Ice Hockeypublished at 07:42 Greenwich Mean Time 12 February 2018
Swizerland 0-0 Japan
We are up and running at the Kwandong hockey centre.
Watch at the top of the screen.
REPLAY: Figure Skating on Red Button (replays continue till 23:59 GMT) - press play button to watch
Dutch speed skater Ireen Wust triumphs
Biathlon golds for German Laura Dahlmeier & France's Martin Fourcade
GB's Aimee Fuller 17th in slopestyle final affected by strong winds
Tom Rostance
Swizerland 0-0 Japan
We are up and running at the Kwandong hockey centre.
Watch at the top of the screen.
Curling
Caroline Chapman
BBC Sport in Pyeongchang
After arriving from their holding camp in Japan last week, training has started for Britain’s curlers on the ice in Pyeongchang.
The women’s team are here now in practice at the curling centre. Eve Muirhead, Anna Sloane and Vicki Adams won bronze at Sochi in 2014, along with Claire Hamilton and then alternate Lauren Gray.
Hamilton quit the rink just after the last Winter Games, so Gray now competes as lead, with the experienced former GB skip Kelly Shafer as alternate.
Mr T was tweeting again in the early hours of this morning. He is now our favourite Winter Olympics fan.
(In case you missed it, he said he was watching "curling, fools" yesterday...)
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Slopestyle champion Jamie Anderson:
"The conditions were not ideal but it changes so quick. When we were practising and even earlier this morning when we all got there, it was really bad and they did delay it and did their best. I think there's a lot of mixed feelings.
"I just kind of tried to stay in my zone, stay optimistic. I knew there was wind, obviously, but who knows when there's not going to be wind. I think we talked about maybe running in a couple of days, when it may have been calmer. I was kind of down for whatever. I just try to keep it neutral and let the officials make the call."
Strong stuff - pundits and athletes alike seem to all agree that the slopestyle final shouldnot have gone ahead.
What did the gold medalist have to say?
Snowboarding: Women's slopestyle final
Jenny Jones speaking to BBC TV: "It was an absolute shocker as far as the wind was concerned. It was really gusty.
"It was a total lottery of what was going to happen. I wonder what went on in those conversations and why somebody didn't say "let's postpone this." In my mind, I would have wanted it to be postponed.
"Of course it's not safe. It's an extreme sport. You're jumping off a 60 foot kicker and you're almost sailing on your board. Luckily nobody was badly injured. I'd be asking why this whole thing carried on.
"I think Aimee Fuller will be gutted. But she is in one piece. She stayed on her feet and she almost made that last kicker but the wind took her. There was nothing she could do. It wasn't in her control.
"Jamie Anderson played it safe and credit to her - that was her experience that showed. She almost did a run the same level I did in Sochi and we all know they have progressed so much since then. It's so sad they couldn't showcase it."
Switzerland v Japan (07:40 GMT)
The women's ice hockey is about to start, the Swiss team have been warming up by playing football with what looked like a basketball. Unconventional.
You'll be able to watch at the top of the screen shortly.
Women's slopestyle
Enni Rukajarvi of Finland, who won bronze:
"It was pretty bad. It was really dangerous, you didn't know what kind of wind you were going to get for your run. It was kind of about luck if you had good wind or not. And you had to be smart to try to read the flags, which way the wind was blowing.
"It was a totally new experience for me, even I have been competing for so long, with wind like that, which is changing all the time. You didn't know at all what you were going to get.
"The weather was bad and too dangerous, and I got a lot of wind in my run, so that was bad, too. I had a fall and hurt my chin a little bit, so it wasn't too nice."
On whether it was a good call to hold the final in windy conditions:
"It wasn't. It was better in the practice, but then it got really bad, so they should have cancelled it, or moved it."
On winning bronze:
"I'm happy to land my run and get a good score. Most happy that no one got hurt really bad."
Fuller crashed out
Great Britain's Aimee Fuller crashed out of the women's slopestyle final, after the 26-year-old rider scored a "disappointing" 34.63 in her first run & crashed out in her second run in the final.
Should they have delayed or moved the slopestyle final?
That's the big talking point of the day.
Snowboarding: Women's slopestyle final
BBC Radio 5 live
Jenny Jones, who became the first Briton to win an Olympic medal in a snow event at Sochi in 2014, speaking to BBC Radio 5 live on the weather conditions in the women's slopestyle final: "It was so tough with the wind. Visibility was fine and even temperature was okay but it wasn't a consistent wind.
"As an athlete coming down that course it was like pot luck and you had no idea what speed to take into each jump and you could see what problems the girls were having.
"They started the event in the end but you were thinking was there less wind when they started it? As they were coming down that course, on the same kicker, one girl would land at the bottom and one at the top. That was dependent on the tailwind. I saw some bad crashes and I'm just happy that nobody was badly injured.
"They postponed it twice and there was this little window of opportunity where it died down and there was another decision that had to be made.
"But these girls have progressed so much from Sochi - the level - but that wasn't shown today. They didn't get to showcase it. Can you imagine training for four years and not being able to show it? It was all over after just two runs."
#bbcolympics or text us on 81111
Auro Fox: How possible would it be to build #slopestyle, external#halfpipe, external indoors to avoid wind interference?
If you build it, they will come
Women's slopestyle final
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Women's halfpipe qualification
What goes through an elite athlete's mind moments before a competition, I hear you ask?
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The mint choc chip didn't slow Kim down though - she set a huge marker in the women's halfpipe qualifying with a score of 91.50, the 17-year-old is the red hot favourite to win the gold medal in Pyeongchang.
#bbcolympics
#bbcolympics or text us on 81111
How's your winter Olympics so far? What's the highlight been?
Have you ever tried the luge?
Let us know - you can text in to 81111 (UK Only, names on please) or tweet us at #bbcolympics.
I'm not going to lie to you, it's a bit of a fallow period just now.
The men's double luge is the only event actually happening, and that's 'only' practice.
Here's what's to come though on the medals front:
"It was a lottery out there"
If you missed the women's slopestyle earlier on, it was hugely affected by the weather, with wind playing havoc.
Anna Gasser, one of the medal favourites, only finished 15th and she was not happy.
"It was really hard conditions, like almost I would say it as a lottery with the wind how you would do," she said.
"I don't think it was a fair competition and I'm a little disappointed in the organisation that they pulled through with it.
"From my point of view I think it was not a good show for women's snowboarding.
"For me, a competition should be fair, especially on that stage.
"Even yesterday the practice we did in the morning was dangerous. It was a really good decision for them to not do it yesterday, even though I think it was less windy than today, but we need weather days."
Thanks Steph, and morning everyone!
How are we on this chilly Monday morning?
Anyway, those questions are for another time. Or maybe they are for Tom Rostance. He's here to guide you through the rest of the day.