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Weston and Stoecker make history as Great Britain win a third Olympic gold
  1. curling

    Food for thoughtpublished at 19:34 GMT 15 February

    Curling - GB men 3-2 Switzerland

    Richard Winton
    BBC Sport Scotland in Cortina

    Hammy McMillan, Bobby Lammie and Grant Hardie are all devouring with Squares bars. McMillan was telling me the lads have brought a four-pack for each match in the Games. Hopefully, that's 11 matches, which is... a lot of cereal bars.

    Hardie reckons the boys have got into Sour Patch Kids recently while competing in North America, so will have something along those lines for a quick carbs hit. That'll will replace dried mango. Apparently a bad dose of toothache after eating a whole pack at a recent competition has put the vice skip right off that.

    Bruce Mouat's role as skip is more mental than physical, so he doesn't need quite the same energy boost as the sweepers. So he is munching a tangerine.

  2. Postpublished at 19:33 GMT 15 February

    Ski jumping - women's large hill

    Penultimate jumper - Anna Odine Stroem, the normal hill champion.

    She goes top!

    It's 148.1, the best of the final, and a combined score of 284.8 puts her in gold medal position.

    Now it's time for Eirin Maria Kvandal.

  3. Postpublished at 19:32 GMT 15 February

    Ski jumping - women's large hill

    Now it's Silje Opseth's turn.

    She scores 130.8, that is now the seventh-best score of the final, and she too goes third, displacing her compatriot Heidi Dyhre Traaserud.

  4. curling

    Postpublished at 19:31 GMT 15 February

    Curling - GB men 3-2 Switzerland

    Richard Winton
    BBC Sport Scotland in Cortina

    Bruce Mouat is at the trick shots now...

    An astonishing penultimate throw by the Team GB skip sends granite skiting but the Swiss produce a fabulous effort of their own in response to limit the British team to one and a 3-2 lead at the break.

    This really is a high-grade contest between two of the best teams here.

  5. Postpublished at 19:31 GMT 15 February

    Ski jumping - women's large hill

    Time for the first of four Norwegians - here's Heidi Dyhre Traaserud.

    Her 129.5 is the seventh-best of the final and her combined score of 259.1 puts her third.

    Frida Westman of Sweden is second as it stands with 265.4.

  6. Postpublished at 19:29 GMT 15 February

    Ski jumping - women's large hill

    Into the last five jumpers in the women's large hill.

    First up is Nika Prevc of Slovenia, the reigning world champion.

    She scores a huge 143.2, easily the biggest score of the day, for a combined two-round total of 271.5.

    She tops the rankings as they stand.

  7. Olympic debut at 42published at 19:26 GMT 15 February

    Figure Skating - pairs short program

    Emma Smith
    BBC Sport in Milan

    One of the most remarkable stories of this Games already - before she has even competed - is that of Canada’s Deanna Stellato-Dudek.

    She had a 15-year break from competing; then in 2024, she and Maxime Deschamps won the world title – she was 40 at the time.

    Now, she will make her Olympic debut aged 42.

    There was a doubt over her fitness, which caused them to miss the team event, but she has now been passed fit.

    The pair have struggled a bit this season but could be medal contenders if they regain their form of 12 months ago.

    Deanna Stellato-DudekImage source, Getty Images
  8. Postpublished at 19:24 GMT 15 February

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

    Matias RocheImage source, Getty Images

    Run one is done in Livigno and it's France's Matias Roche who leads the way with a score of 95.25.

    The judges score competitors out of 100, so his score is pretty good!

    Here's how the top five looks heading into run two (remember, they complete three runs and add together their two highest scores to determine the overall standings).

    1. Matias Roche (France) - 95.25
    2. Mac Forehand (USA) - 93.25
    3. Timothe Podmilsak (USA) - 93.00
    4. Matej Svancer (Austria) - 92.25
    5. Miro Tabanelli (Italy) - 91.00

    GB's Chris McCormick is down in 23rd place, with a score of 31.25.

  9. 'It's great for the program and great to be a part of'published at 19:22 GMT 15 February

    Skeleton - mixed team

    Freya Tarbit and Marcus WyattImage source, Getty Images

    Fourth place duo Freya Tarbit and Marcus Wyatt spoke to BBC Sport:

    Freya: "I am really proud of myself. It's disappointing that we didn't get a medal but I can come away with my head held high that I can hold my own and put it together under pressure.

    "Two gold medals for British skeleton is something to be immensely proud of. It's great for the program and great for us to a part of. It's great that we are so good at a winter sport!

    "This is a games to be proud of. Fourth and seventh at my first Olympics really isn't bad.

    "I really enjoyed myself, and I'm really proud that I've let myself enjoy the experience and I can come away with some really amazing memories."

    Marcus added: "I tried to go out there and make amends for the mistakes in the individual race. I had Freya carry me and do her best to drag me to a medal! We put a pretty good performance, tried our best and we can be happy with what we did.

    "Me and Matt were there in Beijing and it was good to come and prove that Beijing was a blip and not a trend. What these medals will do for the future of this programme for the next four, eight, 12 years... we are going to be expecting more medals and keeping that rich history of British skeleton alive."

  10. Stoecker and Weston join Team GB greatspublished at 19:20 GMT 15 February

    Team GB goldsImage source, BBC Sport

    Great Britain have only ever won 15 Winter Olympic golds - and two of them have come today!

    It's also three for the Games, a fifth of GB's all-time total.

    It may have been a slow start but Milan-Cortina is turning into one to remember.

  11. Postpublished at 19:18 GMT 15 February

    Ski jumping - women's large hill

    We're over halfway through the field in the women's large hill.

    The first round leaders are still to come, but there's still intrigue further down the rankings.

    Abigail Strate of Canada and Selina Freitag of Germany had the 26th and 28th best jumps earlier tonight but have recorded the second and fourth best leaps of those who've gone thus far in the final.

    That's improved their standing a fair bit.

    Meanwhile it's bad news for the United States - Josie Johnson didn't start in the final, Paige Jones is bottom of those who've had two runs and Annika Belshaw has been disqualified.

  12. curling

    Postpublished at 19:12 GMT 15 February

    Curling - GB men 2-2 Switzerland

    Richard Winton
    BBC Sport Scotland in Cortina

    One more wee mistake from Switzerland gives Bruce Mouat another sniff of a steal, but the Swiss scramble to claim one for themselves and level the scores after four ends.

  13. Back on BBC Twopublished at 19:10 GMT 15 February

    BBC Two

    Well, after that Team GB drama we're back on BBC Two for the rest of the action on day nine.

    There's still curling, ski jumping, figure skating, freestyle skiing and ice hockey to come!

  14. ice hockey

    Postpublished at 19:08 GMT 15 February

    Men's ice hockey

    Canada registered a big win in their final Group A match, hammering France 10-2. They had 10 different goal-scorers, including captain Sidney Crosby, and scored at least three goals in each period.

    They finished top of Group A, with three wins from three.

    Earlier on Sunday, Switzerland beat Czech Republic 4-3 in overtime.

    In Group C, Denmark and Latvia are currently in action in Milan, with Denmark leading 3-1 in the second period.

    USA vs Germany will start at 20:10 GMT.

  15. Postpublished at 19:05 GMT 15 February

    Ski jumping - women's large hill

    We're back under way for the final of the women's large hill.

    Competitors jump in the reverse of the qualification standings order, so Eirin Maria Kvandal will jump last after topping the leaderboard earlier this evening.

    Scores from the first round are added to those from the final, so a bad jump in qualifying can be costly even if you make it through.

  16. Team GB up to 12th in medal tablepublished at 19:02 GMT 15 February

    With two golds on Super Sunday, Great Britain are up to 12th in the medal table!

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  17. Can Vaipan-Law and Digby crack top 10?published at 19:01 GMT 15 February

    Figure Skating - pairs short program

    Emma Smith
    BBC Sport in Milan

    After disappointment for Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson, Britain are back on the ice tonight in the figure skating pairs event.

    Anastasia Vaipan-Law and Luke Digby have a best finish of fifth at Euros and 12th at the World Championships. A medal is not expected - but as the men's event shows, figure skating can be a very unpredictable sport.

    On terms of what would be a good result for Vaipan-Law and Digby, their aim will be to finish in the top 16 tonight in order to qualify for the free skate - but they have not set any targets beyond that.

    "We've not set a positional target in black and white," Vaipan-Law told BBC Sport earlier this week.

    "We have been gradually rising the rankings and increasing our placements, so we just want to focus on that," Digby added.

    Vaipan-Law and Digby are the 11th pair of the 19 to skate tonight, and are expected on the ice at around 20.26 GMT.

    Anastasia Vaipan-Law and Luke DigbyImage source, Getty Images
  18. How it works?published at 19:00 GMT 15 February

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

    Each skier will complete three jumps in qualifying, launching themselves down a 225m ramp and off a 40m high jump to perform tricks and flips.

    A competitors two highest-scoring runs are added together, with the top 12 advancing to Tuesday's final. A caveat - your two runs have to be from an 'A' direction and a 'B' direction, which is why you'll see (A) and (B) on the leaderboard.

    Judges score each run out of 100 based on difficulty, execution, amplitude and landing control.

    Run timings

    • Run one - 18:30
    • Run two - 19:15
    • Run three - 20:00
  19. GB's Chris McCormick in big air qualifyingpublished at 18:59 GMT 15 February

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

    Chris McCormickImage source, Getty Images

    Team GB have one representative in the men's big air in Chris McCormick.

    The 27-year-old made his Olympic debut in Milan-Cortina, finishing 26th in the men's slopestyle earlier this week.

    In the big air, he achieved multiple top-20 World Cup finishes last season and also placed 14th at the 2025 World Championships.

    The first run got under way at 18:30 GMT, with further runs at 19:15 and 20:00.

    USA's Mac Forehand leads the way with a score of 93.25, with Matej Svancer (Austria) second (92.25) and Italy's Miro Tabanelli (91.00) third.

  20. curling

    Postpublished at 18:54 GMT 15 February

    Curling - GB men 2-1 Switzerland

    Richard Winton
    BBC Sport Scotland in Cortina

    So the Swiss were looking at GB lying two as they prepared to throw their final stone in the third. Could they remove both?

    They could not and Bruce Mouat's rink steal one to add to the point they took with the hammer in the second end.

    In a contest as tight as this is likely to be, that could be hugely significant.