Postpublished at 11:21 Greenwich Mean Time 15 February 2022
McKay ends with a smile but that quickly turns to a disappointed look towards the ice.
Her team-mates are applauding up in the stands.
Now we wait for the judges...
Day 11 selected highlights (all times GMT):
Women’s figure skating short programme - Russian Kamila Valieva, 15, returns & leads standings going into Thursday's free skate
Curling - Success for GB as the women beat Japan before the men defeat Sweden
Two-man bobsleigh - GB's Hall and Gleeson crash out on third run
Women’s ski slopestyle final - Kirsty Muir eighth and Katie Summerhayes ninth as GB medal wait goes on
Women’s downhill - Corinne Suter of Switzerland takes gold medal
GB's James Woods pulls out of men’s ski slopestyle qualification
Men's aerials qualifying - Lloyd Wallace will not be in the final after scoring 71.94 on second run
Get involved via #BBCOlympics
Matthew Henry, Tom Mallows and Nicola Pearson
McKay ends with a smile but that quickly turns to a disappointed look towards the ice.
Her team-mates are applauding up in the stands.
Now we wait for the judges...
Figure skating women's short programme
McKay has recovered OK.
Her uncle Les Barr played for Dundee FC. I doubt he moved like this on the football pitch...
Down!
Great Britain's Natasha McKay takes a tumble early in her routine. She's got a lot to do to drag it back.
Remember she must qualify in the top 25 to make the free skate.
Figure skating women's short programme
Here we go then.
"Representing Great Britain, Natasha McKay."
Figure skating's awkward wait for the judges' scores while waving to camera really is iconic.
Figure skating women's short programme
Australia's Kailani Craine does not look happy with her routine. She's slumping from the ice, seemingly close to tears.
Great Britain's Natasha McKay is up next...
Figure skating - women’s short programme
Sonia Oxley
BBC Sport in Beijing
Nastasha McKay has just been presented to the crowd. She’s now warming up and just has to wait for one more skater, Kailani Craine, to perform.
Men's team pursuit
A supreme performance in the final ensured Norway retained their Olympic men's team pursuit title.
The Russian Olympic Committee had set an Olympic record in shocking the USA in their semi-final. But that effort looked to have taken its toll as they gassed out in the final, crossing the line 2.39 seconds slower than the Norwegians.
Did you think you'd be saying that at the start of the day, Carl?
#BBCOlympics
Carl: Men’s Nordic combined, what a race
Figure skating women's short prgramme
Great Britain's Natasha McKay is out on the ice warming up for her short programme figure skating effort.
We're expecting her to go for real in about 10 minutes.
Nordic combined
Jarl Magnus Riiber fades badly and eventually crosses the line in eighth.
You have to feel for the Norwegian. He only got out of isolation yesterday after a positive Covid test so clearly did not know the course.
After going the wrong way he had to turn around and get back on the correct route, virtually wiping out the 44-second lead he had following the ski jump.
Freestyle skiing men's aerials qualifcation
The men's aerials qualification is under way.
Each skier flies down to a massive jump, flips and twists their way through a trick in the air and then attempts to land it.
The judges give each a score.
The top six from qualification run one go through to the final. The rest go into qualification run two.
Lloyd Wallace should be the 16th to drop.
Nordic Combined
He has reeled in the chasing pack! It's a sensational gold for Joergen Graabak of Norway!
Team-mate Jens Luraas Oftebro makes it a Norwegian one-two as their domination of this event continues, with Akito Watabe of Japan taking home a creditable bronze.
What a finish that was.
Nordic combined
Johannes Lamparter is into the lead, is the gold medal going to Austria?
Akito Watabe is tucked in behind in second with Manuel Faisst in third - but Vinzez Geiger is still there in fourth, while Joergen Graabak is leading a trio of Norwegians that are closing in on the leaders as we approach the finish.
This is going to be close!
Nordic Combined
Ollie Williams
Commentator on BBC TV
That is one of the great Olympic calamities!
Jarls Magnus Riiber has been in isolation so he's not had that much time to prepare, he didn't know which way to go.
He went into the finish line when he should have been going round to start the second lap. He had to turn around and ski all the way back and now he has been caught.
You can imagine what must be going on in Riiber's mind right now because it's one of the great disasters of the Olympics!
Nordic combined
World champion Johannes Lamparter has joined Jarl Magnus Riiber, Akito Watabe and Manuel Faisst at the front.
German Vinzenz Geiger, who overcame an 86-second deficit in the normal hill event, is leading a bunched chasing pack of 11. Do not rule him out.
The athletes will be really feeling the burn now as they begin steep climb. I'm exhausted just watching.
Freestyle skiing men's aerials
At 11:00 GMT is the first qualification run of the men's aerials in the freestyle skiing.
Competing for Great Britain is Lloyd Wallace - his second Winter Games.
He has remarkable Olympic pedigree.
His grandfather Peter Curry competed in the steeplechase at the 1948 Olympics, his uncle Shaun Wallace a track cyclist in LA 1984 and Atlanta in '96, his father Robin was a freestyle in Calgary in 1988 and his mother Jilly Curry a freeskier in 1992 and 1994. Remarkable.
None of those have won an Olympic medal, however. Could Lloyd be the first?
It'll be tough. Russian Maxim Burov is the man to beat.
I know the triple axel is tough because I've seen I, Tonya...
Figure skating - women's short programme
Sonia Oxley
BBC Sport in Beijing
Just scanning through the list of planned elements and what's going to separate the best from the rest in the short programme is the triple axel.
Only seven of the 30 skaters will attempt the jump - which involves three and a half rotations of the body, taking off forwards and landing backwards.
Kamila Valieva has one in her programme.