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Lamarche 5th in dramatic 1000m speed skate, Oldham wins bronze in slopestyle

02/09/26 12:57

Jutta Leerdam wins record-setting 1000m speed skating gold with fiancé Jake Paul in stands

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Jutta Leerdam of Netherlands celebrates after winning gold and setting a new Olympic record for the women’s 1000m.Piroschka Van De Wouw/Reuters

Twice world champion Jutta Leerdam delivered the Netherlands their first gold medal of the Milano Cortina Olympics on Monday by winning the women’s speed skating 1000m crown in a new Olympic record time.

Fellow Dutchwoman Femke Kok and Japan’s most decorated female Olympian Miho Takagi took silver and bronze respectively.

Canada’s Béatrice Lamarche fell just short of the podium, finishing fifth after temporarily holding a medal position.

Lamarche, from Quebec, held third place entering the event’s last pairing but was pushed out after the Netherlands’ Jutta Leerdam finished first and Japan’s Miho Takagi reached third, taking bronze.

Two other Canadians, Prince George, B.C.’s Carolina Hiller-Donnelly and Rose Laliberté-Roy from Lévis, Que., finished 26th and 27th, respectively.

– Reuters and The Canadian Press

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Lamarche just missed the podium in the 1000m event.DANIEL MUNOZ/AFP/Getty Images

02/09/26 12:37

Legendary moguls skier Mikaël Kingsbury heads to his last Olympics

– Eric Reguly

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Kingsbury, the most decorated moguls skier in history, was Canada’s flag-bearer at the opening ceremony of what will be his last Olympics.David Ramos/Getty Images

Mikaël Kingsbury has nothing left to prove.

At the Milan Cortina Winter Games, the world’s most decorated moguls skier is not even planning to perform his signature “1440” – four aerial rotations, or 1440 degrees of spin – though is not ruling out the spectacular manoeuvre if the conditions on the slope, and in his mind, are right for it.

“Really, I just want to ski and have fun,” he said in an interview two weeks before the men’s moguls’ final on Feb. 12, in Livigno, one of the Olympic towns in the Italian Alps.

Read the full story on Kingsbury’s legacy.

02/09/26 11:53

Chloe Kim says U.S. Olympians have right to speak up after Trump criticizes Hunter Hess

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Hunter Hess of the United States reacts while competing in the men’s freeski halfpipe final during the Toyota US Grand Prix 2025 in December.Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

American athletes have the right to speak their minds, double Olympic snowboarding champion Chloe Kim said on Monday, stepping into a row that has spilled from the Italian Alps into U.S. politics.

“I’m really proud to represent the United States,” Kim, a two-time Olympic gold medallist in the halfpipe, told a press conference held by the women’s U.S. snowboarding team in the mountain venue of Livigno on Monday.

“The U.S. has given my family and I so much opportunity. But I also think that we are allowed to voice our opinions on what’s going on. And I think we need to lead with love and compassion and I would like to see some more of that.”

Her comments came a day after U.S. President Donald Trump labelled freestyle skier Hunter Hess a “real loser” for admitting he felt conflicted about representing his country at the Milan Cortina Games.

Hess had said it was “a little hard” to wear U.S. colours given his unease about events at home, remarks that ignited a social media storm and drew Trump’s rebuke on Truth Social.

The exchange has sharpened a broader debate about whether Olympians should express personal views on the global stage.

American Olympic medallist Gus Kenworthy, competing for his birth nation Britain at the Games, was pulled into the same culture clash after saying he got “awful messages” for posting an anti-ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) slogan, apparently etched with urine in the snow to his followers.

Together the episodes have turned athlete expression into one of the Games’ unexpected fault lines.

– Reuters

02/09/26 11:08

Opinion: Where’s Mark Carney? Sadly, not where he should be: the Olympics

– Cathal Kelly

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Prime Minister Mark Carney waves holding a challenge coin as he speaks to guests at the Black History Month event at the Museum of History in Gatineau, Que. Wednesday, Feb 4, 2026. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian WyldAdrian Wyld/The Canadian Press

Outside of a strictly sporting context, Canada is culturally invisible at the Olympics. That was fine two years ago. Preferable, even. Nobody wants to take the spotlight off the athletes – that was the wisdom.

It doesn’t work any more. If the athletes want the spotlight entirely to themselves, I suggest they brush up on their international diplomacy. Whether they want to be or not, they are all travelling representatives of a country under a sort of siege.

In those circumstances, Canada doesn’t need more bronze medals. It needs to create global heat. Because when they’re coming for us, you don’t want people from Brazil and Japan going, “Who?”

You want them saying, “Not Canada, that country I know a little about and think I love based on its many charming appearances on the world stage.”

If sales is the job, only one Canadian has shown themselves both willing and able recently – Mark Carney.

As best I can tell, this guy lives on a plane, like that weird billionaire in Contact. Since he got the top job, it seems like he’s visited every major world capital except Ottawa.

But will he be in Milan? No plans to do so, according to the Prime Minister’s Office on Sunday. He’s leaving that one to the B-team.

02/09/26 10:32

Ukraine’s Heraskevych displays images of athletes killed in war on his helmet

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Vladyslav Heraskevych of Ukraine during training.Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters

Ukrainian skeleton athlete Vladyslav Heraskevych trained on Monday at the Milano Cortina Games in a helmet with images of compatriots killed during the war in Ukraine, delivering on a promise to use the Olympics to keep attention on the conflict.

“Some of them were my friends,” Heraskevych, who is his country’s flag bearer, told Reuters of the portraits after his training session at the Cortina sliding centre.

Visible on the helmet are teenage weightlifter Alina Perehudova, boxer Pavlo Ischenko, ice hockey player Oleksiy Loginov, actor and athlete Ivan Kononenko, diving athlete and coach Mykyta Kozubenko, shooter Oleksiy Habarov and dancer Daria Kurdel, he told Reuters.

The 26-year-old said the International Olympic Committee had contacted Ukraine’s Olympic Committee over his helmet.

“It’s still being processed,” he said. Heraskevych, who held up a “No War in Ukraine” sign at the Beijing Olympics days before Russia’s 2022 invasion, had said he intended to respect Olympic rules prohibiting political demonstrations at venues while still ensuring Ukraine’s plight remained visible during the Games.

Rule 50.2 of the Olympic Charter states: “No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas.”

Neither the IOC nor the Ukrainian committee had any immediate comment on Heraskevych’s case.

– Reuters

02/09/26 10:22

How the Ice Academy of Montreal became a global hub for Olympic figure skaters

– Robyn Doolittle

A look at the Ice Academy of Montreal when The Globe visited in September.

Fred Lum/The Globe and Mail

It’s a rainy fall morning outside the rink in Montreal, just a few weeks ahead of the first event in the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating competition series.

On one ice pad, world champions Madison Chock and Evan Bates of the United States are drilling sections of their flamenco free program.

Around the corner on the second rink, reigning Olympic champion Guillaume Cizeron and his new partner Laurence Fournier Beaudry – a former Canadian champion, who now represents France with Cizeron – are running their twizzles.

Usually, Britain’s Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson would also be here, but they have the day off.

All three teams are archrivals and Olympic podium contenders. They’re also training partners.

In fact, 13 of the 23 teams competing at these Milan Cortina Winter Olympic Games are based out of the Ice Academy of Montreal (I.AM), the elite international ice dance school that has produced the last two Olympic champions – Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir in 2018 and Cizeron and his former partner Gabriella Papadakis in 2022 – as well as nine of the last 10 world champions.

The idea of being able to openly watch your fiercest competition train every day may seem peculiar to some – especially after the outrage over the spying scandal at the Paris Olympics, when an analyst working for Canada Soccer was caught flying a drone over a rival’s practice – but this is the ethos of I.AM.

And it’s producing results.

02/09/26 09:47

Megan Oldham’s post-medal family reunion

02/09/26 09:37

Switzerland’s Franjo von Allmen and Tanguy Nef win combined gold in alpine skiing men’s team

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Gold medallists Tanguy Nef of Switzerland and Franjo von Allmen of Switzerland celebrate on the podium during the victory ceremony.Christian Hartmann/Reuters

Swiss skiers Franjo von Allmen and Tanguy Nef stormed back to win gold in the team combined Monday as the event made its Olympic debut at the Milan Cortina Games.

In fourth place after von Allmen’s downhill run, Nef found speed on a rutted slalom course to help the Swiss-2 team finish in a combined time of 2 minutes, 44.04 seconds.

The Swiss-1 team of Marco Odermatt and Loic Meillard tied for silver with the Austrian-1 team of Vincent Kriechmayr and Manuel Feller. Both teams finished 0.99 seconds behind.

No bronze medal was awarded as a result of two teams finishing in a tie for silver.

The team combined event involves one racer competing in a downhill run and another in a slalom, with their two times added up to determine the final results.

– The Associated Press

02/09/26 09:22

Reasons why the size of the Olympic hockey rink in Milan probably doesn’t matter

– Grant Robertson

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Head coach Jon Cooper of Team Canada during training at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on Sunday.Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Even before the first puck is dropped in the men’s hockey tournament in Milan, the hockey world has already seen a new record set: Most time spent talking about the size of a rink.

In the past few months, the slightly off-kilter size of the Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena has been the subject of endless debate anywhere hockey is discussed.

Though NHL players are returning to the Olympics for the first time in 12 years, the rink itself is not quite NHL size. It’s about three feet shorter and a few inches wider.

But the real question is: Does it even matter?

For any hockey fans worked up about the rink size at the Olympics, here are five reasons why it probably doesn’t.

02/09/26 09:09

In any other sport, this moment would have created tension between teams. Not in curling

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Stefania Constantini of Italy shakes hands with Korey Dropkin of United States after winning with Amos Mosaner of Italy in curling mixed doubles round-robin game.Issei Kato/Reuters

In any other Olympic sport, a tie game with the result hanging in the balance would create tension between teams. Not in curling.

When U.S. mixed doubles curler Korey Dropkin accidentally kicked his stone off the center line Monday, in the middle of a decisive match against Italy in the Winter Games, the Italian duo laughed and waved it off, trusting the American to return it to its original position.

There were no debates involved, no refs called in, no bad-mouthing.

“For us it was really fine,” said Stefania Constantini, the curling belle from Cortina, glowing after the match, which her team won 7-6. “We just had a laugh together because they are really nice people.”

The moment highlighted one of the many reasons the niche sport of curling has such a dedicated fanbase — teams are easygoing and friendly to each other on the ice, even in the most heated moments. Monday’s game decided who would play whom in the semifinals, and the U.S. had been hoping for a win to avoid having to play Italy again.

Though that wish did not come true, it was clear there were no hard feelings. Dropkin said after the match that he and his mixed doubles partner and Minnesota native, Cory Thiesse, would focus on “being a little sharper here and there and just trying to be a little more precise” when playing Italy again tonight.

“We’re a tough team to beat twice,” he said. “They’re gonna have to bring their A game.”

The semifinals will be played Monday evening at 12:05 p.m. ET. Along with the repeat between the U.S. and Italy, Sweden’s curling siblings Isabella and Rasmus Wrana will play Britain’s best friends, Bruce Mouat and Jennifer Dodds, the top-ranked team in the field.

– The Associated Press

02/09/26 08:56

Italy’s early medals lift TV audiences and ticket sales

A medal-rich start by hosts Italy at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics is translating into booming television audiences and strong in-person demand for what is shaping into a commercially successful Games, organizers said on Monday.

Italy has won nine medals including one gold, driving a surge of interest at home and putting them third in the table behind winter powerhouses Norway and the United States. Among highlights for Italian fans was a gold medal for speed skater Francesca Lollobrigida, who celebrated with tears and wrapped in the tricolour national flag alongside her two-year-old son.

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Gold medallist Francesca Lollobrigida of Italy celebrates with the Italian flag after the women’s 3,000 meters speedskating race on Saturday.Christophe Ena/The Associated Press

“These have been fantastic days for us. Enthusiasm is growing not only inside the venues. We are getting positive feedback from partners,” Luca Casassa, Milano Games spokesperson, told a press conference on Monday.

Ticket sales also rose early in the Games.

In the first two days, another 127,000 tickets were sold, taking the total to 1.2 million so far, said Andrea Francisi, the Olympics’ chief games operations officer.

In the first few days of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, approximately 925,000 tickets were sold out of a final total of just over one million.

In Pyeongchang 2018, South Korea, only less than 60 per cent of available tickets had been sold in the first few days. There can be no comparison with Beijing 2022 because tickets were not put on general sale due to the COVID emergency.

– Reuters

02/09/26 08:02

Megan Oldham wins slopestyle bronze for Canada’s second medal at Olympics

– Eric Reguly

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From left, silver medalist China’s Eileen Gu, gold medalist Switzerland’s Mathilde Gremaud and bronze medalist Canada’s Megan Oldham stand on the podium after the women’s freestyle skiing slopestyle finals.Fabrizio Troccoli/The Globe and Mail

Canadian freestyle skier Megan Oldham took bronze in the freeski slopestyle competition, handing Canada a well-needed second medal on the third day of the Milan Cortina Olympics.

Oldham fought well in a nail-biter of a competition in Livigno, narrowly beating British freestyle star Kristy Muir for the bronze. Chinese-American megastar Eileen Gu, took silver, a disappointment for her, and Switzerland’s Mathilde Gremaud, the defending champion took gold in a dazzling, gravity defying performance.

The Canadian contingent among spectators, including Oldham’s parents, erupted in applause after her bronze was confirmed. They waved Canadian flags and “MG” posters. They were all the more happy since Oldham’s second of three runs in the final ended in near disaster.

Oldham, who is 24 and grew up in Parry Sound, Ont., got off to a fine start in the first of three runs in the final on a sunny day in Livigno. For most of the second run, she performed exceedingly well. But she flubbed her last jump by rushing the takeoff and landed hard as the audience gasped.

Naomi Urness of Mont-Tremblant, Que., finished seventh in her Olympic debut.

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Megan Oldham of Canada in action during her third run of the women’s freeski slopestyle finals.Dylan Martinez/Reuters

02/09/26 06:54

Mystery of breaking Olympic medals baffles Milan Cortina organizers

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United States’ Breezy Johnson shows her gold medal in the alpine ski women’s downhill race, at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)Andy Wong/The Associated Press

Whether gold, silver or bronze, there is one thing Milan Cortina Winter Olympics medals have in common: they can break.

Games organizers on Monday said they have launched an investigation into a spate of mishaps that have left Olympic medallists, including American downhill skiing champion Breezy Johnson, sporting a cracked and chipped medal.

“We are fully aware of the situation and you have seen the pictures,” Milan Cortina Chief Games Operations Officer Andrea Francisi told a press conference on Monday. “We are looking into what exactly the problem is.”

“We will pay maximum attention to the medals … so that everything will be perfect because this is one of the most important things for the athletes.”

Johnson is one of several decorated athletes in Italy who have seen their medals snap, crack and pop only minutes after the award ceremonies in the first few days of the Games.

“It is heavy, it’s broken. It’s a look,” Johnson told reporters shortly after the podium ceremony, showing off her cracked and chipped medal in one hand as the separated ribbon hung around her neck. “I was jumping up and down in excitement, then it just fell off.”

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U.S. gold medalist Breezy Johnson speaks to the media in a press conference after the women’s downhill on Day 2 of the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics.Julian Finney/Getty Images

She is not the only one, with Germany biathlete Justus Strelow seeing his bronze medal lying cracked on the floor during celebrations at their team headquarters.

Sweden’s cross-country skier Ebba Andersson’s silver prize from the women’s skiathlon suffered a similar fate.

– Reuters

02/09/26 06:30

Eileen Gu and Mathilde Gremaud face off again in Olympics freeski slopestyle final

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Eileen Gu of China in action during training ahead of the race.Marko Djurica/Reuters

Eileen Gu and Mathilde Gremaud are ready to face off again in the women’s freeski slopestyle final at the Winter Olympics on Monday.

Gu emerged as a global star at the Beijing Olympics when at age 18 she made Olympic history by becoming the first winter action sport athlete to win three medals in a single Games. She took gold in halfpipe and big air, while grabbing a silver in slopestyle.

The only woman stopping her from a golden treble was Switzerland’s Gremaud, who edged Gu to first place in the slopestyle final by a mere 0.33 points.

Gremaud showed she had come to defend her title when she led qualifying just ahead of Gu on Saturday. Gu had to overcome a fall on her very first jump that had put her spot in the final in jeopardy. With the pressure on, Gu nailed her next jump to go through in style.

Gu, 22, was born in San Francisco but competes for China, her mother’s homeland.

Canadians Megan Oldham of Parry Sound, Ont., and Naomi Urness of Mont-Tremblant, Que., will also take to the course at Livigno Snow Park in the women’s slopestyle final.

In slopestyle, skiers perform acrobatic tricks while skiing over rails and jumps that are judged for difficulty and execution. In the final, the best score of the three jumps counts.

– The Associated Press

02/09/26 06:04

U.S. ski great Vonn had two operations after leg fracture

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General view outside a hospital in Treviso where U.S. skiier Lindsey Vonn is being treated after she crashed during women’s downhill yesterday.Leonardo Benassatto/Reuters

U.S. skiing great Lindsey Vonn has had two operations in Italy after a serious leg fracture at the Olympics, with a source saying the procedures should help stabilize her and prevent complications linked to swelling and blood flow.

Vonn, 41, was flown by helicopter to the Ca’ Foncello Hospital in the city of Treviso from Cortina d’Ampezzo after her audacious bid to win downhill gold with a ruptured knee ligament ended in a horrific crash 13 seconds into Sunday’s race.

One of the most decorated ski racers in history, she was operated on by a joint team of local orthopaedic and plastic surgeons, the source close to the matter said on Monday.

Her personal doctor was present but only assisted while Italian surgeons led the procedures, the source said.

– Reuters

Skier Lindsey Vonn’s Olympic crash, which came while she was still recovering from an earlier accident, has ignited a debate over who decides when an injured competitor is fit to compete.

Reuters

02/09/26 05:57

Brett Peterman and Jocelyn Gallant’s mixed doubles curling Olympic hope ends in disappointment

– Rachel Brady

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Jocelyn Peterman and Brett Gallant look on during their match against Yannick Schwaller and Briar Schwaller-Huerlimann of Switzerland.Jennifer Lorenzini/Reuters

Canadian curlers Brett Gallant and Jocelyn Peterman will need some time to process the pain of missing the Olympic playoffs in mixed doubles.

Canada’s husband-and-wife team finished their Winter Games with an 8-4 win over Switzerland on Monday, but had already been eliminated from the playoffs on Sunday by losing to Korea. They finished with a 4-5 record, not good enough to make the Olympic semifinals. That’s tough for a Canadian curler to swallow.

“There’s a lot of disappointment and a lot of hurt,” said Peterman. “I hope when it’s not as fresh that we can be proud of how we fought out there.”

As Peterman began to cry while talking to reporters, her husband tried to help finish her thought. They looked into each other’s eyes often while trying to describe how crushed they feel after starting the bonspiel 3-0 and then dropping five straight, missing a shot to play for a medal.

Mixed doubles brought the two athletes, both from Chestermere, Alta., together a decade ago when they formed a team. Now, they are married and have a two-year-old son, Luke. They were one of more than a dozen real-life partners competing together at the Milano Cortina Olympics.

“You both know what each other are feeling. There’s no guessing at how much it hurts,” said Gallant, looking at his wife. “It’s a sad hug at the end of the day, because you’re both going through that disappointment. But we’ll always have each other.”

02/09/26 05:48

U.S. figure skater Amber Glenn faces backlash over politics and copyright issues after Olympic gold

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Team USA’s Amber Glenn celebrates with her gold medal after the figure skating team event at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Sunday.Ashley Landis/The Associated Press

On the same day Amber Glenn won Olympic gold as part of the team event, and stepped away from social media due to backlash over her comments on politics and the LGBTQ+ community, the American figure skater ended up with another headache.

Canadian artist Seb McKinnon, who produces music under the name CLANN, took to social media late Sunday to object to the use of his song “The Return,” which Glenn had used in her free skate — and has been using for the past two years without issue.

“So just found out an Olympic figure skater used one of my songs without permission for their routine. It aired all over the world … what? Is that usual practice for the Olympics?” McKinnon posted to X, shortly after the team competition had ended.

Figure skaters are required to obtain permission for the music they use, but that process is hardly straightforward.

Sometimes the label or record producer owns the copyright, other times the artist themselves, and often there are multiple parties involved. Skaters sometimes will piece together different cuts of music, too. Throw in third-party companies such as ClicknClear that try to smooth out the permission process, and the entire copyright issue becomes murky and nuanced.

– The Associated Press

02/09/26 05:35

Bobsleigh, luge and skeleton athletes make plans for fast tracks

– Rachel Brady

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Embyr-Lee Susko of Canada during luge training.Athit Perawongmetha/Reuters

Canada’s bobsleigh, luge and skeleton athletes have been studying the icy Olympic track at the Milan Cortina Winter Games track meticulously well ahead of their races.

Athletes and coaches in the three Olympic sliding sports have studied maps of the Cortina Olympic sliding track, walked the snaking, long icy surface on foot, watched video footage, and analyzed its every curve and transition before racing on it. Then they commit their race lines to memory.

The track in the Italian Dolomites is relatively new to all of these athletes, so there is little footage to study, and no one has years of experience on it. That could help level the competition.

Called Cortina Sliding Centre during the Games, it is also known as the Eugenio Monti Sliding Centre, named after Italy’s six-time Olympic bobsleigh medalist. The venue is built on the same grounds of the historic track that was built in the 1920s and used for the Cortina d’Ampezzo 1956 Olympic Winter Games before it shut down in 2008. It underwent a total reconstruction for these Olympics, and reopened last year.

02/09/26 05:00

Today’s Olympic schedule and event start times

– Globe staff

It’s another busy day in Italy with Canadian women’s hockey playing Czechia in their second round-robin game (after defeating Switzerland 4-0 on Saturday) and the mixed-doubles curling preliminary matches continuing.

Meanwhile, slopestyle skiers Megan Oldham and Naomi Urness look to bring Canada its second medal of the Milan Cortina Olympics on Day 3.

Figure skating also continues today, with Canada having three tandems in competition when the ice dance event opens with the rhythm event.

Here are the events to watch for, and you can find the full schedule here.

  • 4:05 a.m. ET – Mixed doubles curling (Canada vs. Switzerland)
  • 1:20 p.m. ET – Figure skating, mixed ice and rhythm dance
  • 3:10 p.m. ET – Women’s hockey (Canada vs. Czechia)

Medal events:

  • 6:30 a.m. ET – Women’s slopestyle freestyle skiing
  • 8 a.m. ET – Men’s alpine skiing team combined slalom
  • 11:30 a.m. ET – Women’s 1000m speed skating
  • 1:30 p.m. ET – Women’s snowboard big air
  • 2:12 p.m. ET – Men’s normal hill ski jump
02/09/26 05:00

How to watch the Olympics in Canada

– Globe staff

CBC is Canada’s official Olympic broadcaster. The 2026 Winter Games will be available to watch on CBC through your TV provider, or to stream for free on the CBC Gem app or at CBCGem.ca.

You can also follow The Globe and Mail’s live coverage of all the latest news and analysis of the Games, on our website or mobile app.

02/09/26 05:00

Your guide to the 2026 Winter Olympics

– Globe staff

The Milan Cortina Winter Olympics have begun and are poised to be historic in more ways than one, as Team Canada and the world’s best athletes converge in northern Italy.

From hockey to figure skating and the debut of ski mountaineering, the competition will be nothing short of thrilling. But at the most geographically widespread edition of the Winter Games ever, international tensions – particularly toward the United States – will also be on full display.

Here’s everything you need to know about the Games.

02/09/26 05:00

Ask us your Olympics questions

– Globe staff

From how Canada is doing so far to what the energy is like in Italy, tell the The Globe’s Olympics team what you want to know about the Games. We’ll do our best to answer them.

Ask us your Olympics questions

What do you want to know about the 2026 Winter Games and Team Canada so far? Send us your questions, and The Globe’s journalists on the ground in Italy will try to answer them.

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