Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Sports

Winter Olympics today: Speed skater Erin Jackson finishes fifth in 500m

MILAN — Sunday, Feb. 15 at the 2026 Winter Olympics was another exciting day of competition for these Milano Cortina Games.

A pair of American stars had disappointing results in their events. Defending speed skating gold medalist Erin Jackson finished fifth in the women’s 500 meters. And skier Mikaela Shiffrin was one of three Americans competing in the women’s giant slalom but did not make the podium.

Mac Forehand also finished the qualifying round for the freestyle big air skiing event in first place, advancing to the final round along with fellow Americans Troy Podmilsak (10th) and Konnor Ralph (12th).

The U.S. men’s curling team scored a pair of victories over Sweden and Norway to improve to 4-2 in the round robin stage, before Team USA hockey defeated Germany 5-1 to earn a first-round bye after the preliminary stage.

USA TODAY Sports has a team of more than a dozen journalists on the ground in Italy to bring you behind the scenes with Team USA and keep you up to date with every medal win, big moment and triumphant finish. Get our Chasing Gold newsletter in your inbox every morning and join our WhatsApp channel to get the latest updates right in your texts.

Here’s how Sunday at the Olympics unfolded:

U.S. defeats Germany 5-1 in hockey

The United States defeat Germany 5-1 to finish 3-0 in the preliminary round. Team USA also earns a first-round bye and will face the winner of Sweden and Latvia in the tournament stage. – Austin Curtright

Team USA curling defeats Norway 10-8

The United States improved to 4-2 in the preliminary round robin after defeating Norway 10-8 in its second win of the day after also taking down Sweden 8-5.

The U.S. has the third-best record so far in the round robin, tied with Great Britain and behind Switzerland and Canada, who both defeated the Americans. – Austin Curtright

USA’s Mac Forehand in first place after freestyle skiing big air qualifying

LIVIGNO, Italy – Mac Forehand of United States won qualifying for the freestyle skiing big air on a chilly Feb. 15 evening. Two other Americans will join him in the final, as Troy Podmilsak (10th) and Konnor Ralph (12th) each finished in the top 12 to advance.Alex Hall, a two-time Olympic medalist in slopestyle, fell on his final run in big air and failed to advance. – Gentry Estes

United States vs Germany hockey underway

The United States’ final preliminary round hockey game is underway, as the Americans are looking to secure a first-round bye with a win over Germany.

Follow along here for live updates of the game. – Austin Curtright

Ilia Malinin to skate in Olympic exhibition gala

Ilia Malinin will skate in the Olympic exhibition gala on Feb. 21 despite not winning a medal, according to USA TODAY’s Christine Brennan. The gala is the last of the skating events at each Olympics, and he was chosen to compete due to his popularity although he surprisingly didn’t podium in the free skate.

Malinin is also set to defend his world title at the 2026 world championships next month in Prague, Czech Republic. – Austin Curtright

Team USA’s Alex Hall looking to qualify for freestyle skiing big air final

LIVIGNO, Italy — American Alex Hall responded with a clean jump on his second run to keep his hopes alive in the freestyle skiing big air qualifying.

Hall, the slopestyle silver-medalist in these Games, scored an 84 on his second jump (after a 43.25 on his opening one).

In big air qualifying, each of the 29 competitors make just three runs, and the best two scores count. The top 12 advance to the Olympics final.

This has been a good showing so far for Team USA. Mac Forehand and Troy Podmilsak each appear to be in solid shape entering the third run. Forehand opened with a 93.25 and added an 89.75, putting him currently in first place with about half the field yet to take a second run.

Podmilsak put an 85 in his second attempt with an opening 89 and is in sixth place.

Konnor Ralph couldn’t quite hold his landing on his second run, so he’ll need a good third jump to go along with his opening 86.75. – Gentry Estes

Team USA’s Mac Forehand in 2nd place of freestyle skiing big air qualifying after first run

LIVIGNO, Italy – The first of three runs in the men’s freestyle skiing big air qualifying is complete, and Mac Forehand of the United States is in second place.

Forehand posted a 93.25 in his opening jump, which was bested only by a 95.25 from Matias Roche of France.

In big air qualifying, each of the 29 competitors just three runs, and the best two scores count. The top 12 advance to the Olympics final.

American teammates Troy Podmilsak (89.00, 8th place) and Konnor Ralph (86.75, 10th) each posted solid opening scores. The surprise was a 43.25 score for Alex Hall, who won silver in the freeski slopestyle earlier in these Games. Hall landed his jump cleanly but evidently fell shy on difficulty because of a lack of rotation.

Finland’s Elias Lajunen suffered a scary fall when he failed to land his first jump, falling instead on his back. The competition continued after a brief delay while medical personnel attended to him. – Gentry Estes

Team USA finishes 7th, 10th in mixed skeleton team event

Team USA finished 7th and 10th in the mixed skeleton team event at the Cortina Sliding Center Sunday night. Mystique Ro and Austin Florian clocked in at 2:00.39, setting a track record before two sliders from Italy bested them by 0.39 seconds. Kelly Curtis and Dan Barefoot finished with a combined time of 2:01.43.

Team Britain won gold, with Tabitha Stoecker and men’s gold medalist Matt Weston combining for a total track-record time of 1:59.36. Team Germany earned silver and bronze. Susanne Kreher (women’s silver medalist) and Axel Jungk combined for a total time of 1:59.53, with Jacqueline Pfeifer (women’s bronze medalist) and Christopher Grotheer just behind at 1:59.54. – Payton Titus

No appeal for Chock and Bates in ice dancing controversy

U.S. Figure Skating has chosen not to appeal the controversial finish to the ice dance competition involving Team USA’s Madison Chock and Evan Bates and France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron, a USFS official told USA TODAY Sports.

‘There has been a lot of thoughtful, and at times emotional, discussion about the ice dance competition in Milan,’ USFS CEO Matt Farrell said in a statement to USA TODAY Sports. ‘Working together with Madi and Evan after the Games, we will have thoughtful and intentional discussions about the best way to support them and the future of the sport.’

The statement comes after public scrutiny and calls to challenge the results of the ice dance competition, which many believe was scored incorrectly. − Jordan Mendoza and Christine Brennan

Femke Kok dominates 500m speed skating; Erin Jackson 5th

This was not the plan for Erin Jackson at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

With a chance to defend her Olympic title in the women’s 500 meters, Jackson instead finished fifth at the Milano Speed Skating Stadium with a time of 37.32 seconds.

Dutch star Femke Kok won gold with a time of 36.49 seconds, an Olympic record. Fellow Dutch star Jutta Leerdam took silver (37.15 seconds). Japan’s Miho Takagi won bronze (37.27 seconds). − Josh Peter

US rallies to beat China in women’s curling

The U.S. women’s curling team stole points in the final two ends to pull off a stunning 6-5 comeback over China in round-robin play. Despite the Chinese having the hammer in the ninth and 10th, the American squad of Tabitha Peterson, Tara Peterson, Taylor Anderson-Heide and mixed doubles silver medalist Cory Thiesse was able to get the key steals that led to victory.

Team USA iimproves to 4-1 during the preliminary round in Cortina.

American teen snowboarders reach slopestyle finals

Call the U.S. women’s snowboard slopestyle team the comeback kids.

Kids, because the two who qualified for finals — Jessica Perlmutter and Lily Dhawronvej — are 16 years old. But “comeback” because of how they put down solid second runs after frustrating first ones to keep their Olympic dreams alive.

Dhawronvej and Perlmutter qualified 10th and 11th, respectively, for Tuesday’s finals. The top 12 of 30 riders advanced to finals. − Chris Bumbaca

Has Mikaela Shiffrin turned a corner? We’ll find out Wednesday

Shiffrin finished 11th in the giant slalom, but she showed a comfort level she didn’t seem to have during her slalom run in the team combined event last week.

Her combined time in the two-run race was 2:14.42, 0.92 seconds behind Italy’s Frederica Brignone, who collected her second gold medal of these Olympics. But Shiffrin was only 0.30 off the podium.

Shiffrin is still chasing her elusive fourth Olympic medal, which would tie Julia Mancuso for most by an American woman in Alpine skiing. Her best event, the slalom, is coming up on Wednesday.

‘I was pushing, trying to turn any nervous energy into more, sort of, intensity or taking the power from the course. … And it felt good to push,’ Shiffrin said after the seond run.

Shiffrin is arguably the greatest skier of all time. Her 108 World Cup wins are the most by any skier, male or female, and she won three medals, two of them gold, at her first two Olympics.

But she is now 0-for-8 in her most recent Olympic races. − Nancy Armour and Payton Titus

Erin Jackson set to defend gold in 500m speed skating

Erin Jackson, the U.S. speed skater, looks to defend her Olympic title in the women’s 500 meters with a sign she’s primed for the task at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

This week she posted her second-best time ever in the women’s 1,000 meters and finished sixth. It left her sounding optimistic as she prepared for signature race, which gets underway at 11 a.m. ET.

Jackson, the 33-year-old American, will take on a 30-skater field that includes Jutta Leerdam, who this week won the gold in the women’s 1,000 meters.

Paired with Femke Kok of Netherlands, Jackson will skate in the 15th and final slot. Kok holds the world record in the 500 with a time of 36.09 and she won silver in the 1,000 here at the Milano Cortina Winter Games. − Josh Peter

Biathlete Deedra Irwin finishes 35th in women’s 10km pursuit

Team USA’s 66-year biathlon drought continues.

American biathlete Deedra Irwin finished in 35th place in the women’s 10km pursuit with a time of 33:51.5. Lisa Vittozzi of Italy won the gold.

The U.S. has medaled in every Winter Olympic sport, except biathlon, which combines cross-country skiing and rifle shooting. — Cydney Henderson

Switzerland earns OT win in men’s hockey

Switzerland defeated Czechia 4-3 as the 2026 Winter Olympics men’s hockey tournament made its first foray into overtime. Dean Kukan scored 1:49 into the extra period on a two-on-two, firing the puck up and over the right shoulder of Czechia netminder Lukas Dostal to clinch second place for the Swiss in the Group A standings. 

Switzerland now awaits the outcome of the other matches on the last day of round-robin action to find out where they will be seeded going into the qualifying matches on Tuesday. 

Filip Chlapik put the Czechs on the scoreboard at at 15:19 of the first period, but Roman Josi and Timo Meier put the Swiss in the lead in the second period. The Swiss were without one of their top players, Kevin Fiala, who suffered a lower-body injury in a game against Canada. − Helene St. James

Italian skiing star wins second gold, Mikaela Shiffrin 11th in giant slalom

Less than 10 months after shattering her left leg in a crash, Italy’s Federica Brignone now has a second gold medal of these Olympics.

Just two days after winning gold in the super-G, Brignone posted the top time in the first run and won the women’s giant slalom with ease. The Italian star’s combined time of 2:13.50 put her 0.62 seconds ahead Sweden’s Sara Hector and Norway’s Thea Louise Stjernesund, who tied for silver.

When Brignone crossed the finish line, she put her hands on her helmet, which had the image of a tiger on it. Her fellow competitors heard her roar, indeed, falling to their knees and bowing down to her.

The USA’s Mikaela Shiffrin finished 11th in the giant slalom, while Paula Moltzan was 15th. Nina O’Brien jumped up to 20th, thanks to the fastest time in the second run. − Nancy Armour

Red Gerard endures ‘awful’ wait in slopestyle qualifying

Snowboarder Red Gerard is still alive in his pursuit of a second Olympic gold medal in the men’s slopestyle.

But as for the ordeal he’d just endured? ‘It was awful,’ he said.

Out of 12 riders to advance out of the 30-man qualifying field at Livigno Snow Park, Gerard finished 11th. Despite two relatively clean runs without an obvious stumble, his high score on the second (70.00) put him squarely on the bubble with more than 20 riders to go after him. 

Yet Gerard, just barely, held a strong enough position to qualify for the finals on Feb. 18.

‘Slopestyle is in this point right now where there’s 30 riders in here, and all 30 of those riders can win the contest,’ Gerard said. ‘It’s just such a heavy game. So you’re sitting there just nervous as all heck.’ − Gentry Estes

Aerin Frankel racking up saves, salads in Milan

U.S. goaltender Aerin Frankel is known as the ‘Green Monster,’ nicknamed after the iconic left field wall at Boston’s Fenway Park because she’s just as solid in front of the net for the U.S women’s national hockey team.

But her nickname could also apply to her love of romaine lettuce.

Frankel is such a big fan of Caesar salads that she has an entire Instagram account dedicated to the leafy greens. She’s been posting photos and reviews on @painbyromaine since May 2024, but her passion project has landed in the limelight at the 2026 Winter Olympics as the U.S. women are set to play Sweden in the semifinals Monday.

Frankel has already tried several Caesar salads in Milan so far, with her first review of the 2026 Winter Games dropping Saturday. − Cydney Henderson

US teams eliminated in mixed snowboardcross relay

The U.S. mixed snowboardcross team of Nick Baumgartner and Faye Thelen was eliminated from the relay. Baumgartner started slow and never recovered, which put Thelen in an insurmountable position for her race.

The U.S. team of Stacy Gaskill and Nathan Pare also did not place in the top two of four teams in their heat. Pare finished second but Gaskill struggled and fell in her comeback attempt. − Chris Bumbaca

Norwegian skier breaks record for most golds at Winter Olympics

Hoesflot Klaebo said winning his ninth Olympic gold medal in the men’s 4 x 7.5km relay was the “perfect way” to break the all-time Winter Games record.

“We were disappointed in Beijing when we got the silver (in 2022), so now we are back on to the top again,” Klaebo said. “For me, to win my ninth (Olympic gold medal) here with the team, it’s unbelievable.”

Klaebo has won gold in all the men’s cross-country skiing events so far, with two more to go. When asked if he can win gold in the remaining events, Klaebo  said, “We’ll see, I’m going to try again on Wednesday. We’ll see where we end up.”

Klaebo is the all-time winningest Winter Olympian. When you include the Summer and Winter Games, Klaebo is tied for second on the list of all-time Olympic gold medalists with Russian gymnast Larisa Latynina, American swimmers Katie Ledecky, Mark Spitz and Caeleb Dressel, in addition to track-and-field athletes Paavo Nurmi of Finland and American Carl Lewis.

American swimmer Michael Phelps leads them all with 23 gold medals. − Cydney Henderson

US in great medal position in women’s monobob

After two runs in women’s monobob at the Cortina Sliding Center, Team USA has all three sleds in the top five.Elana Meyers Taylor is second with a time of 1:59.24, just 0.22 seconds off leader Laura Nolte of Germany. Defending Olympic champion Kaillie Armbruster Humphries is 0.31 seconds back in third. Kaysha Love is fifth with a two-run time of 2:00.01.The final two heats of women’s monobob will be held tomorrow. − Payton Titus

US relay team 6th in cross-country skiing

Team USA finished sixth in the men’s 4 x 7.5km relay at the Tesero Cross-Country Skiing Stadium. The American squad — made up of Ben Ogden, Gus Schumacher, John Steel Hagenbuch and Zak Ketterson — posted a time of 1:06:11.8.

Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo led Team Norway to a gold medal with a time of 1:04:24.5. It marks Klaebo’s fourth gold of the 2026 Games and the ninth of his career to make him the winningest athlete in Winter Olympic history. France won silver and Italy took bronze in front of the home crowd.

Ogden kicked off the race for the Americans in classic style and put up a total time of 16:15.7 to put Team USA in second place at the first exchange, only 0.6 seconds off the top Norwegian team. Ogden tagged in Schumacher for another classic ski. He finished with a time of 16:46.7, slipping to fourth position behind Norway, France and Italy.

Hagenbuch skied the third leg of the relay in freestyle without any sleeves and put up a time of 16:29.4, slipping to sixth position by 1:19.9 seconds heading into the final leg. Ketterson skied the anchor leg and turned in a time of 1:06:11.8. — Cydney Henderson

Snowboard: Red Gerard breathes sigh of relief in men’s slopestyle

It had some stress to it, but former Olympic gold-medalist Red Gerard of the USA barely made it through qualifying of the men’s slopestyle.Gerard’s top score of 70.00 on two runs put him on the bubble to advance as one of top 12 riders in the 30-man field. He waited out about half the field and eventually ended up 11th as two riders down the stretch were given scores just shy of 70.Among the Americans, Ollie Martin (78.30) and Jake Canter (70.53) finished ahead of Gerard and will join him in the Olympic finals.The fourth Team USA member of the field, Sean Fitzsimons, was unable to put together a clean run to advance. — Gentry Estes

Men’s curling: USA 8, Sweden 5

Team USA stole momentum in the seventh end by stealing a point and taking a 6-3 lead. Then they went into defense mode and Danny Casper forced Sweden to concede when his final stone cleared Sweden’s lone stole in scoring position.

Casper’s squad improves its record to 3-2, which is in fifth place, and it will take on Norway later Sunday (1:05pm ET). Norway is currently tied with Canada for third place with a 3-1 record.

Mikaela Shiffrin 7th after first run in women’s giant slalom

We are in for a wild second run of the women’s giant slalom.

Italian star Federica Brignone, the newly minted Olympic super-G champion, has a 0.34-second lead after the first run, but there are five women within a second of her, including Germany’s Lena Duerr, who sits in second.

Sofia Goggia, the Italian star who picked up the bronze medal in the downhill last week, is third, 0.46 seconds back. Then comes 2022 Olympic gold medalist Sara Hector of Sweden, Albania’s Lara Colturi and Norway’s Thea Louise Stjernesund, who are in a three-way tie for fourth.

A win might be too big an ask for Mikaela Shiffrin, who is currently 1.02 seconds behind Brignone in seventh. But she’s about a half-second – 0.56 seconds, to be exact – out of third.

The second run is scheduled for 7:30 a.m. ET (1:30 p.m. local). — Nancy Armour

USA’s Campbell Wright 8th in men’s 12.5km biathlon pursuit

American biathlete Campbell Wright finished eighth in the men’s 12.5km biathlon pursuit on Sunday. He recorded a total time of 32:25.4, just 1:13.5 behind Olympic champion Martin Ponsiluoma of Sweden.

Wright, 23, represented New Zealand at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics before joining Team USA in October 2023. Wright became the first U.S biathlete to win two medals in a single world championship when he won back-to-back silver medals in sprint and pursuit in 2025. He’s the first American to win a world championship medal since Susan Dunklee in 2020 and the first American male since Lowell Bailey’s gold in the 20 km in 2017. — Cydney Henderson

Canada’s Mikael Kingsbury wins inaugural men’s dual moguls

Gold for Canada, finally, at the 2026 Winter Olympics. And a gold for the men’s mogul GOAT on his way out.

Mikael Kingsbury won the inaugural men’s dual moguls competition after a heartbreaking silver in the singles moguls competition in which he fell to second on a tiebreaker.

Kingsbury said after that competition his retirement would be sooner rather than later. — Chris Bumbaca

Ollie Martin completes strong second qualifying run in slopestyle

USA’s Ollie Martin, 17, put together a strong second run in men’s slopestyle qualification. His score of 78.30 moved him into fourth place. About two-thirds of the 30-man field has yet to take a second run, but Martin looks to be in good shape for finishing in the top 12 to reach the Olympic finals.The upcoming wait could be more tense for Americans Jake Canter (70.53) and Red Gerard (70.00). Both are through their second runs and currently holding ninth and 10th place, respectively. — Gentry Estes

Chaos for Nick Page; Dylan Walczyk advances in dual moguls

The best new event of these Olympics keeps living up to the hype.

But dual moguls was not as successful for the U.S. men compared to the women’s team.

Nick Page’s Round of 16 race was pure chaos. He stumbled and went outside of the boundary gate, while Ikuma Horishima passed the center line, fell and crossed the finish line backward. Because that is the irony of duals moguls – sometimes you just have to make it down the mountain.

Dylan Walczyk advanced to the quarterfinals of the knockout-style tournament in which two skiers are competing at the same time (the event still comes down to judging and is not a race).

USA’s Charlie Mickel earned his bit of glory by pulling off an upset of gold-medalist Charlie Woods in the Round of 16. But a different Australian, Matt Graham, knocked him out in the quarterfinals. — Chris Bumbaca

USA’s Red Gerard looking for better second qualifying run in slopestyle

Former Olympic gold medalist Red Gerard may need to pick it up in his second qualifying run in Livigno to ensure he’ll reach the finals in snowboard slopestyle this time.

Gerald scored a 57.32 in his opening run through the slopestyle course at Livigno Snow Park, leaving him third among the four Americans in the field. Jake Canter opened with a 70.53, while Ollie Martin scored 66.51. Sean Fitzsimons sat down on one of his landings, resulting in a 26.50.

They’ll all get one more crack at it.

Each competitor in the 30-man field gets two runs with the best score counting toward qualification. The top 12 riders advance.

Outside of Fitzsimons, none of the Americans suffered any glaring falls in opening runs, but judges rewarded others for executing in a bit sharper fashion.

New Zealand’s Dane Menzies currently leads qualifying with a 86.06 score. Canadian Mark McMorris, slopestyle bronze medalist in each of the past three Olympics, opened with an impressive 81.81 after returning from an injury leading up to the big air competition earlier in these Games.

Olympic fields in big air and slopestyle are largely the same, as those two events are combined.

Gerard won gold in slopestyle in Pyeongchang in 2018 and has been critical of the format that lumps together competitors in big air and slopestyle.

The Olympic slopestyle qualifying for men and women was moved up one day on the schedule because of poor weather in the forecast for Feb. 16 in Livigno. — Gentry Estes

Mikaela Shiffrin has clean first run

Mikaela Shiffrin is keeping herself in the mix. Shiffrin skied a solid run, showing none of the tentativeness she did in the combined, and was 0.28 seconds behind clubhouse leader Sara Hector of Sweden. Lot of skiers to go, but this is a positive performance from Shiffrin.

Hector was the gold medalist in this event four years ago. — Nancy Armour

Where to watch Olympics today

Watch all 2026 Winter Olympics events on NBC and Peacock.

Watch Olympics on Peacock

Olympics schedule today

All times Eastern and accurate as of Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026, at 6:52 p.m.

3 a.m. – Nordic Combined: Large Hill Official Training 2, Predazzo Ski Jumping Stadium (Val di Fiemme)
3:05 a.m. – Curling: Men’s Round Robin – USA vs. SWE, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
3:05 a.m. – Curling: Men’s Round Robin – GER vs. GBR, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
3:05 a.m. – Curling: Men’s Round Robin – NOR vs. ITA, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
4 a.m. – Alpine Skiing: Women’s Giant Slalom Run 1 & 2 – medal event, Stelvio Ski Centre (Bormio, Valtellina)
4 a.m. – Bobsleigh: Women’s Monobob Heat 1 & 2, Cortina Sliding Centre (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
4:30 a.m. – Freestyle Skiing: Men’s Dual Moguls Quarters, Semis, Finals – medal event, Livigno Snow Park (Livigno, Valtellina)
5:15 a.m. – Biathlon: Men’s 12.5km Sprint – medal event, Anterselva Biathlon Arena (Antholz)
6 a.m. – Cross-Country Skiing: Men’s 4 x 7.5km Relay – medal event, Tesero Cross-Country Skiing Stadium (Val di Fiemme)
6:10 a.m. – Ice Hockey: Men’s Preliminary (SUI vs. CZE), Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena
7:30 a.m. – Snowboard: Mixed Team Snowboard Cross Quarterfinals, Semifinals, Final – medal event, Livigno Snow Park (Livigno, Valtellina)
8:05 a.m. – Curling: Women’s Round Robin – JPN vs. KOR, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
8:05 a.m. – Curling: Women’s Round Robin – DEN vs. ITA, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
8:05 a.m. – Curling: Women’s Round Robin – GBR vs. SWE, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
8:05 a.m. – Curling: Women’s Round Robin – USA vs. CHN, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
8:45 a.m. – Biathlon: Women’s 10km Sprint Pursuit – medal event, Anterselva Biathlon Arena (Antholz)
10 a.m. – Speed Skating: Men’s Team Pursuit Quarterfinals, Milano Speed Skating Stadium (Rho, Milan)
10:40 a.m. – Ice Hockey: Men’s Preliminary (CAN vs. FRA), Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena
11:03 a.m. – Speed Skating: Women’s 500m – medal event, Milano Speed Skating Stadium (Rho, Milan)
11:35 a.m. – Ski Jumping: Women’s Large Hill Trial Round, 1st Round, Final – medal event, Predazzo Ski Jumping Stadium (Val di Fiemme)
12 p.m. – Skeleton: Mixed Team – medal event, Cortina Sliding Centre (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
1:05 p.m. – Curling: Men’s Round Robin – USA vs. NOR, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
1:05 p.m. – Curling: Men’s Round Robin – CHN vs. CAN, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
1:05 p.m. – Curling: Men’s Round Robin – CZE vs. ITA, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
1:05 p.m. – Curling: Men’s Round Robin – GBR vs. SUI, Cortina Curling Olympic Stadium (Cortina d’Ampezzo)
1:10 p.m. – Ice Hockey: Men’s Preliminary (DEN vs. LAT), Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena
1:30 p.m. – Freestyle Skiing: Men’s Freeski Big Air Qualification Runs 1, 2, 3, Livigno Snow Park (Livigno, Valtellina)
1:45 p.m. – Figure Skating: Pair Skating – Short Program, Milano Ice Skating Arena (Milan)
3:10 p.m. – Ice Hockey: Men’s Preliminary (USA vs. GER), Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena

Meet Team USA 2026: Get to know the athletes behind the games

More 2026 Winter Olympics

See the full Milano Cortina Games schedule

See the 2026 Medal Count Here

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

    You May Also Like

    Politics

    When George Santos mentioned his family during his congressional campaign, the New York Republican often reflected on the work ethic and strength of his...

    Sports

    Kicker Alejandro Mata is following former Tigers coach Deion Sanders to Colorado. ‘Thankful to be committed and signed to the University of Colorado,’ Marta wrote on...

    Stocks

    The stock market has always come up with ways for challenging investors. What seems to be so obvious rarely works out, and what seems...

    Politics

    Sister Stephanie Schmidt had a hunch about what her fellow nuns would discuss over dinner at their Erie, Pennsylvania, monastery on Wednesday night. The...

    Disclaimer: SecretCharts.com, its managers, its employees, and assigns (collectively “The Company”) do not make any guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Information provided by this website is for research purposes only and should not be considered as personalized financial advice. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give investing advice or provide investment recommendation. Any investments recommended here should be taken into consideration only after consulting with your investment advisor and after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.

    Copyright © 2025 SecretCharts.com | All Rights Reserved