Summary

  • Watch: Men's combined downhill replay

  • GB's Elise Christie crashes out in short-track speed skating final

  • Christie left in tears. Italy's Arianna Fontana wins gold

  • US teenager Chloe Kim claims halfpipe title

  • Marcel Hirscher wins first Olympic gold in men's combined

  • Kjeld Nuis wins speed skating gold for dominant Dutch

  • Norway's Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo and Sweden's Stina Nilsson claim sprint classic gold

  1. Brit-watchpublished at 05:52 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    • 08:30-09:45: Andrew Young,winner of GB's first cross country World Cup medal in 2015, lines up for his third Olympics
    • 10:00-12:11: Triple world champion Elise Christie bids for short-track speed skating gold in the women's 500m
    • 10:26-10:54: Team-mate Joshua Cheetham will make his Olympic debut in the 1,000m qualification rounds alongside Farrell Treacy
    • 11:00-13:00: Annika Taylor will compete in the cross country women's individual classic
  2. Key action: Christie goes for goldpublished at 05:48 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    10.00-12.11: Four years since Elise Christie was disqualified in all three of her events and endured both online abuse and death threats after a collision with a South Korean skater, she finally has the chance to write a happier chapter in Olympic history.

    Pyeongchang will be Christie's third Games and, having used therapy to overcome the emotional struggles that plagued her after Sochi, she enters these Olympics with genuine medal potential at all three distances.

    The Scot is the current world champion and world record holder over 500m, but knows the home crowd will be against her in the sport's spiritual home.

    Her quarter-final is scheduled for 10:02 GMT, the semi-finals start at 11:11 and the final is due at 12:09.

    Seven-time world champion Choi Min-jeong currently leads the World Cup standings in all three distances, while fellow South Korean Shim Suk-hee - a winner of three medals at Sochi 2014 - is another strong rival.

  3. Postpublished at 05:43 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

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  4. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 05:41 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    #bbcolympics

    Nick McCartan: Shaun White is not human.

  5. Postpublished at 05:40 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Ed Leigh
    Snowboarding commentator on BBC TV

    You start wondering if Shaun White isn't operating within a different gravitational force.

    Certainly, tomorrow, we have a final on our hands. I don't think I've ever seen scoring in qualifying quite like this.

  6. White leads againpublished at 05:39 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    98.50! This is only qualification!

    What will the final be like?

  7. Postpublished at 05:37 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Frontside double 1260. Hand in the air. Detach the board, walk away. White knows it was good.

  8. James takes the leadpublished at 05:36 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Scotty James, the world champion, lays down the gauntlet to Shaun White. 96.75 puts James in the lead and pushes White to third.

    Here comes the American...

  9. Postpublished at 05:34 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Huge. If James goes much higher, he'll take off.

  10. Postpublished at 05:34 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Scotty James, the Australian. A huge rival of Shaun White's...

  11. 'I'll give myself a pass'published at 05:31 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Women's halfpipe final

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  12. Postpublished at 05:28 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    No improvement on his first-run 91, but Ferguson's work is done. He'll be back for tomorrow's final.

  13. Postpublished at 05:27 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Grabs, almost an over-rotation, switch McTwist. Clean as you like. The same routine as his first run, possibly not an improvement in the score.

  14. Postpublished at 05:26 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Ben Ferguson led for a time during the opening run. He's down in third as he pushes off for his second...

  15. Hirano overtakes Whitepublished at 05:23 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Good lord. No sooner do I type that Shaun White continues to sit atop the leaderboard, does Japan's Ayumu Hirano, fourth after the first run, pull off something magical. A mah-hoo-sive score of 95.25 sees Hirano overhaul White by two points. Four years ago in Sochi, Hirano won silver aged only 15.

  16. White leading the waypublished at 05:20 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    We're well into the second run in the men's halfpipe qualifiers, with two-time champ Shaun White continuing to head the leaderboard after that earlier score of 93.25. He leads a top five of two Americans, two Japanese and an Australian.

    The Flying Tomato will go out for his second run soon.

  17. 'I’m not fazed by pressure'published at 05:18 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Nick Hope
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    Medal hope Woodsy (James Woods) has been soaking up a few rays ahead of his pre-Games media interview.

    The multiple X Games medallist was cruelly denied a true podium push in Sochi four years ago after suffering a hip injury in training, but is expected to improve on his fifth-place finish at the last Games.

    “It’s an opportunity to ski and do my best and perform under pressure which is what I love,” he tells me.

    “Winning feels great and I’m not fazed by pressure but I just want a chance to go out there and show what I can do.”

    James Woods
  18. Watch: Dressen leads the way in the men's combinedpublished at 05:12 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's combined

    The second part of the men's combined, the slalom, gets under way at 06:00 GMT, with Austria's Marcel Hirscher, the favourite, lying 12th.

    Germany's Thomas Dressen, the first of the 62 competitors to hit the course, leads thanks to this run...

    Media caption,

    Germany's Dressen leads the way in the men's downhill combined

  19. News you might have missed...published at 05:08 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Alex Capstick
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    Two goalkeepers in the US women’s ice hockey team have been asked to remove the Statue of Liberty emblem on parts of their masks. The IOC doesn’t allow images which might be viewed as a political symbol. Neither goalkeeper, Nicole Hensley and Alex Rigsby, featured in the team’s opening match.

    The International Ski Federation has defended its decision to go ahead with yesterday’s women’s slopestyle final. A spokesperson for the governing body said the wind speed was monitored constantly and that only one team approached them directly with any concerns. They expect to catch up with the schedule once the winds die down later this week.

    In a bid to boost numbers fans without tickets will no longer be charged to attend victory ceremonies at the Olympic medals Plaza in PyeongChang.

  20. Postpublished at 05:04 Greenwich Mean Time 13 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe qualification

    Tim Warwood
    Snowboarding commentator on BBC TV

    I wouldn't be surprised if some of the riders at the top of the scoreboard choose not to use their second run, if they're feeling confident. There's a big gap in the score right now, which I think only a few can be expected to bridge.