Amelia Coltman (9th) in top 10

  • Curling: Team GB women beat world champions Canada 7-6 in round robin and men beat Czech Republic 7-4

  • Men's giant slalom: Lucas Pinheiro Braathen wins Brazil's first-ever Winter Olympic medal

  • Day-by-day guide

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  1. Postpublished at 19:23 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton - run four

    Tabby Stoecker time!

    The Team GB ensures a minimum position of fifth with a run of 57.72.

    That's a final time of 3:50.48 on her Games debut.

  2. Postpublished at 19:22 GMT 14 February

    Ski jumping - men's large hill individual (gold medal run)

    Beautiful landing from Philipp Raimund but it won't be double gold for the German.

    As it stands:

    1. Ryoyu Kobayashi (Japan) - 284.5 points
    2. Philipp Raimund (Germany) - 277.4
    3. Johann Andre Forfang (Norway) - 271.1
  3. Postpublished at 19:21 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton - run four

    Belgium's Kim Meylemans' final run is 57.86.

    Having moved above Freya Tarbit after run three, she consolidates her position in sixth with that time, finishing with 3:50.67.

  4. Postpublished at 19:20 GMT 14 February

    Ski jumping - men's large hill individual (gold medal run)

    Ryoyu Kobayashi - normal hill champion and large hill silver medallist in 2022 - takes the lead with 10 jumpers to come.

    The Japanese jumper's second effort earns a huge 149.6 points to take his total to 284.5 - that's the mark to beat.

    Up next, men's normal hill gold medallist Philipp Raimund.

  5. Postpublished at 19:19 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton - run four

    Great Britain's Freya TarbitImage source, Getty Images

    Freya Tarbit also nabs a place back!

    The Games debutant lost two places after the third run, but takes one back after China's Zhao Dan puts in a final run of 58.21.

    Zhao's final time of 3:51.21 puts her between Tarbit, who is now guaranteed at least seventh, and Amelia Coltman.

  6. Postpublished at 19:18 GMT 14 February

    Freestyle skiing - women's big air qualification (run two)

    Defending champion Eileen Gu was fourth after run one but her second jump is not good. She under-rotates and is hunched over as she slams into her landing, ending up face down in the snow.

    It's a score of 20.75 for her second jump.

  7. Postpublished at 19:17 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton - run four

    Next up is another Team GB athlete - it's Freya Tarbit's run.

    She finishes with a run of 57.77, closing with a time of 3:50.80.

    That guarantees her at least eighth.

  8. Excellent final showing from Coltmanpublished at 19:15 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton - run four

    John Jackson
    Two-time Olympic bobsledder on BBC Two

    Amelia ColtmanImage source, Getty Images

    That was a real statement run from Amelia Coltman to try and move herself up the rankings.

    If we look at her time (57.6s) compared to Hannah Neise's third run (currently in fourth), she was only one hundredth of a second slower.

    This is the potential Amelia has to be in and among the medals. Unfortunately, she couldn't put it together for four runs.

  9. Postpublished at 19:14 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton - run four

    Amelia Coltman takes a place back!

    Anna Fernstaedt moved ahead of her after the third run, but the athlete from the Czech Republic drops back behind Coltman into 10th after closing with a time on 57.85.

    Her accumulated time of 3:51.44 is .12 of a second worse than Coltman's.

  10. GB's Muir second after run onepublished at 19:14 GMT 14 February

    Freestyle skiing - women's big air qualification (run one)

    Qualifying run one - done! Two more to go.

    Remember, it's your best two scores across the three runs which are added together to determine the overall standings, with 12 skiers going through to the final.

    Here's the top 12 as things stand:

    1. Megan Oldham (Canada) - 91.25 points
    2. Kirsty Muir (Great Britain) - 87.50
    3. Grace Henderson (USA) - 86.75
    4. Eileen Gu (China) - 86.00
    5. Mathilde Gremaud (Switzerland) - 85.25
    6. Sylvia Trotter (New Zealand) - 83.00
    7. Flora Tabanelli (Italy) - 81.50
    8. Lara Wolf (Austria) - 80.25
    9. Mengting Liu (China) - 80.00
    10. Kateryna Kotsar (Ukraine) - 79.75
    11. Naomi Urness (Canada) - 79.50
    12. Maria Gasslitter (Italy) & Avery Krumme (USA) - 78.00

    The second run is at 19:15 GMT and the third at 20:00.

  11. Postpublished at 19:12 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton - run four

    Good work from Team GB's Amelia Coltman, having put in her worst run last time out, she finishes her first Games with her best.

    Her time was 57.60, for an accumulated finish of 3:51.32.

  12. 'Britain have never done this before'published at 19:08 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton

    Lizzy Yarnold
    Two-time Olympic skeleton champion on BBC Two

    I am incredibly excited to watch our British athletes. Two out of the three athletes have had their fastest push ever in this competition. They are hungry and ambitious.

    Three athletes inside the top 10 is huge! We have never done this before as Britain. I am very excited.

  13. Postpublished at 19:08 GMT 14 February

    Women's skeleton - run four

    15 competitors down in run four of the women's skeleton, 10 to go.

    Team GB's Amelia Coltman, 10th after the third run, is the next up.

    Team-mate Freya Tarbit, currently eighth, will be 18th down the track, with fifth-placed Tabby Stoecker the 21st to go.

  14. Postpublished at 19:08 GMT 14 February

    Ski jumping - men's large hill individual (gold medal run)

    The first 10 jumpers have been and gone in the ski jumping men's large hill final.

    Here's how the medal positions are looking as it stands:

    1. Naoki Nakamura (Japan) - 257.2 points
    2. Kevin Bickner (USA) - 249.1
    3. Hektor Kapustik (Slovakia) - 248.3
  15. Postpublished at 19:07 GMT 14 February

    Freestyle skiing - women's big air qualification

    Ohhh that's a huge effort from Sylvia Trotter. The New Zealander raises a hand in the air in celebration as she lands!

    With 83 points, she slots into the top five.

  16. Postpublished at 19:00 GMT 14 February

    Freestyle skiing - women's big air qualification

    Katie Falkingham
    BBC Sport in Livigno

    Team USA's Rell HarwoodImage source, Getty Images

    Worth noting that Team USA's Rell Harwood is competing with a torn ACL.

    She sustained the injury just weeks before the Games, but with her doctors' blessing, chose to still compete. She skipped the slopestyle event last week in order to compete tonight in the big air.

    She was certainly moving gingerly after that crash.

  17. Postpublished at 18:58 GMT 14 February

    Ski jumping - men's large hill individual (gold medal run)

    Telemark landingImage source, Getty Images

    The key to sounding like a ski jumping expert? Knowing your Telemark landing.

    One ski slightly in front of the other, knees slightly bent, arms - the gold standard of ski jump landings.

  18. Gold medal up for grabs in ski jumpingpublished at 18:56 GMT 14 February

    Ski jumping - men's large hill individual (gold medal run)

    Back at the ski jumping, the final run is about to get under way - a gold medal is up for grabs!

    Here's a reminder of the top 10:

    1. Nikaido Ren (Japan) - 154.0 points
    2. Domen Prevc (Slovenia) - 147.0
    3. Kristoffer Eriksen Sundal (Norway) - 145.0
    4. Kacper Tomasiak (Poland) - 141.8
    5. Jan Hoerl (Austria) - 141.7
    6. Vladimir Zografski (Bulgaria) - 139.3
    7. Stephan Embacher (Austria) - 139.0
    8. Ilya Mizernykh (Kazakhstan) - 137.0
    9. Antti Aalto (Finland) - 136.1
    10. Philipp Raimund (Germany) - 135.2

    The field has been trimmed to 30 for this run and the jumpers will go in reverse order of the standings.

  19. Postpublished at 18:53 GMT 14 February

    Freestyle skiing - women's big air qualification

    Remember, in this qualifying process, the skiers complete three jumps, with their highest two scores added together to determine the overall standings.

    The top 12 (from 27) go through to Monday's final.

    The remaining two runs start at 19:15 GMT and 20:00 GMT.

    12 skiers to go and the top three - Megan Oldham, Kirsty Muir (GB), and Eileen Gu - is unchanged.

  20. Postpublished at 18:48 GMT 14 February

    Freestyle skiing - women's big air qualification

    Oh my word! USA's Rell Harwood has gone down hard on her landing, cartwheeling down the slope. The medics are quickly by her side but Harwood is up on her feet and brushing it off.

    She scores 11.25 to put her in 10th place after 10 skiers but the most important thing is she seems to be ok.

    Canada's Megan Oldham remains at the top of the standings (91.25 points), with GB's Kirsty Muir (87.50) second and reigning champion Eileen Gu (86) third.