Summary

  • GB's Elise Christie wins short-track speed skating heat

  • Lim Hyo-jun wins speed skating gold for hosts South Korea

  • Sweden's Charlotte Kalla wins first gold of the Games in skiathlon

  • Unified Korean women's ice hockey team lose 8-0 to Switzerland

  • Debate: #bbcolympics or text 81111

  1. Postpublished at 06:00 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Just waking up? Why would you set your alarm for this time at the weekend?

    You've missed all three of the Great Britain's men missing out on a place in the slopestyle final.

  2. Postpublished at 05:56 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    I'm still not sure I entirely understand how this OAR malarkey works. I can sort of see how athletes in individual sports can compete under the Olympic flag, but how does it work in teams events. I mean, who is in charge of the OAR ice hockey team? What was the selection criteria? How did they know who was available?

  3. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 05:54 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    #bbcolympics

    TweetImage source, Twitter
  4. Postpublished at 05:49 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    After the cross-country, there are also medals to be won in biathlon, short-track, speed skating and ski jumping. We'll also have luge, ice hockey and curling on the menu.

    Have you managed to stay awake through the night? Let me know. I'll give you a point if you have.

  5. Key actionpublished at 05:46 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Nick Hope
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    07:15-08:20: The first medals of the 2018 Winter Olympics will be awarded at the Alpensia cross country skiing centre where Norway's Marit Bjoergen is a strong favourite to secure victory in the women's 7.5km + 7.5km skiathlon.

    The 'Iron Lady' is the reigning world and Olympic champion in the event and looking to secure a seventh Olympic title, but countrywoman Heidi Weng took bronze in Sochi 2014 and is in career-best form.

  6. Postpublished at 05:45 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    "What next?" I hear you both cry. We're about 90 minutes or so away from the first gold medal of the Games being decided. There's an Olympic champion to be crowned in women's cross-country skiing from 07:15 GMT.

  7. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 05:43 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Charlie Groves: It's all about the big air now boys!

  8. Snowboardingpublished at 05:39 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Ed Leigh
    Snowboarding commentator on BBC TV

    Such a shame for Billy Morgan, after the journey he's been on, he looks absolutely gutted.

  9. Snowboardingpublished at 05:38 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Morgan looks absolutely crestfallen. What a disappointing first day of these Games on the snow for Great Britain.

  10. Snowboardingpublished at 05:37 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Team GB's Jamie Nicholls on BBC One: "It's such a shame when you see people fall over at this stage, when you've worked so hard for so long and you can't put a run down.

    "Some days it works, some days it doesn't."

  11. Morgan fallspublished at 05:37 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Snowboarding heats

    He's gone!

    Billy Morgan is down.

    He is the third Briton to fail in qualifying of the slopestyle.

    At least there's the big air to come...

  12. Snowboardingpublished at 05:37 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Landed a big jump....

  13. Snowboardingpublished at 05:36 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    He's away. 270 on, 270 off. Clean and fast....

  14. Snowboardingpublished at 05:36 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Was that fall on the exact same jump as the first run? It certainly looked like it. A missed grab, maybe even switching midway through the jump.

    Anyway. Billy Morgan....

  15. Coultas fallspublished at 05:35 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Snowboarding

    Here he goes. Perpendicular to the slope, then on to the pipes. Ah no....

    Down again.

    Rowan Coultas will not reach the final.

  16. Snowboardingpublished at 05:34 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Right then. Rowan Coultas. The first of the two Britons in the second run of the second heat.

    An Olympic dream on the line....

  17. Snowboardingpublished at 05:32 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Canada's Max Parrot, second after the first run, is heading down. To me, that's pronounced like the bird, but apparently it's more to rhyme with the Belgian detective Poirot. A bit like Hyacinth Bucket pronouncing it bouquet. 87.36 puts him in the lead in the second heat and gives him the best score of either heat.

  18. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 05:28 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Willie Gilmour: Up early watching the snowboarding - these guys are unreal. Brave, fearless and skillful beyond words. Amazing.

  19. Snowboardingpublished at 05:27 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    The miserable scene that we were greeted with earlier, the misty snow as we waited for the first heat to begin, really has given way to something quite lovely. The further the riders progress down the mountain, the greater sunshine they enjoy. Good lord, American Kyle Mack, pictured, has taken a helluva bump there. It was looking so good, but the final landing in a face full of snow.

    United States snowboarder Kyle Mack crashesImage source, Reuters
  20. ice hockey

    'Now we can focus on hockey'published at 05:22 Greenwich Mean Time 10 February 2018

    Switzerland v Corea - Women's hockey (12:10 GMT)

    Caroline Chapman
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    The united Korean team got a brilliant reception as they walked out at the Olympic Stadium on Friday, but their merger hasn't all been positive.

    The move has been criticised by some in South Korea who feel that their athletes have lost the opportunity to play so players from the North could be accommodated.

    Grace Lee, who was born in America, told the BBC's Alex Capstick what it was like when the players from the North arrived into the team.

    "It was pretty short notice but as soon as everyone came in, everyone was trying to help them out," said the 19-year-old from Colorado.

    "After they arrived, a little bit of ease came with it. It’s been pretty good.

    "When they were deciding if this was happening, there was a time where we thought it would happen. Once we got the answer of yes, they are coming, everyone was fine and this was going to be our team.

    "Now we can focus on hockey."

    Korea's joint hockey teamImage source, Getty Images