Beijing Olympics -- Feb. 14 Highlights

Print

Published on February 15 2022 6:10 am
Last Updated on February 15 2022 6:11 am

Beijing Olympics - Highlights:

-- Lawyers for 15-year-old Russian figure skating star Kamila Valieva said during the hearing that ruled she could compete in the women’s competition despite a positive drug test in December that she failed the test because of contamination from heart medication her grandfather was taking. She is being allowed to compete, starting with the women’s short program airing tonight, because as a minor she is subject to different rules. But an investigation will continue, and if Valieva wins a medal, no medals will be awarded in the women’s competition until the probe is done, which could take months. 

-- The defending Olympic champion U.S. women’s hockey team with play archrival Canada in the gold medal game after the U.S. beat Finland 4-1 in their semifinal. Canada won its semifinal earlier in the day 10-3 over Switzerland. During that pummeling, Canada had five first-period goals over an Olympic record span of 3:24.

-- American Megan Nick was the surprise winner of the bronze medal in the women’s ski aerials. Xu Mengtao of China won the gold and defending champion Hanna Huskova of Belarus took silver. -- The U.S. won the bronze medal in men’s speedskating team pursuit, with Joey Mantia leading three American skaters through all eight laps. Winning with Mantia were Ethan Cepuran, Casey Dawson and Emercy Lehman. Norway won gold and the Russians took silver. 

-- Freestyle skier Eileen Gu, who was born and raised in the U.S., won her second medal for China, taking silver in the women’s slopestyle, after winning gold in women’s freestyle big air. The 18-year-old, who’s competing for her mother’s home country of China, will also compete in the halfpipe.

-- Swiss skier Corinne Suter won gold in the women’s downhill, beating defending champion Sofia Goggia of Italy, who took silver. Mikaela Shiffrin of the U.S., who didn’t finish her first two races, in which she was favored for a medal, and came in ninth in the super-G, finished 18th.

Medal Count: (As of 4:00 a.m. ET) - Norway is in first place with 24 medals, followed by the Russians with 20, and the U.S. and Canada with 17 each. In the gold medal count, Norway is first with 11, Germany is second with eight, and the U.S. is third with seven. The U.S. has 17 medals overall, seven gold, six silver and four bronze.