Summary

  • Winter Olympics day three - watch live coverage (UK only)

  • Figure skaters Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson fourth in ice dance after first part - event concludes on Wednesday

  • GB's Mia Brookes finishes fourth in snowboard big air final

  • GB's Bruce Mouat and Jen Dodds lose 9-3 to Sweden in semi-final and will be in bronze-medal match on Tuesday (13:05 GMT)

  • Netherlands Jutta Leerdam, partner of YouTuber-turned-boxer Jake Paul, wins speed skating gold

  • Team GB's Kirsty Muir misses out on slopestyle medal by 0.41 points, finishing fourth

Send us your Winter Olympics views

  1. Get Involvedpublished at 18:55 GMT 9 February

    Click 'Get Involved' at the top of this page to have your say

    Watching each run of the Big Air Snowboarding is pure adrenaline and nerves. It’s crazy how they do it

    Tayyib, Newcastle Upon Tyne

  2. Postpublished at 18:52 GMT 9 February

    Snowboarding - women's big air

    Japan's Kokomo Murase is up after Mia Brookes.

    It's a superb run, landing her a score of 89.75 and the lead.

    New Zealand's Zoi Sadowski Synnott, the winner in qualifying, can't land cleanly though, she's 10th with a score of 27.75.

    1. Kokomo Murase (Jpn) - 89.75
    2. Yu Seungeun (Kor) - 87.75
    3. Reira Iwabuchi (Jpn) - 82.75
    4. Mia Brookes (GBR) - 80.75
    5. Zhang Xiaonan (Chn) - 74.25
    Kokomo MuraseImage source, Getty Images
  3. Getting in a twizzlepublished at 18:51 GMT 9 February

    Figure skating - ice dance

    Emma Smith
    BBC Sport at Milano Ice Skating Arena

    I know it sounds like Kat Downes is making it up when she says "twizzle" - but that is the legitimate term.

    The International Skating Union defines a twizzle as "a traveling turn on one foot with one or more rotations, which is quickly rotated with a continuous action."

    If a skater from Istanbul performs that move, is it a Turkey twizzle?

  4. Postpublished at 18:49 GMT 9 February

    Snowboarding - women's big air final

    Ed Leigh
    Snowboarding and freestyle skiing commentator on BBC Two

    That was the trick that won her the World Championships. Oh my word.. she has answered Yu Seungeun back. That is a combination between two jumps.

  5. Postpublished at 18:48 GMT 9 February

    Snowboarding - women's big air

    Here comes Team GB's Mia Brookes for her first run.

    It's a switch 1440 - her score is 80.75, enough to propel her to third in the early standings.

    South Korea's Yu Seungeun leads having gone down the slope right before Brookes, scoring 87.75 to move ahead of Japan's Reira Iwabuchi (82.75).

    Mia BrookesImage source, Getty Images
  6. Postpublished at 18:47 GMT 9 February

    Figure skating - ice dance

    Emma Smith
    BBC Sport at Milano Ice Skating Arena

    That was a terrific performance by James and Phebe - full of pep and personality, while also being clean and technically sound.

    This duo have flown under the radar amid all the interest in Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson, but they are excellent skaters in their own right.

    And what a time to pull out a season best score! As long as one of the next 20 couples scores lower, they are through to the final.

  7. Postpublished at 18:47 GMT 9 February

    FIgure skating - ice dance

    James Hernandez and Phebe BekkerImage source, Getty Images

    A leather jacket from James Hernandez, a dress seemingly inspired by Elmer from Phebe Bekker.

    They looked like they were having a ball throughout and nailed their "twizzle sequence", according to the commentator.

    They collect a season's best 72.46 points, putting them at the top of the charts after three pairs.

    Remember, the top 20 scoring couples (out of 23) progress to Wednesday's final, where they perform their free skate.

  8. Postpublished at 18:44 GMT 9 February

    Katie Falkingham
    BBC Sport in Livigno

    All snowboarders love Mia Brookes because of the “steeze” she puts on her tricks.

    For those not familiar with the lingo, it effectively means the extra style she adds.

    Or as the in-house announcer just described it here: “Like ordering a hot dog with an extra layer of mustard.”

    Mia BrookesImage source, Getty Images
  9. Postpublished at 18:40 GMT 9 February

    Snowboarding - women's big air final

    Ed Leigh
    Snowboarding and freestyle skiing commentator on BBC Two

    We are ready to see history made here today.

  10. Bekker and Hernandez up nextpublished at 18:39 GMT 9 February

    Figure skating - ice dance

    Emma Smith
    BBC Sport at Milano Ice Skating Arena

    While Fear and Gibson channel British 90s culture through the Spice Girls, James Hernandez and Phebe Bekker do so through music by George Michael.

    A blend of Freedom and Killer by the former Wham! frontman will provide the setting to their performance.

    Will they qualify? You gotta have faith...

  11. Postpublished at 18:39 GMT 9 February

    Snowboarding - women's big air

    Away we go with run one of the women's big air!

    China's Zhang Xiaonan sets an early marker with 74.25, but 2022 winner Anna Gasser can only record a score of 25.00.

    Remember, the Austrian will be able to discard that run if her next two attempts go well, but it ramps up the pressure.

    China's Zhang XiaonanImage source, Getty Images
  12. Get Involvedpublished at 18:36 GMT 9 February

    Click 'Get Involved' at the top of this page to have your say

    Hate to say it but Jen and Bruce completely bottled it. Bronze simply not good enough.

    Vinny, Isle of Wight

    That's got to be the worst Jen & Bruce have ever played. Unrecognisable from every other match.

    Tom

  13. curling

    Postpublished at 18:35 GMT 9 February

    Curling mixed doubles semi-final - GB 3-9 Sweden

    Richard Winton
    BBC Sport Scotland in Cortina

    Bruce Mouat and Jen Dodds leave the arena looking disconsolate, and no wonder. They've been in this movie before, in Beijing four years ago, and had their heart broken in the bronze-medal match.

    They came here to right that wrong and they've now got once more chance to do it. But who will they face? Italy lead the United States in the final end over on Sheet D, so it's looking like the Americans...

  14. Postpublished at 18:35 GMT 9 February

    Katie Falkingham
    BBC Sport in Livigno

    I think mascot Tina might be the warmest person in Livigno tonight.

    It’s currently -7.

    I’ve learned from yesterday’s mistakes and remembered to put foot warmers in my boots. My toes are thanking me.

    MascotImage source, BBC Sport
  15. curling

    Postpublished at 18:32 GMT 9 February

    Curling mixed doubles semi-finals - GB 3-9 Sweden

    Steve Cram
    Curling commentator on BBC Two

    Great Britain stumbling at the final hurdle to get into the gold medal match. For the British pair, huge disappointment.

  16. GB lose to Sweden in semi-finalspublished at 18:29 GMT 9 February
    Breaking

    Curling mixed doubles semi-finals - GB 3-9 Sweden

    It's all over with an end to spare. Sweden take a point and an unassailable 9-3 lead.

    They will face either Italy or USA in the gold medal match. Italy lead 8-7 heading into the final end but USA have the hammer.

    Jen Dodds and Bruce Mouat will be in the bronze medal match as they attempt to win Great Britain's first Olympic medal in mixed doubles.

    Sweden's Isabella Wranaa and Sweden's Rasmus WranaImage source, Getty Images
  17. World champion Taubitz leads after two runspublished at 18:29 GMT 9 February

    Luge - women's singles

    Julia TaubitzImage source, Getty Images

    Two runs down, two to go in the women's singles.

    World champion Julia Taubitz has the overnight lead with a combined time of 1:45.188. She's attempting to win Germany's eighth consecutive gold in the women's event.

    Compatriot Merle Frabel is second (1:45.249) while Latvia's Elina Bota (1:45.683) occupies the bronze medal spot.

    Italy's Verena Hofer and USA's Ashley Farquharson complete the top five.

    Sandra Robatscher (Italy), Lisa Schulte (Austria), Emily Fischnaller (USA), and Beijing silver medallist Anna Berreiter (Germany) are all within a second of top spot.

    The gold medal will be decided on Tuesday.

  18. Brookes goes for goldpublished at 18:28 GMT 9 February

    Snowboarding - women's big air

    Mia Brookes gave British fans a few nervous moments in yesterday’s qualifying but pulled it out of the bag with her third and final run. Now the 19-year-old former world champion has her eyes on the podium, and could become Britain’s youngest Winter Olympic medallist since figure skater Jeanette Altwegg 78 years ago.

    Brookes finished third in qualifying behind New Zealand’s flagbearer Zoi Sadowski-Synnott, who is her nation’s most successful Winter Olympian with three medals, and Japan’s reigning world champion Kokomo Murase.

    Japan have four of the 12 finalists, including Mari Fukada, who like Brookes is just 19. Their other two representatives are Reira Iwabuchi, who has finished fourth at the last two Winter Olympics and 18-year-old Momo Suzuki.

    Austria’s Anna Gasser is the only woman to have won the Big Air at the Olympics and is targeting an unprecedented third consecutive snowboarding gold. The 34-year-old is the only one of the 12 finalists not to have been born in the 21st century.

    The competitors will compete in the reverse of the order they finished in qualifying, so Brookes will go out 10th. Each athlete can discard one of their three attempts, so one bad run isn't necessarily a disaster plus the standings can change dramatically during the third round.

  19. curling

    Postpublished at 18:22 GMT 9 February

    Curling mixed doubles semi-finals - GB 3-8 Sweden

    Richard Winton
    BBC Sport Scotland in Cortina

    Jen Dodds and Bruce Mouat have been so, so good all week. But their touch has deserted them at the worst possible moment.

  20. Postpublished at 18:21 GMT 9 February

    Figure skating - ice dance

    I'm in the moooood for dancing and so are two British pairs. It's ice dance time!

    Phebe Bekker and James Hernandez will be the third duo to take to the ice.

    World bronze medallists Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson are 21st in the running order.