Summary

  • Elise Christie tells BBC she is determined to carry on to 2022

  • Curling: GB men knocked out after losing tie-breaker v Switzerland

  • GB's Dave Ryding ninth in men's slalom - Andre Myhrer takes gold

  1. Postpublished at 04:49 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's slalom

    Remember that we're going in reverse order here from the best times clocked in the first run. So that means the lead is going to change rather frequently, with the leading skiers all going towards the end - including our very own Dave Ryding....

  2. Postpublished at 04:47 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's slalom

    Phil Brown - not the former Hull City and Southend United football manager - was leading the early stages of the second runs in the men's slalom. Not any more.

    Germany's Fritz Doffer overtook him and then his time was bettered by Russian Alexander Khoroshilov.

  3. Taylor completes second runpublished at 04:40 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's slalom

    Britain's Laurie Taylor is one of the first out in the second run of the men's slalom for the top 30, having been 27th after the first run.

    The 22-year-old from Basingstoke gets down in one minute 43.41 seconds, which for the moment leaves him third. The skiers are going out in reverse order so leader Henrik Kristoffersen goes out last.

    Remember Briton Dave Ryding was 12th after the first run, 1.37 seconds behind Kristoffersen.

    Laurie TaylorImage source, AFP
  4. Postpublished at 04:35 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Ice hockey gold-medal match, USA v Canada

    Less than five minutes to go in the first period and it's still scoreless between the USA and Canada. You feel like the first goal will get this properly going.

  5. Best ever alpine finish for GB?published at 04:30 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's slalom

    Anna Thompson
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    Dave RydingImage source, Getty Images

    By my reckoning the best ever finish for Britain in an alpine event at a Winter Olympics is Gina Hathorn's fourth place in the women's slalom back in Grenbole in 1968.

    The best men's result is Martin Bell's eighth place in the men's downhill at the 1988 Games in Calgary.

    Back in 2002, Alain Baxter finished third in the men's slalom and claimed Britain's first Winter Olympic medal on snow.

    But the joy was short-lived as he failed a post race drugs test when a trace of a banned substance was found. He was stripped of the medal.

    He won an appeal against a three-month ban set by the International Ski Federation (FIS) and was described as an “honest man” by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) but because of the "strict-liability rule" his medal was never returned.

    Ryding watched Baxter's "medal" at home in Lancashire and it fuelled his fire and he has said if he wins a medal today it's to reclaim Britain's lost medal.

  6. Half-empty at the Ice Arenapublished at 04:26 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Ice hockey women's final: Canada 0-0 USA

    Caroline Chapman
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    It's a bit of a disappointing crowd for a gold-medal match at the Ice Arena.

    Maybe everyone made the same mistake as me and went to the other hockey venue in Pyeongchang, where all the group games were held?

    Despite only being about half full, the crowd are so loud. I'd say there's a bigger Canadian support, but USA are louder!

    Canada v USA
  7. Postpublished at 04:19 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Ice hockey gold-medal match, USA v Canada

    It's been a cagey start with most of the action in the neutral zone until a flurry at either end with Canada's Blayre Turnbull unable to convert the best chance so far after good work by Natalie Spooner.

  8. Postpublished at 04:13 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Ice hockey gold-medal match, USA v Canada

    We're under way in the women's ice hockey final, no goals in the opening three minutes and no real openings so far.

  9. ice hockey

    Gold medal matchpublished at 04:11 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    USA v Canada

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  10. The story so farpublished at 04:06 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Ice hockey: women's final

    Caroline Chapman
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    Canada were unbeaten in the group stage, beating OAR, Finland and the USA on their way to the semi-final, where they thrashed the Russians again.

    The Americans' only defeat came against Canada and they also secured a 5-0 in the semi-finals, against Finland.

  11. Groundhog day for the USA?published at 04:02 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Ice Hockey

    Caroline Chapman
    BBC Sport in Pyeongchang

    It's final time in the women's ice hockey in less than 10 minutes.

    Canada have been gold medal winners at the last four Olympics, beating USA in the final at Sochi and Vancouver.

    The Americans have been world champions for the past four years but haven't won the women's Olympic title since 1998 - the year of the event's inception.

    Is their 20-year wait finally over?

    USAImage source, Getty Images
  12. Postpublished at 04:00 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's ski halfpipe final

    The last time Nico Porteous looked this happy was probably when he was ripping open his Christmas presents. The fresh-faced New Zealander climbs onto the podium, punching the air with unbridled joy. Look how proud he is! What a story.

  13. Postpublished at 03:56 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe final

    Tim Warwood
    Freestyle skiing and snowboarding commentator on BBC TV

    Well, well, well. That is a men's halfpipe final to remember.

    Alex Ferreira takes second and a huge shout out to Nico Porteous in third too, but David Wise has pulled it out of the bag.

  14. That went down well across the pond...published at 03:53 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

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  15. Postpublished at 03:53 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's ski halfpipe final

    Wise, the reigning champion, defends his crown from Sochi with fellow American Alex Ferreira taking silver.

    "U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A!!" chant the Stars and Stripes-waving American fans.

    New Zealand teenager Nico Porteous will join them on the podium - at the age of SIXTEEN!

  16. gold-medal

    Gold Medal - David Wise (USA)published at 03:51 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's ski halfpipe final

    The final fella heading down is Aaron Blunck. Can he make it an American 1-2-3? No! He can only score 84.80...

    That means David Wise is the Olympic champion (again)!

  17. Postpublished at 03:49 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's ski halfpipe final

    Indeed it is Alex Ferreira's best run... but it's not enough to overtake David Wise. Drama o'clock.

    The judges hand him a score of 96.40, just short of his compatriot's more technical 97.20.

  18. Postpublished at 03:47 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's halfpipe final

    Tim Warwood
    Freestyle skiing and snowboarding commentator on BBC TV

    He didn't just knock it out of the park, he strapped it to a space rocket and sent it into outer space!

  19. Postpublished at 03:47 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's ski halfpipe final

    Oh my word. Alex Ferreira flies higher into the air than a firework down your local park on Bonfire Night.

    The crowd go wild, our commentators purr. "It's got to be close to perfection," says Tim Warwood....

    Alex Ferreira of USAImage source, EPA
  20. Postpublished at 03:43 Greenwich Mean Time 22 February 2018

    Men's ski halfpipe final

    American teenager Alex Ferreira was leading after run one. He was leading after run two. Now he's starting run three... Will he lead when it REALLY matters?