Summary

  • REPLAY: Women's Super G final on Red Button and at the top of this page (replays continue until 23:59 GMT) - use play button to watch

  • GB's Lizzy Yarnold wins skeleton gold and Laura Deas bronze

  • Yarnold defends title to win GB's first gold of the 2018 Games

  • Izzy Atkin wins slopestyle bronze

  • GB's most successful day in Winter Olympic history

  • Elise Christie has X-rays after crashing out of short-track semi-finals

  • GB women curlers beat Canada but lose to South Korea

  1. Postpublished at 04:06 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    First jump. Land backwards.

  2. Postpublished at 04:06 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Three rails. A pause on the third.

  3. Postpublished at 04:06 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    A smile at the top of the run. She's riding despite an ankle injury. Away she goes...

  4. Women's slopestyle finalpublished at 04:04 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    While all that drama has been happening on the mountains, the women's slopestyle final has begun.

    Here's Britain's Katie Summerhayes with her first of three runs...

  5. 'Most astonishing Olympic story'published at 04:04 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    Matt Chilton
    Commentator on BBC TV

    Ester Ledecka is multi-talented. She is here armed with both her skis and snowboard because she is competing in the parallel giant slalom next week.

    She cannot believe it. That is one of the most astonishing Olympic stories of all time.

    At 22, she leads the Olympic super G by one hundredth of a second. Anna Veith was starting to celebrate, she was starting to give interviews.

  6. Ledecka snatches the leadpublished at 04:02 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    Can you believe this? Ester Ledecka, of the Czech Republic, has snatched the lead by 0.01 seconds. She can barely believe it. Anna Veith, the defending champion, has been beaten. Ledecka, the 22-year-old, is also competing in snowboarding events at these Games. Incredible stuff.

    Ester Ledecka of the Czech RepublicImage source, Getty Images
  7. Postpublished at 03:56 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

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  8. Postpublished at 03:55 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    Anna Vieth of Austria continues to lead this super G and is on course to become the first woman to defend the Olympic title. The competitors are slowly ebbing away in the Pyeongchang sunshine.

  9. get involved

    Your Olympicspublished at 03:51 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    #bbcolympics

    TwitterImage source, Twitter
  10. Women's slopestyle finalpublished at 03:45 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Are you still with me?

    Up early? Just getting in from a late one?

    Stick with it.

    The women's slopestyle final, featuring British pair Katie Summerhayes and Izzy Atkin, begins in 15 minutes.

  11. get involved

    Get Involvedpublished at 03:43 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    #bbcolympics

    Paul Williams: Vonn has waited 8 years for crack at the Olympics again....its tough, it means everything one chance is all you get.

  12. Title defence?published at 03:38 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    Matt Chilton
    Commentator on BBC TV

    Magnificent skiing from defending champion Austrian Anna Veith.

    The Austrians have dominated this event. In 2006 it was Michaela Dorfmeister who actually did the double, in 2010 it was Andrea Fischbacher and Veith in 2014.

    No-one has ever done consecutive victories in the women's Olympic super G.

  13. Veith pips Weiratherpublished at 03:37 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    There will be no super G fairytale for Tina Weirather. She is edged out by the defending champion, Anna Veith of Austria.

    Anna Veith of AustriaImage source, Getty Images
  14. Postpublished at 03:35 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

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  15. No medal for Goggiapublished at 03:32 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    Matt Chilton
    Commentator on BBC TV

    Sofia Goggia was winner of the test event here last year, doing the double winning both the downhill and super G.

    She hasn't won a World Cup super G this season but has been successful twice in the downhill discipline.

    She lived dangerously down the bottom half of the track but after a massive mistake it was no real surprise she will not be among the medals.

    She'll hope to put things right in the downhill.

  16. Happy team = Cool runningspublished at 03:30 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Nick Hope
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    It’s been a chaotic week for the Jamaican women’s bobsleigh team ahead of their Olympic debut with Ex Olympic champion turned coach Sandra Kiriasis left the setup - claiming there was a “toxic” atmosphere.

    Her departure suggested the team could lose the sled she had secured for them to compete in at the Games, but they trained today in that ‘Mr Cool Bolt’ sled.

    “We’re here to be athletes, it’s what the Olympics are all about - doing your best for your country and enjoying the process,” pilot Jazmin Fenlator tells me.

    “It’s never easy - if it was then everyone would be doing it so we just want to show people what is possible.”

    Jamaica bobsleigh
  17. Promising pedigreepublished at 03:27 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    Matt Chilton
    Commentator on BBC TV

    Tina Weirather's dad was downhill world champion in 1982.

    Her mum did the slalom and giant slalom Olympic gold double for Liechtenstein winning both in Lake Placid in 1980.

  18. Postpublished at 03:26 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    Tina Weirather is quite a story. She is Liechtenstein's only athlete at these Games. Her mother, Hanni Wenzel, won the tiny nation's only other Winter Olympic golds. Hanni's brother Andreas also won a silver medal. They are a royal family of skiing.

  19. 'It wasn't perfect'published at 03:21 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    Matt Chilton
    Commentator on BBC TV

    What a fantastic race at Jeongseon here today. It wasn't perfect from Tina Weirather, mistakes were made.

    The others watching at the top of the course will learn from her mistakes and hope to do it better.

  20. Postpublished at 03:19 Greenwich Mean Time 17 February 2018

    Women's super G

    We can now say with certainty that Lindsey Vonn will not be adding another Olympic gold medal to her trophy cabinet. Liechtenstein's Tine Weirather takes the lead, pushing Vonn down into fourth place.

    Tine Weirather of LiechtensteinImage source, Getty Images