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Winter Olympics live updates: The 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea

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The Pyeongchang Winter Olympics are underway. The Los Angeles Times will be providing live updates, analysis and features on the events and athletes from around the world.

For the best photos from the Winter Olympics, click here.

Also, get all the useful information on TV schedules and what is live and what isn’t in one spot.

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Olympics say goodbye to Pyeongchang with one big party

Fireworks illuminate the sky during the closing ceremony of the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympic Games,
Fireworks illuminate the sky during the closing ceremony of the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympic Games,
(EPA / Shutterstock)

Photo gallery: Olympic closing ceremony

After 16 days of sliding, skating, jumping and sweeping, the Pyeongchang Games have come to a close with one last party.

The Winter Olympics concluded Sunday night with a bash at the Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium, a final hurrah for the venue before it’s demolished.

Among the participants were the Olympic Athletes From Russia, who lost an appeal earlier in the day to march under the Russian flag following a massive doping scandal. The show also included a rocking guitar solo, roller-skating panda bears and performances from K-pop super group EXO and singer CL.

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Sunday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Chloe Kim will be featured during today's Winter Olympics review.
(Lee Jin-man / Associated Press)

Sunday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

11 a.m.: Winter Olympics review of best moments. NBCSN

12:45 p.m.: Repeat broadcast of women’s hockey gold medal match. NBCSN

5 p.m.: Closing Ceremony. NBC

8:30 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11:35 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

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Closing ceremony is underway, and it’s cold!

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Crowds start filling stadium before the closing ceremony

We are about an hour from the start of the Pyeongchang 2018 Games closing ceremony. It is considerably warmer than the frigid weather at the opening ceremony.

The crowd has started filling the stadium and it seems a much more festive mood than at the opening.

We’ll be on the lookout for any Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un impersonators and any evidence of a cyberattack.

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Olympic Athletes From Russia win men’s hockey gold with 4-3 overtime victory over Germany

Russians celebrate the winning goal.
(Larry W. Smith / EPA / Shutterstock)

Kirill Kaprizov’s quick shot from the right circle during a power play gave the Olympic Athletes From Russia a 4-3 overtime victory over surprise finalist Germany and the gold medal in the men’s Olympic hockey tournament.

Kaprizov, whose NHL rights are owned by the Minnesota Wild, had a goal and four assists after he ended the game and the tournament nine minutes and 40 seconds into sudden-death play. Teammate Nikita Gusev, whose rights are owned by the Vegas Golden Knights, had two goals and two assists.

The gold medal was the first won by the team known variously as the Olympic Athletes From Russia / Russia / the Unified Team since a 1992 triumph in Albertville, France, as the Unified Team.

Former Kings defenseman Slava Voynov gave the Russians the lead with a half-second remaining in the first period. Germany failed to clear its zone and Russia controlled the puck, with former Tampa Bay forward Gusev eventually finding Voynov in the high slot for a quick shot that zipped past Germany goalie Danny Aus Den Birken. Kirill Kaprizov got the second assist.

Gusev’s NHL rights were traded by the Lightning to the Vegas Golden Knights last June. Voynov remains suspended by the NHL as a result of a domestic violence incident. He pleaded no contest to a misdemeanor charge and spent two months in jail. Afterward, he returned to Russia and signed a three-year contract with St. Petersburg of the KHL in 2015.

Germany tied it at 9:32 of the second period on a close-in shot that Russia goaltender Vasili Koshechkin knocked into the net with his own blocker. The goal was credited to Felix Schutz, a onetime Buffalo Sabres draft pick.

Germany tested Koshechkin several times in the second period, but he came up with some big saves.

The teams exchanged goals in the third period, with Gusev scoring from a sharp angle over the German goalie’s shoulder at 13:21 and Dominik Kahun cashing in from the slot off a pass from Frank Mauer at 13:31. Germany took the lead with 3:16 left in the third period on a shot by Jonas Muller from between the faceoff circles, but Russia tied it while killing a penalty. With Koshechkin pulled in favor of an extra skater, the Russians worked the puck down low and let Gusev work his magic. He again scored from a sharp angle deep on the left side, with 55.5 seconds left in the third, putting the puck over the helpless goalie’s shoulder.

Aus Den Birken made a memorable save in a generally conservative overtime, getting his left pad on a dangerous shot by former NHL standout Ilya Kovalchuk about 6 ½ minutes into four-on-four overtime. Kaprizov’s goal triggered cheers from a spirited crowd that was dominated by supporters of Russia. Fans chanted, waved Russian flags and banners, and a group sitting on the upper level, to the right of the goal at which the Russians shot in the first and third periods, wore shirts with letters that spelled out “Russia in my heart.”

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‘Team Reject’ gave U.S. historic medal in curling

John Shuster of the United States celebrates a point during the gold-medal game in men's curling.
(Wang Zhao/Getty Images )

Their gold medals were intended for the women’s curling champions.

But that didn’t seem to bother John Shuster and the rest of the U.S. men’s curling team at the Gangneung Curling Center.

After all, minutes earlier they had shocked Sweden 10-7 on Saturday to win the first-ever U.S. gold medal in curling. The history was enough, even if the medals were wrong.

“A gold medal in curling is a gold medal in curling,” John Shuster, the team’s leader, said afterward.

Shuster and his motley crew had already been through enough to get to this place.

The small inscription on the medal didn’t matter.

After Shuster’s team finished second-to-last at the Sochi Olympics, USA Curling’s high-performance program rejected him. So, the easygoing former bartender, who is a part-time employee at Dick’s Sporting Goods, persuaded Tyler George, Matt Hamilton and John Landsteiner to go it alone.

They quickly came up with an unusual nickname.

“I don’t think ‘team of rejects’ is the right term,” said Shuster, who also competed at the Turin and Vancouver Games. “I think it was just ‘team reject.’ ”

The rejects eventually won the national championship in 2015 -- beating the two high-performance-program teams. They represented the U.S. at the world championship the same year, then were added to the high-performance program in 2016.

“We never held it against anybody who didn’t want us in the program,” Shuster said.

The path at the Pyeongchang Olympics wasn’t much easier.

Shuster’s group dropped four of their first six matches and faced long odds to qualify for the medal round. But they defeated Canada, Great Britain and Switzerland -- three of the world’s top teams -- to advance.

In the semifinals, the U.S. beat Canada -- the defending Olympic champion -- to reach the gold-medal match against Sweden, the second-ranked group in the world.

And they ended up with gold medals, even if they were for the women’s winners.

“From the day the 2014 Olympics came to an end, every single day was with this journey in mind and I was extremely lucky with these incredible guys ... went along with me in not being selected for the high-performance program because this wouldn’t have ever happened,” Shuster said. “My family has a mantra and I have a mantra that everything happens for a reason. It’s days like today that you just have to believe.”

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Norovirus outbreak at Pyeongchang Olympics appears over

As the Pyeongchang Olympics winds down, the norovirus outbreak that’s lurked in the background of the Games is doing the same.

In the latest numbers released Saturday by the Korean Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 321 staff and volunteers have been diagnosed with norovirus, but only two remain quarantined.

The outbreak of the highly contagious disease was traced to contaminated water used in food preparation at the Horeb Youth Center.

The outbreak, initially among security personnel, spread from Pyeongchang to the coastal town of Gangneung, which hosts indoor events at the Games.

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IOC upholds ban on Russia because of doping scandal

Thomas Bach, president of the International Olympic Committee, speaks during the opening ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympics.
(Clive Mason/Associated Press)

The International Olympic Committee executive board has recommended upholding the ban of Russia from the Pyeongchang Winter Games because of a massive doping scandal.

The full membership will vote on the proposal Sunday ahead of the closing ceremony.

The IOC could readmit the Russian team, continue the ban or hedge with what it has described as a “partial solution.”

IOC President Thomas Bach says a condition for Russia’s reinstatement is no further positive drug tests at these Olympics. Two of the four athletes who tested positive in Pyeongchang were competing as “Olympic Athletes from Russia.”

Russia was banned from the Olympics because of widespread doping at the 2014 Sochi Games.

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Do you believe in miracles? U.S. men top Sweden for curling gold

John Shuster, center, John Landsteiner, left, and Matt Hamilton of the U.S. during the men's curling final.
John Shuster, center, John Landsteiner, left, and Matt Hamilton of the U.S. during the men’s curling final.
(Javier Etxezarreta/EPA-EFE/REX)

John Shuster’s last throw in the eighth end of the Olympic curling final clacked off one Swedish stone and knocked it into another, sending them both skittering out of scoring range.

Five yellow-handled American rocks were left behind.

The score, known as a five-ender, is so rare it has only been topped once before in the history of the men’s or women’s Olympic final. And it effectively clinched gold for Shuster’s erstwhile “rejects,” who rallied from the brink of pool play elimination to claim only the second curling medal ever for the United States.

“It’s hard to rationalize wanting to do it,” vice-skip Tyler George said after the Americans beat favored Sweden 10-7 in nine ends in the gold medal match on Saturday. “But then days like this happen.”

With the King of Sweden and Ivanka Trump looking on — and bolstered by social media messages from actor Mr. T., NFL quarterback Aaron Rodgers and speedskater Dan Jansen — Shuster skipped the Americans from a 2-4 record at the start of pool play to five wins in a row, starting with a victory over three-time defending Olympic champion Canada.

No U.S. curling team, men or women, had ever beaten Canada at the Winter Games.

Shuster’s team did it again in the semifinals.

That set up a gold medal match with Sweden, the world championship runner-up and top winner in pool play, including a 10-4 victory over the Americans on Feb. 16.

After three back-and-forth ends in the final, the Swedes squandered a point in the fourth despite having the last-rock advantage, known as the hammer. (The call was too close to be made with the naked eye; an umpire measured it with a gadget that is calibrated to the millimeter.)

From there, Sweden was playing catch-up.

Tied 5-5 in the eighth, but with the Americans controlling the hammer, Sweden skip Niklas Edin failed on a double-takeout, clearing away just one of the two stones he was aiming for. That left Shuster with a relatively routine shot for an almost unprecedented score. (Canada’s six-ender in the 2006 men’s final was the only other score of more than four in an Olympic gold medal match).

“During the entire end we could kind of feel it building. Their margin for error got really small,” Shuster said in the news conference with teammates team Tyler George, Matt Hamilton, John Landsteiner and alternate Joe Polo. “I can’t tell you how un-nervous I was sitting in the hack to throw it. Just let it go.”

The Americans played defense in the ninth end to avoid giving up a big score. Sweden scored two, but with the hammer going to the United States for the 10th, a victory was out of reach.

On his second-to-last stone, Edin made a spin-o-rama out of the starting block, bringing laughter from the crowd.

Then he shook hands to concede the match.

“When I missed [in the eighth], we knew for sure he was going to make that double, and we knew we were going to lose,” said Edin, who said he threw in the spin move to lighten the mood so that perhaps he could “get a silver medal without throwing it into the sea.”

“I don’t know if I would use the word ‘fun’ in that situation,” Edin said. “Instead of just shaking hands, it was one of those moves that you’re trying to give the crowd, all the disappointment we felt, give them a little something back.”

With Trump, the president’s daughter, clapping along, the American fans in the crowd chanted, “U-S-A!”

Switzerland, which beat Canada in the third-place game on Friday, joined the finalists on the podium to receive its bronze medals. Sweden got silver.

But when the Americans looked at the medals draped around their necks, there was a problem: They had been given the ones engraved for the women’s winners. The correct medals were quickly swapped out.

Shuster brushed it off: “A gold medal in curling is a gold medal in curling.”

South Korea will play Sweden in the women’s final on Sunday. Japan beat Britain 5-3 in the women’s bronze medal match on Saturday.

A four-time Olympian who won bronze in 2006 with Polo — the United States’ only other curling medal — Shuster left that team after Turin to form his own foursome and skipped them back to the Winter Games in Vancouver.

But he performed so badly he was benched, and then finished ninth of 10 teams in Sochi. After failing to make the national training program the next year, Shuster teamed up with two of the others who were cut (and George, who hadn’t even tried out) and called themselves “Team Reject.”

They beat all of the teams chosen instead of them.

“From the day the 2014 Olympics came to an end, every single day was with this journey in mind,” said Shuster, adding that he was inspired by Jansen’s ability to bounce back from six years of tragedy and Olympic failure to win his final speedskating race.

“Time and time again, he got back up and he wrote his story, and he’s an Olympic champion,” Shuster said. “I’m so proud that I was able to do something similar.”

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Saturday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Women's cross-country skiing is the final event of these Olympics.
(Kirill Kudryavtsev / AFP/Getty Images)

Saturday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Curling (men’s gold-medal match, U.S. vs. Sweden). NBCSN

9:30 a.m.: Speedskating (men’s and women’s mass start). NBCSN

10:30 a.m.: Curling (women’s bronze-medal match). NBCSN

Noon: Speedskating (men’s and women’s mass start), cross-country skiing (men’s 50-kilometer race). NBC

1 p.m.: Men’s hockey (bronze-medal match). NBCSN

4:05 p.m.: Curling (women’s gold-medal match). NBCSN

5 p.m.: Bobsled (men’s four-man, final two runs), figure skating (gala exhibition). NBC

7:30 p.m.: Men’s hockey (gold-medal game). NBCSN

8 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11 p.m.: Cross-country skiing (women’s 30-kilometer).

12:30 a.m. (Sunday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

1 a.m. (Sunday morning): Figure skating gala exhibition. NBCSN

3 a.m. (Sunday morning): Men’s hockey (gold-medal game). NBCSN

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Kyle Mack wins silver medal in Olympic debut of Big Air

Kyle Mack of the United States celebrates winning the silver medal during the men's Big Air final.
(Clive Mason/Getty Images)

Canadian snowboarder Sebastien Toutant has soared to gold in the Olympic debut of men’s Big Air.

Toutant scored a 174.25 in the final to give Team Canada its 11th gold of the Pyeongchang Games.

Kyle Mack of the United States took second with a score of 168.75. He had a chance to better Toutant but sat down on his third and final jump.

Billy Morgan of Great Britain earned bronze in front of a boisterous crowd at Alpensia Ski Jumping Centre.

Ivanka Trump was also in attendance. The daughter of president Donald Trump took in the finals as part of a whirlwind tour during the penultimate day of the games. Wearing a red ski suit with a blue knit USA cap, Trump joined Kim Jung-sook, wife of South Korean president Moon Jae-in.

Red Gerard, who captured the first gold medal for the United States in Pyeongchang in the slopestyle event two weeks ago, finished fifth.

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Jessie Diggins will carry the flag for the U.S. at closing ceremony

Jessie Diggins
(Florian Choblet / AFP/Getty Images)

This has been a good week for Kikkan Randall and Jessie Diggins.

On Wednesday night, they became the first U.S. women to earn a medal in cross-country skiing, winning the team sprint free. The next day, Randall was elected as an athlete representative on the International Olympic Committee.

Friday, it was Diggins’ turn for more good news as her teammates selected her to serve as flag-bearer for the American squad in the closing ceremony of the 2018 Winter Games.

“This is such an incredible honor for me,” Diggins said. “I’m really humbled and moved that the athletes voted for me.”

The two-time Olympian joins a list of former closing ceremony flag-bearers that includes Dan Jansen, Bonnie Blair and Eric Heiden.

“Jessie’s breakthrough performances here in Pyeongchang have been inspirational and historic,” U.S. Olympic Committee Chief Executive Scott Blackmun said.

The closing ceremony is scheduled for Sunday night at Olympic Stadium.

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Germany upsets defending champion Canada to reach men’s gold medal hockey game against Olympic Athletes from Russia

Germany recorded the biggest upset of the men’s Olympic hockey tournament by holding off Canada for a 4-3 semifinal victory on Friday, setting up an unexpected gold medal matchup on Sunday against the Olympic Athletes from Russia.

“Sounds crazy, right?” said Germany coach Marco Sturm, a former NHL player who briefly played for the Kings.

That it did. Germany, seeded 10th among the 12 entrants, last won an Olympic medal in 1976, a bronze. Germany didn’t qualify for the 2014 Sochi Olympic tournament. The Olympic Athletes from Russia defeated the Czech Republic 3-0 in the first semifinal on Friday at the Gangneung Hockey Center, a victory clinched on an empty-net goal by former NHL standout Ilya Kovalchuk.

Top-seeded Canada won the last two men’s Olympic gold medals but had a roster built around NHL stars on those occasions. The NHL did not permit players to participate in the Pyeongchang Games, leaving teams to draw players from leagues across Europe. That became an equalizer and helped boost the chances of teams such as Germany that have few NHL players.

Germany forward Brooks Macek, who was born in Winnipeg, Canada and was eligible to play for Germany because his father was born there, said he almost couldn’t believe what he and his teammates had done. “It’s amazing. It took every single guy in that dressing room to put forth their best effort for the whole 60 minutes and I think we did that. It’s an amazing feeling,” said Macek, who was drafted by the NHL’s Detroit Red Wings but never signed with them. “This is absolutely huge in Germany. The main sport is soccer and there’s nothing else. It’s just all soccer. If there’s kids back home back in Germany watching this game, maybe it will push them towards playing ice hockey I think it’s absolutely massive for the sport in Germany.”

Macek gave Germany a 1-0 lead in the first period with a five-on-three power-play goal. The Germans added second-period goals by Matthias Plachta and Frank Mauer before Canada’s Gilbert Brule converted a power-play chance at 8:17. Brule was ejected later in the period for a check to the head and neck of Germany’s David Wolf.

Patrick Hager padded Germany’s lead to 4-1, but Canada’s Mat Robinson trimmed that to 4-2 at 2:42 of the third. Canada goaltender Kevin Poulin, playing in place of the injured Ben Scrivens, stopped a penalty shot by Dominik Kahun at 3:21 of the third to keep Canada in the game. Canada closed the gap to 4-3 on a power-play goal by Derek Roy from close range at 9:42 of the third period but Germany goalie Danny Aus Den Birken, who plays in his country’s elite league, withstood intense pressure and held on for the win.

“It’s the greatest day in German hockey,” said defenseman Christian Ehrhoff, another former King.

It was a dark day for Canada, which will face the Czech Republic for the bronze medal on Saturday.

“They came out ready to play. We didn’t. They were the better team today,” Canada forward Rob Klinkhammer said. “There’s no reason not to be ready. Just credit to them. I know it’s a huge win for them. Best of luck to them.

“It stings a lot right now with the opportunity we had. We let a big one get away from us.”

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Friday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Friday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Curling (men’s bronze-medal match, Canada vs. Sweden). NBCSN

9:30 a.m.: Curling (women’s semifinal, teams TBD). NBCSN

Noon: Biathlon (men’s 30-meter relay), Figure skating (review of women’s competition). NBC

12:30 p.m.: Medal ceremonies from various events. NBCSN

1 p.m.: Hockey (teams TBD). NBCSN

2:30 p.m.: Curling (women’s semifinal, teams TBD). CNBC

5 p.m.: Bobsled (men’s four-man, runs 1 and 2), speedskating (men’s 1,000 meters), snowboarding (men’s big air). Alpine skiing (team event). NBC

5 p.m.: Biathlon (men’s 30-meter relay). NBCSN

6:30 p.m.: Curling (women’s semifinal, teams TBD. NBCSN

8:35 p.m.: Snowboarding (men’s and women’s parallel giant slalom). NBC

9 p.m.: Cross-country Skiing (men’s 50-kilometer). NBCSN

10:35 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

Midnight: Curling (men’s gold-medal match, U.S. vs. Sweden). NBCSN

1:35 a.m. (Saturday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

3:30 a.m. (Saturday morning): Men’s hockey (bronze-medal game, teams TBD). NBCSN

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Second Russian athlete fails doping test at Olympics

Olympic Athlete from Russia bobsled pilot Nadezhda Sergeeva, right, and her teammate Anastasia Kocherzhova train at the Pyeongchang Games.
(Zsolt Czegledi / EPA/Shutterstock)

A second Russian athlete has failed a doping test at the Pyeongchang Games, a day before the International Olympic Committee’s executive board is to decide whether to reinstate the country for Sunday’s closing ceremony.

Russian Bobsled Federation President Alexander Zubkov told the Associated Press on Friday that a drug-test sample that pilot Nadezhda Sergeeva gave on Sunday was positive.

The Russian delegation at the Pyeongchang Olympics said in a statement that the substance found was trimetazdine, a medication used for angina sufferers that is listed by the World Anti-Doping Agency as a banned substance affecting the metabolism.

“She confirms she took no such medication and the team confirms she was not issued any medication,” said Zubkov, a former bobsledder who himself was stripped of two Olympic gold medals for the Russian doping scheme at the 2014 Sochi Games. “Federation representatives at the Olympics” are starting to prepare a defense, he said.

Zubkov also said a sample she had given five days earlier was negative.

“I can tell you that on the 13th it was clean, but on the 18th it gave a positive result for the heart medication,” he said.

Sergeeva’s crew finished 12th in the women’s bobsled competition on Wednesday, after she had given the sample that later came back positive.

The Russian team was barred from the Olympics in December for doping at the Sochi Games, but the IOC invited 168 athletes from the country to compete under the Olympic flag.

“This won’t win us any extra credit,” Russian delegation leader Stanislav Pozdnyakov said in comments reported by Russian media. “Unfortunately this case speaks to negligence by the athlete. She has let us down.”

Earlier this month, Sergeeva told the AP that competitors from other countries had warmed to her after she passed IOC vetting for Pyeongchang, which included an examination of her drug-testing history.

“I don’t know why, but they’ve started talking to us more than ever before. I feel it. Maybe it’s a sign to them that we’re clean,” Sergeeva said. “There’s a lot of people coming up and saying, `We’re happy you’re here.“’

At the time, she was training in a T-shirt with the words “I Don’t Do Doping.” Sergeeva used to compete in track and field as a heptathlete before switching sports in 2010.

It is the fourth doping case of the Games. Russian curler Alexander Krushelnitsky was stripped of his bronze medal Thursday after testing positive for the banned substance meldonium. Slovenian hockey player Ziga Jeglic and Japanese speedskater Kei Saito also left the Games after testing positive.

Trimetazidine, the substance found in Sergeeva’s sample, has been detected in previous doping cases. Chinese swimmer Sun Yang, an Olympic gold medalist, was banned for three months in 2014 by his country’s sports authorities after testing positive for the substance.

Sun said he had been prescribed the drug for a medical condition and hadn’t known it was banned. The perceived leniency of that three-month ban led to Sun receiving criticism from swimmers from other countries at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, where he won another gold medal.

Russia’s bobsled program has been in the spotlight for drug use for several years.

Zubkov and four other bobsledders were disqualified from the Sochi Games for doping, though four other bobsledders have been reinstated. Another gold medalist, Dmitry Trunenkov, was banned last year for failing a doping test.

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Shani Davis refuses to address media after seventh-place finish in 1,000-meter speedskating

Shani Davis competes in the 1,500-meter race on Feb. 21 at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games.
Shani Davis competes in the 1,500-meter race on Feb. 21 at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games.
(Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

In what is probably Shani Davis’ last Olympic Games, the decorated speedskater decided not to address the media after his seventh-place finish in the men’s 1,000-meter race at the Gangneung Ice Arena.

Davis has courted controversy in these Games by criticizing the way the United States Olympic Committee selected the person who carried the U.S. flag during the opening ceremony.

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Cashing in medals for money is tough sledding for most U.S. Olympians

Chloe Kim at the women's snowboarding halfpipe finals
(Lee Jin-man / Associated Press)

When she arrived for the Winter Olympics in South Korea, Chloe Kim already was an accomplished snowboarder with a handful of endorsement deals from the likes of Visa Inc., Nike Inc. and Toyota Motor Corp.

Then came her dominating performance to win the gold medal in the women’s snowboarding halfpipe in Pyeongchang, and the charismatic 17-year-old Southern Californian instantly became a breakout star of the Olympic Games with a future likely to include much more lucrative sponsorship deals.

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Alina Zagitova wins figure skating gold with thrilling performance

Alina Zagitova of the Olympic Athletes from Russia competes during the women's free skate.
(Richard Heathcote / Getty Images)

Alina Zagitova has won the women’s figure skating competition, becoming the first Russian gold medalist at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

The 15-year-old Zagitova edged her friend and training partner Evgenia Medvedeva to end the gold drought for the Olympic Athletes from Russia. That’s the designation given to the nation’s competitors after Russia was officially banned by the IOC for a doping scandal.

Zagitova and Medvedeva tied in the free skate, a rare occurrence, but Zagitova had won the short program Wednesday, so she got gold.

Kaetlyn Osmond has won bronze, giving Canada four overall medals in figure skating.

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Figure Skating Live: Worst showing ever for U.S. women in figure skating

USA's Bradie Tennell competes in the women's free skate
USA’s Bradie Tennell competes in the women’s free skate
(Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images)

8:10 p.m.

The Americans secured their worst showing in modern-era Olympic women’s figure skating with Mirai Nagasu failing to get any lift on her triple axel and popping a triple lutz.

The 24-year-old Nagasu was fourth at the 2010 Vancouver Games but never got going in the individual competition at the Pyeongchang Games after helping the U.S. win a team bronze. She hit her triple axel in that event, becoming the first American woman and third overall to do so in an Olympics. But she slipped below U.S. champion Bradie Tennell in the standings after Friday’s free skate, with 2017 national champ Karen Chen just behind.

With the top six skaters to go, the Americans almost certainly will wind up ninth, 10th and 11th. Since World War II, at least one American woman finished sixth or higher.

8:00 p.m.

Marai Nagasu didn’t have the performance she needed to put a scare into the leaders after she missed on a couple of her signature jumps. Nagasu slotted into fourth place between teammates Tennell and Chen and looks to finish near or in the top 10.

The top skaters are now getting to skate and this is where the true drama will take place.

7:40 p.m.

Americans Bradie Tennell and Karen Chen started at 10th and 11th, respectively at the free skate portion of the women’s figure skating event and that looks to where they will end after the final long program.

Tennell and Chen currently sit second and third behind Maria Sotskova of Olympics Athletes of Russia with eight skaters to go, including their teammate Mirai Nagasu.

Alina Zagitova and Evgenia Medvedeva are the two favorites heading into the final groups of the evening.

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David Wise wins halfpipe gold after enduring adversity on and off the slopes

There were moments during the last four years when David Wise wasn’t sure if he would survive.

The defending Olympic ski halfpipe gold medalist endured the worst two seasons of his career. He suffered three concussions, plus serious injuries to his shoulder and back. His wife, Alexandra, experienced severe postpartum depression. Sponsors fled. His sister, Christy, lost her right leg in a boating accident and nearly died. One of Wise’s students committed suicide.

“There are two ways to react to adversity in life,” Wise, 27, wrote on his blog recently. “One way is to feel slighted and to allow yourself to be bitter. The other is to use the adversity to your advantage and gain strength and momentum from it. I choose the latter.”

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What time is the Winter Olympics closing ceremony and when can I watch it?

Figure skating commentators Tara Lipinski and Johnny Weir will host NBC's prime-time broadcast of the Winter Olympics closing ceremony.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Tara Lipinski and Johnny Weir will be there. So will Ivanka Trump. And very likely so will at least one K-Pop star, as well as many of the athletes we’ve grown to know and love during the two-plus weeks of the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.

But the majority of us will not be at this weekend’s closing ceremony in South Korea. Lucky for us, though, there’s several opportunities to watch.

Anyone who feels the need to watch the event as it unfolds Sunday at 3 a.m. Pacific time can do so at NBCOlympics.com or by using the NBC Sports app. Those who prefer to be well rested while they watch can tune in to taped broadcasts of the ceremony on NBC at 5 p.m. and again at 8 p.m.

Skating commentators Lipinkski and Weir, along with their broadcast partner Terry Gannon, will host the event during the prime-time broadcasts. Trump, daughter of and senior advisor to President Trump, will lead the U.S. delegation at the ceremony.

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Sven Kramer apologizes after he and teammates injure fans by throwing a large object into a crowd

Dutch speedskater Sven Kramer has issued an apology after he and several teammates accidentally injured two fans by throwing a giant replica of a bronze medal into a crowd during a promotional event at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

Kramer won his third straight Olympic gold medal in the 5,000 meters earlier in these Games. He and teammates Jan Blokhuijsen, Patrick Roest and Koen Verweij also won bronze in the team pursuit, bringing Kramer’s career Olympic medal count to nine.

Those four speedskaters were onstage at an event held at the Heineken House on Wednesday night when they received a giant replica of their bronze medal and somehow thought it would be a good idea to toss it into the crowd.

Two women were injured, with one of them needing to go to a hospital, according to multiple media reports citing Dutch media.

Kramer later sent out an apology in Korean.

According to Yahoo, part of it roughly translates to: “I apologize for the injury last night in the Heineken House representing our team. You came here to cheer the Netherlands’ ice sports team. But accidents happen and I apologize for this. And I hope for a quick recovery.”

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U.S. men advance to gold medal game in curling

John Shuster and the rest of the U.S. men's curling team is guaranteed at least a silver medal.
John Shuster and the rest of the U.S. men’s curling team is guaranteed at least a silver medal.
(Wang Zhao / AFP/Getty Images)

The United States will compete for a gold medal in men’s curling after knocking out their Canadian opponents 5-3 in a tense semifinals showdown at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

The U.S. victory on Thursday is a remarkable turnaround for a team that hasn’t made the Olympic podium since the 2006 Turin Games, when they won a bronze medal.

Just as remarkable was the loss for Canada, which has won the gold medal in men’s curling at the last three Winter Olympics. The Canadian women’s team, meanwhile, didn’t even make the semifinals, despite being the defending world champions.

The U.S. will face off against Sweden for the gold. The Swedish team beat Switzerland 9-3 in another semifinals match on Thursday.

Sweden picked up two points in the first end and then four in the fourth to take a 6-1 lead. Still trailing 9-3 after eight frames, the Swiss conceded defeat.

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Thursday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Mirai Nagasu competes today in figure skating.
(Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

Thursday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6 a.m.: Short-track speedskating (men’s 500 meters, women’s 1,000 meters, men’s 5,000-meter relay). NBCSN

8:15 a.m.: Biathlon (women’s 24-kilometer relay). NBCSN

10 a.m.: Curling (men’s semifinal, teams TBD). NBCSN

Noon: Nordic combined (men’s team large hill portion), Biathlon (women’s 24-kilometer relay). NBC

1:30 p.m.: Hockey (teams TBD). NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (men’s semifinal, teams TBD). CNBC

5 p.m.: Short-track speedskating (men’s 500 meters, women’s 1,000 meters, men’s 5,000-meter relay), Snowboarding (women’s big air), Alpine skiing (women’s super combined, downhill portion), Figure skating (women’s free skate). NBC

5 p.m.: Figure skating (women’s free skate, early groups).

7 p.m.: Biathlon (women’s 24-kilometer relay), Nordic combined (men’s cross-country portion). NBCSN

9:30 p.m.: Short-track speedskating (men’s 500 meters, women’s 1,000 meters, men’s 5,000-meter relay). NBCSN

9:35 p.m.: Alpine skiing (women’s super combined, slalom portion), freestyle skiing (women’s ski cross). NBC

11:15 p.m.: Hockey (men’s semifinal, Czech Republic vs. Olympic Athletes of Russia). NBCSN

11:35 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

2 a.m. (Friday morning): Speedskating (men’s 1,000 meters). NBCSN

3:35 a.m. (Friday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

3:45 a.m. (Friday morning): Hockey (men’s semifinal, teams TBD). NBCSN.

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U.S. beats rival Canada and wins Olympic gold in women’s hockey

USA celebrates after defeating Canada in a shootout to win the gold in women's hockey
(Larry W. Smith / EPA/Shutterstock)

The long wait is over for the U.S. women’s Olympic hockey team.

Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson scored in the sixth round of the tie-breaking shootout and goaltender Maddie Rooney stopped Meghan Agosta to give the Americans a 3-2 victory over Canada and the first Olympic gold medal for the women’s team since the inaugural women’s tournament in 1998 at Nagano, Japan.

The American players jumped off the bench, hurling their sticks and gloves in the air as they hugged each other and cried on the ice at the Gangneung Hockey Centre to celebrate a victory that showcased the two best teams in the sport on Thursday before a spirited crowd at Gangneung Hockey Centre.

Canada had won the previous four Olympic tournaments, three of them at the expense of the U.S.

Chants of “USA!” alternated with chants of “Go Canada Go!” as the overtime continued, with fans aware of the gold-medal possibilities on every foray up ice and every shot.

The game was played at a breathtaking pace and with a physical edge that often exceeded the rules but was sometimes ignored by officials whose skills didn’t match those of the players. The U.S. killed a penalty in overtime, but just barely, sending the game to the decisive shootout.

Second-period goals by Canada forwards Haley Irwin and Marie-Philip Poulin — who both played college hockey in the U.S. — had given Canada a 2-1 lead.

But a bad line change by Canada gave the Americans an opening, and they took advantage of it to pull even at 2-2 at 13:39 of the third period. Monique Lamoureux-Morando took a lead pass from linemate Kelly Pannek and got behind Canada’s defense, giving her time to go from her forehand to her backhand and then to the forehand again to lift a shot into the upper-right corner of the net.

The U.S. players and team executives had focused on this game for the past four years, since its defeat at Sochi, creating a residency program in Florida that would allow players to practice and train together for several months and retooling the roster to bring in young, swift skaters with the aim of increasing its speed.

The team was fast and it got strong goaltending from 20-year-old Olympic rookie Maddie Rooney,who stopped 29 shots on Thursday and yielded two goals in the shootout.

Capitalizing on the third of three straight advantages they gained in the first period, the U.S. women scored the game’s first goal.

Defenseman Sidney Morin, who was among the last players added to the U.S. roster in late November, made the goal possible when she controlled the puck in the left circle and launched a low shot on net.

Hilary Knight, playing in her third Olympic hockey tournament, was in position in front of the net to redirect Morin’s shot past goaltender Shannon Szabados at 19:34 of the period.

As the players filed off the ice to their respective locker rooms, Canada coach Laura Schuler — who had been exasperated with the officials’ call of interference against Sarah Nurse on that third penalty — summoned the officials to the bench to chat before they left the ice. The referees were Nicole Hertrich of Germany and Katarina Timglas of Germany, and the linesmen were Lisa Linnek of Germany and Johanna Tauriainen of Finland.

Canada pulled even early in the second period. Blayre Turnbull deked past U.S. defenseman Lee Stecklein and sent a centering pass to Haley Irwin, who batted the puck out of midair and past Maddie Rooney at the two-minute mark. Irwin played college hockey at the University of Minnesota-Duluth.

Canada pulled ahead soon after, when Meghan Agosta took control of the puck in the neutral zone and slid a pass to an onrushing Marie-Philip Poulin, who went to one knee for a shot from the inside edge of the right circle that found room inside the left post at 6:55. Poulin, who played her college hockey at Boston University, has been a nemesis for the U.S.: She scored the tying and winning goals for Canada in the gold medal game four years ago at Sochi.

The Americans couldn’t take advantage of a power play they gained late in the second period, continuing their scoring woes against the better teams in this tournament. They probably should have gotten a power play early in the third period, when Poulin elbowed Brianna Decker in the face in front of Canada’s net, but no penalty was called.

A bad line change by Canada was a key factor in Monique Lamoureux-Morando bringing the U.S. even at 2-2 at 13:39 of the third period. She took a lead pass from linemate Kelly Pannek and got behind Canada’s defense, giving her time to go from her forehand to her backhand and then to the forehand again to lift a shot into the upper-right corner of the net.

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Mikaela Shiffrin gets silver in Alpine combined; Vonn skis out

Mikaela Shiffrin added a silver to her earlier gold in the slalom.
Mikaela Shiffrin added a silver to her earlier gold in the slalom.
(Tom Pennington / Associated Press)

Michelle Gisin of Switzerland has won the women’s Alpine combined with an aggressive slalom run to edge American Mikaela Shiffrin at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

Lindsey Vonn, the leader after the downhill portion, made a mistake early in the slalom Thursday and didn’t finish in what’s likely her final Winter Games.

Gisin was nearly flawless in finishing in a combined time of 2 minutes, 20.90 seconds to hold off silver medalist Shiffrin by 0.97 seconds. Wendy Holdener of Switzerland earned the bronze.

Shiffrin adds the silver medal to the gold she won earlier in the games in the giant slalom.

It was very likely the first and only Olympic race between U.S. teammates Vonn and Shiffrin.

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Kikkan Randall to serve as athlete representative on the IOC

Jessica Diggins, left, and Kikkan Randall celebrate winning gold in the women's cross country team sprint free final.
Jessica Diggins, left, and Kikkan Randall celebrate winning gold in the women’s cross country team sprint free final.
(Odd Andersen / Getty Images)

A day after helping the U.S. women win their first-ever gold medal in cross-country skiing, Kikkan Randall was elected to serve as an athlete representative on the International Olympic Committee.

Randall and Finnish hockey player Emma Terho will fill two spots that became open this week when previous members of the athletic commission – including former U.S. hockey player Angela Ruggiero – finished their eight-year terms.

“Wow, what amazing news to get today,” Randall said on Thursday, adding: “This is going to be a really fun ride.”

On Wednesday night, Randall and teammate Jessie Diggins made U.S. history by winning the team sprint free relay at the Alpensia Cross-Country Skiing Centre.

A five-time Olympian, Randall was elected to the 20-member IOC commission by her fellow athletes in Pyeongchang. The group aims to give athletes a voice in the Olympic movement.

“Kikkan has always represented Team USA to the highest levels,” said Scott Blackmun, chief executive of the U.S. Olympic Committee. “She’s a selfless and consummate athlete, professional, wife, mother, and advocate, and will no doubt have an extremely positive impact on the IOC Athletes’ Commission.”

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David Wise takes gold, Adam Ferreira finishes second in men’s freestyle skiing halfpipe

David Wise reacts after his gold medal win.
David Wise reacts after his gold medal win.
(Sergie Ilnitsky/EPA-EFE)

At least the Americans have the Phoenix Snow Park halfpipe.

Freestyle skier David Wise successfully defended his gold medal Thursday, breaking through on his final run to give the U.S. its third gold medal in the halfpipe at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

Wise wiped out on his first two runs before sneaking past countryman Alex Ferreira on his third with a score of 97.20. Wise landed double corks in all four directions — front left, front right, switch (backward) left and switch right — a goal he set for himself entering these games.

It’s the seventh gold medal for the U.S. in Pyeongchang, five of which have come at Phoenix Snow Park. Chloe Kim and Shaun White won snowboard halfpipe gold last week, and Red Gerard and Jamie Anderson won at snowboard slopestyle.

The snowboard and freestyle skiing crews have picked up the slack for the U.S. team in these Olympics. Those competitors have accounted for 10 of the country’s 19 medals, many of them at the snow park located an hour away from the Gangneung Olympic Plaza.

Ferreira took silver, and 16-year-old Nico Porteous from New Zealand got bronze. It was the second medal of the day for the Kiwis after snowboarder Zoi Sadowski Synnott won bronze in big air to end New Zealand’s 26-year Winter Games drought.

Porteous momentarily pushed past Ferreira for the top spot with his second run, shocking even himself with a score of 94.80. His jaw dropped and he pumped his arms when it was announced.

Porteous finished 12th at least year’s world championships and ranked 11th in qualification. His brother, Miguel, won silver in the halfpipe at the 2017 X Games.

Porteous didn’t even bother trying on Run 3, cruising through the halfpipe without a trick and waiting at the bottom for the other competitors.

Ferreira stormed past Porteous on his second run. The 23-year-old American spun his right ski pole over his head at the bottom of the halfpipe, then threw up his hands when the judges gave him a 96.00.

Wise put down his double-cork dream run a few minutes later, and Ferreira could only counter with a 96.40.

Wise had a big cheering section of family and friends at the bottom of the halfpipe, and most of them had “David Wise” drawn on their faces. Wise’s sister, Christy, is an Air Force rescue pilot who lost a leg in a paddleboarding accident in 2015, and Wise is giving 10 percent of all his earnings this season to a foundation he and his sisters created: One Leg Up On Life.

The Americans had eyed a podium sweep in the halfpipe, with Torin Yater-Wallace and Aaron Blunck also among the favorites. Yater-Wallace failed to complete a clean run, including a gnarly crash midway through his third try, and finished ninth. Blunck’s best effort was an 84.80 on his final run, good for seventh.

The U.S. last swept a podium in Sochi, when Joss Christensen, Gus Kenworthy and Nick Goeppel won the men’s skiing slopestyle. The U.S. also swept the 2002 men’s snowboard halfpipe and the 1956 men’s figure skating.

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Lindsey Vonn in lead after downhill leg of Alpine combined

United States' Lindsey Vonn smiles in the finish area of the women's combined downhill.
(Christophe Ena / Associated Press)

Lindsey Vonn has the lead after the downhill leg of the Olympic Alpine combined, with American teammate Mikaela Shiffrin right in the thick of things.

Vonn finished in a time of 1 minute, 39.37 seconds. Shiffrin is 1.98 seconds behind.

The race switches Thursday afternoon local time to Shiffrin’s specialty — the slalom. Both times are combined to determine the winner.

Vonn had the lead after the downhill leg at the 2010 Vancouver Games but didn’t finish the slalom.

Ragnhild Mowinckel of Norway had the second-fastest time in the downhill and is 0.74 seconds behind Vonn.

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USA’s Jamie Anderson wins silver in women’s big air snowboarding

Jamie Anderson of the U.S. in action during the women's snowboard big air final.
(Diego Azubel / EPA-EFE )

Anna Gasser edged two-time gold medalist Jamie Anderson to win gold in the Olympic debut of women’s big air snowboarding.

Gasser, the reigning world champion, stomped the last of her three jumps, a double cork 1080 that saw the Austrian flip twice while spinning three times. Her score of 96 was the highest of the day and gave her a total of 185.00.

Anderson, who last week captured her second Olympic gold in women’s slopestyle, led going into the final round but sat down while trying to land her last jump. Gasser took full advantage. The 26-year-old raised her arms in triumph and embraced Anderson after the score flashed.

Zoi Sadowski Synnott earned bronze to give New Zealand its first Winter Olympics medal in 26 years.

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Canada edges Finland 1-0 to reach men’s hockey semifinals and will meet surprise semifinalist Germany

Canadian players celebrate a goal as Finland's Julius Junttila looks on during the men's quarterfinals.
(Kirill Kudryavtsev / AFP / Getty Images)

Backup goaltender Kevin Poulin made 15 saves in relief of injured starter Ben Scrivens on Wednesday night as Canada held on for a 1-0 quarterfinal victory over Finland at Gangneung Hockey Centre.

Canada, which relied on its wealth of NHL stars to win the last two men’s Olympic hockey tournaments, will face Germany in the semifinals on Friday. Germany was a surprise winner over Sweden, advancing on a goal by Patrick Reimer one minute and 30 seconds into overtime. Germany is coached by Marco Sturm, whose NHL stops included a stint with the Kings.

Defenseman Maxim Noreau, who played six NHL games with the Minnesota Wild and has spent the last two seasons in the Swiss League, scored Canada’s goal on Wednesday. Eric O’Dell, who was drafted by the Ducks in 2008 but never played for them, won a faceoff in Finland’s zone and slid the puck back to Noreau, whose slap shot beat Finland goalie Mikko Koskinen 55 seconds into the third period.

Poulin had replaced Scrivens early in the second period after Scrivens was involved in a goalmouth collision with Finland forward Veli-Matti Savinainen. Scrivens — a former Kings goaltender — played for a few seconds after the contact but left the game at 4:17 of the middle period after having stopped six shots. Canada coach Willie Desjardins said more would be known about Scrivens’ status Thursday morning.

“It was a great job tonight from Kevin, coming in like that and making some big saves,” forward Maxim Lapierre said.

Poulin’s teammates protected him well. “They had some chances, but we wanted to minimize the second chances,” forward Derek Roy said. “We know if we give [Poulin] a good look at the shot, he can make the save, and guys were literally jumping in front of pucks. We were diving everywhere. They would have taken one in the teeth for sure.”

Desjardins said he was surprised that Sweden had lost to Germany. “Sweden is a good team. Germany must be playing well,” said Desjardins, who coached the Vancouver Canucks for three seasons before being fired in April 2017. “You don’t get lucky in this tournament. You’ve got to play well. And Germany’s got some confidence and they’re going to be a tough team to play. … They play the world championships with that group, so they have some experience against high-end competition.”

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Germany wins gold, U.S. silver in women’s bobsled

Mariama Jamanka, left, and Lisa Buckwitz of Germany celebrate winning gold.
(Clive Mason / Getty Images)

Women’s bobsledding has a new star, and a surprise Olympic champion.

Germany’s Mariama Jamanka -- a winner of exactly zero major international races in her life until now -- drove to gold in the women’s bobsled event at the Pyeongchang Games on Wednesday night, adding to her country’s dominant showing at the sliding track in these Olympics.

Jamanka and brakeman Lisa Buckwitz finished their four runs in 3 minutes, 22.45 seconds. Elana Meyers Taylor and Lauren Gibbs of the U.S. were second in 3:22.52, the 0.07-second margin being the closest between first and second in any Olympic women’s bobsled race.

Canada’s Kaillie Humphries teamed with Phylicia George to get third in 3:22.89.

It was the third consecutive medal for both Meyers Taylor and Humphries. Meyers Taylor won bronze as a push athlete in 2010 and silver as a driver in 2014; Humphries won gold in each of those Olympic races.

Both arrived in South Korea fully expecting gold. Jamanka had other ideas.

She showed absolute nerves of steel in the ultimate moment to win the 18th Olympic gold medal in German bobsled history, the second by a woman.

And there’s no question who the best team at the sliding track has been in these Pyeongchang Games. With eight of the nine events now complete in bobsled, skeleton and luge, Germany has won five golds and will be a favorite to grab yet another in the four-man event that ends on the final day of these Games on Sunday.

Stephanie Schneider of Germany was fourth, and Jamie Greubel Poser of the U.S. took fifth.

Nigeria, with pilot Seun Adigun and brakewomen Akuoma Omeoga and Ngozi Onwumere -- Omeoga was ill and couldn’t race Wednesday, so she was subbed out -- finished last in the 20-sled field, nearly four seconds behind 19th-place Jamaica.

The Nigerians were the first sled from an African nation to compete in women’s bobsled at the Olympics.

“All we have to give is everything we’ve got,” Adigun said.

Meyers Taylor and Jamanka were the last two sleds down the track, and the only two real remaining contenders for gold by that point in the race.

Meyers Taylor finished in 50.73 seconds, jumped out of her sled, threw her arms in the air and celebrated with Gibbs. And then everyone turned their attention to the top of the track, to see if Jamanka could pull off the win.

It wasn’t the greatest start for the Germans, and they trailed Meyers Taylor by 0.13 seconds in one of the early splits. But Jamanka picked the perfect line and kept picking up speed, overtaking Meyers Taylor’s time in one of the final turns.

Jamanka held a lead of 0.07 seconds after Tuesday’s first two runs, and she opened the third heat by breaking Meyers Taylor’s track record -- setting the tone for the night with a time of 50.49 seconds.

Undeterred, Meyers Taylor took the record right back.

She was next down the track, crossing the line in 50.46 seconds and cutting the deficit to 0.04 seconds going into the final run. With that, the stage to a gold medal was set for either the upstart German or the American veteran -- the one who carried the lead into the fourth heat of the Olympics four years ago and saw it slip away in one steering mistake.

There was no big mistake this time. Meyers Taylor was almost flawless. Jamanka was just a tiny bit better.

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Wednesday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

David Wise of the U.S. will compete in the men's freestyle skiing halfpipe final today.
(Anna Stonehouse / Associated Press)

Wednesday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific

6:30 a.m.: Bobsled (women, final runs). NBCSN

7:45 a.m.: Cross-country skiing (team sprint), speedskating (men’s and women’s team pursuit). NBCSN

10:30 a.m.: Medal ceremonies from various events. NBCSN

11 a.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. Britain). NBCSN

Noon: Cross-country skiing (team sprint), speedskating (men’s and women’s team pursuit). NBC

2 p.m.: Hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. Sweden). CNBC

5 p.m.: Freestyle skiing (men’s halfpipe final), bobsled (women, final runs), Alpine skiing (women’s combined, downhill portion), Cross-county skiing (women’s team sprint). NBC

5 p.m.: Curling (women, Canada vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia). NBCSN

7:45 p.m.: Women’s hockey (gold-medal game, U.S. vs. Canada). NBCSN

8:35 p.m.: Alpine skiing (women’s combined, slalom portion; men’s slalom), Snowboarding (men’s and women’s parallel giant slalom qualifying). NBC

11 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11 p.m.: Snowboarding (men’s and women’s parallel giant slalom qualifying), Nordic combined (team large hill event). NBCSN

12:15 a.m. (Thursday morning): Curling (men’s and women’s tiebreaker to determine semifinalists, if necessary. Teams TBD). NBCSN

1:05 a.m. (Thursday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

2:20 a.m. (Thursday morning): Nordic combined (20-meter cross-country relay), biathlon (women’s 24-meter relay). NBCSN

4:45 a.m. (Thursday morning): Short-track speedskating (men’s 500 meters, women’s 1,000 meters, men’s 5,000-meter relay.

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Olympic Athletes of Russia reach men’s hockey semifinals after rout of Norway

Russia's Ilya Kablukov, left, checks Norway's Henrik Odegaard in a men's quarterfinal hockey game.
(Kirill Kudryavtsev / AFP / Getty Images)

The Olympic Athletes of Russia, considered the favorite to win gold before the men’s Olympic hockey tournament began, advanced to the semifinals with a 6-1 rout of Norway on Wednesday at Gangneung Hockey Centre. Eleven players had at least one point, including many whose names are familiar to fans of NHL teams.

Former Kings defenseman Slava Voynov, who was permitted to play here despite serving nearly two months in jail following his no-contest plea to a charge of corporal abuse of a spouse, had a goal and an assist. He declined to talk after the game other than to say hello, and that he feels good. Former Detroit Red Wings standout Pavel Datsyuk had two assists, former Tampa Bay draft pick Nikita Gusev had a goal and two assists, and Mikhail Grigorenko, who played junior hockey in Quebec and later played for the Buffalo Sabres and Colorado Avalanche, contributed a goal and an assist.

The Olympic Athletes of Russia will face the Czech Republic in the semifinals on Friday. The Czechs moved with a quarterfinal shootout victory over the U.S. on Wednesday.

“They’re a really good team, good defensively and they have a good goalie,” Grigorenko said of Czech goalie Pavel Francouz. “A lot of their players play in the KHL so we know them.”

Datsyuk said the Russian team “can play better,” and will have to do so against the Czechs, who are unbeaten in four games. “They have a good team. They prove that already,” he said. “Will be a good game.”

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U.S. wins first-ever gold medal in women’s cross-country skiing

Jessica Diggins and Kikkan Randall celebrate as they win gold.
(Lars Baron/Getty Images)

Marit Bjoergen made Olympic history and the United States women’s cross-country skiing team won its first medal ever — and it was gold.

Bjoergen won her 14th medal at the Winter Games by taking bronze with her Norwegian teammates on Wednesday in the team sprint. That made her the most decorated Winter Olympian of all time, breaking the tie she held with Norwegian biathlete Ole Einar Bjoerndalen.

Jessica Diggins and Kikkan Randall led the way as the American women pulled off a huge upset in the same race. The only other American to win a medal in cross-country skiing was Bill Koch, who took silver in the 30-kilometer race at the 1976 Innsbruck Games.

The Americans posted the fastest time in the semifinals and started on the front row in the final. Diggins passed the Swedes and the Norwegians on the final lap to win the first Olympic gold medal for the United States in the sport. Sweden took silver.

The 37-year-old Bjoergen has won four medals at the Pyeongchang Games. She took gold in the women’s 4x5-kilometer relay, silver in the 15-kilometer skiathlon and bronze in the 10-kilometer freestyle. She still has one event remaining — the 30-kilometer mass start on Sunday — if she chooses to participate.

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Czech Republic eliminates U.S. in men’s hockey

Team United States reacts after losing 3-2 in an overtime shootout to the Czech Republic.
(Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

When the U.S. men’s hockey team looks back on the 2018 Winter Olympics, the key phrase might be “missed opportunities.”

The Americans came up short again on Wednesday, seeing their improbable medal run come to an end with a 3-2 overtime loss to the Czech Republic in the quarterfinals at Gangneung Hockey Centre in Pyeonechang, South Korea.

The U.S. failed to convert on several chances in extra time and came up empty in a taut shootout that decided the game.

It was a familiar story for a team that, during pool play, had let its opener against Slovenia slip away and had been shut out by Olympic Athletes From Russia.

On Wednesday, the Americans started quickly as Ryan Donato, their biggest offensive threat in Pyeongchang, scored his fifth goal of the tournament. But they could not hold the lead for long as Czech defenseman Jan Kolar tied things up late in the first period.

The teams continued going back and forth in the second, with Jim Slater scoring for the U.S. and Tomas Kundratek answering for the Czechs.

Twice the Americans failed to take advantage of power plays in a scoreless third period.

“We were really good on penalty killing and everybody worked and battled,” Kundratek said.

Once overtime began, the Americans applied pressure but ultimately had no answer for Czech goalie Pavel Francouz. After that, each team had five chances in the shootout.

Petr Koukal beat U.S. goalie Ryan Zapolski on the Czechs’ second attempt. It was the only goal that Zapolski would surrender.

But with Donato, Troy Terry and the other American players struggling to finish, it was all the Czechs needed.

“It is such a great feeling,” Kundratek said. “Our goalie was unbelievable.”

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Lindsey Vonn wins bronze medal in women’s downhill; Italy’s Goggia wins gold

United States' Lindsey Vonn smiles in the finish area after competing in the women's downhill.
United States’ Lindsey Vonn smiles in the finish area after competing in the women’s downhill.
(Christophe Ena/Associated Press)

Lindsey Vonn cast a quick glance toward the sky after finishing what was likely her final Olympic downhill run, shrugged her shoulders at seeing her time and shook a friendly index finger at her good friend.

No one could catch Sofia Goggia of Italy.

Goggia won the women’s downhill Wednesday at Jeongseon Alpine Center as Vonn earned bronze. The American was looking at a higher finish, before Ragnhild Mowinckel of Norway turned in a surprise silver-medal performance as the 19th racer on the course.

Then again, shocking finishes seem to be the norm on this hill. Ester Ledecka of Czech Republic made a late charge last week from back in the pack to take the super-G title. She skipped the downhill to step back into the snowboarding realm and will go through qualifying Thursday in the parallel giant slalom.

Goggia finished in a time of 1 minute, 39.22 seconds to hold off Mowinckel by 0.09 seconds. Vonn was 0.47 seconds behind Goggia.

At 33, Vonn becomes the oldest female medalist in Alpine skiing at the Winter Games. The record was held by Austria’s Michaela Dorfmeister, who was just shy of her 33rd birthday when she won the downhill and the super-G at the 2006 Turin Olympics.

This particular track just seems to suit Goggia’s aggressive skiing. She also edged Vonn in March to win the only World Cup downhill contested on the hill.

Maybe mind games. Maybe a ploy. But each pointed to the other as the one to watch in the days leading up to the race. Goggia referred to Vonn as “definitely the favorite.”

Goggia was behind at the top, but found another speed near the bottom. Vonn couldn’t match it when she skied off two spots later.

This was Goggia’s first gold at an Olympics or a world championships. She has four World Cup wins.

Vonn has dedicated these Olympics to her grandfather, Don Kildow, who died in November. She wears his initials “DK” on the side of her helmet as a tribute.

The night before the race, she said on her Twitter account: “Tomorrow I will push out of the starting gate in what will most likely be my last Olympic Downhill race. I’m trying to enjoy the moment as much as I can and I am thankful to share this race with such amazing teammates. I know everyone expects a lot from me, and I expect even more of myself however there’s only one thing I can guarantee; I will give everything I have tomorrow. Count on it.”

Mikaela Shiffrin didn’t race downhill because of the altered Olympic program. When the Alpine combined was moved a day forward to Thursday, Shiffrin elected to skip the downhill race rather than compete in back-to-back days. The combined adds the times of a downhill and one run of slalom, her specialist discipline.

On social media, she said: “This. Track. Is. So. Fun! Only slightly bummed I’m not skiing it today cause we have 4 girls who are ready to hammer down and I can’t wait to watch!”

American Alice McKennis finished fifth.

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Russian skaters finish 1-2 in short program; Americans far from podium

Marai Nagasu after her performance in the short program.
Marai Nagasu after her performance in the short program.
(Harry How/Getty Images)

Alina Zagitova’s record-setting short program has given the 15-year-old Russian the lead over friend, training partner and two-time world champion Evgenia Medvedeva heading into Friday’s free skate.

Zagitova scored 82.92 points, breaking the mark of 81.61 that Medvedeva had set about 15 minutes earlier. Both scores topped the short program record Medvedeva set earlier in the Pyeongchang Games.

Kaetlyn Osmond of Canada was third with 78.87 points.

The American trio of Mirai Nagasu, Karen Chen and Bradie Tennell struggled with early mistakes in each of their programs. Nagasu was ninth with Chen and Tennell right behind her.

8:45 p.m.

Nine days after becoming the first U.S. woman and third overall to land a triple axel in the Olympics, Mirai Nagasu has taken to competitive ice again in the short program.

She came down on two feet on her opening triple axel, then fell to the surface. While the rest of her program was clean, Nagasu’s chances for an individual medal were damaged. She earned 66.93 points, a season’s best, but not likely to put her in position for the podium.

Nagasu, 24 and the fourth-place finisher at the Vancouver Games, helped the United States win a bronze medal in the team event with her historic jump and a spotless free skate.

7:45 p.m.

American figure skater Bradie Tennell fell during the opening combination in her short program at the Pyeongchang Olympics, such a rare mistake that not even she can remember the last time she made it.

Tennell, whose strength is her jumps, recovered to skate cleanly the rest of the way. The reigning national champion wound up with 64.01 points. As the first skater on the ice, that total should keep her in first place for quite a while.

The rest of the medal contenders all skate about two hours later.

“It was definitely unexpected,” Tennell said of her fall on a triple toe loop, “but things happen. We’re all human. We all make mistakes. You just have to get up and keep going.”

The starting order is determined in part by world rankings, and Tennell dealt with injuries much of last season and did not compete in the biggest events. That forced her into the opening group, and she drew the No. 1 starting spot from among those skaters

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Elizabeth Swaney basically attempted no tricks during her halfpipe runs in Pyeongchang. What was she doing at the Olympics?

Freestyle skier Elizabeth Swaney competes in the halfpipe event at the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics on Feb. 19.
(David Ramos / Getty Images)

Elizabeth Swaney once ran for governor of California but lost to Arnold Schwarzenegger. She also once tried out to be an Oakland Raiders cheerleader and attempted to reach the Olympics as skeleton racer for Venezuela.

None of that panned out for her. But now the 33-year-old who has a master’s degree from Harvard and recruits software engineers in the Bay Area can say she competed in the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics as a freestyle skier.

OK, maybe “competed” isn’t the best word to describe what Swaney did in the qualifying round of the women’s halfpipe on Monday. She didn’t really do any tricks during her two runs at Phoenix Snow Park.

Basically, she went up the halfpipe wall, turned while barely in the air and went back down to the other side a number of times before finishing with her final ride with back-to-back “alley-oops,” another word for inward 180-degree turns.

She received 31.40 out of 100 possible points. Her score was more than 40 points behind the lowest score that qualified for the medal round.

“I didn’t qualify for finals so I’m really disappointed,” she said afterward, apparently with no trace of irony.

Those runs are pretty typical for Swaney, who has competed in 13 World Cup halfpipe events and placed at or near the bottom in every one. She has yet to earn a score of 40 or higher.

So how exactly did such an average skier make it to the Olympics? Swaney, whose maternal grandfather is from Hungary, merely had to finish in the top 30 at a World Cup event — something that wasn’t difficult to do since many such events don’t have close to that number of participants.

“The field is not that deep in the women’s pipe and she went to every World Cup, where there were only 24, 25 or 28 women,” longtime FIS ski halfpipe and slopestyle judge Steele Spence told the Denver Post. “She would compete in them consistently over the last couple years and sometimes girls would crash so she would not end up dead last.”

But Spence added that Swaney and others like her may have a more difficult time qualifying for future Games.

“There are going to be changes to World Cup quotas and qualifying to be eligible for the Olympics,” he said. “Those things are in the works so technically you need to qualify up through the system.”

Swaney insists her endeavor is a serious one, not some sort of publicity stunt. She’s primarily self-funded and has trained with Park City Ski & Snowboard since 2013, learning some spins off the facility’s water ramps that she hasn’t yet been able to transfer to the snow-covered halfpipe.

“Her persistence is probably her biggest strength, so she’s always there and she’s gone to all the World Cups and she’s put in the time and the miles,” Chris Haslock, a 1988 Olympic aerials athlete who is now Park & City’s free ski and snowboard program director, told the Denver Post.

“She has made some significant improvements on the water ramp, but wasn’t necessarily able to take those tricks to snow.”

Still, Swaney will forever be able to call herself an Olympic athlete.

“I’m just trying to do the best for myself and represent Hungary as best as I can,” she said on Sunday. “I really hope to inspire others in Hungary to take up freestyle skiing and I hope that contributes to a greater number of people out there freestyle skiing.”

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Tuesday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

U.S. champion Bradie Tennell will compete in the women's figure skating short program today.
(Julie Jacobson / Associated Press)

Tuesday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Nordic Combined (ski jumping phase). NBCSN

7:30 a.m.: Biathlon (mixed relay). NBCSN

9 a.m.: Nordic Combined (cross-country phase). NBCSN

9:45 a.m.: Short-track Speedskating (women’s 3,000-meter relay, women’s 1,000-meter qualifying, men’s 500 meters qualifying). MSNBC

11 a.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. South Korea). MSNBC

Noon: Nordic Combined (ski jumping phase), Biathlon (mixed relay). NBC

2 p.m.: Hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. Switzerland). CNBC

5 p.m.: Snowboarding (men’s big air), Bobsled (women), Alpine Skiing (women’s downhilll), Figure Skating (women’s short program). NBC

5 p.m.: Figure Skating (women’s short program, early groups). NBCSN

7 p.m.: Men’s Hockey (Quarterfinal game, TBD). CNBC

7:45 p.m.: Curling (women, Canada vs. Great Britain). NBCSN

9:05 p.m.: Freestyle Skiing (ski cross), Short-track Speedskating (women’s 3,000-meter relay, women’s 1,000-meter qualifying, men’s 500 meters qualifying). NBC

9:30 p.m.: Curling (women, South Korea vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia). NBCSN

10:35 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11:40 p.m.: Men’s Hockey (Quarterfinal game, TBD). NBCSN

11:30 p.m.: Women’s Hockey (Bronze medal game, TBD). USA

2 a.m. (Wednesday): Curling (men, U.S. vs. Great Britain). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Wednesday): Curling (men, Sweden vs. Norway). USA

2:05 a.m. (Wednesday): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

4:10 a.m. (Wednesday): Men’s Hockey (Quarterfinal game, TBD). NBCSN

4:10 a.m. (Wednesday): Men’s Hockey (Quarterfinal game, TBD). USA

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U.S. advances to quarterfinals in hockey; will meet Czech Republic

United States celebrates after defeating Slovakia.
United States celebrates after defeating Slovakia.
(Ronald Martinez/Getty Images)

Maybe a touch of frustration had worked its way into the locker room of the U.S. men’s hockey team.

The players talked about creating opportunities but not scoring enough. It was a problem that needed fixing as they faced their first do-or-die game at the 2018 Winter Olympics.

“We came in with the idea of being confident,” forward Ryan Donato said. “If we played on our heels and kind of played worried, it would have affected our game.”

The Americans found an immediate solution in the form of a 5-1 victory over Slovakia on Tuesday afternoon, a win that advances them to the quarterfinals against the undefeated Czech Republic.

All those goals might also have given them some momentum.

“It’s as good a defensive team as probably there is in the tournament,” Coach Tony Granato said of Slovakia. “So for us to get five against them is progress.”

With a roster of college players and veterans from outside the NHL, the U.S. has struggled at times in Pyeongchang, notably in a 4-0 loss to the Olympic Athletes from Russian last week.

Their offensive woes continued in the first period against Slovakia as both sides had chances but failed to capitalize. It would take a little longer for the U.S. to finally gel.

The Americans found their rhythm as the second period got off to a wild start.

Donato, the biggest offensive threat on the roster so far, kicked things off by picking up a loose puck and shooting past Slovak goalie Jan Laco on the glove side.

About 30 seconds later, in a reckless exchange, Slovakia drew two penalties, one for goalkeeper interference and another for checking to the head and neck area when Michal Cajkovsky hit Donato high.

“It felt not too great, I’m not going to lie,” Donato said. “But it created a five-on-three.”

James Wisniewski quickly took advantage with a one-timer from the faceoff circle. Then, after Slovakia killed off the rest of the five-on-four penalty, Troy Terry, a highly regarded Ducks draft pick, wheeled behind the goal and fed Mark Arcobello out front to make the score 3-0.

The Americans had been in this position before, holding a sizable lead over Slovenia in the tournament opener. That time, they ran out of gas in the third period and ultimately lost in overtime.

The stumble might have been on their minds when Slovakia closed the gap to 3-1 late in the second period, Peter Ceresnak scoring on a power play. There were more troubles at the start of the third, with defenseman Bobby Sanguinetti sent off for tripping.

But Slovakia gave the favor right back, misplaying a puck at center ice and getting called for slashing.

That allowed the Americans to regain control and fashion another offensive burst at the end.

Garrett Roe converted a centering pass from Broc Little to make the score 4-1. Donato finished things off by flicking a shot past Laco with 3:14 remaining.

With the quarterfinals looming, there was a different mood among the U.S. players.

“It’s fun to win a game like this,” Arcobello said. “Hopefully we can build on it.”

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Canadian pair win ice dance gold; Shibutani siblings win bronze

American siblings Maia and Alex Shibutani react after competing in the ice dance free dance.
(Aris Messinis/Associated Press)

Scott Moir said his and partner Tessa Virtue’s free dance performance on Tuesday was personal, for each other, the best way they knew to honor the ice dance collaboration they’ve enjoyed for the better part of two decades.

By the time the Canadian couple completed their sultry routine to music from “Moulin Rouge,” the moment belonged not just to them, but to the ages.

Virtue and Moir held off an exquisitely enthralling performance by Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron of France to win the ice dance gold medal—their fifth in the sport--and set a record for the most Olympic medals won in figure skating.

The previous Winter Games record for figure skating medals was four, shared by Sweden’s Gillis Grafstrom in the 1920s and 1930s and Russia’s Evgeny Plushenko. V

irtue and Moir won ice dance gold in 2010 and ice dance silver in 2014 in addition to contributing to Canada’s team silver medal in 2014 and team gold medal here.

With three gold medals, Virtue and Moir tied Grafstrom, Irina Rodnina, and Sonja Henie for most gold medals won in figure skating. That’s elite company.

“We skated with each other in mind the whole way and we skated with our hearts,” Moir said after he and Virtue earned the second-highest scored free dance to compile 206.07 points and edge out the French duo’s total score of 205.28. “It’s extremely fulfilling.”

Another kind of history was made by the American brother and sister duo of Maia and Alex Shibutani, whose rise from fourth place after the short dance to third place gave them the distinction of being the first skaters of Asian descent to win an individual ice dance medal since the discipline was added to the Olympic program in 1976. The siblings had contributed to the U.S. team’s bronze-medal performance last week by skating both their short dance and free skate routines.

Maia, 23, and Alex, 26, switched places with American teammates Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue, who lost points on some sloppy twizzles (one-footed turns) and on a late stumble that Donohue couldn’t explain. The Shibutanis, whose heritage is Japanese, finished third with 192.59 points, to 187.69 for Hubbell and Donohue.

The third American couple, Redondo Beach native Madison Chock and partner Evan Bates, dropped from seventh to ninth after both fell on the entrance to a combination spin.

“We kind of knew right away, when we finished, that we had given it away,” Hubbell said. “It’s a pretty hard feeling. As much as the Olympics is about amazing dream moments, there’s a lot more Olympians that have this moment. And certainly it’s something that’s difficult, but as much as this is my dream, it was our dream to be here and we still got that dream.”

Maia Shibutani has spoken about persevering in the sport even though she never saw anyone who looked like her and her brother when they began skating in the New York area 13 years ago. She became emotional on Tuesday when she recalled the derision she and her brother have faced for skating together in a discipline that often requires skaters to tell a love story or to portray characters who are romantically involved.

“It’s incredibly special,” Maia said, “and along the way of our career there have been a lot people that have told us that maybe we shouldn’t do it, that siblings shouldn’t be a team. But we believed in ourselves and we accomplished this together, and I’m so proud of all the work that we’ve done.”

They had every reason to be proud after skating to “Paradise” by Coldplay at a good pace that built up to a dramatic ending. They are a better and more sophisticated duo than they were in finishing ninth at the 2014 Sochi Winter Games, and they’re only the second siblings to team up for an Olympic ice dance medal, after Isabelle and Paul Duchesnay won silver for France in 1992. . “It’s incredible. I don’t think anyone would have expected it of us,” Alex said. “I know no one expected it of us but we’ve always believed in ourselves and we’ve always dreamed that this was possible and we knew we had it in us.”

Virtue and Moir were the final skaters. Papadakis—whose costume had slipped off during the short dance but stayed intact on Tuesday—and Cizeron had set a monumental challenge with their program to Piano Sonata and Moonlight Sonata, forcing the Canadians to get a personal-best score to win. Virtue and more did that, earing 122.40 points and leaving Papadakis wistful.

“We knew it was possible and we really wanted it but we did our best we have nothing to regret,” she said of not having won gold.

Virtue and Moir left nothing undone in the sport. This likely was their competitive finale, though they said they’ll wait a while before making any announcements. If this is it, they left their fans and the skating world wanting more, an ideal way to depart.

“I am thrilled with this competition. That performance was really special and truly memorable,” Virtue said “The gold medal is the cherry on the cake.”

.

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Brita Sigourney of the U.S. takes bronze in ski halfpipe

Brita Sigourney won the brozne medal in the ski halfpipe Tuesday at Phoenix Snow Park.

The two-time Olympian scored 91.60 points in her third and final run to clinch the medal.

Maddie Bowman, the defending gold medalist from South Lake Tahoe, placed 11th in the final. She struggled through her runs, including crashing near the end of the third one after a solid performance.

Canada’s Cassie Sharpe (95.80) and France’s Marie Martinod (92.60) took gold and silver.

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Canada women beat Russia 5-0, will meet U.S. in hockey final

Canada's Jennifer Wakefield skates against Russia's Anna Shokhina during a women's hockey semifinal at the 2018 Winter Games on Feb. 19.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

It’s part of the routine now, as much a staple of the Winter Games as the medal ceremonies, the doping scandals or the sequins on the figure skating costumes.

The United States playing Canada for the Olympic women’s hockey gold medal.

Jennifer Wakefield scored twice and Shannon Szabados stopped 14 shots on Monday night to lead the Canadians to a 5-0 victory over the Olympic Athletes from Russia and earn the four-time defending Olympic champions a spot in another gold medal game.

It will be the fifth time in six Winter Games since women’s hockey was added to the program that the North American neighbors have met in the final. No one else has ever skated away with an Olympic gold medal.

Canada outshot Russia 47-14 but struggled to pull away, scoring just once in each of the first two periods before Wakefield bounced one in off goalie Valeria Tarakanova’s right arm just two minutes into the third and then Emily Clark made it 4-0 just 31 seconds later.

Russian coach Alexei Chistyakov swapped his goalies, but it was too late. The Russians still have a chance for their first Olympic women’s hockey medal ever when they play Finland in the bronze medal match on Wednesday.

Marie Philip-Poulin and Rebecca Johnston also scored for Canada, which has won 24 in a row at the Olympics since losing the gold medal game in Nagano in 1998.

The United States advanced to the gold medal game with a 5-0 victory over Finland earlier Monday.

The Americans won the Four Nations Cup, third only to the Olympics and world championships in importance, beating Canada in three of the first four games in a Pyeongchang tuneup tour. But Canada has won the last four, with a 2-1 victory in the pool play finale on Thursday.

None of it matters, really.

The gold medal match is the game these two have been looking forward to since Canada rallied from a two-goal deficit and beat the Americans in overtime in Sochi four years ago.

And it’s the only thing right now that can help the 10 American holdovers from that team ease the pain of their 2014 collapse.

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Monday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Freestyle skier Maddie Bowman of the U.S. competes today.
Freestyle skier Maddie Bowman of the U.S. competes today.
(Mike Lawrie / Getty Images)

Monday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Ski Jumping (men’s team large hill). NBCSN

8 a.m.: Bobsled (two-man), Speedskating (men’s 500 meters, women’s team pursuit qualifying). NBCSN

9:30 a.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. Canada). NBCSN

Noon: Ski Jumping (men’s team large hill), Speedskating (men’s 500 meters, women’s team pursuit qualifying). NBC

12:30 p.m.: Hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. China). CNBC

5 p.m.: Bobsled (two-man), Freestyle Skiing (women’s halfpipe final), Figure Skating (ice dance final). NBC

5 p.m.: Figure Skating (ice dance final, early groups). NBCSN

6:35 p.m.: Alpine Skiing (women’s downhill training). NBCSN

7:10 p.m.: Men’s Hockey (playoffs first round, teams TBD). NBCSN

9:05 p.m.: Freestyle Skiing (men’s halfpipe qualifying). NBC

9:30 p.m.: Curling (men, Canada vs. Japan). NBCSN

10:35 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11:40 p.m.: Men’s Hockey (playoffs first round, teams TBD). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Tuesday morning): Curling (women, U.S. vs. South Korea). NBCSN

2:05 a.m. (Tuesday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

4 a.m. (Tuesday morning): Men’s Hockey (playoffs first round, teams TBD). USA

4:10 a.m. (Tuesday morning): Men’s Hockey (playoffs first round, teams TBD). NBCSN

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Mikaela Shiffrin drops downhill to focus on combined at Winter Olympics

Mikaela Shiffrin takes a run during downhill training on Feb. 19.
(Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

After another weather-related change to the Alpine skiing schedule at the Pyeongchang Olympics, American Mikaela Shiffrin has dropped Wednesday’s downhill.

With winds expected to increase later in the week, organizers shifted the women’s combined from Friday to Thursday.

Skipping the downhill allows Shiffrin to avoid back-to-back races and focus on the combined. She will contend for a gold medal in the event.

“As much as I wanted to compete in the Olympic downhill, with the schedule change it’s important for me to focus my energy on preparing for the combined,” Shiffrin said in a statement Monday.

Her pre-Games plan of attempting to medal in five events hasn’t gone as expected. After starting off with a gold medal in the giant slalom, she finished a surprising fourth in the slalom, her best event. She dropped the super-G after weather compacted the 11-event Alpine schedule.

Shiffrin finished 16th in Monday’s downhill training run at the Jeongseon Alpine Center. Teammate Lindsey Vonn, third in the training run, is the favorite in the race.

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Russian athletes win gold medal in men’s hockey in overtime

Kirill Kaprizov (77) celebrates with Olympic Athletes from Russia teammates after scoring the winning goal against Germany on Sunday.
(Srdjan Suki / EPA/Shutterstock)

A power-play goal by Kirill Kaprizov in overtime has lifted the Olympic Athletes from Russian to the gold medal in men’s hockey with a 4-3 win over Germany at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

It’s the first gold in men’s hockey for Russians since 1992.

Kaprizov also had three assists Sunday. He scored on a one-timer from the right circle off a pass from Nikita Gusev.

Gusev also had two goals and two assists. He scored his second with 55.5 seconds left in regulation to force overtime.

Ilya Kovalchuk had a chance to win the game 6:30 in only to have his forehand stopped by a tremendous pad save by German goalie Danny aus den Birken.

The Germans still go home with the best medal they’ve ever won in hockey: silver.

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Wardrobe malfunction doesn’t derail French pair in ice dance; Canadian pair takes lead and Americans in contention

Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron of France compete during the ice dance.
Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron of France compete during the ice dance.
(Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images)

All that held Gabriella Papadakis’ costume together were a few frayed threads and the prayers of her partner, Guillaume Cizeron.

The top of her dress came loose while the French couple warmed up for the short dance portion of the ice dance competition on Monday at Gangneung Ice Arena but they had no time to fix it.

Her desperate efforts to keep it from slipping off hampered her movement and spoiled the stunning unison the two-time world champions usually display during their routine to samba and rhumba music.

“I think in the twizzles it kind of affected us the most,” Cizeron said, referring to the rapid, one-footed turns that ice dancers frequently perform, “because when you are rotating it is hard to keep your dress on when it’s open.”

Her costume eventually gave way and she experienced a wardrobe malfunction that exposed her breast, much to her embarrassment. That’s what most casual watchers will remember.

But it shouldn’t be forgotten that they managed to hold things together well enough artistically to stay within reach of a gold medal despite a world-record short dance performance by Canadians Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, the 2010 Olympic champions and 2014 silver medalists.

Skating to samba, rhumba and cha-cha music, Virtue and Moir danced their way to 83.67 points to top the field leading into Tuesday’s free-dance finale. Papadakis and Cizeron scored 81.93 points despite their problems. “Two points can be caught up,” Cizeron said. “If we do our best, we have our chances to win.”

U.S. champions Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue are third with a personal-best 77.75 points in their Olympic debut, ahead of the American brother-sister duo of Maia and Alex Shibutani (77.73).

The third American entry, Madison Chock and Evan Bates, did well to rank seventh after a mishap on a lift during their warmup aggravated a loose bone fragment in Chock’s foot and caused her intense pain. They had a season-best 75.45 points.

Hubbell said she and Donohue planned to be aggressive with their samba-rhumba program, and they succeeded. “We wanted to be proud of ourselves, we wanted to be proud of the effort and show all of the work we did back home,” Hubbell said. “I was really inspired watching some of the other events, watching pairs and Adam [Rippon]. People just really have been going for it at these games. Even in the team event nobody held back, and that’s something the Olympics are about.”

An American couple has won an ice dance medal at three straight Olympics, and a fourth straight visit to the medal stand is distinctly possible. Tanith Belbin and Ben Agosto won silver at Turin in 2006, Meryl Davis and Charlie White won silver at Vancouver in 2010, and Davis and White won gold at Sochi in 2014.

Virtue and Moir, who also won a team silver medal at Sochi and a team gold medal here last week, surpassed their effort in the team event by more than four points with a sizzling routine.

“It’s as if you were watching a ballroom team compete, and the rhumba is a very sensual, sexual dance,” Virtue said. “The samba and cha-cha rhythms are fun. It’s an easy program to engage the audience, so we’re really trying to bring people in with this and hopefully have some fun.”

The Shibutanis shrugged at their score, clearly believing their marks didn’t reflect the quality of their performance, which improved upon the 75.46 points they had gotten for their short-dance performance in the team event. They also performed their free dance in the U.S. team’s bronze-medal effort.

“That was the skate that we wanted to have,” Maia Shibutani said. “Going into [Tuesday] we have three fantastic skates under our belt, and that gives us a lot of confidence to just go out there and enjoy it.”

Chock said she and Bates had altered their short program following their third-place finish at the U.S. championships last month, “to have our short dance be rejuvenated and have a fresh feel.” They were happy with the changes—and with her new dress, which had a bird theme and incorporated all five colors in the Olympic rings—but she found it difficult to ignore the pain in her foot, which has led her to get frequent cortisone injections.

“Considering everything, considering the stumble in the warmup and the pain that Maddie skated in, it’s incredible,” Bates said. “We’ll definitely take that performance and that score and look for a special performance [Tuesday].”

Papadakis and Cizeron are looking for a performance that’s special because of what they do, not what she’s wearing. “Tomorrow is a new day and we’ll do our best as always,,” he said. “here is nothing we could do about this. We just have to keep going.”

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U.S. women’s hockey team advances to the gold medal game

United States celebrates their 5-0 win over Finland.
(Bruce Bennett/Associated Press)

None of the last 10 days really mattered and that included Monday, when the United States cruised to a 5-0 victory over Finland in the semifinals of the women’s hockey tournament.

The 17 games played up to this point have served as something of a prolonged and gratuitous qualification phase for the inevitable gold-medal contest between the United States and Canada.

So long as Canada defeats the Olympics Athletes from Russia – in other words, Russia – the anticipated rematch of the previous two Olympic finals will take place Thursday at Gangneung Hockey Centre. Count on it happening. The Canadians already crushed the Russians in the opening round of this tournament, 5-0.

These are the fifth Olympics to include women’s hockey, but the sport as a whole remains painfully backward, as the national programs outside of the U.S.’s and Canada’s are in the athletic Stone Age.

Finland was the perfect example of that.

The Fins are the world’s third-ranked team but if they had as much as chance of upsetting the U.S. as they did of brokering world peace.

The Americans defeated the Fins in their Olympic opener, 3-1. This would be worse. Significantly worse.

All-world goaltender Noora Raty couldn’t save the Fins, who were overwhelmed in virtually every aspect of the game. The U.S. went ahead in the first period, 2-0, on goals by Gigi Marvin and Dani Cameranesi.

The Americans showed they weren’t here to play around, as a hip check by captain Meghan Duggan sent defender Ronja Savolainen head-first into the nearby walls. Savolainen crumbled to the ice and remained down for several minutes as her teammates crowded around her in concern.

Savolainen was escorted to the locker room, but later returned.

Duggan wasn’t penalized, eliciting a chorus of boos from the half-empty arena.

The Fins never retaliated and the Americans continued to do whatever they wanted. Joselyne Lamoureux-Davidson’s one-timer with 6:39 remaining in the second period extended the U.S. advantage to 3-0. Hilary Knight redirected a shot by Sidney Morin 34 seconds later to make it 4-0.

Cameranesi added a fifth goal in the third period.

Like that, the Americans advanced to the game they have waited four years to play.

The U.S.’s only gold medal at this tournament was won in 1998, the first year women’s hockey was contested at the Games.

The Americans dropped the final game to Canada in 2002, 2010 and again in 2014. The most recent of the defeats was also the most painful, as the U.S. blew a two-goal lead in the third period and choked in overtime to lose, 3-2.

Curiously, the U.S. has been as dominant at the world championships as the Canadians have been at the Olympics. The U.S. has won eight of the 10 world championships contested since 2005, including the last four.

The U.S. and Canada played each other in the last game of the group stage of this Olympic tournament. Canada won, 2-1, but it didn’t matter. Only the game Thursday counts.

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IOC faces tough questions after Russian curler tests positive for doping

Russian curler Alexander Krushelnitsky.
(Aaron Favila/Associated Press)

Amid reports that a male Russian curler has tested positive for doping, officials at the 2018 Winter Olympics find themselves facing tough questions about the integrity of these Games.

A member of the Russian women’s squad confirmed on Monday that team officials had informed them of the situation.

“It was the main coach who came to tell us the news and we actually just read the news because it was pretty late at night and we were all in our rooms,” curler Victoria Moiseeva told reporters. “We tried to fall asleep and it was a little hard.”

The situation is troublesome because, although Russia is banned from taking part as a nation, the International Olympic Committee made the controversial decision to let individual athletes from the nation compete if they met a series of criteria.

“It’s extremely disappointing for Russia if a case is proven,” IOC spokesman Mark Adams said. “On the other hand, what it does show is that we have a system that is effective.”

Alexander Krushelnitsky, who won the bronze medal in mixed-doubles curling with his wife, is suspected of having tested positive for meldonium, according to multiple news reports.

Meldonium has been in the news before – scores of Russian athletes, including tennis star Maria Sharapova, have been found with the drug in their systems.

The pharmaceutical was developed to increase blood flow and has been used for treatment of heart ailments. That also would make it beneficial to athletes as a performance enhancer.

“We will never reach a point where we have no doped athletes,” Adams said when asked if athletes from other countries should have confidence they are competing on a level playing field. “It’s like saying we’re going to do away with burglary or murder.”

Russia was banned from the Olympics after multiple investigations found systemic cheating among its athletes, coaches and officials. There was additional evidence that Russian lab workers had tampered with samples to mask positive results.

The IOC subsequently announced that individual athletes who could prove they had competed cleanly would be invited to join an “Olympic Athletes from Russia” squad that would compete under a neutral flag.

With 169 athletes ultimately invited, some anti-doping authorities – as well as athletes from other countries – questioned the decision.

The IOC has been monitoring the OAR squad in Pyeongchang, Adams said, explaining that officials have been “looking throughout the Games at actions and deportment of the team and its officials.”

Whenever drug testers detect a positive result from an “A” sample, they can test a separate “B” sample to confirm their initial finding. Results from that second examination were expected at some point Monday.

“We didn’t talk to [Krushelnitsky],” Moiseeva said. “We thought that there are no words to comfort now. We just tried to stay away, not because we’re afraid to say something.”

If one of its athletes is caught cheating, the OAR squad could be barred from taking part in the closing ceremony on Sunday.

Adams declined to speculate on further sanctions, saying only that the IOC would continue to watch the contingent.

“There’s running surveillance on that,” he said. “Everything will be taken into account.”

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Lindsey Vonn responds to social media attacks: ‘I haven’t changed my mind’

The social media onslaught against Lindsey Vonn doesn’t seem to be bothering the U.S. Alpine skiing star.

After Vonn failed to medal in the super-G last week, a slew of posts by supporters of President Trump, often using profane or threatening language, celebrated the result.

“I always try to remember that it’s people talking behind a computer and they’re going to say anything,” Vonn said Monday after her second downhill training run at the Jeongseon Alpine Center.

“There’s going to be people who hate me and hope I ski off a cliff and die. But that’s fine. I’m not going to do that. And, you know, I just take it for what it is. At some point you have to laugh and say, ‘This is completely ridiculous.’”

Her skiing didn’t draw the social media ire, but rather comments she made during an interview with CNN in December that were critical of the Trump administration. She also said she would “absolutely not” visit Trump’s White House if she won a gold medal.

Vonn had the third-fastest training time Monday — she didn’t go all-out — in advance of Wednesday’s final where she is the favorite.

She doesn’t plan to adjust her social media use — or political beliefs.

“I haven’t changed my mind,” Vonn said.

United States' Lindsey Vonn after completing women's downhill training at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
(Christophe Ena/Associated Press)
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Canadian pair take lead after short program in ice dance; three American pairs in medal contention

Canada's Tessa Virtue and Canada's Scott Moir compete in the ice dance short dance.
(Mladen Antonov/Getty Images)

Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir came out of retirement to win more Olympic gold.

Only the free dance stands in their way.

The Canadian ice dancers broke their own record for a short program at the Pyeongchang Olympics on Monday, piling up 83.67 points with a harmonious, rock-inspired performance.

That score edged their own record set last year by nearly a point, and left them more than a point ahead of their training partners and biggest rivals, Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron.

The French couple appeared a bit thrown off by Papadakis’s costume, which came unhooked at the neck during their program. They held things together despite the wardrobe malfunction and scored 81.93 points, and now will rely on their stronger free dance Tuesday to track down the leaders.

U.S. champs Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue were third, two-hundredths of a point ahead of their compatriots, Maia and Alex Shibutani. The third American couple, Madison Chock and Evan Bates, was seventh and in medal contention despite an injury that she aggravated during warmups.

Virtue and Moir won Olympic gold at the 2010 Vancouver Games, then won silver four years later in Sochi, Russia. They stepped away from competition for two years, the taxing grind of more than 15 years spent working together having taken its toll, but returned to make another Olympic run.

They were nearly unstoppable last season, winning the world championship as if they had never been away, but were upset by Papadakis and Cizeron at the Grand Prix Final in December.

They proved Monday that they’re still the team to beat.

Performing to Latin-infused music by the Rolling Stones, Eagles and Santana, Virtue and Moir were in lock-stop from the moment they stepped on the ice. They received level-four marks across the board, highlighted by their dazzling midline step sequence to open the program, and nailed their rhumba sequence on which they were harshly graded in helping Canada win the team event.

The crowd, relatively sparse compared to other figure skating sessions, roared as the three-time world champions skated off to await their scores. The fans roared again when their record numbers were read, and the longest-tenured ice dance team in Canadian history smiled and hugged.

Papadakis and Cizeron followed them onto the ice and received mostly level-four marks, underscored by their in-step rhumba. The only miscue came on their closing straight line lift, perhaps because they were distracted by her emerald and blue dress revealing a bit too much.

Hubbell and Donohue proved their win last month at nationals, after years of frustration, was no fluke with a dramatic performance dragged down only by a small bobble on their synchronized twizzles.

The Shibutanis, who helped the U.S. win team bronze, overcame a shaky start to their performance with a strong second half, including a breathtaking rotational lift to finish.

Meanwhile, Chock and Bates had to push aside the uncertainty caused by her injury to put together a strong opening performance. Chock has a floating bone fragment in her right foot that she’s dealt with all season, and it caused some pain about 30 seconds before their warmup was complete.

She planned to see a doctor later Monday, but doesn’t expect to miss the free skate.

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U.S. men’s hockey team will face Slovakia in qualification round match to stay alive in Olympic tournament

The U.S. men’s hockey team, which finished third in its preliminary-round group in the Olympic tournament, will face Slovakia in a qualification round game Tuesday at 12:10 p.m. KST at Gangneung Hockey Centre. The winner will advance to a quarterfinal matchup against the Czech Republic here Wednesday.

The winner of each of the three groups and the team with the second-best record received byes to the quarterfinals. The Czechs won Group A, the Olympic Athletes from Russia won Group B, and Sweden won Group C. Canada had the best record among the second-place teams.

Slovakia finished fourth, one place behind the U.S., in preliminary-round play in Group B. The two teams met in the first round, with the U.S. winning 2-1 on a pair of power-play goals scored by Ryan Donato, one of four college players on the U.S. roster. That was the U.S. team’s only victory in the first round; Coach Tony Granato’s team lost to the Olympic Athletes from Russia, 4-0, and lost to Slovenia 3-2 in overtime.

In the other qualification round matchups, Slovenia will face Norway, with the winner to face the Olympic Athletes from Russia in the quarterfinals; Finland will face Korea, with the winner to face Canada in the quarterfinals, and Switzerland will face Germany for the right to face Sweden in the quarterfinals.

The semifinals will be played on Friday. The bronze medal match is scheduled for Saturday and the gold medal game is scheduled for Sunday.

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IOC comments on report that Russian curling medalist tested positive for banned substance

Alexander Krushelnitsky and Anastasia Bryzgalova pose with their bronze medals in curling on Feb. 14.
(Martin Bureau / AFP/Getty Images)

The International Olympic Committee on Sunday offered only brief comment on a news report that a Russian medalist had tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug at the 2018 Winter Games.

“On the one hand it is extremely disappointing when prohibited substances might have been used,” the IOC said in a statement, “but on the other hand it shows the effectiveness of the anti-doping system at the Games which protects the rights of all the clean athletes.”

Alexander Krushelnitsky, who won the bronze medal in mixed-doubles curling with his wife, is suspected of having tested positive for meldonium, Reuters said, citing an unnamed source.

Meldonium has been in the news before — numerous Russian athletes, including tennis star Maria Sharapova, have been found to have had the drug in their systems after testing.

The drug is designed to increase blood flow and has been used for treatment of heart ailments. It would also be beneficial to athletes as a performance enhancer.

In the wake of a widespread doping scandal, Russia was banned from taking part in the Pyeongchang Olympics as a nation.

All of the Russian athletes in Pyeongchang were invited to join a neutral “Olympic Athletes from Russia” squad after presenting evidence that they had not cheated. The IOC stated: “Only athletes for whom there was no suspicion were invited to the Games.”

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Sunday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

The U.S. women's hockey team is in the semifinals today.
(Brendan Smialowski / AFP/Getty Images)

Sunday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Bobsled (two-man). NBCSN

7:15 a.m.: Freestyle skiing (men’s aerials final). NBCSN

8:15 a.m.: Speedskating (women’s 500, men’s team pursuit qualifying). NBCSN

9 a.m.: Biathlon (men’s 15-kilometer mass start). NBCSN

10 a.m.: Cross-country skiing (men’s 40-meter relay). NBCSN

Noon: Biathlon (men’s 15-kilometer mass start), speedskating (men’s team pursuit qualifying), freestyle skiing (men’s aerials final). NBC

Noon: Hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN.

1 p.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. Norway). CNBC

4 p.m.: Bobsled (two-man), speedskating (women’s 500 meters), freestyle skiing (women’s halfpipe), figure skating (ice dance). NBC

5 p.m.: Figure skating (ice dance, early groups). NBCSN

7:15 p.m.: Freestyle skiing (men’s aerials final). NBCSN

8:10 p.m.: Women’s hockey (semifinals, U.S. vs. Finland). NBCSN

9:35 p.m.: Snowboarding (big air). NBC

10:30 p.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. Denmark). NBCSN

11:35 p.m.: Repeat of 4 p.m. broadcast. NBC

1:30 a.m. (Monday morning): Curling (men, U.S. vs. Canada). NBCSN

4:10 a.m. (Monday morning): Women’s hockey (semifinal, Canada vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia). NBCSN

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Defending gold medalist Ted Ligety finishes 15th in giant slalom

Ted Ligety’s battered body finally felt normal.

In the last four years, the most recognizable men’s Alpine skier in the U.S. underwent surgery to insert four screws in his broken left wrist, fix a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee and repair three herniated discs in his back that caused persistent nerve pain down his left leg.

“I am the healthiest I have felt in I don’t know how many years,” Ligety said shortly after arriving at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

But the newfound health hasn’t translated into the usual success for the 33-year-old from Park City, Utah, in the twilight of his career. Nicknamed “Mr. GS” because of his prowess in the giant slalom, Ligety failed to reach the podium in the event Sunday at the Yongpyong Alpine Centre.

“I just didn’t attack the way I should’ve or could’ve,” he said.

Ligety couldn’t overcome an uncharacteristic first run down the course between stands of barren, scraggly trees. Yes, Austrian star Marcel Hirscher, coming off a gold medal in the combined event, set a blistering pace down the hill. But Ligety didn’t look like one of the greatest slalom skiers in history. He ranked 20th after the first run, 2.44 seconds behind Hirscher.

“I was really surprised when I saw the time,” Ligety said. “I didn’t feel like I crushed it, but I didn’t feel two and a half seconds back. … For me, I’m out of it.”

Despite minimal wind and temperatures that climbed above 30 degrees, 24 of the 110 competitors either crashed or were disqualified during the first session.

Ligety’s second run was marginally better, 0.17 seconds faster than his first try. He still trailed teammate Ryan Cochran-Siegle, who briefly took the lead by a half-second after blazing through the course.

As expected, Hirscher won gold, finishing 1.27 seconds ahead of Norway’s Henrik Kristoffersen. France’s Alexis Pinturault took bronze.

The early gap made a medal all but impossible for Ligety in the event that, more than any other, became synonymous with the winner of 25 career World Cup races. He won five World Cup titles in the giant slalom and captured the gold medal in the event at the Sochi Olympics in 2014. He is one of three U.S. Alpine skiers — Mikaela Shiffrin and Andrea Mead Lawrence are the others — with two career gold medals.

But Ligety, competing in his fourth Olympics, hasn’t won the giant slalom in a World Cup event since October 2015 in Solden, Austria. The injuries didn’t help.

Last month provided a glimmer of hope. He finished third in the event at Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, in late January, his final race before the Olympics. Ligety’s performance had been mixed in Pyeongchang, placing fifth in the combined, 18th in the downhill and not finishing the super-G.

But the familiar course at the Yongpyong Alpine Center, where he won a World Cup giant slalom in 2006, seemed to be an advantage.

“It’s a hill that suits me,” Ligety said.

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Nick Goepper wins silver in ski slopestyle

Silver medal winner Nick Goepper celebrates Feb. 18 after the men's slopestyle final at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang.
Silver medal winner Nick Goepper celebrates Feb. 18 after the men’s slopestyle final at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang.
(Gregory Bull / Associated Press)

The American men knew it wasn’t going to be easy this time.

Four years ago, they dominated the Olympic ski slopestyle, finishing in the top three spots. But key injuries and some new faces figured to level the field at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang.

“There are so many countries so competitive and so good in slopestyle,” said Gus Kenworthy, the defending silver medalist.

That international talent showed up at the Phoenix Snow Park on Sunday afternoon as Oystein Braaten of Norway took the gold and Alex Beaulieu-Marchand of Canada won bronze.

The lone U.S. representative on the podium was Nick Goepper, who needed a dazzling final run to secure the silver.

As Braaten put it: “The level was so high … just being part of a final like this was amazing.”

Goepper seemed glad to at least improve on the bronze he won at the 2014 Sochi Games.

“I was thinking, this is it, this is my final chance,” he said. “I’m at my second Olympics. I want a medal.”

The sport of slopestyle has skiers navigating their way downhill through a series of obstacles and jumps. Judges watch for how they slide and twist on rails and flip through the air.

As Kenworthy noted, the rest of the world has had four more years to catch up since ski slopestyle made its Olympic debut in Sochi, Russia. The American squad also competed in Pyeongchang in less-than-optimum health.

The 2014 gold medalist, Joss Christensen, didn’t even make the team as he battled to recover from an ACL surgery. Kenworthy broke his thumb during practice last week.

By the time Saturday’s final began, the four-man American squad was cut in half as Olympic rookies McRae Williams — the defending world champion — and Alex Hall failed to advance past qualifying.

Braaten wasted little time in showing that he would contend for the gold, starting with a run of 95.00 and forcing everyone else in the field to chase.

“First run, I did what I planned to do, what I wanted to do as well as I could, and it held up against all the great runs today,” he said.

British skier James Woods, who won bronze in the last world championships, came close with a 91.00 on his second run. Beaulieu-Marchand then put up a 92.4.

Silver medal winner Nick Goepper, gold medal winner Oystein Braaten, of Norway, and bronze medal winner Alex Beaulieu-Marchand, of Canada,.
Silver medal winner Nick Goepper, gold medal winner Oystein Braaten, of Norway, and bronze medal winner Alex Beaulieu-Marchand, of Canada,.
(Lee Jin-man/Associated Press)

n the meantime, Kenworthy struggled. Coming into the competition, there had been some question about whether he might be distracted with all the media attention he had received since coming out as a gay athlete after Sochi.

“I’ve always been someone that’s had to compartmentalize my life because I was in the closet and I’ve always had fear of outing myself,” he said last week when asked about potential distractions. “I always had so much going on in my mind.”

Whatever the reason, he fell on his first two runs. Goepper fared only slightly better.

The Indiana native had faced some challenges of his own since 2014, dealing with what he described as mental health issues. He sounded upbeat in South Korea, saying: “I’m deeply in love with the sport and what it’s done for my life.”

Goepper put together a complete second run, but lingered in the middle of the pack. If anyone was going to knock off Braaten, it would have to be on the final try.

Woods came up short and Kenworthy couldn’t really mount a challenge, losing his balance at a key moment. As his score of 32.00 flashed across the jumbo screen, he shrugged and said, ‘It’s OK.”

The U.S. team finally enjoyed a bright spot as Goepper came through on his last attempt, sliding and spinning his way down the hill, throwing his arms in the air when he landed the final jump that would score 93.60

“I knew that caliber of run would put me up there in the top three,” he said.

It was the best the Americans could manage on this day.

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U.S. women’s team will employ a revolutionary strategy to beat Finland: ‘Score more goals’

Hilary Knight blocks a shot as goalie Maddie Rooney, right, protects her net against Canada.
(Julio Cortez / Associated Press)

Don’t tell anyone, but here’s the revolutionary strategy the U.S. women’s hockey team has come up with in its quest to defeat Finland in the Olympic tournament semifinals on Monday and advance to the gold medal game.

“Score more goals than the other team,” forward Hilary Knight said Sunday. “It hasn’t changed.”

Getting the puck past Finland’s goaltender, University of Minnesota-trained Noora Raty, is never easy. When the teams met in the first round, the U.S. had to rally from a first-period 1-0 deficit and outshot Finland 42-24 but didn’t clinch its 3-1 victory until Dani Cameranesi scored into an empty net with 13 seconds left in the third period.

That was one of two victories the U.S. earned in its three preliminary-round games; it also lost to Canada, 2-1.

Canada will face the Olympic athletes from Russia in the other semifinal Monday night. The semifinal winners will play for gold Thursday. The U.S. won the first women’s hockey tournament in 1998 but hasn’t won since then and has lost to Canada in the last two gold-medal finals.

The U.S. women had their first practice on Sunday at Gangneung Hockey Centre and welcomed a chance to get accustomed to the boards and the ice. They focused on driving to the net, with an emphasis on creating chances for deflections and rebounds.

They’ve scored nine goals overall, with Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson and Kendall Coyne sharing the team lead with two each. Finland, which had one win and two losses in the first round, is led by Riikka Valila, a 44-year-old mother of three who scored twice in her team’s 7-2 rout of Sweden in the quarterfinals and has four goals overall.

“We haven’t been finishing, but I think it would be more frustrating if those opportunities weren’t there,” Knight said. “So just got to put the puck in the back of the net, and that’s what we’re going to try and do.

“It’s sort of a one-game tournament now. We need to win to advance to where we want to be. Can’t take Finland lightly. Every game is 50-50 going in, so just try to sway the odds in our favor during the time of play.”

Coach Robb Stauber has emphasized getting the puck to the net — and then into the net — during the last three or four practices. “Everything in tight, where the game’s won and lost,” he said. “It’s not too often you’re going to score from the point. If you get it through, you’re going to most likely score on a deflection or a redirect and some loose change. So most of those goals are going to come net-front.”

He estimated 80% of the team’s scoring chances have come within a 15-foot radius of the net. “We’ve hardly had any real clear looks, you know? That’s not a surprise, though, we’re not surprised by that,” he said. “We’ve spent the better parts of the practices doing exactly what we think is going to happen in the game. Seems like a decent plan, now we’ve got to execute and get the puck across the goal line.”

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Mikaela Shiffrin on slalom disappointment: ‘I don’t think I could have done it differently’

Mikaela Shiffrin looks on during downhill training.
Mikaela Shiffrin looks on during downhill training.
(Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

Less than 24 hours after Mikaela Shiffrin’s unexpected fourth-place finish in the slalom, the U.S. Alpine skiing star grappled with the disappointment in a 270-word post on Instagram.

“I’ve gone over it a thousand times in my head, and I don’t think I could have done it differently even if I got a second chance,” Shiffrin wrote Saturday. “So I wouldn’t take back my emotions or excitement after the [giant slalom] in order to have better shot at a [slalom] medal too. You know, it’s not necessarily the medalists who get the most out of the Olympics. It’s those who are willing to strip down to nothing and bear their soul for their love of the game. That is so much greater than Gold, Silver, or Bronze.”

Shiffrin, the top-ranked overall skier on the World Cup circuit this season, won the giant slalom in her first race at the Pyeongchang Games.

But she vomited before the start of the slalom Friday — she later attributed the upset stomach to nerves — and couldn’t medal in her best event.

“Some are going to leave here feeling like heroes, some will leave heartbroken, and some will have had moments when they felt both — because we care,” Shiffrin wrote. “That is real. That is life. It’s amazing and terrifying and wonderful and brutal and exciting and nerve racking and beautiful. And honestly, I’m just so grateful to be part of that.”

The 22-year-old remains a contender for medals in the downhill — training started Sunday — and combined events.

Another victory would make her the first U.S. Alpine skier of either gender to win three career gold medals at the Games.

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Lindsey Vonn assailed on Twitter after failing to medal in super-G at Pyeongchang Olympics

The backlash started minutes after Lindsey Vonn skidded to a stop past the finish line at the Jeongseon Alpine Center on Saturday and mouthed “I tried.”

The most successful women’s Alpine skier in history tied for sixth in the super-G at the Pyeongchang Olympics after a mistake during a turn late in her run.

Posts assailing Vonn and celebrating the unexpected result quickly flooded Twitter, most of them tied to comments she made about President Trump last year.

“Losers gonna lose.”

“Did God just give her a little nudge off course?”

“Hope you break a leg or two.”

“Happy to see a traitor of the USA defeated.”

Many of the tweets were profane, threatening or both. They cited karma; hoped she suffered an injury; wished she would lose again; used the #MAGA hashtag, short for Trump’s pledge to “Make America Great Again.”

What prompted such a vicious, gleeful response? During an interview with CNN in St. Moritz, Switzerland, in December, Vonn was asked how she would feel competing in the Olympics for a country led by Trump.

“I hope to represent the people of the United States, not the president,” Vonn answered. “I take the Olympics very seriously and what they mean and what they represent, what walking under our flag means in the opening ceremony. You know, I want to represent our country well, and I don’t think there are a lot of people currently in our government who do that.”

Would she accept an invitation to the White House if she won a gold medal?

“Absolutely not,” Vonn told CNN.

As the vitriol increased on Twitter in the hours after the race, some came to Vonn’s defense. They included Julie Foudy, the former soccer standout now covering the Winter Games for ESPN.

“I just spent last 20 min’s reading thru tweets directed” at Vonn, Foudy tweeted. “Sickened & disgusted once again by the lack of humanity that engulfs our country. She just raced her damn heart out & Trump supporters gloat/cheer/celebrate her inability to medal. Is this what we’ve become?”

Vonn seemed to take the social media storm in stride. After all, she waited eight years and fought through a series of injuries to return to the Olympics. Her 81 wins on the World Cup circuit are the most by any woman; she’s poised to break the all-time record of 86 for either gender. And her best event, the downhill, awaits Wednesday.

“It’s ok Julie,” Vonn tweeted in response. “Not everyone has to like me but my family loves me and I sleep well at night. I work hard and try to be the best person I can be. If they don’t like me their loss I guess... Thank you for the support.”

A few minutes later, she added: “Tomorrow is another day and another opportunity to become better. Goodnight.”

But the ugliness continued in the first response to her innocuous message.

“Time to hang it up.”

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Norovirus outbreak at Pyeongchang Olympics increases to 275 cases

Fourteen new cases of norovirus among staff and volunteers at the Pyeongchang Olympics were reported Saturday, the Korean Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said, raising the total to 275 people infected.

Of those diagnosed with the highly contagious illness, 53 remain quarantined while the rest have returned to work.

Most of the cases — 111 — have been at the Horeb Youth Center with the others in Pyeongchang (83) and Gangneung (81).

The outbreak has been traced to contaminated water used in food preparation at Youth Center.

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Saturday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Ted Ligety will try to win the men's giant slalom today.
(Peter Schneider / AP)

Saturday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Freestyle skiing (men’s aerials qualifying). NBCSN

7:30 a.m.: Cross-country skiing (women’s 20-meter relay). NBCSN

8:30 a.m.: Biathlon (women’s 12.5-kilometer mass start). NBCSN

9:30 a.m.: Short-track speedskating (men’s 1,000 meters, women’s 1,500 meters). NBCSN

11:30 a.m.: Ski jumping (men’s individual large hill). NBCSN

Noon: Biathlon (women’s 12.5-kilometer mass start), freestyle skiing (men’s aerials qualifying), cross-country skiing (women’s 20-meter relay). NBC

12:30 p.m.: Hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. Canada). CNBC

5 p.m.: Alpine skiing (men’s giant slalom), skeleton (women), ski jumping (men’s individual large hill final), short-track speedskating (men’s 1,000 meters, women’s 1,500 meters). NBC

5 p.m.: Freestyle skiing (men’s slopestyle qualifying). NBCSN

7:10 p.m.: Men’s hockey (Germany vs. Norway). NBCSN.

8:30 p.m.: Alpine Skiing (men’s giant slalom, final run). Freestyle skiing (men’s slopestyle qualifying). NBC

9:30 p.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. Japan). NBCSN

11 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC.

11:40 p.m.: Men’s hockey (Czech Republic vs. Switzerland). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Sunday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

2 a.m. (Sunday morning): Curling (women, Canada vs. Switzerland). NBCSN

4 a.m. (Sunday morning): Men’s hockey (Canada vs. South Korea). USA

4:10 a.m. (Sunday morning): Men’s hockey (Sweden vs. Finland). NBCSN

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Lindsey Vonn ties for sixth in super-G at Winter Olympics

Lindsey Vonn reacts in the finish area after competing in the women's super-G at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
(Christophe Ena/Associated Press)

After an eight-year absence from the Olympics, Lindsey Vonn’s return ended in disappointment Saturday.

Vonn, one of the most successful Alpine skiers in history, finished tied for sixth in the super-G at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

“It didn’t quite turn out the way I hoped,” she said.

High winds delayed the race at the Jeongseon Alpine Center for an hour. Vonn started first, but went too wide on a turn near the end of the run in a mistake that likely kept her off the podium.

Vonn will compete in the downhill, her best event, Wednesday.

Ester Ledecka of the Czech Republic claimed the gold medal with a stunning run to finish on the podium for the first time in her career.

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Defending gold medalist Ted Ligety 20th after first run in giant slalom

Defending champion Ted Ligety is in 20th place after the first giant slalom session Sunday at the Yongpyong Alpine Center.

The disappointing run essentially ended medal hopes in the event for Ligety, whose former prowess earned him the nickname “Mr. GS.”

Ligety trails Austria’s Marcel Hirscher, the giant slalom leader, by 2.44 seconds.

“I just didn’t attack the way I should’ve or could’ve,” said Ligety, a four-time Olympian. “No explanation for that.”

Twenty-four of the 110 competitors either crashed or were disqualified during the first session.

The second runs are scheduled for later Sunday.

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Lindsey Vonn will not medal in the super-G event

Lindsey Vonn reacts in the finish area after competing in the women's super-G.
Lindsey Vonn reacts in the finish area after competing in the women’s super-G.
(Christophe Ena / Associated Press)

There will be no medal for American skier Lindsey Vonn in the Olympic super-G at the Pyeongchang Games.

She had a fast run going before a mistake near the bottom cost her valuable time. Tina Weirather of Liechtenstein leads after the opening eight racers.

Vonn will have another chance in the downhill.

At age 33, she is trying to become the oldest woman to win an Olympic Alpine skiing medal.

She won bronze in the super-G at the 2010 Vancouver Games — to go with her downhill gold — but missed the 2014 Sochi Olympics after surgery on her right knee.

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Hanyu wins gold again, Nathan Chen finishes fifth, Vincent Zhou sixth, Adam Rippon tenth

Nathan Chen competes during the men's single free program.
Nathan Chen competes during the men’s single free program.
(Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu has become the first man to successfully defend his Olympic figure skating title since Dick Button in 1952. He held off countryman Shoma Uno, who won silver, and Spain’s Javier Fernandez, who took bronze, in Saturday’s free skate in Pyeongchang.

Fernandez and Hanyu share the same coach, Brian Orser.

American Nathan Chen surged from a fiasco of a short program, where he was 17th. He won the free skate to wind up fifth overall.

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Norovirus cases at Winter Olympics rise to 261; two Swiss skiers infected

The norovirus outbreak among staff and volunteers at the Pyeongchang Olympics isn’t going away.

Seventeen new cases were diagnosed Friday, according to the Korean Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That brings the Games-long total to 261 staff members and volunteers who have contracted the highly contagious illness.

Two freestyle skiers from Switzerland have also come down with the illness, the first athletes at the Games known to have been diagnosed.

Though few details about the skiers have been made public, they were not staying in the Olympic Village.

“Particularly in winter sports, these things do happen,” International Olympic Committee spokesman Mark Adams said.

The broader outbreak has been traced to contaminated water used in food preparation at the Horeb Youth Center, the epicenter of the illness.

Forty-four staff members and volunteers remain quarantined.

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The story behind Yuzuru Hanyu and all those Pooh bears

Fans throw gifts on the ice for Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan after his routine during the men's short program at Gangneung Ice Arena on Feb. 16.
(Maddie Meyer / AFP / Getty Images)

As enthralling as Yuzuru Hanyu’s short program was at the Pyeongchang Games, something almost just as mesmerizing happened after the Japanese figure skater’s routine.

The shower of Winnie the Pooh dolls raining down on the ice.

It was quite a sight to behold, but actually nothing unusual for the aftermath of a performance by the 23-year-old skater.

But why all the Pooh bears?

In 2010, Hanyu started bringing a tissue box covered with the cuddly character with him to competitions and news conferences. Kind of a good luck charm.

Since then, the whole thing has taken on a life of its own with the fans.

“I’ve skated after Yuzu actually a handful of times,” U.S. skater Nathan Chen said Thursday before the short program. “The only thing I can take away from it is, be prepared for the Pooh bears to rain down.”

And along the way, Hanyu won two world championships and a gold medal at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, so he’s not likely to ask anyone to stop throwing the plush toys.

“I know that Yuzuru is very, very superstitious, and I believe it’s part of the superstition,” Hanyu’s coach, Brian Orser, said in 2014.

According to NBC Sports, at least 10 sweepers were required to remove all the Pooh bears off the ice after Hanyu’s routine at the 2015 world championships. And it looked like close to twice that number of children on skates were out there Thursday night gathering all the stuffed toys, which Hanyu usually donates to local charities.

Children collect Winnie the Pooh plush toys thrown onto the rink by spectators following a performance by Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu on Feb. 16.
(Mladen Antonov / AFP / Getty Images)
A skater collects Winnie The Pooh toys off the ice following Yuzuru Hanyu's performance.
(Julie Jacobson / Associated Press)

“You go backstage and there are bags and bags and bags,” Orser said in 2016.

Hanyu earned a 111.68 in the short program and leads the field going into Saturday’s free skate finale. Another performance like Thursday’s and he could walk away with another gold medal — and a lot more Pooh.

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German speed skater Claudia Pechstein, 45, is ready to race toward another Winter Olympics

Despite missing out on a chance to become the oldest woman to win a gold medal at the Winter Games, seven-time Olympian Claudia Pechstein of Germany isn’t yet ready to hang up her speedskates.

Pechstein, who was six days short of her 46th birthday on Friday when she faded and finished a distant eighth in the women’s 5,000-meter race with a time of 7:05.43 , said she intends to continue competing through the 2022 Beijing Games. “Why not?” she said, laughing.

Why not, indeed. Pechstein, who has won five gold medals, two silvers and two bronzes and set the Olympic record in the 5,000 since 2002, said she had been training well before Friday’s 12 1/2-lap race. In addition, she has had success on the Gangneung Oval, having won a silver medal here last year in a World Cup 5,000-meter race to become the oldest women’s speedskater to win a World Cup medal.

“The lap times up to six, seven laps were OK. I don’t know why, now, it’s not possible to make much more pressure,” said Pechstein, who missed the 2010 Winter Games while serving a two-year ban for irregularities in her blood profile, a ban she has continued to fight to get overturned. “Normally in training I have no problems. I can go 10, 15 laps with really good lap times. I don’t know why now. But the next chance is in four years to get the medal at the Olympics.”

The winner on Friday was Esmee Visser of the Netherlands, who was 4 years old when Pechstein won her first medal at the 1992 Albertville Games. Visser’s winning time was 6 minutes, 50.23 seconds, allowing her to end the two-Olympics winning streak of Martina Sablikova of the Czech Republic. Sablikova was second in 6:51.85, with Natalia Voronina of the Olympic Athletes from Russia third in 6:53.98. Visser, 22 years and 20 days old, is the second-youngest winner of this event; Pechstein was the youngest, three days past her 22nd birthday, when she triumphed at Lillehammer in 1994.

The lone American entrant, Carlijn Schoutens, was 11th with a time of 7:13.28.

Pechstein, who finished ninth in the 3,000 last Saturday, was asked if she ever feels her age. She seemed to think it was a ridiculous question.

“No, no, no, no. Not yet,” she said. “I don’t think about my age. You?”

Many of the rest of us do, though.

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Friday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Lindsey Vonn competes in the women's super-G today.
(Jean-Christophe Bott / Associated Press )

Friday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Skeleton (women, runs 1 and 2). NBCSN

7:45 a.m.: Speedskating (women’s 5,000 meters), Ski jumping (men’s individual large hill qualifying). NBCSN

10:15 a.m.: Medal ceremonies from various events. NBCSN

11 a.m.: Curling (women, South Korea vs. Switzerland). NBCSN

Noon: Speedskating (women’s 5,000 meters), Cross-country skiing (men’s 15-kilometer freestyle), Ski jumping (men’s individual large hill qualifying). NBC.

2 p.m. Hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. Denmark). CNBC

5 p.m.: Figure skating (men’s free skate), Alpine skiing (women’s super-G), Freestyle skiing (women’s aerials), Skeleton (women, runs 1 and 2). NBC

5 p.m.: Figure skating (men’s free skate, early groups). NBCSN.

7 p.m.: Women’s Hockey (quarterfinals, TBD). CNBC

7:10 p.m.: Men’s hockey (Canada vs, Czech Republic). NBCSN

9:30 p.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. Olympic Athletes from Russian). NBCSN

9:35 p.m.: Freestyle skiing (women’s slopestyle), Figure skating (men’s free skate). NBC.

11:30 p.m.: Women’s hockey (quarterfinals, TBD). USA

11:35 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11:40 p.m.: Men’s hockey (Switzerland vs. South Korea). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Saturday morning): Curling (men, Canada vs. Sweden). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Saturday morning): Curling (men, Switzerland vs. Norway). USA

3:35 a.m. (Saturday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

4:10 a.m. (Saturday morning): Men’s hockey (U.S. vs. Olympics Athletes from Russia). NBCSN.

4:10 a.m.: (Saturday morning): Men’s hockey (Slovenia vs. Slovakia). USA.

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Ryan Donato helps the U.S. take a key step forward in win over Slovakia

There wasn’t anything too fancy or technical about what the U.S. men’s hockey team needed to do Friday afternoon.

After a disappointing overtime loss to start the 2018 Winter Olympics, the Americans knew they had to give a full 60 minutes’ effort against Slovakia.

“We just continued to keep our foot on the gas,” forward Jordan Greenway said. “We didn’t let up in the third period.”

That meant chasing down loose pucks and working their way to the front of the net. It meant playing defense and killing a crucial penalty.

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Mikaela Shiffrin suffers stomach problems and then fails to medal in slalom

The brown smudge in the snow lay amid a tangle of orange safety netting at the top of the Yongpyong Alpine Center’s slalom course.

Minutes before Mikaela Shiffrin’s first run Friday in her best event, one where a gold medal seemed to be a foregone conclusion, the U.S. Alpine skiing sensation vomited.

The pre-race upset stomach would be the first of many things that didn’t go as planned for Shiffrin, a day after her long-awaited debut at the Pyeongchang Olympics ended with a gold medal in the giant slalom.

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Yuzuru Hanyu wins men’s short program with a magical routine

Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan reacts as his score is posted following his performance in the men's short program figure skating.
(David J. Phillip/Associated Press)

What bad ankle?

Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu put to rest any doubts about his injured ankle with an amazing performance in men’s figure skating short program from the Gangneung Ice Arena.

Hanyu, skating first in the final group of skaters, set an Olympic record with a dazzling performance that earned a 111.68 from the judges.

His main rival, Spain’s Javier Fernandez, didn’t let Hanyu open too comfortable of a lead though, with a strong skate that the judges gave 107.58 points.

Japan’s Shoma Uno finished third with 104.17 points.

The top American favorite Nathan Chen faltered badly in the short program and will the free skate in 17th place after a routine that featured multiple falls.

American Adam Rippon continued his great skating run and enters tomorrow’s free skate in 7th place with an outside shot at the podium.

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Mikaela Shiffrin finishes fourth in slalom at Pyeongchang Olympics

Mikaela Shiffrin is human after all.

The U.S. Alpine skiing sensation failed to medal her best event Friday, finishing fourth in the slalom at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

A day after opening her Games with a gold medal in the giant slalom at the Yongpyong Alpine Center, Shiffrin entered the slalom as the heavy favorite. She won the event four years ago in Sochi at age 18, becoming the youngest Olympic slalom medalist in history, and is the world’s top-ranked competitor in the event.

The gold medal seemed to be a foregone conclusion as the 22-year-old Shiffrin chased history at these Games.

Instead, Sweden’s Frida Hansdotter won the gold, Switzerland’s Wendy Holdener won silver and Austria’s Katharina Gallhuber captured bronze.

Minutes before her first run, Shiffrin vomited on the snow near a tangle of orange safety netting.

“It was kind of sudden. It almost felt like a virus kind of puking, less about nerves,” Shiffrin said between races.

She didn’t look like her usual self, finishing the first run almost a half-second behind leader Holdener in 49.37 seconds.

Shiffrin’s didn’t fare better in the second run, as her time increased to 49.66 seconds.

She is trying to become the first female U.S. Alpine skier to win three medals in one Olympics and the first U.S. Alpine skier of either gender with three career gold medals.

After winning the giant slalom Thursday, Shiffrin kept a conservative schedule. She took a nap, had dinner, then accepted her gold medal from Liechtenstein’s Princess Nora during a ceremony at the Pyeongchang Medals Plaza.

Shiffrin skipped the usual commitments for U.S. gold medalists -- sitting down for a one-on-one interview with NBC, celebrating at the U.S. house, a follow-up news conference at the Main Press Center -- because of her ambitious program that still includes the downhill and combined.

Still, the medal ceremony kept her up until about 10 p.m. rather than going to bed at 8:30 p.m. as usual.

“It certainly was not normal preparation, but I knew going into these Olympics it’s not normal races and not normal preparation,” Shiffrin said.

And it didn’t lead to a normal result.

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Adam Rippon says he’s a ‘hot mess’

If you knew me you would know that I’m a hot mess, and there’s nothing more distracting than being me

— Adam Rippon, after the men’s short program on Thursday night

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Men’s figure skating live: Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu jumps into first with historic skate

Adam Rippon reacts after his short program skate.
Adam Rippon reacts after his short program skate.
(Mladen Antonov/Getty Images )

What bad ankle?

Japan’s Yukuru Hanyu put to rest any doubts about his injured ankle with an amazing performance in men’s figure skating short program from the Gangneung Ice Arena.

Hanyu, skating first in the final group of skaters, set an Olympic record with a dazzling performance which earned a 111.68 from the judges.

His main rival, Spain’s Javier Fernandez didn’t let Hanyu open too comfortable of a lead thought, with a strong skate that the judges gave 107.58 points.

Japan’s Shoma Uno finished third with 104.17 points.

The top American favorite Nathan Chen faltered badly in the short program and will the free skate in 17th place after a routine that featured multiple falls.

American Adam Rippon continued his great skating run and enters tomorrow’s free skate in 7th place with an outside shot at the podium.

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Gus Kenworthy takes a jab at Vice President Mike Pence

(Ker Robertson / Getty Images)

Call it a good news-bad news scenario for Gus Kenworthy.

The outspoken freestyle skier broke his thumb in training on Thursday.

He tweeted out a picture of his X-ray, along with one of his freshly casted hand and included this quip: “It won’t stop me from competing (obvi) but it does prevent me from shaking Pence’s hand so Silver linings!”

Kenworthy, who came out as gay about two years after his silver medal win at the Sochi Games, has been openly critical of President Trump and Vice President Mike Pence, who was in South Korea for the start of the games.

Kenworthy has previously said he would not go to the White House as part of the traditional visit the U.S. Olympic team makes after the Olympics.

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Mikaela Shiffrin in fourth place after first slalom run at Pyeongchang Olympics

Mikaela Shiffrin entered Friday’s slalom competition at the Pyeongchang Olympics as the heavy favorite, the defending gold medalist and the world’s top-ranked skier in the event.

But the slalom is off to an uncharacteristic start for the 22-year-old.

A day after winning gold in the giant slalom, Shiffrin is 0.48 seconds off the lead and in fourth place after her first run through the slalom course at the Yongpyong Alpine Center.

She vomited just before starting.

“It was kind of sudden. It almost felt like a virus kind of puking, less about nerves,” Shiffrin said. “It’s nice to have that first run out of the way. Nothing was tricky, you just have to move quickly like always.”

Switzerland’s Wendy Holdener had the fastest time during the first run, completing the course in 48.89 seconds.

Shiffrin stuck to a conservative schedule after Thursday’s victory. She took a nap, had dinner, accepted her gold medal from Liechtenstein’s Princess Nora at the Pyeongchang Medals Plaza, then turned in for the night.

Shiffrin skipped the usual commitments for U.S. gold medalists -- sitting down for a one-on-one interview with NBC, visiting the U.S. house, the follow-up news conference -- because of her ambitious program that includes the downhill and combined.

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Austrian Markus Schairer heading home after breaking his neck in snowboardcross event

Markus Schairer of Austria is heading home for treatment after breaking his neck in a frightening crash during the Olympic men’s snowboardcross quarterfinals.

Schairer, 30, lost control in the air on the final jump of the treacherous downhill course on Thursday. He slammed into the snow on his back, sending his goggles flying. He was able to get to his feet before being taken for a medical exam.

The Austrian Olympic Committee says Schairer fractured the fifth vertebrae in his neck. It says there is no indication the 30-year-old Schairer experienced any neurological impairment or long-term damage.

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Norovirus outbreak at Pyeongchang Olympics increases to 244 cases

The norovirus outbreak among staff and volunteers at the Pyeongchang Olympics has increased to 244 cases, the Korean Centers for Disease Control said Thursday.

Investigators traced the outbreak to contaminated water used in food preparation at the Horeb Youth Center.

Fifty-six people remain under quarantine. The rest have returned to work.

The Horeb Youth Center had 108 cases with an additional 77 cases in the coastal city of Gangneung and 59 cases in the mountain cluster around Pyeongchang.

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Radio personality fired after making vulgar comments about 17-year-old Olympian Chloe Kim

Chloe Kim smiles during the women's halfpipe finals during the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Chloe Kim smiles during the women’s halfpipe finals during the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
(Lee Jin-man / AFP/Getty Images)

Radio host Patrick Connor was fired from a San Francisco area station after he made inappropriate comments about 17-year-old Olympic snowboarder Chloe Kim on a Barstool Radio SiriusXM show.

Connor hosted a show called “The Shower Hour with P-Con” weekday mornings on KNBR. He also is a co-host of the new Barstool Radio show “Dialed-In with Dallas Braden.”

Kim, a 5-foot-3 Southern California snowboarder whose parents are Korean immigrants, won the gold medal in halfpipe on Monday. In doing so, she became the first woman in Olympic history to land consecutive 1080s — two triple rotations.

On Wednesday’s broadcast of “Dialed-In,” Connor took a discussion about Kim’s accomplishments in a vulgar direction.

“Her 18th birthday is April 23, and the countdown is on, baby,” Connor said.

Connor continued: “She’s fine as hell! If she was 18, you wouldn’t be ashamed to say that she’s a little hot piece of … . And she is. She is adorable. I’m a huge Chloe Kim fan.”

Connor later apologized on Twitter.

KNBR program director Jeremiah Crowe stated Wednesday: “Be advised that Patrick Connor is no longer with Cumulus Media. Neither KNBR, nor Cumulus Media condone the comments made by Patrick Connor on his SiriusXM program.”

Connor is still a part of the Barstool Radio show, although he was told by Braden on-air Wednesday that he will be off the show if he does not behave appropriately. “That is not who we are,” Braden said of Connor’s comments. “That is not where this show comes from.”

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NBC’s Bode Miller apologizes for suggesting a skier’s marriage has negatively affected her performance

Bode Miller, shown in 2015, is an NBC Olympics ski analyst.
(Brennan Linsley / Associated Press)

NBC Olympics ski analyst Bode Miller found himself apologizing on-air Thursday for stating earlier in the broadcast that a female skier’s recent struggles were somehow linked to her recent marriage.

Austrian skier Anna Veith won Olympic gold in the super-G during the 2014 Sochi Games and claimed the world title in that event and giant slalom the following year. But she has struggled since multiple knee injuries caused her to miss the 2015-16 season and much of the following season.

As she was competing in the giant slalom in Pyeongchang, NBC announcer Dan Hicks mentioned that Veith “hasn’t been the same” since the knee injuries.

Miller replied: “The knee is certainly an issue. I want to point out she also got married. And it’s historically very challenging to race on World Cup with a family or after being married.”

“Not to blame the spouses,” the six-time Olympic medalist continued with a slight chuckle, “but I just want to toss that out there, that it could be her husband’s fault.”

About an hour later, during the broadcast of the men’s downhill event, Miller apologized for his comment, which aired in the U.S. on Wednesday.

“That was an ill-advised attempt at a joke,” Miller said. “I was an athlete that competed after marriage and I know how beneficial it is. I know the support team you need. I relied on my friends and family. And if you have the luxury of relying on a spouse I know they are inevitably your biggest supporter. And on Valentine’s Day I didn’t mean to throw spouses under the bus. Certainly, I’m going to be hearing it from my wife, I know.”

Miller followed up on Twitter, explaining what he meant to say with his original comment. “To be clear I was not seriously blaming Anna Veith’s lack of results on her husband,” he tweeted. “It’s a changing of priorities that is historically hard, male or female.”

He added: “I had the love and support of my wife while I was racing and I know it can be a huge asset.”

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Lowell Bailey fails to medal in men’s 20-kilometer individual biathlon

Lowell Bailey finished in 51st place.
(Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

There would be no gutsy finish for Lowell Bailey. Not this time.

The only American to win a world championship in the sport of biathlon fell short of the podium in the third try of his final Olympics.

Bailey finished 51st in the 20-kilometer individual at the 2018 Winter Games in Pyeongchang, just days after similar results in the 10-kilometer sprint and the 12.5-kilometer pursuit.

Competing in the Olympics for a fourth time, the 36-year-old was hoping for the kind of surprise end that earned him a 20-kilometer title at the 2017 world championships. But finding consistent speed has been a problem of late, and his normally dependable marksmanship has deserted him in South Korea.

Among the other Americans in the Thursday night race, Tim Burke finished 41st and Sean Doherty was 44th, meaning that biathlon remains the only winter sport in which the U.S. has never medaled.

Bailey had previously announced that he would retire after this season and move to Montana to oversee a new biathlon training camp.

“I’ve put my heart and soul into this sport for a long time,” he said earlier in the week. “And I’ve really put everything I have into this Olympics.”

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Thursday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

John Daly goes for gold in men's skeleton today.
(Rick Bowmer / Associated Press)

Thursday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Luge (relay). Speedskating (men’s 10,000 meters). NBCSN

9 a.m.: Biathlon (men’s 20-kilometer individual). NBCSN

11 a.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. Italy). NBCSN

Noon: Cross-Country Skiing (women’s 10-kilometer freestyle). Speedskating (men’s 10,000 meters). NBC

2 p.m.: Hockey (teams TBD). NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. Switzerland). USA

5 p.m.: Freestyle Skiing (women’s aerials qualifying), Skeleton (men’s skeleton, final runs), Alpine Skiing (men’s super-G), Snowboarding (women’s Snowboardcross), Figure Skating (men’s short program). NBC

5 p.m.: Figure Skating (men’s short program, early groups). NBCSN.

7 p.m. Men’s Hockey (U.S. vs. Slovakia). CNBC

8 p.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. Sweden), NBCSN

10 p.m.: Cross-Country Skiing (men’s 15-kilometer). NBCSN

10:05 p.m.: Luge (relay). Biathlon (men’s 20-kilometer individual). NBC

11:35 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11:40 p.m.: Men’s Hockey (Olympic Athletes from Russia vs. Slovenia). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Friday morning): Curling (women, Sweden vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia). NBCSN

4 a.m. Friday morning): Men’s Hockey (Finland vs. Norway). USA

4:05 a.m. (Friday morning): Highlights from Thursday. NBC

4:10 a.m. (Friday morning): Men’s Hockey (Sweden vs. Germany). NBCSN

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Mikaela Shiffrin wins gold in giant slalom at Winter Olympics

Giant slalom medal winners Ragnhild Mowinckel of Norway, Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S. and Federica Brignone of Italy pose for a photo..
Giant slalom medal winners Ragnhild Mowinckel of Norway, Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S. and Federica Brignone of Italy pose for a photo..
(Martin Bernetti / Getty Images )

For three days, Mikaela Shiffrin waited as Siberian wind howled through the Taebaek Mountains.

Temporary buildings erected for the Winter Olympics buckled. The wind chill plunged below zero. Debris whipped through the streets. And in a narrow valley named after a dragon, navigating the 1,250-meter Rainbow 1 course at the Yongpyong Alpine Center became a perilous exercise.

The wind forced the postponement of Shiffrin’s first race at the Games once, then twice. The world’s top-ranked Alpine skier jokingly wondered if she’d ever get the chance to compete.

Finally, the wind quieted Thursday. Temperatures climbed into the mid-20s. The sky cleared. As supporters blew horns and clanged cowbells under blinding sunshine, Shiffrin embarked on her much-anticipated quest to make history.

The 22-year-old from Vail, Colo., blitzed through her second run in the giant slalom to win the gold medal by almost a half-second.

“There’s moments when I think, ‘Oh my gosh, what am I going to do?’ and there’s moments where I feel like, ‘No problem,’” Shiffrin said. “I don’t know when it was, at some point today after the first run I thought, like, ‘I can really win this.’ I just tried to hang on to that feeling.”

She will contend for as many as three additional medals in the next week. If the plan works, Shiffrin would be the first U.S. woman to win three Alpine medals in a single Olympics.

After crossing the finish line, she leaned toward the snow, sucked in a breath, then broke into a wide smile as the sparse crowd roared.

“She attacked both runs,” said France’s Tessa Worley, the world’s second-ranked competitor in the event who came in seventh. “It is a good way to do things. … She wanted this medal.”

Norway’s Ragnhild Mowinckel finished second, and Italy’s Federica Brignone placed third.

Shiffrin’s aspirations, however, extend far beyond the lone medal.

She entered the Games having struggled in recent weeks, blaming the uncharacteristic difficulties, which included two seventh-place finishes, on too many races too close together. She arrived in South Korea almost two weeks ago to rest and recover and, after the short break, feels back to her usual grinning, dominant, unflappable self.

That’s a frightening development for other Alpine competitors.

“I have to refocus my energy, but to come to the Olympics after some tough races on the World Cup circuit and, you know, to charge like that,” Shiffrin said, “I risked it on the second run. It’s super-cool.”

She is the heavy favorite to defend her gold medal in the slalom, her best event, Friday. She’s a medal contender in the combined. And, if she has the energy, she could compete in the downhill.

But not the super-G. Shiffrin won’t take part in that event on Saturday because of the adjusted schedule.

“She will have raced and trained — or tried to race — for six days in a row,” her mother and coach Eileen Shiffrin said. “She has to have a day off.”

Sound daunting? Shiffrin is accustomed to breaking ground. She has dominated the World Cup circuit this season, amassing almost twice as many overall points as second-place Wendy Holdener of Switzerland. That included winning five consecutive races — the longest streak in 20 years — in December and January. Shiffrin has already collected 41 World Cup victories — Sweden’s Ingemar Stenmark’s 86 career wins are the most by either gender.

The packed schedule in Pyeongchang — even more challenging after wind led to the reshuffled program — might transform Shiffrin into the U.S. face of these Games.

Even though Shiffrin hadn’t won a giant slalom since Jan. 6 in Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, she delivered the competition’s second-fastest time in her first run through the course Thursday. Her easy confidence afterward hinted at what awaited the other skiers in the final run.

“I also feel like I can go a little bit harder,” Shiffrin said between races. “There’s nothing to hold back.”

She was right.

UPDATE

Feb. 15, 7:10 a.m.: This article was updated with Shiffrin’s decision not to compete in Saturday’s super-G race.

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Shaun White: ‘I have grown and changed as a person’

Gold medalist Shaun White.
Gold medalist Shaun White.
(Andreas Rentz / Getty Images)

Hours after winning the men’s halfpipe at the 2018 Winter Olympics, Shaun White faced questions about a sexual harassment suit filed by Lena Zawaideh, a former drummer in his band. The claim, which dates to 2016, has returned to the news this week.

“Honestly, I’m here to talk about the Olympics, not gossip,” White told reporters.

“I am who I am, and I’m proud of who I am,” he continued. “And my friends, you know, love me and vouch for me, and I think that stands on its own.”

When a reporter tried to follow up, U.S. Ski & Snowboard official Nick Alexakos interrupted, saying: “I think we’re here to talk about the gold medal.… If you don’t have another question, why don’t you go ahead and pass the mike.”

Later in the day, during an appearance on NBC’s “Today” show, White apologized for using “gossip” in reference to the lawsuit, saying it was “a poor choice of words to describe such a sensitive subject” and that he is “truly sorry.”

In an email to the media, Zawaideh’s attorney took exception, stating: “Mr. White’s comments, on the world stage, directly impugn the character of Ms. Zawaideh. No woman wants to be called a ‘gossip’ or a liar by the harasser.”

White responded to the renewed criticism through his representatives later in the day.

“Representing Team USA at the Olympics in a sport that I love is a true honor and I was thrilled to win Gold. I regret my behavior many years ago and am sorry that I made anyone — particularly someone I considered a friend — uncomfortable. I have grown and changed as a person, as we all grow and change, and am proud of who I am today,” read the statement emailed to the media.

According to the lawsuit, White repeatedly sexually harassed Zawaideh, forced her to watch pornography and told her how to dress and get her hair cut.

The suit also alleged that on separate occasions, White grabbed Zawaideh’s backside, tried to kiss her and shoved a bottle of vodka into her mouth and forced her to drink from it.

The parties settled for an undisclosed amount in May.

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Shiffrin in good spot for a medal in women’s giant slalom

Mikaela Shiffrin of the United States competes during the women's giant slalom.
(Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)

Mikaela Shiffrin is in prime position heading into the final run of the Olympic giant slalom, trailing Manuela Moelgg of Italy by 0.20 seconds.

The American standout attacked the tight course on a fast first run to give herself a chance at a gold medal as she kicks off her Pyeongchang Games. Only a handful of lower-ranked skiers remain on the course.

The top 30 finishers from the first run go in reverse order for the final run, with their times combined to determine the winner. Shiffrin will go second-to-last Thursday afternoon in South Korea.

The 22-year-old finished fifth in the giant slalom at the 2014 Sochi Games. She’s the defending Olympic slalom champion.

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Mikaela Shiffrin second after initial giant slalom run at Winter Olympics

Mikaela Shiffrin during the first run of the women's giant slalom.
(Michael Probst / Associated Press)

Mikaela Shiffrin finally debuted at the Pyeongchang Olympics on Thursday after two postponements this week because of high winds.

The U.S. Alpine skiing star has the second-fastest time after her initial run in the giant slalom under a calm, cloudless sky at the Yongpyong Alpine Center.

The second runs are scheduled for later Thursday in South Korea.

Shiffrin, ranked third in the World Cup in the event this year, was pleased with the clean run that left her 0.20 seconds behind Italy’s Manuela Moelgg.

“I also feel like I can go a little bit harder,” she said. “There’s nothing to hold back for the second run…. I’m excited to see what I can do.”

The giant slalom was originally scheduled for Monday, but it was one of three Alpine races pushed back because of the winds.

Shiffrin will compete Friday in the slalom, her best event and one in which she’s a heavy gold medal favorite.

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Lindsey Vonn is looking for love at the Olympics

Skier Lindsey Vonn takes part in the opening ceremony at Pyeongchang.
(Al Bello / AFP / Getty Images)

U.S. skier Lindsey Vonn is still two days away from her first evet at the Pyeongchang Games.

And it’s Valentine’s Day.

And she’s single.

Apparently all that led her to send out a playful tweet on Wednesday.

She got plenty of responses, and replied to several of them.

Even Indy car driver Conor Daly took his shot.

Vonn’s first scheduled event is the super-G on Friday.

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Wednesday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Wednesday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Skeleton (women’s training runs), luge (doubles). NBCSN

8:30 a.m.: Biathlon (women’s 15-kilometer individual). NBCSN

10:15 a.m.: Curling (women, Denmark vs. Sweden). NBCSN

Noon: Luge (doubles), Nordic combined (men’s individual normal hill). NBC

1:15 p.m.: Medal ceremonies from various events. NBCSN

2 p.m.: Men’s hockey, teams TBD, NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. Japan). CNBC

5 p.m.: Skeleton (men’s), Speedskating (women’s 1,000 meters), Alpine skiing (women’s giant slalom, first run), figure skating (pairs’ final round). NBC

5:30 p.m.: Figure skating (pairs’ final round, early groups). NBCSN

7 p.m.: Men’s hockey (Finland vs. Germany). CNBC

7:10 p.m.: Women’s hockey (U.S. vs. Canada). NBCSN

9:05 p.m.: Alpine Skiing (women’s giant slalom, second run). Snowboarding (men’s snowboardcross), skeleton (men’s, second run of four). NBC

9:30 p.m.: Curling (women, U.S. vs. Britain). NBCSN

11:05 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11:30 p.m.: Women’s hockey (Finland vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia). USA

11:40 p.m.: Men’s hockey (Norway vs. Sweden). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Thursday morning): Cross-country skiing (women’s 10 kilometer). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Thursday morning): Curling (women, Canada vs, Norway). USA

2:35 a.m. (Thursday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

4:10 a.m. (Thursday morning): Men’s hockey (Switzerland vs. Canada), NBCSN

4:10 a.m. (Thursday morning): Men’s hockey (Czech Republic vs. South Korea), USA

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Shani Davis deserves a better sendoff, but he won’t put the controversy on ice

Shani Davis competes in the 1,500-meter race on Wednesday at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games.
Shani Davis competes in the 1,500-meter race on Wednesday at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games.
(Maddie Meyer / Getty Images)

In his latest brouhaha, which is over the flag-bearing responsibilities at the opening ceremony, Davis remains the designated “bad guy” and it’s entirely his fault. He could de-escalate the situation — or, at very least, shift the course of the discussion — but his pride won’t allow it.

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Shaun White addresses sexual harassment suit, flag flap and rebounding from slump

Gold medalist Shaun White celebrates during the victory ceremony.
(Clive Rose/Getty Images)

Shaun White’s victory news conference in Pyeongchang, South Korea, on Wednesday evening wasn’t all golden and good news.

Hours after winning the men’s halfpipe at these 2018 Winter Olympics, White talked about the emotions of rebounding from a slump and a bad crash to capture the third gold medal of his career. He talked about his third run of the day, when he landed back-to-back 1440s for the first time in his life.

“I just dug deep and made it happen,” he said.

But there were also questions about a sexual harassment suit filed by Lena Zawaideh, a former drummer in his band. The claim, which dates to 2016, has come back into the news this week.

“Honestly, I’m here to talk about the Olympics, not gossip,” White said.

“I am who I am, and I’m proud of who I am,” he continued. “And my friends, you know, love me and vouch for me, and I think that stands on its own.”

When a reporter tried to follow up, U.S. Ski & Snowboard official Nick Alexakos interrupted, saying: “I think we’re here to talk about the gold medal. … If you don’t have another question, why don’t you go ahead and pass the mike.”

Later in the day, during an appearance on NBC’s “Today” show, White apologized for using the word “gossip” in reference to the lawsuit, saying he used “a poor choice of words to describe such a sensitive subject” and he’s “truly sorry.”

According to the lawsuit, White repeatedly sexually harassed Zawaideh, forced her to watch pornography and told her how to dress and get her hair cut.

The suit also alleged that on separate occasions, White grabbed Zawaideh’s backside, tried to kiss her and shoved a bottle of vodka into her mouth and forced her to drink from it.

The lawsuit was settled for an undisclosed amount in May.

Also on Wednesday, White responded to social media debate about an incident immediately after his winning run when someone handed him an American flag and he let it drag along the snow behind him.

“I was trying to put my gloves on and hold the flag and get my board,” he said. “I definitely didn’t mean any disrespect.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

1 p.m.: This article was updated with background information on the 2016 lawsuit against White.

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U.S. Alpine skier Tommy Biesemeyer out of Games with ankle injury

U.S. Alpine skier Tommy Biesemeyer injured his right ankle during training Wednesday and won’t be able to compete in the downhill.

Teammate Ryan Cochran-Siegle will take Biesemeyer’s place in the downhill Thursday at the Jeongseon Alpine Center.

“I wonder why this happens,” Biesemeyer said in a statement. “It is hard to not think if there is a deeper meaning to it all. You are supposed to be optimistic in times like these and say something like, ‘I will come back stronger than ever.’ But I just can’t bring myself to do it.”

Biesemeyer, 29, would’ve been competing in his first Olympics.

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Shaun White earns gold medal with epic finish in halfpipe

One of the eateries in this tiny hamlet in the Taebaek Mountains serves hamburgers. One is named after Shaun White.

Its namesake tried one the other day. “It was a magical moment,” he said.

Not quite as magical as what happened just up the hill in Phoenix Snow Park on Wednesday in the finals of the snowboard halfpipe at the Winter Olympics.

It wasn’t that Shaun White won the gold medal; he’s done that twice before. It was where, when, why. And how.

“He’s a psycho,” said fellow American Jake Pates, who finished eighth and was trying to put into words what he just witnessed. “He’s really, really, really good, man. And he can turn it on when he has to, land it when it means something. I think the dude thrives on pressure, honestly. History shows that dude does good when it’s turned up.”

Here’s how much it got turned up:

White, a 31-year-old from Carlsbad, scored 94.25 on his first of three runs to take an early lead, only for Japan’s Ayumu Hirano to do what only he has in snowboarding history and land back-to-back 1440s (four revolutions) for a 95.25. White, figuring he needed to match Hirano, tried back-to-back 1440s in his second run and couldn’t hang onto the landing.

That left him with one run, the last of the competition, and this fate: Do something he never had, or settle for silver.

“Some people are gamers, some aren’t,” said coach J.J. Thomas, the 2002 bronze medalist. “He’s a relentless competitor. He thrives under the pressure. That’s what it takes. He almost needs the pressure to perform.”

White spent the moments before the final run riding loops on the chairlift.

“Anything to distract from this pressure-cooker situation,” White said. “I don’t know. I sat there and looked down at the pipe. I said, ‘I know you got this, you’ve been working on this all your life.’ I dropped in and let all of those cares and worries go away and truly believed in myself.

“I knew I had it in me to do it. And I did it.”

Shaun White competes in the Snowboard Men's Halfpipe Final at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
(Matthias Hangst / Getty Images)

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Lindsey Vonn uses Twitter to look for a Valentine’s Day date

Lindsey Vonn smiles during a press conference.
(J. David Ake/Associated Press)

Chalk it up to the time change from Pyeongchang, South Korea to back home in the States, but U.S. skier Lindsey Vonn forgot that today is Valentine’s Day.

So she did what many would do to find a date on Feb. 14, she went online. Vonn tweeted a request for a date for Valentine’s Day to her almost million followers on Twitter.

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Mikaela Shiffrin’s Pyeongchang Olympics debut delayed again because of high wind

Mikaela Shiffrin’s debut at the Pyeongchang Olympics will have to wait at least another day, as high winds continued to throw the Alpine skiing schedule into disarray.

The slalom — where Shiffrin is the heavy favorite — was postponed Wednesday after four weather-related delays at the Yongpyong Alpine Center.

The event has been rescheduled for Friday.

“Everyone’s a little bummed out when a day like this happens,” U.S. women’s Alpine coach Paul Kristofic said. “But they do happen to us so we’re quite used to it.”

Temperatures were in the high 20s Wednesday — much warmer than previous days — but winds gusted at more than 20 mph at the base of the course.

Kristofic said winds were forecast to increase throughout the day, creating problems with visibility, safety and the fairness of the race.

Earlier this week, wind forced the postponement of the men’s downhill and women’s giant slalom. Only the men’s combined event — won by Austria’s Marcel Hirscher on Tuesday — has been contested in the 11-race Alpine schedule.

The wind is expected to decrease Thursday, when the women’s giant slalom, featuring Shiffrin, and men’s downhill are scheduled. Friday will also be busy, with the men’s super-giant slalom running in addition to the women’s slalom.

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Speedskater Maame Biney, cut down in the 500, must wait another four years for her Olympic glory

Speedskater Maame Biney lost her signature race, the 500, and is unlikely to contend for a medal in her final event, the 1,500.
(Julie Jacobson / Associated Press)

The reservoir of tears that welled up in the eyes of Maame Biney started to roll down her cheeks.

“I just have to wait four more years to be able to get back to this big stage, so I can’t wait until those four years,” she said, brushing aside a tear on the left side of face.

There will be no gold in Biney in her first Olympics — or medal of any color. The always-smiling 18-year-old short track speedskater was eliminated from her signature race in the 500 meters in the quarterfinal round Tuesday night in Gangneung Ice Arena, finishing last in her four-woman heat.

The first African American woman to make a U.S. Olympic speedskating team, Biney failed to respond after the opposition managed to neutralize her greatest weapon — her quick start. Biney used an explosive start to dominate the U.S. Olympic trials but was introduced to a new level of the sport here. Heading into the first turn, she was bumped by Sofia Prosvirnova of Russia. Biney dropped to the back of the field.

Prosvirnova won the race in 43.466 seconds. Biney was a distant fourth in 44.772 seconds.

“I usually don’t get bumped in the start,” Biney said. “It was a big shock to me. I needed to figure out how to get my rhythm back, but I didn’t.”

In the event final staged later that night, Arianna Fontana of Italy claimed the gold medal.

Biney’s Olympics aren’t over. She will race in the 1,500 meters but isn’t expected to contend for a medal.

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Shaun White goes big in halfpipe qualifying

Shaun White celebrates after his second qualifying run during the men's snowboard halfpipe competition.
(David Ramos / Getty Images)

Shaun White thought his day was pretty much over.

Sure, the U.S. snowboarder had one more qualifying run left on the halfpipe, but after posting a 93.75 on his first run White wasn’t planning on doing anything too spectacular the second time through.

But then the two-time gold medalist in the event watched as Japan’s Ayumu Hirano put up a 95.25 and Australia’s Scotty James a 96.75 in their second runs.

So White went ahead and did this.

“I started seeing everybody putting in these great runs and I figured I would just kind of step it up and they motivated me to send it,” said White, whose second-run score of 98.50 was the best of the qualifying round.

“It’s like I knew I had it in me and I watched these young guys completing these amazing runs and it fired me up,” White said.

“I just wanted to show this is what I’ve been doing my entire life and I’m here to put it down.”

White gets the coveted last run of the afternoon in Wednesday’s finals.

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American Emily Sweeney thrown off sled in luge crash

American luger Emily Sweeney avoided serious injury in a frightening crash that knocked her out of the Pyeongchang Olympics on Tuesday during the final heat of the competition.

The diagnosis was that Sweeney had only some bumps and bruises.”I’m OK,” Sweeney said.

Emily Sweeney of the United States waves after her third run during the women's luge final on Tuesday.
(Andy Wong / Associated Press)

Sweeney lost control around Curve 9, the track’s most treacherous spot, and then began careening all over the track. She wound up sliding feet-first up one curve toward the track roof before getting thrown from her sled and eventually tumbling to a stop.

Many in the crowd looked at the monitors, horrified. The stands were filled with raucously cheering fans who immediately went silent, waiting for a sign that Sweeney would be all right.

It took several minutes for Sweeney to get to her feet, then several more before she could finally start a slow walk to the finish area — surrounded by team and on-site medical personnel.

“I’ve never been so relieved than when I saw her getting up and walking,” said American teammate Summer Britcher, choking back tears.

Sue Sweeney, center, Emily Sweeney's mother, cries out as her daughter crashes on the final run during the women's luge final Tuesday.
(Andy Wong / Associated Press)

This was the first Olympics for Sweeney.

Curve 9 has been a problem for sliders throughout the early portion of the Olympics, causing many to skid, lose control and lose time. Crashes, however, have not come as often as they did in the 2006 and 2010 Games, both of which left athletes openly complaining about track safety.

Later in the final run, Britcher lost control at the start and collided with some walls — but got down the track without crashing or serious injury.

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Maame Biney fails to advance in 500-meter short-track speedskating

Maame Biney finishes fourth in the 500-meter short-track speedskating quarterfinal.
(Harry How / Getty Image)

American teenager Maame Biney has been eliminated from the 500 meters in short-track speedskating.

Biney landed in a tough quarterfinal that included former world champion Fan Kexin of China. The 18-year-old from Virginia trailed throughout after trying to go for the lead early and getting crowded out by Fan and Sofia Prosvirnova of the Olympic Athletes from Russia. She finished fourth in her heat with a time of 44.772 seconds.

Only the top two in each heat advance to the semifinals later. Biney still has another event left in Pyeongchang, as she also qualified for the 1,500 meters

Tough luck also befell medal contender Marianne St-Gelais of Canada, who was penalized for impeding shortly after the start of her heat and left the ice.

Among those moving on are Arianna Fontana of Italy, Elise Christie of Britain, Kim Boutin of Canada and crowd favorite Choi Min-jeong of South Korea. Choi survived a three-way photo finish for second and the crowd cheered wildly when she advanced.

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Tuesday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Tuesday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Luge (women’s singles), Cross-Country Skiing (men’s and women’s individual sprint). NBCSN

8:30 a.m.: Speedskating (men’s 1,500 meters). NBCSN

9:30 a.m.: Short-track Speedskating (women’s 500 meters final, men’s 1,000-meter qualifying, men’s 5,000-meter relay qualifying). NBCSN

11:30 a.m.: Curling (mixed doubles bronze medal match). NBCSN

Noon: Speedskating (men’s 1,500 meters), Luge (women’s singles), Cross-Country Skiing (men’s and women’s individual sprint). NBC.

2 p.m.: Women’s Hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles gold medal match). CNBC

5 p.m.: Alpine Skiing (women’s slalom, first run), Snowboarding (men’s halfpipe), Figure Skating (pairs’ short program). NBC

5 p.m.: Figure Skating (pairs’ short program, early groups). NBCSN

7:10 p.m.: Women’s Hockey (Sweden vs. Switzerland). NBCSN

9:05 p.m.: Alpine Skiing (women’s slalom, final run). Short-track Speedskating (women’s 500 meters, men’s 1,000-meter qualifying, men’s 5,000-meter relay qualifying). NBC

9:30 p.m.: Curling (men, U.S. vs. South Korea). NBCSN

11:05 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

11:30 p.m.: Nordic Combined (individual normal hill event). Skeleton (women’s training runs). NBCSN

11:30 p.m.: Women’s Hockey (Korea vs. Japan). USA

2 a.m. (Wednesday): Speedskating (women’s 1,000 meters). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Wednesday): Curling (women, Great Britain vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia). USA

3:30 a.m. (Wednesday): Men’s Hockey (U.S. vs. Slovenia). NBCSN

4:10 a.m. (Wednesday): Men’s Hockey (Slovakia vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia). USA

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Star Austrian skier Marcel Hirscher lands his first Olympic gold

Austria's Marcel Hirscher skis during the slalom portion of the men's combined at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
(Luca Bruno / Associated Press)

Marcel Hirscher is an idol in ski-crazed Austria, the scruffy-faced winner of six consecutive overall World Cup titles to become the planet’s most dominant Alpine skier.

His exploits on the slopes even inspired a song that became a runaway hit in Austria and will be the only thing that sticks in your head longer than one of his flawless slalom runs.

The 28 year old seemed to have everything -- except for an Olympic gold medal. Hirscher has downplayed the glaring absence in a career that includes 55 World Cup victories, 120 podiums and, in two previous trips to the Olympics, one silver medal.

But Pyeongchang will be his final Games. One accomplishment remained.

“I’m here for the mission,” he said a few days ago.

Hirscher made good on the pledge Tuesday. He won the combined event at the Jeongseon Alpine Center on the strength of a mesmerizing trip through the slalom course, seemingly unaffected by swirling wind and bitter cold under sunshine and blue skies.

Even some Austrian journalists covering the event couldn’t restrain themselves, roaring support for their countryman.

“Everyone is saying, ‘Nice career, but an Olympic gold medal is still missing,’” Hirscher said. “This is perfect, unbelievable.”

The pressure of the moment, as usual, didn’t faze him. Because of lingering wind that delayed the start of the 11-event Alpine schedule for two days, organizers moved the beginning of the downhill portion of the combined to the lower super-G start.

Still, wind whipped through the course. Two of the first four downhill competitors crashed. Which way the wind was blowing from minute to minute played a major role in how each skier finished -- some skied with a tailwind, others faced a headwind.

“There is only the wind that can be a problem,” said France’s Alexis Pinturault, who won the silver medal.

Hirscher placed 12th in the downhill -- the technical specialist was thrilled with the performance -- then posted a simple message on Instagram: “first part done.” He added a check mark at the end.

Then Hirscher, the favorite to win the slalom and giant slalom, flew through the slalom with his red skis. Wind kicked up again during the run. It didn’t bother him. The lone mistake -- if you can even call it that -- came as he teetered on one ski crossing the finish line with the best time, by far, in the event in front of a half-full grandstand.

“Well, it’s not real for now, but I think in a few hours it’ll come closer and especially during the prize-giving ceremony,” Hirscher said. “A dream coming true.”

France’s Victor Muffat-Jeandet won bronze.

Ted Ligety, who won a medal medal in the combined for the U.S. at the Turin Olympics in 2006, finished fifth.

“It’s always a wild card event,” he said. “You never know exactly what is going to happen.”

The other U.S. entries struggled with Bryce Bennett coming in 17th and Jared Goldberg placing 36th, despite a strong showing in the downhill.

“I was looking for a miracle on ice,” Bennett said. “But it didn’t happen.”

Unlike most of the 2,952 athletes competing at the Games, the gold medal isn’t a career-making, life-changing moment for Hirscher. He’s already on top of the sport. Instead, it is a golden exclamation point on his career.

But does the medal feel different than his slew of World Cup titles?

“At the moment it’s the same,” said Hirscher, who plans to retire in 2019, “but ask me this question tomorrow.”

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Chloe Kim wins gold with historic performance

(Lee Jin-man / Associated Press)

Staring down the halfpipe, ready for her third and final run, Chloe Kim hesitated a moment.

The Southern California teenager stamped her snowboard, leaned forward and exhaled hard. Twice.

An athletic prodigy at 17, Kim already clinched her first gold at these 2018 Winter Olympics with a solid first run, but solid wasn’t going to be enough.

“I was like, I can do better than that,” she said. “I can one-up myself.”

Putting an exclamation mark on her victory, Kim became the first woman to land back-to-back 1080s — two triple rotations in a flash — at the Pyeongchang Games, earning a near-perfect score of 98.25 and confirming her dominance in the sport.

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Norovirus outbreak at Pyeongchang Olympics linked to contaminated water

The norovirus outbreak that has sickened 194 staff and volunteers at the Pyeongchang Olympics appears linked to contaminated water used to prepare food, the Korean Center for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday.

According to the KCDC, norovirus has been found in 94 people linked to the Horeb Odaesan Youth Training Center, including those who ate food from the center but don’t live there.

Analysis of the center’s water discovered fecal coliform bacteria.

After the training center stopped providing meals, requested frequent hand washing and promoted the use of hand sanitizer, “the norovirus infection reduced considerably,” the KCDC said in a statement.

The illness has spread from the Pyeongchang area to Gangneung, the coastal city hosting several indoor events at the Games.

No athletes are known to have been infected.

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Ryan Zapolski to start in goal as U.S. men’s hockey team begins play against Slovenia on Wednesday

Ryan Zapolski, right, gives up a goal against Slovakia during a Deutschland Cup game on Nov. 10, 2017.
(Peter Kneffel / Associated Press)

Ryan Zapolski of Erie, Pa., will start in goal for the U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team in its tournament opener against Slovenia on Wednesday, USA Hockey announced Tuesday.

Zapolski, 31, played at Mercyhurst College and then bounced around early in his professional career, playing on six ECHL teams and two American Hockey League teams in his first three seasons. He left to play two seasons for Lukko in Finland’s Elite League before moving on to Jokerit, a Finland-based team that is a member of Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League. In 38 games with Jokerit this season he had a 1.73 goals-against average and .932 save percentage.

Zapolski’s odyssey is similar to those experienced by many U.S. players here. After the NHL declined to allow its players to represent their homelands, executives in charge of the 12 teams in the men’s tournament had to search far and wide for candidates to fill out their rosters. The U.S. team has four college players, some former NHL players and many others who either couldn’t establish themselves in the NHL or never got the chance to play there but continued to play hockey in leagues around the world.

The U.S. is the No. 5 seed here, behind Canada, Russia, Sweden and Finland.

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U.S. Alpine skier Jared Goldberg ninth after downhill portion of combined

Jared Goldberg competes in the Men's Alpine Combined Downhill at the Jeongseon Alpine Center on Feb. 13.
Jared Goldberg competes in the Men’s Alpine Combined Downhill at the Jeongseon Alpine Center on Feb. 13.
(Fabrice Coffrini / AFP / Getty Images)

Jared Goldberg of the U.S. delivered the ninth-fastest time during the downhill portion of the Alpine combined event Tuesday.

Fellow U.S. skier Bryce Bennett finished 27th and Ted Ligety, the four-time Olympian who won the combined at the Turin Games in 2006, came in 26th.

The second part of the combined, the slalom, will be contested later Tuesday.

The start of Alpine skiing at the Games had been delayed two days because of blustery conditions.

The wind hadn’t died down at the Jeongseon Alpine Center, leading organizers to adjust the downhill course to begin at the lower super-G start. Two of the first four skiers still crashed, including Ryan Cochran-Siegle of the U.S.

“The conditions are fast, I think because it’s a touch harder but also more bumpy,” said Aksel Lund Svindal, the Norwegian star who ranks eighth. “This wind has polished everything a little bit. The wind is on and off, some are more lucky and others are less lucky.”

Germany’s Thomas Dressen turned in the fastest downhill time.

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Video: Watch the chairlift you need to ride to cover Olympic skiing

Chairlifts are an afterthought for any skier or snowboarder.

But the four-person lift at the Jeongseon Alpine Center, site of the men’s combined event Tuesday, is part of the trek to the media center.

That’s fine for most people unless, like this reporter, you struggle with heights. You know, sweaty palms despite subzero windchill, weak knees, the whole bit.

Can’t beat the scenery, though. At least for the parts my eyes were open.

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International Ski Federation defends holding wipeout-marred women’s slopestyle in windy conditions

The International Ski Federation defended the decision to hold the women’s snowboarding slopestyle final Monday at the Pyeongchang Olympics despite high winds that caused a slew of wipeouts.

“The first priority for FIS is the safety of the athletes and FIS would never stage a competition if this could not be assured,” the organization said in a statement. “The FIS jury monitored the weather conditions closely throughout the day, including consulting with the coaches, and considered it was within the boundaries to stage the competition safely.

“FIS always aims for the athletes to be able to stage their best performances, which some athletes have expressed was not the case ... but the nature of outdoor sports also requires adapting to the elements.”

Several competitors assailed organizers for moving forward with the event at the Phoenix Snow Park, won by South Lake Tahoe’s Jamie Anderson.

“Honestly, every event I’ve been at this year there’s been a lot of drama about weather, and snow, and flat light, and the safety of everything, which definitely has an important role,” Anderson said, “but I think when we all signed up for snowboarding it wasn’t always bluebird perfect sunny days like you get in California.”

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Chloe Kim wins gold in halfpipe at the Pyeongchang Olympic Games

Chloe Kim’s coronation is complete.

The 17-year-old from Torrance, California, dominated the Olympic women’s halfpipe snowboarding final on Tuesday, soaring to a gold medal four years in the making.

Kim put up a score of 93.75 on the first of her three final runs and then bettered it with a near-perfect 98.75 on her final run with the gold already well in hand. With members of her family in the stands, including her South Korean grandmother, Kim put on a show that delivered on her considerable pre-Olympic hype.

Liu Jiayu took silver with an 89.75 to become the first Chinese snowboarder to medal at the Olympics.

American Arielle Gold, who pondered retirement last summer, edged teammate and three-time Olympic medalist Kelly Clark for bronze.

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Mirai Nagasu was once a Colorado Avalanche Ice Girl

Mirai Nagasu celebrates after competing in the Figure Skating Team Event.
(Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

Mirai Nagasu, who soared into Olympic history when she landed a clean triple axel jump that was crucial to Team USA winning a bronze medal in the Olympic team figure skating event here on Monday, has used her skating skills to entertain people—and to clean the ice at hockey games.

Nagasu, a native of Arcadia who trains in Colorado Springs, worked for the NHL’s Colorado Avalanche as an Ice Girl during the 2015-16 hockey season. Her duties included representing the team at community and charity functions, and scraping snow off the ice during breaks in the action.

The Avalanche paid tribute to her here, and the story went viral. Nagasu saw it on Twitter and got a good laugh.

“Gotta pay for skating somehow,” she tweeted.

Nagasu became only the third American woman to land a clean triple axel, a jump that requires 3 ½ rotations, and the first American woman to pull that off in the Olympics. Only two other women have landed a verified triple axel in Olympic competition. Midori Ito of Japan did it in 1992, and Mao Asada of Japan performed three during her performances at the 2010 Vancouver Games.

Nagasu will compete again, in the women’s singles event, Feb. 21 and Feb. 23.

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Monday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Chloe Kim will try to medal in the women's halfpipe today.
(Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images)

Monday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

6:30 a.m.: Luge (women’s singles, run 2). NBCSN

7 a.m.: Freestyle skiing (men’s moguls finals). NBCSN

8 a.m.: Women’s ski jumping. NBCSN

9:15 a.m.: Biathlon (men’s 12.5-kilometer pursuit). NBCSN

10:30 a.m.: Speedskating (women’s 1,500 meters). NBCSN

Noon: Freestyle skiing (men’s moguls), women’s ski jumping, luge (women’s singles, run 2). NBC

2 p.m.: Women’s hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN

2 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles, second semifinal). CNBC.

5 p.m.: Snowboarding (women’s halfpipe final, men’s halfpipe qualifying), Alpine skiing (men’s super combined, downhill phase), speedskating (women’s 1,500 meters). NBC

5 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles, second semifinal). NBCSN

7 p.m.: Women’s hockey, teams TBD. NBCSN

8:30 p.m.: Snowboarding (men’s halfpipe qualifying). NBCSN

9:05 p.m.: Snowboarding (men’s halfpipe qualifying), Alpine skiing (men’s super combined, slalom phase). NBC.

9:05 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles bronze medal match). NBCSN

11:35 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC.

11:40 p.m.: Women’s hockey (Canada vs. Finland). NBCSN.

4:10 a.m. (Tuesday morning): Women’s hockey (U.S. vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia). NBCSN

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More norovirus cases diagnosed at Pyeongchang Olympics; total increases to 194

Seventeen new cases of norovirus were confirmed Monday among staff and volunteers at the Pyeongchang Olympics, organizers said, bringing the outbreak’s total to 194 cases.

The highly contagious illness appears to be spreading beyond Pyeongchang, the small mountain town that is the hub of the Games.

Nine of the new cases are in Gangneung, the coastal city hosting indoor events such as hockey and figure skating. The bulk of previous cases had been in and around Pyeongchang.

Organizers said 147 of the 194 people diagnosed with the illness have been released from quarantine and resumed work at the Games.

No athletes are known to have contracted norovirus during the outbreak.

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U.S. men’s hockey team needs hard work, not miracles, to succeed in Olympics, coach says

Coach Tony Granato runs a U.S. men's hockey practice at the Gangneung Hockey Center on Feb. 9.
(Bruce Bennett / Getty Images)

Although U.S. men’s Olympic hockey coach Tony Granato was inspired to learn about and play international hockey after he watched the 1980 “Miracle on Ice” U.S. team prevail at the Lake Placid Games, he said his motivational tactics haven’t included showing his own players the popular movie that was made about that gold-medal team.

Speaking at a news conference on Monday, Granato said he saw no need to screen the film “Miracle” before his team plays its Olympic opener on Wednesday against Slovenia at Kwandong Hockey Center. “To win, we don’t need a miracle,” said Granato, who was 15 when Herb Brooks’ team upset the Soviets and went on to win the gold medal. “We need to be at our best for two weeks.”

The U.S. men didn’t play any “friendly” or exhibition games before settling in at the Athletes’ Village, and they’ve had four practices here. Granato wouldn’t say on Monday which of his three goalies will start against Slovenia, but it wouldn’t be a surprise to see Ryan Zapolski of Erie, Pa., who has been playing for Jokerit of Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League, get that honor. The other two goalies are David Leggio, who has been playing in Germany, and Brandon Maxwell, who has most recently played in the Czech Republic.

“He’s the guy that is ready for that opportunity if that’s what it is,” Granato said of Zapolski.

Granato, who played for the 1988 U.S. Olympic team at the Calgary Games, also said he has liked what he has seen of his team so far. “It’s been fun. The practices have been good. Obviously, they’ve got great energy. They’re going to be Olympians in two days,” he said. “Practices have been at an unreal pace. It’s exciting for everybody. It’s exciting for the coaches to get back on the ice and be with this group and we finally get to drop the puck and put another team on the ice in a couple of days.”

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NBC apologizes to South Koreans for analyst’s remark

(Jae C. Hong / Associated Press)

NBC has apologized to South Koreans for an on-air remark by an analyst that cited Japan as an example that has been important to the country’s own transformation.

The remark was made by analyst Joshua Cooper Ramo during NBC’s coverage of Friday’s opening ceremony. He was noting the significance of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s visit.

“Every Korean will tell you that Japan is a cultural and technical and economic example that has been so important to their own transformation,” Ramo said.

An online petition quickly circulated demanding an apology, and NBC delivered one on its NBCSN cable network Saturday and formally to the Pyeongchang Olympic organizing committee.

Japan occupied Korea from 1910 to 1945. Petitioners said anyone familiar with Japanese treatment of Koreans during that time would be deeply hurt by Ramo’s remark. They also criticized the accuracy of giving Japan credit for South Korea’s resurgence.

The petition had more than 10,000 supporters Sunday.

“We believe that staying silent is not an appropriate response to such ignorant, insensitive, and harmful information that defies the very spirit of peace, harmony, and human dignity of the Olympics,” it said.

NBC said in a statement Sunday it was gratified that local Olympic officials accepted the apology. The network said that South Korea and its Olympic organizers have been “exceptional hosts in every way.”

Ramo, a former journalist at Time magazine, is co-chief executive at Kissinger Associates and had been hired temporarily by NBC to bring historical context to its coverage. The network said his assignment ended with the opening ceremony. It disputed reports that Ramo had been fired.

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Jamie Anderson gives U.S. gold in women’s slopestyle

(Loic Venance/Getty Images )

U.S. snowboarding star Jamie Anderson survived brutal conditions Monday to defend her Olympic gold medal in the women’s slopestyle.

Unrelenting winds ripped through the Phoenix Snow Park throughout the event, creating dangerous conditions that led to crashes by most of the 26 competitors.

Anderson, from South Lake Tahoe, scored 83.0 on a clean first run that no one else in the field could match.

She long been a snowboarding fixture, picking up the sport at age 9 and landing endorsement deals within a year.

Anderson, 27, won gold in the same event at the Sochi Games in 2014.

Gusting winds forced the cancellation of Sunday’s qualifying round. Instead, all competitors moved into Monday’s final. They each had two jumps, instead of the usual three, as the wind chill plunged below zero.

Canada’s Laurie Blouin won silver and Finland’s Enni Rukajarvi took bronze.

Conditions were bad enough for the women’s giant slalom at the nearby Yongpyong Alpine Center to be postponed.

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U.S wins bronze in team figure skating; Canada gold

(Richard Heathcote/Getty Images)

The United States has earned the bronze medal in team figure skating. It clinched third even before its ice dancers took the ice.

Canada already was assured of the gold, and the Russians had taken silver heading into the final discipline. The Americans led Italy by four points, and when the Italian ice dancers, Anna Cappellini and Luca Lanotte, did not score well enough to win the free dance, the U.S. had replicated its third-place finish in the event at Sochi.

That pretty much left Maia and Alex Shibutani’s program as an exhibition.

The medals winners were the same as in 2014, except the Canadians had moved up a spot, and the Russians — the Olympic Athletes from Russia this time around — won gold.

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Adam Rippon steals the show in interview with Mike Tirico

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Mirai Nagasu becomes first American woman to land a triple axel in the Olympics

Mirai Nagasu of the U.S. competes on day three of the 2018 Winter Olympic Games.
(Richard Heathcote / Getty Images)

Mirai Nagasu has become the first American woman — and third overall — to land a triple axel in the Olympics, accomplishing the rare feat in the women’s free skate at the team competition in Pyeongchang.

The 24-year-old from Montebello skated first of the five women and led off her routine with the triple axel just 21 seconds in. The feat drew huge cheers from the crowd at the Gangneung Ice Arena.

Japan’s Midori Ito and Mao Asada also landed triple axels during the Olympics.

Nagasu completed a flawless routine, pumping both fists as she finished and got a standing ovation from the excited crowd. She received a personal-best score of 137.53.

Going into the women’s free skate, the Canadians were first in the team competition, followed by the Russians in second and Americans in third. The ice dance free skate is still to come.

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More cases of norovirus reported at Pyeongchang Olympics

The norovirus outbreak among staff and volunteers at the Pyeongchang Olympics continues to grow.

Organizers confirmed 19 new cases of the highly contagious illness Monday, upping the total cases to 177 since Feb. 1.

Sixty-eight of the 177 cases, mainly among security personnel, have been released from quarantine and returned to work.

The source of the outbreak remains unclear.

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Slide show: Winter Olympics in pictures

Redmond Gerard of the United States practice ahead of the Snowboard Men's Slopestyle Final.
(David Ramos/Getty Images)

Click here to see more Winter Olympic photos

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Women’s giant slalom rescheduled due to high winds, Mikaela Shiffrin’s Pyeongchang debut delayed

The Taebaek Mountains are one of the coldest places in South Korea, pummeled by Siberian winds that numb exposed skin and knife through multiple layers of clothing.

That wind has thrown the Alpine skiing events at the Pyeongchang Olympics into disarray.

As gusts ripped hats off heads and shook the enormous tents housing media at venues Monday, they also forced the postponement of the women’s giant slalom at the Yongpyong Alpine Center. That meant U.S. star Mikaela Shiffrin’s first event of the Games, one of the marquee attractions, will be delayed two days.

“It’s a bummer that we’re not able to race today,” she said in a statement. “But with the training block I’ve had, I’m prepared and feeling good. … We have a great gym and space to eat and take plenty of naps, so I’ll use this time to recharge.”

Shiffrin is scheduled to compete Wednesday in the slalom, if the weather cooperates, where she’s a heavy favorite to win the gold medal.

Organizers rescheduled the giant slalom for Thursday. That’s the same day the men’s downhill will be contested. High winds led to the cancellation of the event Sunday in what would’ve been in the first of 11 Alpine competitions at the Games.

No Alpine events have been contested, however, thanks to the wind swirling at more than 25 miles per hour and wind chill in double-digits below zero.

Strong winds are expected to continue through Wednesday with temperatures warming in subsequent days.

The weather problems have extended the Phoenix Snow Park. The women’s snowboard slopestyle qualifying round was cancelled Sunday because of the wind. The decision followed Australian Tess Coady suffering a torn left anterior cruciate ligament after falling on her final jump during a training run in the difficult conditions.

The event was rescheduled for Monday, though strong winds delayed the start.

“It’s making competition very difficult,” said Sung Baik-you, spokesman for the organizers. “The utmost importance is the safety of the athletes.”

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Chris Mazdzer gives U.S. first-ever medal in men’s singles luge with a stunning silver

Chris Mazdzer of the United States celebrates winning the silver medal.
Chris Mazdzer of the United States celebrates winning the silver medal.
(Alexander Hassenstein/Getty Images)

It was all set up for a coronation as Germany’s Felix Loch was in the lead heading into the final run of the luge late Sunday night.

But Loch clipped the wall midway down the track and his goal of a third consecutive gold medal ended in the arms of his father and coach who tried to console him after he crossed the line with the fifth best time of the night.

Loch’s mistake opened the door for David Gleirscher of Austria, who started the final run in third place. Gleirscher, who had one of the fastest times of the night in his first run, beat out American Chris Mazdzer by two one hundredths of a second to capture Austria’s first gold medal of the Pyeongchang Games.

By finishing second, Mazdzer made history by becoming the first U.S. men’s singles luger to capture an Olympic medal.

Thirty-three men have represented the U.S. in singles luge at the Olympics, with a combined 48 appearances. The average finish among them had been 19th, with only seven top-10 showings. Adam Heidt finished fourth in 2002 and Tony Benshoof was fourth in 2006, and those were as close as the Americans had ever been to the medal stand in this event.

Mazdzer, who had finished 13th in the Sochi and Vancouver Games, gave the U.S. its second medal of the day after Red Gerard won gold in men’s slopestyle early Sunday.

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Sunday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S. is a medal favorite in the women's giant slalom.
Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S. is a medal favorite in the women’s giant slalom.
(Tiziana Fabi / AFP/Getty Images)

Sunday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

10:30 a.m.: Luge (men’s singles final two rounds). NBCSN

11:30 a.m.: Curling (mixed doubles tiebreaker, if necessary). NBCSN

Noon: Speedskating (men’s 5,000 meters), Biathlon (men’s 10-kilometer sprint), Cross-country skiing (men’s skiathlon). NBC

4 p.m.: Figure skating (team event final), Alpine skiing (first run of women’s giant slalom), Freestyle Skiing (women’s mogul finals), Snowboarding (women’s slopestyle final), Luge (men’s singles final two rounds). NBC

4 p.m.: Biathlon (men’s 10-kilometer sprint). NBCSN

5 p.m.: Snowboarding (women’s slopestyle final). NBCSN

6:45 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles semifinal, teams TBD). NBCSN

8:30 p.m.: Speedskating (men’s 5,000 meters). NBCSN.

8:35 p.m.: Alpine skiing (second run of women’s giant slalom), Snowboarding (women’s halfpipe qualifying). NBC

10 p.m.: Repeat of 4 p.m. broadcast. NBC

10 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles semifinal, teams TBD). NBCSN

11:40 p.m.: Women’s hockey (Switzerland vs. Japan). NBCSN

2 a.m. (Monday morning): Repeat of 4 p.m. broadcast. NBC.

2:10 a.m. (Monday morning): Biathlon (women’s 10-kilometer pursuit), Luge (women, run 1). NBCSN

4:10 a.m. (Monday morning): Women’s Hockey (Sweden vs. Korea). NBCSN

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U.S. women’s hockey team defeats Finland 3-1 in Olympic opener

Finland's Jenni Hiirikoski, left, and the United States' Emily Pfalzer fight for the puck.
(Brendan Smialowski / AFP/Getty Images )

The U.S. women’s hockey team began its quest to end a 20-year Olympic gold medal drought by defeating Finland 3-1 on Sunday at Kwandong Hockey Center in the preliminary round tournament opener for both teams.

The top-seeded Americans gave up a goal to Finland forward Venla Hovi — who lives in Winnipeg, Canada, and plays for the University of Manitoba — with only 5.8 seconds remaining in the first period. However, the U.S. team pulled even at 8:58 of the second period, when Monique Lamoureux-Morando showed great persistence around the net and converted her own rebound. Kendall Coyne gave the U.S. the lead when she scored on a one-timer during a power play, off assists from Hilary Knight and Brianna Decker.

Dani Camaranesi clinched it with an empty-net goal late in the third period.

U.S. goaltender Maddie Rooney, 20, made 23 saves to win her Olympic debut. Finland goalie Noora Raty, who won two NCAA championships at the University of Minnesota, was credited with 39 saves, including a shot that deflected off the skate of a teammate and off her face mask in the third period.

The U.S. team, coached by former Kings goaltender Robb Stauber, had been having trouble scoring goals during its pre-Olympic tuneups. But two goals proved to be enough on Sunday.

The U.S. women next will face the Olympic Athletes of Russia on Tuesday. The men’s Olympic tournament will start here Wednesday.

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Norovirus outbreak at Olympics increases to 158 cases

Nineteen new cases of norovirus were diagnosed Saturday at the Pyeongchang Olympics, according to organizers.

That brings the weeklong total to 158 cases, largely among security personnel.

Organizers said no athletes have come down with the highly contagious illness.

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Olympic medalist Red Gerard: ‘To get first is crazy’

Red Gerard, of the United States, smiles after winning gold in the men's slopestyle final in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
(Lee Jin-man / Associated Press)

Nerves don’t usually bother Red Gerard.

The mop-haired snowboarder from Colorado is known for his relaxed demeanor, even during his first trip to the Winter Olympics.

That changed Sunday,as subzero winds ripped through the slopestyle course at the Phoenix Snow Park and Gerard faced his final run.

His previous two tries had been forgettable, leaving him in last place among 11 riders.

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Despite loss in Olympic opener to Switzerland, Korean women’s hockey team celebrates unity

A member of the North Korean cheerleading team holds a flag depicting a united Korean peninsula during the women's hockey game Saturday.
(Ed Jones / AFP / Getty Images)

In a historic moment whose impact reverberated far beyond the happily noisy confines of Kwandong Hockey Center, diplomacy took the unusual form of ponytailed hockey players and a squadron of identically dressed cheerleaders who sang and swayed and clapped while a unique occasion unfolded on the ice below them.

The unified women’s hockey team of players from North and South Korea took to the ice amid waving flags and smiles of politicians who have long been bitter opponents. Long after the details of Korea’s 8-0 loss to a sound Swiss team are forgotten, the fact that North and South banded together and wore jerseys depicting a joined Korean Peninsula will be remembered as a landmark occasion.

“It definitely was a special moment, debuting as a unified team,” said Korea defenseman Marissa Brandt, who was born in South Korea but was adopted and raised by a couple in Minnesota. She’s known here by her birth name, Park Yoonjung.

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Shaun White’s journey to the Olympics was almost halted by a gruesome injury

Shaun White looks on during the opening ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
(Clive Mason / Getty Images)

The first hit was bad enough.

Shaun White was snowboarding in New Zealand when he took off a millisecond early on a double cork 1440 and came down hard, smacking the lip of the halfpipe at an awkward angle.

But that wasn’t the worst part.

After the initial impact, his board dug in and whipped him forward, face-first, into the icy surface. Blood ran across the snow. A helicopter was summoned.

“All of a sudden,” he says, “I was in the hospital.”

It took 62 stitches to close a jagged gash across his forehead and mend the tip of his tongue. It would take something more to repair his confidence.

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Pyeongchang Olympics organizers confirm cyberattack during opening ceremony

Organizers for the Pyeongchang Olympics confirmed Sunday they suffered a cyberattack during the opening ceremony two days ago.

Mark Adams, spokesman for the International Olympic Committee, wouldn’t identify the source of the attack.

“At the moment we’re making sure our systems our secure, which they are,” he said. “Discussing details of it are not helpful.”

The incident lasted about 20 minutes Friday, shutting down the website for the Games and Internet-connected televisions in the media center.

Adams said a full report would be prepared on the attack, but wasn’t sure if it will be made public.

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The influence of their fallen leader still resonates for the U.S. men’s hockey team

Coach Tony Granato had a full complement of players for the first time at the U.S. men’s Olympic hockey practice Saturday. Yet, there was an empty stall in the team’s locker room at Gangneung Hockey Centre, the space occupied only by a jersey that will never be worn, a vivid reminder of a loss that can never be erased.

Jim Johannson, Team USA’s general manager, chief talent evaluator, prime strategist and, really, its soul, died in his sleep at 53 on Jan. 21 in Colorado Springs. His absence was palpable Saturday as the team began its final preparations for its Olympic opener against Slovenia on Wednesday.

He should have been sitting in the stands, his ginger-colored hair visible in the crowd as he watched the line rushes and discussed the power-play formations. He should have been striding through the hallway to make sure every last detail had been taken care of so that players and team staffers would have the best opportunity to make him and their country proud in these Games. He did a little bit of everything for USA Hockey and for U.S. teams at every level, and he made the organization and its players better for his presence.

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Olympics Buzz: The mystery behind the capital ‘C’ in Pyeongchang is revealed

Sweden's Charlotte Kalla and Norway's Heidi Weng compete in the 15-kilometer cross-country skiathlon on Saturday.
(Franck Fie / AFP / Getty Images)

Before these Winter Games get too old, it seems as if the mystery of the capital letter needs to be explained. The Games are being held in Pyeongchang, South Korea, according to most American news outlets — except the region decided to change the “c” to an uppercase letter, making it PyeongChang.

Why? Because it wants to be further distinguished from Pyongyang, which is the home of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, he of nuclear arsenal fame.

It would be like Altadena changing its name to AltaDena because the city is embarrassed that sister city Pasadena continually sets up police traps to catch people prematurely crossing the yellow turn line onto Arroyo Parkway.

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Red Gerard gives U.S. its first gold medal with win in men’s slopestyle snowboarding

Red Gerard reacts to his score during the men's slopestyle final.
Red Gerard reacts to his score during the men’s slopestyle final.
(Lee Jin-man / Associated Press)

American teenager Red Gerard has won the first gold medal for the United States at the 2018 Winter Olympics, edging Canadians Max Parrot and Mark McMorris for the top spot in men’s slopestyle snowboarding.

Gerard, a 17-year-old from Silverthorne, Colorado, drilled his third and final run on the chilly but sun-splashed course at Phoenix Snow Park. His score of 87.16 was just enough to edge Parrot.

Parrot washed out in his first two runs but nailed his final trip through the tricky series of rails and jumps to post a score of 86.00. McMorris took third after putting up a score of 85.20 in his second run.

Gerard is the second-straight American to win the event, which made its Olympic debut four years ago.

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Men’s downhill postponed at Pyeongchang Games because of high winds

Strong winds that are expected to increase throughout the day forced the postponement of the men’s downhill Sunday, in what would have been the first Alpine skiing event of the Pyeongchang Games.

“With this being an outdoor sport, this is not abnormal,” said Sasha Rearick, the U.S. men’s Alpine coach. “The excitement, the energy on the team right now is fantastic…. Now the key is to take that energy and harness it, stay relaxed and then be able to ramp back up.”

The event has been rescheduled for Thursday and the men’s super-G pushed to Friday, originally an off day.

Bryce Bennett, Tommy Biesemeyer, Jared Goldberg and Wiley Maple are scheduled to compete in the downhill for the U.S. None of them placed in the top 3 during three days of training runs.

Despite gusts that pushed wind chills below zero, competition continued Sunday at Phoenix Snow Park, about a 30-mile drive from the downhill site at the Jeongseon Alpine Center.

The first Alpine event will now be the the women’s giant slalom Monday at the Yongpyong Alpine Center, where U.S. star Mikaela Shiffrin will challenge for a gold medal.

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South Korea wins its first gold medal of Games

South Korean speedskater Lim Hyo-jun celebrates his victory in the men's 1,500-meter short track.
South Korean speedskater Lim Hyo-jun celebrates his victory in the men’s 1,500-meter short track.
(David Davies / Getty Images)

Lim Hyo-jun has given the host country its first gold medal of the Pyeongchang Olympics.

The South Korean crossed the line first in the men’s 1,500-meter short track, setting off a huge roar from the capacity crowd at Gangneung Ice Arena.

Defending Olympic champion Charles Hamelin of Canada was penalized for impeding and finished far back anyway.

Lim surged past Sjinkie Knegt of the Netherlands and finished about two blade lengths ahead in an Olympic-record time of 2 minutes, 10.485 seconds.

Knegt took the silver medal, while the bronze went to Semen Elistratov, who became Russia’s first medalist of the games.

Russia was banned from the Olympics for a massive doping scheme, but Elistratov is among 168 competitors allowed in as “Olympic Athletes From Russia.”

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Saturday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Tucker West of the U.S. tests the luge track.
(Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images )

Saturday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

5 a.m.: Snowboarding (men’s slopestyle qualifying), NBCSN

8:30 a.m.: Luge (men’s singles, first two runs), NBCSN

10 a.m.: Speedskating (women’s 3,000 meters), biathlon (women’s 7.5-kilometer sprint), NBCSN

Noon: Short track speedskating (men’s 1,500 meters, qualifying for women’s 500 meters and 3,000-meter relay), ski jumping (men’s individual normal hill), snowboarding (men’s slopestyle qualifying), luge (men’s singles, first two runs). NBC

Noon: Curling (mixed doubles), U.S. vs. Norway. NBCSN

5 p.m.: Figure skating (team competition). Alpine skiing (men’s downhill). NBC

5 p.m.: Snowboarding (men’s slopestyle final), NBCSN.

7 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles), U.S. vs. Finland. NBCSN

8:30 p.m.: Figure skating (team competition). NBC

8:30 p.m.: Snowboarding (women’s slopestyle qualifying). NBCSN

9:30 p.m.: Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

10:30 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles), Canada vs. South Korea. NBCSN

11:40 p.m.: Women’s ice hockey, U.S. vs. Finland. NBCSN.

1 a.m. (Sunday morning): Repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast. NBC

2 a.m. (Sunday morning): Speedskating (men’s 5,000 meters), biathlon (men’s 10-kilometer sprint). NBCSN

4 a.m. (Sunday morning): Women’s ice hockey, Canada vs. Olympic Athletes from Russia. USA network

4:45 a.m. (Sunday morning): Cross-country skiing (men’s skiathlon), NBCSN

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Maame Biney qualifies for speedskating semifinals, but keeps her alter-ego, ‘Anna Digger,’ in check

Maame Biney during her heat of the 500-meter short track speedskating
(Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

The U.S.’ Maame Biney finished second Saturday night in her first-ever Olympic race to advance for the semifinals of the 500-meter short track speedskating competition.

“Oh, geez!” the 18-year-old from Reston, Va., said. “That was very nerve-racking! My legs were like, woooo!”

The semifinals and final of the event will be held Tuesday at Gangneung Ice Arena.

Biney completed the first-round race in 43.665 seconds, behind Kexin Fan (43.350), the 2017 world champion from China who led the race wire to wire.

Biney said her plan was to block Alang Kim of South Korea, who finished third in the four-woman race.

“The last lap, if she wanted to pass me, she had to go on the outside and not the inside,” Biney said. “I blocked her pretty well. It’s the best block I’ve ever done.”

Biney acknowledged she raced cautiously and didn’t unleash her fiercely competitive alter-ego she calls Anna Digger.

“On Tuesday, you’re definitely going to see her,” she said. “You’re going to be like, ‘Whoa, that’s the girl I know!’ Next time, you’re going to see Anna.”

Elise Christie of Great Britain won her opening race in 42.872 seconds, a new Olympic record.

American Lana Gehring finished third in her heat and didn’t qualify for the semifinals.

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Vice President Mike Pence watches speedskating at Olympics

Vice President Mike Pence sits with South Korean President Moon Jae-in during the short track speedskating.
(Aris Messinis / Getty Images)

Vice President Mike Pence is cheering on U.S. speedskaters at the Winter Olympics before departing South Korea for Washington.

Pence and his wife are viewing the short-track competition Saturday with South Korean President Moon Jae-in and his wife. Eight Americans are participating in the event.

It’s the final stop on a six-day trip that Pence hoped would increase pressure on North Korea as it seeks to use the Games to pursue an opening with the South.

Pence’s efforts to keep the spotlight on North Korea’s nuclear program and human rights abuses have taken a backseat to the widely viewed images of the two Koreas marching under one flag during Friday night’s opening ceremony — and to the invitation by dictator Kim Jong Un for South Korean President Moon Jae-in to visit the North.

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Mamee Biney and all three U.S. men qualify for next round in short track speedskating

The three American men participating in the 1,500-meter short track speedskating heats all qualified for the next round.

Aaron Tran, J.R. Celski and John-Henry Krueger moved on to the semifinals that will take place later this evening.

The first Olympic appearance by American Mamee Biney was also a success as she advanced to the semifinals with a second-place finish in her 500-meter heat.

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North Korean leader offers to meet with South Korean president

Kim Yo Jong, sister of Kim Jong Un, and Kim Yong Nam, right, North Korea's ceremonial leader, with South Korean official Cho Myoung-gyon.
(AFP / Getty Images)

The diplomatic opening created for North and South Korea by the Winter Olympics widened on Saturday, with the totalitarian state’s leader proposing an inter-Korean summit in the “near future.”

The invitation from North Korean leader Kim Jong Un came during a lunch meeting Saturday between high-level North Korean officials — in town after the Games’ opening ceremony the night before — and South Korean President Moon Jae-in.

President Moon appeared receptive to the idea

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New adventures are part of the fun for former Kings goaltender Ben Scrivens at the Olympics

Former Kings goaltender Ben Scrivens welcomes new adventures. After his NHL career stalled following the 2015-16 season, he ventured to Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League, where he spent one season with Dynamo Minsk and this season joined Salavat Yulayev in the city of Ufa.

At the moment, he’s enjoying an adventure he didn’t plan: playing for Canada’s Olympic hockey team.

When it became apparent that NHL players would not be given permission to represent their home countries in the Pyeongchang Olympic hockey tournament, executives of all the participating teams had to scramble.

Hockey Canada called on Scrivens, and he was delighted to get the thoroughly unexpected chance to compete in the Olympics.

“You always want to play hockey to the highest level of your ability, but you’re also kind of a realist at times,” he said. “It’s an opportunity. It’s all anybody asks for. We’re part of the select few that get to take this chance and do what we can with it. I’m certainly excited. It wasn’t a dream before but now it’s a dream come true.”

Scrivens, 31, played 19 games for the Kings in the 2013-14 season, mostly after Jonathan Quick was sidelined by a groin injury. His wife, Jen, whom he had met when they were both freshman goaltenders at Cornell University, is a native of Camarillo, so it was a homecoming for her. And he thrived, too, compiling a 7-5-4 record, 1.97 goals-against average and .931 save percentage.

The emergence of Martin Jones made Scrivens expendable to the Kings, and they traded him to Edmonton for a third-round draft pick on Jan. 25, 2014. He went on to play in Montreal before heading to Russia.

He said living in Russia and not knowing the language or customs has given him new respect for European players who come to the NHL without being familiar with North American customs.

He had to learn not to shake hands through a doorway, not to whistle indoors, and that he was supposed to bring cake to the rink on his birthday. That last custom was one he ignored, though.

“The language barrier is probably the biggest things. Some customs that take getting used to and some friction that you kind of don’t want to get, you choose not to conform to everything,” he said. “The food’s different, but part of it is that you go over expecting it to be different.”

Scrivens shared the practice nets on Saturday with Justin Peters and Kevin Poulin, and he said the three are supporting each other strongly. He said he has played with or against most of his new Olympic teammates at some point in his career. “The hockey world’s really small,” he said.

But his own world has been expanded by this Olympic experience.

“I came in with expectations open. Kind of like going to Russia. You know it’s going to be maybe a circus at times, pulled in a lot of different directions. You know it’s going to be busy,” he said. “You know you’re going to face more media than you normally do in Russia, so I kept my expectations open and so far I’ve been pleasantly surprised. It’s been a great time.”

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Olympic organizers investigating possible cyberattack during opening ceremony

(David Wharton/Los Angeles Times)

Organizers at the 2018 Winter Olympics are investigating whether a cyberattack might have caused their website and televisions throughout the media center to shut down during part of Friday night’s opening ceremony.

The glitch occurred shortly after the ceremony began at 8 p.m. local time in Pyeongchang and lasted about 20 minutes.

“At this time we cannot confirm” a cyberattack, spokesman Sung Baik-you said. “So we are checking all systems. We will provide more information once the details are complete.”

Prior to the Games, experts had warned about cyberattacks.

“Every single piece of digital technology that is being used, whether it’s for tickets or scoring or timing … all that stuff makes really interesting targets,” said Steven Weber, a political science professor at UC Berkeley. “Not only to create damage but as hacktivism, to show that you can.”

Experts say that North Korea has demonstrated a growing expertise in this area, but given that athletes from the nation – and leader Kim Jong Un’s sister – were at Olympic Stadium on Friday, an attack from the North seems less likely.

According to multiple news reports, cybersecurity researchers last month found evidence that Russian hackers might be planning attacks to retaliate for their country’s exclusion from the Games.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry told Reuters the allegations were unfounded.

Pyeongchang 2018 is expected to issue further comment on Saturday.

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Tennell, Shibutanis, Knierims will represent U.S. in next part of figure skating team competition

U.S. women’s figure skating champion Bradie Tennell, who is known for her consistency and excellence on the technical side of the sport, was chosen to skate her short program when the Olympic team competition resumes on Sunday. Maia and Alex Shibutani, the 2017 ice dancing world bronze medalists, will represent the U.S. in the short dance portion of the event.

This will be the Olympic debut for Tennell, 20.

The U.S. stands in second place behind Canada after the first day of the competition. U.S. men’s champion Nathan Chen performed the fourth-best short program and the husband and wife pair of Alexa Scimeca-Knierim and Chris Knierim performed the fourth-ranked short program. The Knierims, the only U.S. pair entered in the Olympic competition, also will represent the team in the long program, on Sunday.

The U.S. won the bronze medal in the inaugural team event at Sochi in 2014 behind Russia and Canada.

Each team selects skaters to perform short and/or long programs in men’s singles, women’s singles and pairs, and the short and/or long dance in ice dancing. Points are awarded according to placement, with the top-ranked performer earning 10 points, the second-ranked skater or duo earning nine, down to one point for 10th place. The points earned by each country in each segment of the competition are added to determine the winning team.

Canada has 17 points, earned on Patrick Chan’s third-ranked short program and Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford’s second-ranked pairs short program. The U.S. has 14 points (seven each for Chen and the Knierims’ placements), and Japan and the Olympic Athletes from Russia have 13 each. Japan got 10 points from Shoma Uno’s top-ranked short program and three from pair Miu Suzaki and Ryuichi Kihara’s eighth-best short program. The Olympic Athletes from Russia got three points from a weak, eighth-ranked performance by Mikhail Kolyada and 10 from the top-ranked short program by pair Evgenia Tarasova and Vladimir Morozov.

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Opening ceremony tried, but it’s the Olympic athletes who are needed to unite us

The opening ceremony of the Pyeongchang Games on Feb. 9.
The opening ceremony of the Pyeongchang Games on Feb. 9.
(Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

The day started on a bus, and with a view that is common around here. South Korean soldiers were at the base of a resort mountain, metal detectors in hand, inspecting the grounds outside of a house serving as a designated meeting place for Slovenian athletes and officials.

The routine nature of these safety patrols underscores a disheartening reality: The Olympics don’t take place in a bubble. They are very much a part of the real world.

The opening ceremony of the Pyeongchang Games on Friday night was designed to convince its audience otherwise. Peace and harmony were the primary themes of the program, which depicted the mystical journey of five children to a utopian future. The motif was reinforced by the North and South Korean athletes, who marched together under the Korean Unification Flag.

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U.S. Alpine skiing star Mikaela Shiffrin rested, ready for Olympics

Mikaela Shiffrin’s schedule at the Pyeongchang Olympics remains in flux two days before the U.S. Alpine skiing star’s first race.

The slalom, where she’s the heavy favorite to win a second consecutive gold medal, and giant slalom are givens. The rest of the program — including the speed events she has found success in this season — will be determined as the Games unfold.

“I don’t have a solid answer for you yet,” Shiffrin said Saturday. “I would like to compete in everything, but I’m not sure if I’m actually going to have the energy to do that.”

Energy is a key word for the 22-year-old. Shiffrin finished an uncharacteristic seventh in each of her final two World Cup races last month before the Games. She blamed the dip on an intense schedule in December and January when she won five consecutive races.

“After that, I got tired,” Shiffrin said. “I needed to take a step back and get a couple days of rest and then get back into training. I’m feeling much better, more like myself.”

She arrived in South Korea nine days ago, providing plenty of time to get over jet lag and train.

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Behind the scenes with fake Kim Jong Un and Donald Trump

Fake Kim Jong Un and Donald Trump pose for photographs during the opening ceremony of the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.
(Ryan Pierse / Getty Images)

Dumb me. When I first saw the Kim Jong Un impersonator walk into the section of seats reserved for reporters at the opening ceremony of the Olympics, my first thought was, “That’s a popular hairstyle here?”

Then I saw a heavyset man in a suit and a red hat.

OK, never mind. I get the joke.

The Trump impersonator followed the Kim impersonator down a set of stairs to the front of the media section. They waved. A crowd formed in front of them. Camera phones were pulled out.

After a couple of minutes, stadium ushers moved in to escort them out of the area. A flood of reporters followed.

“Oh my gosh,” an exasperated stadium usher said.

Fake Trump and Fake Kim were guided out of the nearest tunnel, which led them to an indoor hallway behind the lower sections of seats.

“Both of our buttons are very big,” Fake Kim said. “We both agree on that, so there’s going to be peace.”

The ushers screamed for security.

“You know, we wanted to surprise everybody and bring world peace and then we’re escorted out by security guards, which I think is very unfair,” Fake Kim said.

He asked one of the security guards: “Did my sister get the same treatment?”

The real Kim’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, was in the stadium watching the ceremony.

Fake Kim and Fake Trump were led down a stairway. A line of reporters followed. At one point, the procession packed the entire staircase. So in case you’re wondering, yes, reporters in other countries chase stupid stories, too.

Fake Kim identified himself as “Howard.”

Howard what?

“Just Howard,” he said. “Like Madonna.”

A quick internet search revealed he is a Kim impersonator who calls himself Kim Jong “Um.”

As for Fake Trump, Howard said his name is Dennis Alan. Fake Trump confirmed. Like Howard, Dennis Alan has a Facebook page dedicated to his alter ego.

Some media outlets reported Fake Trump and Fake Kim were kicked out of Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium. That isn’t true.

A stadium staffer politely asked them if they had tickets.

“Of course,” Fake Kim said. “We paid good money for it. We’re not thieves, you know. I can afford it. We’re rich.”

Gesturing toward his partner, he said, “He’s a billionaire, you know.”

Fake Kim showed the staffer their tickets, after which they were led to their assigned seats.

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Eleven new cases of norovirus reported at Pyeongchang Olympics, upping total to 139

The norovirus outbreak among staff and volunteers at the Pyeongchang Olympics appears to be easing.

Eleven new cases were diagnosed Friday, according to organizers, bringing the week’s total to 139.

The outbreak had previously grown by dozens of cases each day.

Seven of the 11 new cases are security staff, the group hit hardest by the highly contagious disease.

Organizers have distributed more than 15,000 bottles of hand sanitizer to combat the outbreak, though the U.S. Centers for Disease control says using alcohol-based products isn’t a substitute for handwashing to prevent the disease’s spread.

Local officials are also increasing inspections of accommodations and restaurants near venues for the Games and encouraging “smile greetings instead of handshakes.”

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Skier Gus Kenworthy to Mike Pence: ‘Eat your heart out’

U.S. skier Gus Kenworthy posted a photo of himself and U.S. figure skater Adam Rippon on Instagram, which included a message for Vice President Mike Pence:

“Eat your heart out, Pence.”

Last month, Rippon publicly objected to Pence being chosen to lead the U.S. delegation to the Pyeongchang Games because of the vice president’s record on gay rights.

Rippon has come out as gay, as has Kenworthy.

Kenworthy’s comment was apparently made in reference to a USA Today article from earlier this week that said Pence had requested to speak with Rippon in mid-January, but was turned down.

A White House official told reporters traveling with Pence to South Korea that the vice president’s office offered to meet with Rippon, but also wanted to give him space.

On Tuesday, Pence tweeted to Rippon: “I want you to know we are FOR YOU. Don’t let fake news distract you. I am proud of you and ALL OF OUR GREAT athletes and my only hope for you and all of #TeamUSA is to bring home the gold. Go get ‘em!”

Rippon said Thursday that he’d be happy to meet with Pence for an open conversation after the competition. In the meantime, Rippon posed for a photo with fellow Team USA member Kenworthy during Friday’s opening ceremony.

“I feel incredibly honored to be here in Korea competing for the U.S. and I’m so proud to be representing the LGBTQ community alongside this amazing guy!” Kenworthy wrote of Rippon on Instagram.

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Tonga’s shirtless flag bearer is back

Pita Taufatofua carries the flag of Tonga during the opening ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
(Petr David Josek / Associated Press)
Taufatofua at the 2016 Rio Games
(Oliver Morin / AFP/Getty Images)

Tonga’s Pita Taufatofua doesn’t need a shirt for these Winter Olympics, even in frigid conditions at Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium.

Taufatofua turned heads at the 2016 Summer Games in Rio with his shirtless, oiled-up look as the flag bearer for his country.

He’s back again and this time it was even more impressive as he waved the flag and didn’t seem fazed by temperatures that had fallen into the 20s.

Taufatofua will be competing in these Olympics as a cross-country skier, despite living in a tropical nation that has no snow. He competed in taekwondo in Rio.

Taufatofua greets fans during the Winter Olympics opening ceremony on Feb. 9.
(Ryan Pierse / AFP/Getty Images)
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In Pictures: Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympics opening ceremony

Fireworks go off at the start of the opening ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympics at the Pyeongchang Stadium.
(Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty Images)

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Just chillin’ at the Winter Olympics

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The moment when the Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un impersonators were escorted back to their seats

There was a weird scene in the middle of the parade of nations at the opening ceremony of the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics.

Two men dressed as President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un came down the steps leading to the area where the media was sitting and once at the first row, turned and started waving to the crowd.

At first no one reacted, but slowly media and spectators descended on the pair, snapping photos and shooting video with their phones. It all lasted about a minute before the volunteers in the area walked over to escort them back to their seats.

Once back in their seats, the focus in stands surrounding the media returned to the athletes parading into the stadium

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Pyeongchang Olympics open with a show of fire, ice and unity, with calls for harmony during the Winter Games

The Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, the first Games held in South Korea in 30 years, officially opened on Friday with fireworks, song and symbolism featured amid celebrations of light, peace, and harmony.

With nods to the country’s landmarks and ancient culture as well as its potential to lead the world in future technological innovations, the opening ceremony at Olympic Stadium featured athletes from 91 countries, including a delegation from North Korea that marched into Olympic Stadium with athletes from South Korea. Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un; U.S. Vice President Mike Pence and International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach were among the powerful political and sports figures who attended the extravaganza on a chilly night.

The two Koreas marched in behind a white flag that was emblazoned with a map of the Korean peninsula depicted in blue. North Korean women’s hockey player Hwang Chung-gum and South Korean bobsleigh pilot Won Yun-jong both clutched the flag pole in a noteworthy display of unity. The two nations have marched together at an Olympics but this time have taken the extraordinary step of combining on the composition of the women’s hockey team.

PHOTOS: Opening Ceremony

Through the eyes of five local children, organizers presented a journey through the country’s past and future, showcasing the mythical White Tiger, Blue Dragon, Vermilion Bird and Black Tortoise. The show was designed to emphasize the connection between people and nature and the need for peace in the world, and was replete with dancers and wonderfully crafted oversized animals.

A handful of sports had previously begun qualifying rounds or actual competition, but the opening ceremony serves as an occasion for athletes to gather and celebrate their similarities rather than their differences and rivalries.

The athletes entered the stadium according to their names as rendered in Korean, with the exception of Greece, whose athletes, by tradition, enter first in tribute to the nation that held the Olympic Games in ancient times and revived them for modern times in 1896. The U.S. delegation numbers 244 but not all athletes participated because of their training or competition schedules. The red, white and blue-clad group was led into the stadium by flag bearer Erin Hamlin of Remsen, N.Y., a 2014 luge bronze medalist. With Russia banned from the Games because of its past systematic, state-led doping operations, athletes from that Olympic power marched under the name of Olympic Athletes from Russia and were preceded by a flag emblazoned with the Olympic rings.

And the well-oiled, shirtless Tongan flag bearer from the 2016 Rio Summer Games, Pita Taufatofua, again delighted the crowd by marching shirtless and well-oiled in temperatures that didn’t much exceed 20 degrees. He competed in taekwando at the Rio Olympics and will compete in cross-country skiing here as his country’s only representative.

Athletes smiled and waved and, of course, took selfies as they paraded around the stadium and to their seats in the stands. “You will inspire us,” Bach said, adding that competing as clean athletes would be imperative for athletes to respect their sports and each other. He also praised the Koreans’ cooperation at the Games. “We all join and support you in your message of peace,” he said.

After Bach’s remarks, Moon Jae-in, the president of the Republic of Korea, declared the Games open. His words touched off a show of colorful lights, fireworks and exultant music. The Olympic flag was carried into the stadium by eight Korean athletes of varying age, all wearing traditional costumes, and the Olympic oath was administered. Ending a 101-day torch relay that involved 7,500 torchbearers, the Olympic flame entered the stadium and the Olympic cauldron was ignited by Korean figure skater Yuna Kim, the 2010 Olympic women’s figure skating champion and 2014 silver medalist. The flame will burn throughout the Games.

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Friday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

Maame Biney will be competing for the U.S. in short-track speedskating
(Felipe Dana / Associated Press )

Friday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific.

3 a.m.: Figure skating (team competition), freestyle skiing (moguls qualifying). Repeats broadcast from 8 p.m. Thursday night. NBC

5 p.m.: Opening ceremony, NBC

8 p.m.: Opening ceremony, NBC (repeat of 5 p.m. broadcast).

11 p.m.: Cross-country skiing (women’s skiathlon), NBCSN

12:05 a.m. (Saturday morning): Curling (mixed doubles), U.S. vs. China, NBCSN.

12:30 a.m. (Saturday morning): Opening ceremony. Repeats broadcast from 8 p.m. Friday. NBC

2 a.m. (Saturday morning): Short-track speedskating, men’s 1,500 meters, women’s 500-meter qualifying, women’s 3,000-meter relay qualifying. NBCSN.

4 a.m. (Saturday morning): Women’s hockey, Switzerland vs. South Korea. USA network

4:30 a.m. (Saturday morning): Ski jumping,men’s individual normal hill final. NBC

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Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un impersonators crash the opening ceremony

The opening ceremony of the Pyeongchang Olympics was crashed briefly by Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un impersonators, who made their way into the media seating section and turned to salute the crowd

The two impersonators were quickly escorted back to their seats by the volunteers at the stadium but not before they were mobbed by spectators and members of the media.

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Pyeongchang Olympics 2018: Yes, it is very cold

Olympic volunteers walk outside the main press center in Pyeongchang.
(Tetsu Joko / Japan News-Yomiuri)

A lot was made in the lead-up to the opening ceremony about the freezing temperatures. Our own David Wharton wrote about the weather conditions and how it would change how the athletes and the fans would experience the Games.

Well, we can report that it is indeed very cold inside the stadium and we are still about two hours from the official start of the Games. The wind is picking up and the metal bleachers inside the stadium already are very difficult to sit on.

The temperature at 6:20 p.m. local time is 27 degrees with a wind chill of 17, and it’s expected to drop as the sun sets.

Still, the K-Pop is blaring, the volunteers are incredibly friendly and the stadium is lit up and ready for the party.

This is my first Olympics, so I have nothing to compare it to, but the stadium seems ideal for the opening ceremony. It had an intimate feel and the fans that are braving this cold at the very least will be treated to an upclose and personal look at the athletes.

Check back for more updates from the Los Angeles Times crew inside the stadium and watching it from the home office at the Main Press Center.

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Lindsey Vonn to ski in three events at Pyeongchang Olympics

Lindsey Vonn in PyeongChang
(Ker Robertson / Getty Images)

Lindsey Vonn plans to enter the downhill, super-giant slalom and combined events in what the U.S. Alpine skiing icon says will be her final Olympics.

Vonn, who missed the Sochi Olympics in 2014 because of a knee injury, won’t compete in the giant slalom because of the knee.

“I want to end on a high note,” she said Friday. “I really want to put an exclamation point on my career.”

Vonn’s first race will be the super-G on Feb. 17. She’s the favorite in the downhill four days later, the event she won at the Vancouver Olympics in 2010.

In recent weeks, the three-time Olympian has dominated this year’s World Cup circuit. That included winning two downhill races in Germany last weekend, giving her 81 career victories.

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Alexa Scimeca-Knierim and Chris Knierim keep U.S. medal hopes alive after shaky performance by Nathan Chen

U.S. men’s figure skating champion Nathan Chen looked nothing like the jump master he became while enjoying an undefeated season, surprisingly falling twice during his short program Friday morning in the first phase of the Olympic team event.

Conversely, the American husband-and-wife duo of Alexa Scimeca-Knierim and Chris Knierim, known for performing beautiful twists and lifts but struggling with side-by-side jumps, were nearly flawless in their short program and sealed it with a kiss at center ice at Gangneung Ice Arena.

Whether it was the earliness of the hour—the event started shortly after 10 a.m. local time—or the pressure of performing at the Olympics hitting home, a startling number of skaters stumbled through the first day of the team competition.

Canada took the lead with 17 points, followed by the U.S. at 14 and a tie between Japan and the Olympic Athletes of Russia at 13 each. Israel, riding a stunning performance by Alexei Bychenko, was fourth with 11 points. A first-place finish is worth 10 points, second is worth nine points and so on down to 10th place earning one standings point.

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Despite violent crash last week, U.S. Alpine skier Stacey Cook is healthy for Winter Olympics

Stacey Cook attends a news conference in Pyeongchang.
(Florian Choblet / AFP/Getty Images)

Stacey Cook didn’t act like someone who slammed into safety netting at 80 mph last week when a downhill run in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, went wrong.

The U.S. Alpine skier covered a black eye with makeup and hoped the cold in Pyeongchang will numb her aching legs. Otherwise, the four-time Olympian from Mammoth Lakes is healthy after a cringe-inducing collision that appeared certain to keep her from competing in the Games.

“I had a very violent, dramatic crash,” Cook said Thursday. “Sometimes you can’t explain why an injury happens and sometimes you can’t explain why you’re OK.”

She calls the seemingly random crashes “snow snakes,” as in “the snow snakes came up and got me.”

“This one was like an anaconda,” Cook said. “A giant one.”

Fellow U.S. skier Jackie Wiles crashed the same day on the same course, breaking her left leg and tearing several ligaments. Her Olympics ended before they started.

Cook said that in the seconds after her race abruptly ended, she assumed the Olympics weren’t a possibility either. But somehow, someway, she escaped serious injury, even if it took several hours and a string of tests to convince support staff she was OK.

“I was almost on that plane home with Jackie,” said Cook, who finished 17th in the downhill at the Sochi Games in 2014. “I had a brief glimpse of what that feels like and it’s not that fun.”

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Nassar scandal dominates discussion at USOC press conference

Larry Probst, chairman of the USOC, at a news conference at the 2018 Winter Olympics.
(Gary Ambrose / Los Angeles Times)

Hours before the opening ceremony at the 2018 Winter Games, U.S. Olympic Committee officials sat down with reporters to talk about the competition but ended up answering question after question about the Larry Nassar sexual abuse scandal.

USOC Chairman Larry Probst faced most of the heat and, to some degree, side-stepped assertions that his organization deserved more blame for allowing Nassar’s crimes to continue unaddressed for years.

“The Olympic system in the United States failed those athletes,” he said. “And we are part of the Olympic system in the United States.”

Hundreds of young athletes — many of them gymnasts — have accused Nassar of molesting them under the guise of providing medical treatment. He served in an official capacity for USA Gymnastics, Michigan State University and, at times, as an Olympic team doctor under the auspices of the USOC.

Nassar pleaded guilty in three different trials — one of them involving child pornography — and has been sentenced to decades in prison.

On Friday, the USOC acknowledged it should have reached out sooner to top gymnasts, such as Aly Raisman, who said they were abused. Probst also addressed concerns that no one from the committee attended a recent Michigan sentencing hearing at which scores of victims came forward to speak.

“That was simply a mistake,” he said. “We should have been there.”

The USOC has commissioned an independent investigation to determine when people within the organization became aware of accusations against Nassar. Officials have also vowed to cooperate with any federal investigations.

The organization faces a potential shift in how it conducts business as an overseer of the national bodies that govern each specific sport. Reporters asked about policy changes and the potential for creating an investigatory staff that would be more proactive in monitoring the national bodies.

“As of now, they are independent institutions,” Probst said. “Clearly some things have occurred that would indicate we need to have a different relationship than we’ve had in the past.”

Alan Ashley, who is in charge of the current Olympic team, said that every member of the U.S. delegation in Pyeongchang has undergone safe-sport training and that medical personnel are following strict guidelines.

Notably absent in South Korea is USOC Chief Executive Scott Blackmun, who remained home for treatment of recently diagnosed prostate cancer. The USOC has so far resisted calls for his resignation.

Board member Anita DeFrantz, who is also an International Olympic Committee member, expressed confidence that results of the independent investigation will show he acted properly.

“I have felt he’s done a great job for us,” DeFrantz said. “I feel he deserves to have everything cleared.”

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U.S. bobsledder Elana Meyers Taylor pledged brain to concussion research to help other women

Two-time U.S. Olympic bobsled medalist Elana Meyers Taylor pledged to donate her brain for concussion research in hopes of helping other female athletes.

“I think the hardest thing for me, just being an advocate for women in sports, was knowing that women are more likely to suffer concussions but there’s not much out there on women and concussions,” Meyers Taylor said Friday. “How it affects us differently, because obviously there are hormonal differences. We just don’t have the research on it.”

Earlier this week, the Boston-based Concussion Legacy Foundation announced the pledge by Meyers Taylor.

She will drive the two-person bobsled for the U.S. later this month in Pyeongchang, a gold medal favorite after winning silver at the Sochi Olympics four years ago.

Meyers Taylor suffered a concussion after a bobsled crash in 2015. The effects were long-lasting.

“The biggest thing is I don’t go down the track with that in the back of my mind,” she said. “But I’m very cautious and specific about when I do go down the track. If I’m tired and not feeling well, if I feel like if I have any symptoms, any little hit that causes something to go off, I don’t go down. ... Now I’m just more careful about it. I’m very confident now that I know how to handle the situation.”

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Court dismisses appeals of 47 Russian athletes seeking last-minute entry into 2018 Winter Olympics

An international court has dismissed appeals from 47 Russian athletes who were seeking last-minute entry into the 2018 Winter Olympics.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled that Olympic officials did not act in a “discriminatory, arbitrary or unfair manner” when they declined to invite the athletes.

“We welcome this decision which supports the fight against doping and brings clarity for all athletes,” the International Olympic Committee said in a statement.

In the wake of a nationwide doping scandal, Russia has been barred from competing as a nation at the Games in Pyeongchang.

The IOC has, however, created an “Olympic Athlete from Russia” squad that allows individuals to compete under a neutral flag if they can prove they have not used performance-enhancing drugs in the past.

About 168 Russians had been invited to join the OAR roster.

Friday’s decision blocked the way for a number of top athletes from the country, including Viktor Ahn, a six-time gold medalist in short track speedskating.

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Speedskater Shani Davis trashes coin toss that determined U.S. flagbearer in opening ceremony

U.S. speedskater Shani Davis tweeted that he has “no problem” that a coin toss determined that he won’t get to carry the American flag into the opening ceremony of the Pyeongchang Games.

Other parts of his tweet, however, suggested otherwise.

@TeamUSA dishonorably tossed a coin to decide its 2018 flag bearer. No problem. I can wait until 2022,” tweeted Davis, who added a Black History Month hashtag.

Davis was one of eight nominees to serve as the U.S. flagbearer. The eight winter sports federations vote to determine which athlete receives that honor. This year, Davis and luge veteran Erin Hamlin got four votes each.

A coin toss is the predetermined method of breaking such a tie. And Hamlin won the toss.

“Working hard and earning success is one thing, being acknowledged as a great representative and member of Team USA by fellow athletes -- many who I have been inspired by -- is above and beyond anything I’ve experienced,” Hamlin said in a statement.

“It is definitely a privilege and honor to be the one to lead the team and will be a very special moment. I can’t wait to share it with them all!”

Davis, 35, is a five-time Olympic qualifier. In 2006, he became the first African American athlete to win gold in an individual event at a Winter Olympics. Overall, he has won two gold and two silver Olympic medals.

Hamlin, 31, is a four-time Olympian and a bronze medal winner at the 2014 Sochi Games. She was the first American ever to medal in an Olympic luge singles event.

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Thursday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule

The opening round of the mixed doubles curling competition will be on TV today.
(Natacha Pisarenko / AP)

Thursday’s Winter Olympics TV schedule. All times Pacific

6 a.m.: Ski jumping, NBC Sports Network

3:30 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles), U.S. vs. Switzerland, China vs. Canada, NBCSN

5 p.m.: Figure Skating (team competition), Freestyle Skiing (men’s and women’s moguls qualifying), NBC

6 p.m.: Alpine Skiing training runs, Luge training runs, NBCSN

8 p.m.: Figure Skating, Freestyle Skiing, NBC (repeat of 5 p.m. competitions)

8:30 p.m.: Curling (mixed doubles), U.S. vs. South Korea, NBCSN

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What time is the Winter Olympics opening ceremony and when can I watch it?

If you want to watch the opening ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympics live as it happens, you will have to get up pretty early in the morning.

The ceremony, held in Pyeongchang, South Korea, will begin at 3 a.m. Pacific time and you can livestream it at NBCOlympics.com.

But for those of us who actually enjoy sleeping, you can wait until Friday night to watch a taped version beginning at 5 p.m. Pacific on NBC. It will be repeated on NBC starting at 8 p.m. Pacific.

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Athletes from Russia hold odd Olympic news conference in tiny office

Stanislav Pozdnyakov, vice president of the Russian Olympic Committee
(Dylan Hernandez/Los Angeles Times)

The Main Press Center 3 is a giant tent-like structure that contains 47 makeshift offices, most of them occupied by news organizations. One of the rooms in the temporary buildings belongs to Olympic Athletes from Russia.

Olympic Athletes from Russia, or OAR, is the designation under which eligible athletes from Russia are competing, as the country was banned from these Games because of a state-sanctioned doping program.

The OAR’s office in the press center has been a curiosity for passersby, who have looked inside to see a few people quietly seated at desks.

Until Thursday.

“Russians are having a presser in their office,” Times reporter Nathan Fenno texted me. “Looks weird.”

It did look weird.

Other news conferences have been staged in spacious auditoriums of the two adjacent buildings, MPC 1 and 2. This was a tiny office.

The handful of non-Russian reporters in the room couldn’t identify the speaker or understand a word he said. Fortunately, Artem Kuznetsov of the Russian news agency TASS was kind enough to help.

Kuznetsov said the speaker was Stanislav Pozdnyakov, a three-time individual Olympic gold medalist in fencing who was the now the vice president of the Russian Olympic Committee.

According to Kuznetsov, the only real news was that a volunteer chosen by the Olympic organizing committee will carry the Olympic flag under which Russian athletes will march at the opening ceremony Friday.

Was that a joke?

“No,” Kuznetsov said. “He said it one week ago and he just confirmed it.”

Other items from the news conference: None of the Russian athletes have contracted the norovirus; approximately 80 people from the OAR delegation will participate in the opening ceremony; and Pozdnyakov continues to hope Russia will be reinstated by the International Olympic Committee.

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L.A. plays role in Salt Lake City plans to bid for Winter Games in 2030

As host of the 2028 Summer Games, the L.A. organizing committee co-owns domestic rights to the Olympics through then.
As host of the 2028 Summer Games, the L.A. organizing committee co-owns domestic rights to the Olympics through then.
(Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)

A day before the opening ceremony for the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics, officials in Salt Lake City announced plans to bid for the Winter Games in 2030.

In the byzantine world of the Olympic movement, Los Angeles figures into that decision. In a big way.

Salt Lake City had previously expressed interest in 2026, but then L.A. was selected to host the Summer Games in 2028.

The LA 2028 organizing committee, in partnership with the U.S. Olympic Committee, now holds domestic rights to the Games through then and doesn’t necessarily want to compete with another American city for sponsorship money.

USOC officials, who ultimately decide which U.S. cities get to submit a bid, have said no one can try for 2026 unless L.A. gives its OK.

So Salt Lake City will submit a 140-page, $1.35-billion plan for 2030 to the USOC and the International Olympic Committee, according to news reports.

But it’s not so simple.

Because the IOC recently set a precedent by simultaneously naming Paris for 2024 and L.A. for four years later, there is speculation that the 2026 and 2030 Winter Games hosts likewise will be chosen as a pair.

That means Salt Lake City, which hosted the Games in 2002, might have to bid during the 2026 cycle.

But the USOC would need to give its blessing by March 31, and, so far, it has not established any process to do that.

In the meantime, a Salt Lake City exploratory committee has reportedly said it can stage the massive sporting event on a balanced budget that aligns with the IOC’s “Agenda 2020,” a set of reforms designed to attract bidders by making the Games more affordable.

Other cities that have expressed interest in hosting include Denver; Calgary, Canada; and Sion, Switzerland.

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Winter Olympics norovirus outbreak grows to 86 staff and volunteers

At least 86 staff members and volunteers at the Pyeongchang Olympics have contracted norovirus, the organizing committee said Thursday.

That’s more than double the number of confirmed cases announced earlier this week.

Of the 86 cases, 58 are security staff members, 12 are police officers, seven work for the organizing committee, four are press support staff, and five fill other roles.

With more than 1,000 security personnel quarantined, 900 military personnel have been deployed to fill their positions.

The source of the outbreak hasn’t been determined.

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Nathan Chen and the Knierims to compete for U.S on first day of figure skating team event

Nathan Chen performs during the men's free skating of the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final in Nagoya, Japan, on Dec. 8
(Koji Sasahara / Associated Press)

Two-time U.S. men’s champion Nathan Chen will perform his short program in the first phase of the Olympic team figure skating event, to be held on Friday at Gangneung Ice Arena. The husband-and-wife duo of Alexa Scimeca-Knierim and Chris Knierim will represent the U.S. in the pairs short program on Friday.

Since the Knierims are the only U.S. pairs entry, they will also be the U.S representatives in the pairs free skate portion of the team event, on Monday.

Chen, a master of the quadruple jump, won his second straight U.S. men’s title last month at San Jose. He’s expected to contend for a medal in the men’s singles competition, which will be held Feb. 16-17.

The U.S. won a bronze medal behind Russia and Canada in the inaugural Olympic figure skating team competition at the Sochi Games in 2014.

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Erin Hamlin selected as U.S. flag bearer for opening ceremony

Four-time Olympian Erin Hamlin will carry the U.S. flag during the opening ceremony at Pyeongchang Olympic Stadium, the U.S. Olympic Committee announced Thursday.

Hamlin, who won a bronze medal in the luge at the Sochi Games in 2014, was selected by a vote of U.S. Olympians.

“Being named to an Olympic team is an amazing accomplishment and making four teams and the bronze medal is so much more than I could have imagined I would accomplish,” Hamlin said in a statement. “Now being voted flag bearer is a whole new level.”

The women’s luge competition starts Feb. 12.

Hamlin, 31, is from Remsen, N.Y., a town just north of Utica. She trains in Lake Placid, N.Y. American athletes in each sport that’s being contested here nominated someone to carry the flag; representatives of all the teams then voted and narrowed the field until Hamlin was chosen.

Hamlin said at a news conference that her selection as the flag bearer “was definitely a surprise and shock. I was not expecting it at all.” Being chosen, she said, was a different thrill than winning her bronze medal in 2014, when she became the first US. athlete to win a luge medal in the sport’s 50-year Olympic history.

“Getting this honor is different because it’s people looking at the work that you put in and acknowledging that,” she said. “And your peers. It’s my fellow Team USA athletes who gave me this. That means a ton because they’re athletes that do the same thing that I do, and there are so many people that are deserving of this, that to be selected is pretty amazing….

“It’s crazy because luge isn’t one of the super-high profile sports. We know we’re very tiny in the grand scheme of things and it’s pretty awesome to have it get recognized this way and have other athletes kind of see the success we’ve had over the years….This is surreal.”

She also said she expects to be more nervous carrying the flag than when she competes. “The nerves will be fine for sure. I slide. That’s what I do. Put me at the top of the track and that’s my happy place,” she said. “Walking out in front of a lot of people and even more watching from home, having to not trip over my own feet or drop the flag, is going to be way more nerve-wracking. It will be.”

--with an additional file from Helene Elliott

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Marissa and Hannah Brandt are sisters on and off the ice

Of the two daughters Greg and Robin Brandt raised in the suburbs of St. Paul, Minn., it was Hannah who was more fascinated with the culture and customs of South Korea than Marissa, whom the couple had adopted from that country as a 4-month-old. The girls went to Korean culture camp together and Hannah was an eager camper, entranced by the hanbok — a traditional Korean dress and outfit — and the language and food, while Marissa wanted to assimilate and be like every other American kid.

In Minnesota, that meant skating. Marissa, older by 11 months, was a figure skater. Hannah played hockey, and eventually Marissa joined her. They played in high school together but went to different colleges, Hannah to the powerhouse University of Minnesota and Marissa to Division III Gustavus Adolphus College. Hannah continued playing in a women’s pro league but Marissa thought her hockey career ended when she finished college.

Instead, they find themselves sharing lunch and strolls through the Pyeongchang Olympic Village. Hannah got here as a forward on the U.S women’s hockey team. Marissa will play defense for the united North/South Korea team under her birth name of Park Yoon-Jung. “I could not have imagined this, ever,” Hannah said Wednesday.

The U.S., seeded No. 1 in the women’s Olympic hockey tournament, and the Korean team, seeded last among the eight teams, are in different groups and won’t face each other unless they both advance out of the preliminary round. But the sisters met up at the Olympic Village earlier this week for the first time since Christmas, catching up on news and sharing their experiences. Marissa has been in South Korea and Hannah was with the U.S. women’s team during its pre-Olympics residency in Wesley Chapel, Fla.

“I think it’s special for our team that we have that unique storyline of Hannah Brandt and her sister playing on the Korean team,” U.S. captain Meghan Duggan said, “because I think that shows family, and I think family is an important aspect of the Olympic movement as well and of our country and the world.”

The sisters also posed for a photo dressed in hanboks, a precious moment that Hannah especially appreciated. “I definitely was always interested in the whole Korean culture aspect, maybe even more so than my sister when I was younger,” Hannah said “She bought me some food [Tuesday], it was a snack food that I used to love when I was in Korean culture camp that kind of brought me back a little bit to that. It’s cool to be here, to finally experience the culture first-hand.”

Hannah said she has been staying with her usual diet rather than eating a lot of Korean food because she doesn’t want to disrupt her routines. But she has been eager to meet local people while here. “We stayed the first night in Incheon. And since then we’ve been in the village,” she said. “It was colder than I expected but it’s not cold by any means. I just am excited to meet more people. The people are awesome. They’re so friendly and nice and it’s fun to learn the language. We might be fluent by the end of this.”

She also said she was amused at seeing her sister’s Korean name on Marissa’s hockey jersey. “I can pick her out from a mile away but sometimes family and friends get a little confused when it doesn’t say ‘Brandt’ on the back,” Hannah said, laughing.

Marissa has become something of a spokesperson with English-speaking media, a role Hannah said her sister has enjoyed. “I think she’s been asked a lot about everything but she’s just happy to be here with her teammates and I think there’s a lot of excitement on that team as there is on mine,” Hannah said. “Just to be able to do this together is pretty fun.”

They’ve played against each other only once, when the Korean women’s team played an exhibition tour in the U.S., and it’s unlikely they will play each other here. But for each of them, getting this far is a victory no matter what happens when the women’s tournament begins on Saturday at Kwandong Hockey Centre. “I think it’s a positive story for women’s hockey,” Hannah said. “It brings attention to our sport and I think it’s obviously a feel-good story for the Olympics.”

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U.S. speed skater Maame Biney talks about her game face

(Rick Bowmer / Associated Press)

My game face on the ice is totally different from right now. It’s not this. It’s like, ‘Don’t be in my way because I’m probably going to kill you’.

— Maame Biney, U.S. short-track speed skater

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North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s sister part of delegation traveling to Olympics

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s sister, an increasingly prominent figure in the country’s leadership, will be part of the North’s delegation to the South Korean Winter Olympics, officials said Wednesday.

Kim Yo Jong, believed to be in her late 20s or early 30s, would be the first member of North Korea’s ruling family to visit South Korea since the end of the 1950-53 Korean War. Analysts say her inclusion in the Olympic delegation shows North Korea’s ambition to use the Olympics to break out from diplomatic isolation by improving relations with the South, which it could use as a bridge for approaching the United States.

By sending a youthful, photogenic person who will undoubtedly attract international attention during the Olympics, North Korea is also trying to construct a fresher and warmer public image and defuse potential U.S. efforts to use the Pyeongchang Games to highlight the North’s brutal human rights record, experts say.

South Korea’s Unification Ministry said North Korea informed it that Kim Yo Jong, first vice director of the Central Committee of North Korea’s ruling Workers’ Party, would be part of the delegation led by the country’s nominal head of state, Kim Yong Nam.

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The women that the U.S. hopes will bring it hockey gold

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U.S. bobsled pilot Justin Olsen released from hospital after appendectomy

U.S. bobsled pilot Justin Olsen has been released from a hospital in Guangneung, South Korea, two days after undergoing surgery to remove his appendix.

Olsen is scheduled to compete in the two-man and four-man events starting Feb. 18.

“We know he’s going to do what he can within his power to be at the starting line on race day,” USA Bobsled and Skeleton Chief Executive Darrin Steele said in a statement earlier this week.

Olsen was part of the four-man bobsled team that won gold at the Vancouver Olympics in 2010.

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U.S. Alpine skier Wiley Maple took an unlikely path to Winter Olympics

A year ago, Wiley Maple wondered whether he would be able to run or jump again.

The veteran U.S. Alpine skier underwent four knee surgeries in five years because of a deteriorating patella tendon. He had three back surgeries and suffered a dislocated ankle and elbow.

Competing in the Winter Olympics seemed as far away for Maple as an injury-free season.

“The past five or six years, it’s just like my mind and my talent have been there but my body has been failing me,” he said earlier this week.

The path to Pyeongchang hasn’t been easy for the skier nicknamed “Danger” because of his propensity to push limits, even at the expense of his health. Instead of big-name endorsement deals and gauzy television features, Maple had to scrape together cash to continue skiing after missing the 2016-17 season because of the injuries.

This is the less glamorous side of the Games. The Aspen, Colo., native coached, sanded walls in houses, delivered barbecue ribs over the summer. His website includes links to Venmo and PayPal, even an address to send checks. Anything to raise the tens of thousands of dollars to remain on the slopes.

“My health returned, and some people were unwilling to give up on me,” Maple wrote on Instagram recently. “It takes a town to keep someone this stubborn around! Thanks for this chance and for helping me through this life.”

Maple, 27, won’t get the same attention at Pyeongchang as big-name U.S. teammates Ted Ligety and Andrew Weibrecht, both Olympic medalists. After all, Maple’s best finish on the World Cup circuit this season is 22nd in the downhill.

But there might not be a more grateful athlete at the Games.

“I came into it thinking it’s going to be just like another race,” Maple said. “Just arriving at the airport and seeing all the mayhem and it’s been nonstop seminars and swag and uniforms. It’s pretty wild.”

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Tricia Mangan replaces Jackie Wiles on U.S. Olympic Alpine ski team

The U.S. Olympic Alpine ski team has added Tricia Mangan to replace the injured Jackie Wiles.

Mangan, 20, finished fourth in the super-G at the Junior World Ski Championships in Davos, Switzerland, earlier this year.

Wiles had been expected to be a key part of the U.S. team but crashed during the downhill in a World Cup event at Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, last week. She suffered a slew of injuries to her left leg, including a torn anterior cruciate ligament and two broken bones.

Mangan, from Buffalo, N.Y., studies biomedical engineering at Dartmouth College.

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32 cases of Norovirus confirmed among workers at the 2018 Winter Olympics

A member of the German luge team takes photos of the Alpensia Ski Jumping Center near Pyeonghcang, South Korea..
(Charlie Riedel / Associated Press)

Thirty-two cases of norovirus have been confirmed among workers at the 2018 Winter Olympics, organizers said Tuesday.

Much of the outbreak has been concentrated among 1,023 security personnel housed at the Horeb Youth Center in Pyeongchang. There have been several cases in other locations.

The ill reported suffering from headaches, stomach pain and diarrhea, organizers said.

The Korea Center for Disease Control has established a quarantine while government officials examine the water and food supply at the facility to determine the outbreak’s origin.

With residents of the youth center being held out of work, 900 military personnel have been deployed to temporarily help with security at 20 Olympic venues.

Disease control officials are advising people in the Pyeongchang area to thoroughly cook their food and boil all drinking water until the source of the norovirus is found.

Updates:

3:15 p.m.: This story has been updated throughout following the confirmation of 32 cases of Norovirus.

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Figure skater Nathan Chen predicted his Olympic future at the age of 10

Nathan Chen performs his program during the men's free skate event at the 2018 U.S. Figure Skating Championships.
(Matthew Stockman / Getty Images)

Even at 10 years old, Nathan Chen had the focus and certainty of a champion.

As the newly crowned winner of the 2010 U.S. novice men’s figure skating title, the Salt Lake City native was invited to join members of the Vancouver-bound Olympic team in skating at a post-competition gala. Skating to “Peter and the Wolf,” the precocious, 4-foot-5 Chen reeled off a series of difficult jumps with the charm of a seasoned performer. Which he was, in a way, thanks to his remarkable skills at gymnastics, piano, ballet, and the rec-room hockey games he played against his two older brothers.

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IOC refuses to invite 15 Russian athletes and coaches who had lifetime bans overturned

IOC President Thomas Bach speaks at a news conference days before the start of the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang.
(Patrick Semansky / Associated Press)

Just days before the start of the 2018 Winter Games, the International Olympic Committee has formally refused to invite 15 Russian athletes and coaches who had their lifetime bans overturned by an international court.

The IOC announced its decision Sunday during meetings at the site of the Games in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

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For 3 figure skaters, the road to Pyeongchang goes through Rafael Arutunian’s Lakewood workshop on ice

Rafael Arutunian will have three skaters competing in figure skating at the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang.
(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Rafael Arutunian can fix uncomfortable figure skating boots and mend bad jumping habits with equal ease, molding materials and technique with the sureness of a coach who has analyzed axels and scrutinized salchows for 40 years at rinks in Armenia, Russia and the United States.

But what makes him so successful is his ability to see into his skaters’ minds and hearts and provide the precise motivation they need, a gift whose value goes beyond teaching how to make an efficient entrance to a jump or nail a landing.

Arutunian, 60, will coach Americans Nathan Chen and Adam Rippon and Czech skater Michal Brezina at the Pyeongchang Olympics, a trio he has coached at the Rinks-Lakewood for nearly two years.

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Lauren Gibbs put the brakes on a corporate career to chase bobsled glory in the Winter Olympics

Lauren Gibbs, 33, hopes to rule the women’s Olympic bobsled world as the brakeman for pilot Elana Meyers Taylor at the Pyeongchang Games.
(Alexander Hassenstein / Getty Images for IBSF)

Lauren Gibbs figures most of her Pepperdine MBA classmates are running companies and wearing stylish outfits while they work in comfortable offices. For Gibbs, work means wearing a skintight, aerodynamically designed racing suit and running along frozen bobsled tracks to push a 365-pound sled before jumping in and hurtling through steep curves and icy straightaways at speeds that can approach 95 mph.

Her former classmates and coworkers are trying to rule the corporate world, and Gibbs might rejoin them someday. But first, the 33-year-old Los Angeles native hopes to rule the women’s Olympic bobsled world as the brakeman for pilot and two-time U.S. Olympic medalist Elana Meyers Taylor at the Pyeongchang Games.

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Injuries cost two U.S. skiers their first shot at Olympic glory, but also led them to each other

Freestyle skier Torin Yater-Wallace, left, and ski jumper Sarah Hendrickson didn't medal at the 2014 Games because of serious injuries.
(Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images; Matthew Stockman / Getty Images)

The darkest time? That would be the winter of 2015 and those dismal weeks spent lying around the living room of her family’s house.

Sarah Hendrickson took the couch, suffering with a knee injury that threatened to end her career as a world-class ski jumper.

Her boyfriend, freestyle skier Torin Yater-Wallace, slept on a twin bed they set up. Frail and exhausted, he was just out of the hospital where a septic infection had nearly killed him.

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Olympian Gus Kenworthy came out as gay in 2015, and to his surprise, he became more popular

Gus Kenworthy celebrates at the end of his second run in the men's slopestyle skiing final at the 2014 Olympics, where he won silver.
(Andy Wong / Associated Press)

The big surprise came moments after his final jump, after Gus Kenworthy nailed a difficult maneuver to grab the lead at a slopestyle competition in the Colorado mountains.

Skiing to the bottom of the course, he noticed flashes of purple, blue and orange in the crowd.

“Amazing,” he says.

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Lack of NHL stars means chance at Olympic glory for unknown players

U.S. Olympic men's hockey coach Tony Granato speaks at a news conference.
U.S. Olympic men’s hockey coach Tony Granato speaks at a news conference.
(Paul Sancya / Associated Press)

Don’t know who Ryan Zapolski is? You’re not alone. Even the most knowledgeable hockey fan would have trouble identifying the likely starting goaltender for the U.S. men’s team at the Pyeongchang Olympics.

The NHL’s decision not to allow its players to represent their homelands in these Winter Games sent national hockey federations scrambling to fill their rosters. Suddenly, scouts were watching video of players toiling in Russia’s Kontinental Hockey League and European elite and secondary leagues, seeking candidates who might have been too small or too slow for the NHL or were late bloomers and would welcome an unexpected shot at Olympic glory.

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