Author: rb809rb

  • Winter Games 2026: How tiny Dartmouth College has sent athletes to every Winter Olympics ever

    MILAN — Certain locations evoke the Winter Olympics in all its snowy glory, places with romantic names like Milano-Cortina, Chamonix, Lake Placid and Lillehammer.

    Hanover, New Hampshire, might not be the first — or the 50th — locale to come to mind in connection with the Winter Olympics, but it should. Hanover is the home of Dartmouth College, which has the unique distinction of sending Olympians to every single Winter Games, from Chamonix in 1924 right on through to Milan Cortina in 2026.

    Advertisement

    Skiers have come from Dartmouth, of course; the school boasts one of the finest skiing programs in the country. (Jeff Shiffrin, Mikaela’s father, was an alumnus.)  But so have biathletes and bobsledders, hockey players and speed skaters. Several Dartmouth athletes at this year’s Games have already won medals, including skier Tanguy Nef (gold medalist for Switzerland in the alpine skiing team combined event) and hockey forward Laura Stacey (silver medalist for Canada). Several more have marched and competed under a wide range of both flags and disciplines.

    How has this tiny Ivy League school, with an enrollment of around 7,000, produced so many elite athletes? There are three answers: one cultural, one logistical, and one geographic.

    “Any Ivy League school is going to attract the best and the brightest,” Maura Crowell, Dartmouth’s hockey coach, said recently. “And I’m looking out the window in this snowy, beautiful setting up here in New Hampshire. Your skiers and hockey players just gravitate to this area. It’s an unbelievable place to go to school.”

    The school also boasts easy access to the Appalachian Trail and a range of running, hiking and mountain biking trails, all of which encourage students to get outdoors. “It’s so easy to get outdoors here. I mean, you can more or less ski from campus if you’re a Nordic skier,” says Cami Thompson, Dartmouth’s women’s nordic head coach. “Our trails are very close to campus. There’s snow on the green here today. And that gets people excited to get out and ski.”

    Advertisement

    Two-time Team USA Olympian cross-country skier Julia Kern agrees. “What drove me there is that I really wanted a strong education, but I also wanted to ski race at a high level,” she said recently, “and I felt like going to Dartmouth gave me the best of both worlds.”

    HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE - FEBRUARY 8: A general view of the Dartmouth College campus on February 8, 2024 in Hanover, New Hampshire. A National Labor Relations Board regional official ruled on Monday that Dartmouth basketball players are employees of the school, clearing the way for an election that would create the first-ever labor union for NCAA athletes. (Photo by Scott Eisen/Getty Images)

    Dartmouth College more than 165 Winter Olympians. (Photo by Scott Eisen/Getty Images)

    (Scott Eisen via Getty Images)

    “It’s the smallest Ivy, so I think a quarter of our student body is a Division I athlete,” Crowell says. “When you walk around campus, you inevitably see Dartmouth lacrosse, Dartmouth track and field, Dartmouth hockey … and because of our size and our location, it is a pretty close-knit athletic community.”

    One logistical key to Dartmouth’s Olympic success: its academic calendar, which allows for potential winter Olympians to structure their schedules to fit their athletic needs. The calendar is made up of four 10-week terms, three classes per term, one term off per year. That offers much more flexibility not just on the annual calendar, but on the weekly and daily ones too.

    Advertisement

    “As a hockey coach, I’m thrilled, because we can do individual meetings, we can do video, they can get in the shooting room, they can work with our mental performance people,” Crowell says. “There’s just more time in their days to focus on athletics, which is kind of rare at an Ivy League school.”

    “There’s no athletic scholarships,” Kern noted. “You’re going there because you want a good education, but you also care about skiing. A lot of people who are driven and disciplined in skiing are also very driven in school.”

    “It’s really up to the students to establish relationships with their professors and think strategically about what classes they’re taking, and when they’re taking them, and how to manage the training and the competition around their classes,” Thompson says. “There’s no special favors for these athletes. They have to make it work on their own.”

    One of those students: Sophomore Michaela Hesova, a goalie on the Dartmouth hockey team and a 2026 Olympian for Czechia. She found out she would be an Olympian while walking home from a workout, and while in Italy, she worked with her professors remotely, taking tests online.

    Advertisement

    “It’s going to be challenging,” Hesova said before the Games, “but I think it’s going to be more than worth it.”

    “The thing that most [Dartmouth Olympians] possess is a willingness to put themselves out there and to try, but also to find balance and figure out where sport fits in their life,” Thompson says. “For most of them, the academics are also important when they’re here. They’re able to find the balance to be successful in a number of areas.”

    “Outside of hockey and classes, there’s still not a bunch of time, but there’s still time to get everything done,” Hesova says. “Especially Sundays, you’ll find our entire team in the library for six hours. I’m not even kidding. As long as you’re willing to put your head down and grind it out, anybody can do it.”

    Advertisement

    Well, maybe not anybody.

    “I like to think that we sort of attract the sort of super-motivated individuals who like to succeed, so that not only is in the classroom, but also on the trails and the ski hill,” Thompson says. “The culture of our program is encouraging our athletes to shoot big. So we’re always happy when they succeed.”

  • Great Britain vs. Canada: How to watch the men’s gold medal curling match at the 2026 Winter Olympics

    DirecTV’s Entertainment tier gets you access to loads of channels where you can tune in to college and pro sports, the Winter Olympics, and more. Channels include ESPN, TNT, ACC Network, Big Ten Network, CBS Sports Network, and, depending on where you live, local affiliates for ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC.

    Whichever package you choose, you’ll get unlimited Cloud DVR storage and access to ESPN+’s new streaming tier, ESPN Unlimited.

    DirecTV’s Entertainment tier package is $89.99/month. But you can currently try all this out for free for 5 days. If you’re interested in trying out a live-TV streaming service for football season but aren’t ready to commit, we recommend starting with DirecTV.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Norway cross-country skiing legend Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo wins sixth gold, most ever in single Winter Games

    Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo is officially 6 for 6: He’s won gold in all six of his cross-country events at the Milan Cortina Olympics.

    Norway’s 29-year-old Olympic legend entered rare air with one more signature kick on Saturday.

    Advertisement

    Klaebo overtook teammate Martin Loewstroem Nyenget on the final lap of the men’s 50-kilometer mass start, climbing with a frenetic burst almost unfathomable after more than two hours of skiing.

    He finished in 2:06:44, clinching his sixth gold medal of this year’s Olympics, the most ever recorded by an athlete at a single Winter Games.

    Norway swept the event, with Nyenget taking silver and Emil Iversen earning bronze.

    Klaebo now has 11 career gold medals, the second most all time in Olympic history. In that regard, Klaebo trails only U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps, the most decorated Olympian of all-time.

    Advertisement

    For some more context, here’s where that haul ranks Klaebo among the most golden Olympic athletes, according to NBC:

    1. Michael Phelps (swimming, U.S.): 23 gold medals
    2. Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo (cross-country skiing, Norway): 11
    T-3. Larisa Latynina (gymnastics, Soviet Union): 9
    T-3. Katie Ledecky (swimming, U.S.): 9
    T-3. Paavo Nurmi (athletics, Finland): 9
    T-3. Mark Spitz (swimming, U.S.): 9
    T-3. Caeleb Dressel (swimming, U.S.): 9
    T-3. Carl Lewis (athletics, U.S.): 9

    In other words, Phelps and Klaebo are the only two athletes to ever win at least 10 Olympic gold medals. With Saturday’s triumph, Klaebo joined Phelps, Spitz and another swimmer, German Kristin Otto (represented East Germany), plus Belarusian gymnast Vitaly Scherbo (represented the Commonwealth of Independent States), as Olympians with at least six gold medals at a single Games, per ESPN.

    Phelps, of course, won eight golds during the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing.

    Advertisement

    Klaebo’s six golds in one Winter Games broke a 46-year-old record that American speed skater Eric Heiden set during the 1980 Lake Placid Olympics.

    Heiden won five golds that year. All of them were in individual events, whereas Klaebo won two of his golds in this year’s Olympics in team events.

    In his third Olympics, Klaebo’s efforts are a big reason why Norway has 18 gold medals in this these Games, the most a country has ever recorded in a single Winter Olympics.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: U.S. wins record 11th gold medal at these Games

    LIVIGNO, Italy — The United States set a new American record for gold medals won at a Winter Olympics on Saturday. And it came from a discipline where Team USA hadn’t had any success earlier in the Games.

    After disappointing performances in the individual aerials events, the mixed team of Kaila Kuhn, Connor Curran and Chris Lillis got to take home some hardware, defending the gold medal Team USA won in this event four years ago in Beijing.

    Advertisement

    It was the 11th gold of these Games for the U.S., topping its previous Winter Olympics record set in Salt Lake City 24 years ago.

    “We’ve had a lot of success with (this event), and I think the fact a lot of U.S. athletes come from team sports and just using each other as motivation really helps us, especially in aerials skiing,” said Lillis, who was the only holdover from the 2022 team and thus became the most decorated aerials skier in Team USA history. “It can feel kind of lonely up there, but if you watched our team at any point in the day, we literally vibe off each other so much and each person that puts down a great jump just motivates the next person.”

    After none of the Americans hit the podium during the individual competition — they all seemed to struggle with takeoff speeds in changing wind conditions — it was unclear who would actually be chosen to compete in the team event.

    Advertisement

    Lillis, 27, was obvious given his track record, and the 22-year old Kuhn won the gold medal at last year’s world championships. The third spot went to Curran, a 21-year old, first-time Olympian from Cincinnati, who said he found out at roughly 6:30 p.m. Friday night he was getting the call.

    “Connor says he was nervous, and I’m sure he was, but I wasn’t nervous for him,” Lillis said. “When you get into that moment and you’ve got the right people on the team you just know you’re going to have success.”

    It turned out to be a brilliant call, as the Americans landed six straight clean runs across the two rounds of the finals to claim the gold.

    As Lillis stuck a clean landing on the final jump of the competition — a back double-full-full-full jump — he pumped his fist, knowing he had certainly done enough to secure the top spot on the podium.

    “I think we all walked away from our individual competitions pretty crushed,” Kuhn said. “None of us really performed at our highest degree that we could have, and we know that we could bounce back for this event so we used it as motivation and it worked out in our favor.”

    Advertisement

    On a day with a light, but steady snow and very little wind, the conditions were far more favorable for the American men — “Connor and I are both pretty tall, lanky jumpers, which made it a little bit easier,” Lillis said — but what really made the difference was coming out strong right away and staying consistent throughout.

    Starting with Kuhn, who landed a nice back-full-full-full to get things started, the U.S. was on top of the leaderboard right out of the gate and amassed a combined score of 351.23 in the first round — significantly more than the other three teams (China, Australia and Switzerland) who made the cut to the second round of the finals.

    Though scores reset after the first final round, the U.S. had earned the advantage of going last, which meant they could adjust their strategy based on what other teams were doing. That turned out to be crucial because China, which dominated the individual events and won four of the six medals, did not get clean runs out of its two male skiers.

    Wang Xindi, the men’s gold medalist, attempted a double full-double full-full jump that would have earned a high score based on degree of difficulty if he landed it on China’s second run. But he didn’t quite measure the landing correctly, leaving the door open for the Americans to take control.

    Advertisement

    That allowed Curran to dial back a bit for his jump, landing a back full-double full-full to put the U.S. in front with a combined score of 208.16, nearly 24 points ahead of China.

    “Team China is always the team to beat,” Lillis said. “They helped us out a bit today”

    On the third run, China’s Li Tianma landed short and dislodged his skis, meaning Lillis only needed to score 89 points to secure gold. Though nothing is assured in an event where you’re jumping 50 feet in the air and trying to land on skis, it allowed him to perform a pretty standard trick with a lot of margin for error as long as he avoided disaster.

    Though it took nearly two long minutes for the judges to actually announce the score after Lillis’ clean landing, there wasn’t much suspense. Lillis’ 117.19 was plenty good enough to beat Switzerland by nearly 30 points. China took the bronze.

    Advertisement

    “In aerial skiing, I’d say the average jumper crashes on 50 percent of their jumps,” Lillis said. “So for three different people to put down two rounds, it’s extremely difficult. Though (my performance) in the individual events doesn’t get redeemed by the team event, it’s so great to get Olympic gold with my teammates and to do it for them and them doing it for me and I can’t describe how special it is to bring home a gold medal for the U.S.”

    And it was a significant gold medal, indeed. After a bit of a slow start to the Olympics for the action sports – including zero gold medals in snowboarding – Alex Ferreira’s freeski halfpipe gold on Friday and this effort by the aerials team made this the most golden Winter Olympics ever for the U.S.

    Advertisement

    “It hasn’t been easy and we’ve all had our falls,” Kuhn said. “For us to put things down when it really, truly matters. … I wanted to walk away with a medal. I let myself be upset (about the individual event) for a couple hours but then I knew I had to switch gears and I wasn’t going to let that beat me down for too long. I let it motivate me for my job today.”

  • Bill Mazeroski, Pirates Hall of Famer and 1960 World Series hero, dies at 89

    Hall of Fame second baseman Bill Mazeroski died at the age of 89, the Pittsburgh Pirates announced on Saturday. He passed away on Friday, according to the team.

    Mazeroski is best known for arguably the most legendary home run in baseball history, hitting a walk-off home run in Game 7 of the 1960 World Series against the New York Yankees. Leading off the ninth inning, the homer came off reliever Ralph Terry, breaking a 9-9 tie, at Forbes Field.

    Advertisement

    As Mazeroski rounded the bases, fans ran out of the stands to congratulate Mazeroski and round the bases with him in celebration. He was 24 years old at the time, in his fifth year with Pittsburgh. No other player has ended a World Series with a Game 7 home run.

    Responsible for an iconic moment in the sport, Mazeroski was remarkably modest about his accomplishment.

    “I didn’t expect that much attention, just hitting a home run to win a game,” he continued. “I don’t know. I just kind of wish maybe somebody else had hit it, or explained it better than I did. I just never came up with a good way.”

    Mazeroski later explained that he wasn’t certain that he hit a home run because the left-field wall at Forbes Field was 406 feet away from home plate in the alley.

    “I don’t know it’s out. I don’t know it’s a home run. But I know I’m going to end up on third if he misplays that ball off the wall,” Mazeroski said in 2015, via MLB.com. “So I’m busting my tail getting around there, and by the time I hit second base, I looked down the line and the fans went crazy. From second base, I didn’t touch the ground all the way in.”

    Mazeroski won two World Series titles with the Pirates, also playing on the 1971 champions that defeated the Baltimore Orioles in seven games. The team retired his No. 9 in 1987 and honored him with a 14-foot bronze statue outside PNC Park, unveiled in 2010.

    “Maz was one of a kind — a true Pirates legend, a National Baseball Hall of Famer and one of the finest defensive second basemen the game has ever seen,” said Pirates chairman Bob Nutting in a statement.

    “His name will always be tied to the biggest home run in baseball history and the 1960 World Series championship,” he added. “But I will remember him most for the person he was: humble, gracious and proud to be a Pirate.”

    Advertisement

    Despite being associated with one of baseball’s most famous home runs, Mazeroski became a Hall of Famer because of his defense at second base. He was awarded eight Gold Gloves during his career.

    “I think defense belongs in the Hall of Fame,” Mazeroski said during his Hall of Fame induction speech. “Defense deserves as much credit as pitching and hitting, and I’m proud and honored to be going into the Hall of Fame on the defensive side and mostly for my defensive abilities.”

    In his 17 seasons with the Pirates, Mazeroski compiled a career average of .260/.299/.367 with 294 doubles, 138 home runs and 853 RBI. In addition to his two World Series championships, Mazeroski was an 10-time All-Star. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2001, elected by the Veterans Committee.

  • Clippers coach Tyronn Lue says team is ‘playing to win,’ following up on Kawhi Leonard remarks

    The Los Angeles Clippers have 26 games remaining on their regular-season schedule, in addition to two possible postseason games if they qualify for the NBA play-in tournament. Contrary to Kawhi Leonard’s belief that the team is not a contender to advance in the playoffs, head coach Tyronn Lue says the team will try to keep winning.

    At 27-29 following Friday night’s loss to the Los Angeles Lakers, the Clippers currently hold the ninth spot in the Western Conference standings, just a half-game ahead of the Portland Trail Blazers.

    “Man, we’re playing to win,” Lue told reporters afterwards, including ESPN’s Dave McMenamin. “I don’t care if it’s young, old, toddlers… Whoever’s on the floor, we’re trying to win. I mean, we’re trying to win. There’s no other reason to play.”

    Lue’s remarks appeared to be a response to Leonard saying earlier in the day that the Clippers’ status as contenders was finished.

    “I think it’s over now,” he said. “It’s, the second half, like a fourth of the season left. But every day is a day to grow. A day to learn and get better. So just got to keep looking over time and see in two weeks if we’re getting better and see what happens from there.”

    Leonard’s outlook follows the Clippers sending James Harden to the Cleveland Cavaliers and Ivica Zubac to the Indiana Pacers before the NBA trade deadline. The team received Darius Garland, Bennedict Mathurin, Isaiah Jackson, two first-round picks and two second-rounders in those deals. But those aren’t the kinds of trades a playoff contender makes in hopes of boosting championship chances.

    Advertisement

    Additionally, the Clippers benched veteran point guard Chris Paul before sending him home and eventually traded him to the Toronto Raptors. Paul, 40, was subsequently released by the Raptors and announced his retirement. He signed a one-year deal before the season, presumably to be a veteran leader but reportedly clashed with Lue.

    Lue acknowledged that the Clippers team Leonard originally signed with in 2019 is much different now.

    “I thought he was just saying far as contender when he first got here, you have PG [Paul George], Kawhi, you have James, you have Russ [Russell Westbrook], you have Zu,” Lue told ESPN. “And so now, having a younger team, we got to play different. We got to do things different, we got to do things better.”

    Advertisement

    The Clippers being in the play-in mix with a chance to make the playoffs as the eventual No. 8 seed is the result of an impressive turnaround. The team began the season as one of the league’s biggest disappointments, compiling a 6-21 record. Yet a 21-8 run in December put a .500 record and postseason berth within reach.

    Up next for the Clippers is a matchup with the Orlando Magic (29-25) on Sunday, followed by a Thursday contest versus the Minnesota Timberwolves (35-22).

  • Travis Kelce, Patrick Mahomes reportedly sued by sneaker company for trademark infringement

    A sneaker company is suing Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce and quarterback Patrick Mahomes for trademark infringement, according to a Friday report from ESPN, which cited court records.

    The company, 1587 Sneakers, reportedly alleges in the suit that the name of the Kansas City steakhouse Kelce and Mahomes own, 1587 Prime, infringes its usage of the identical number combination and, as a result, is causing damage.

    Advertisement

    Along with business partner Noble 33, Kelce and Mahomes opened the restaurant last year. Its name derives from the stars’ jersey numbers — Mahomes’ No. 15 and Kelce’s No. 87 — whereas the sneaker company’s name is inspired by the year 1587, per its website, which explains that the year marks the first recorded presence of Asians in America. At that time, Filipino sailors initially arrived in what became the United States, it says.

    “We are the first sneaker brand in the U.S. that is owned, designed and inspired by Asian American culture — empowering Asian Americans to be unapologetically themselves,” the site reads.

    The sneaker company, which appeared on “Shark Tank” and was founded by Adam King and Sam Hyun, started selling its shoes in April 2023, per the suit, ESPN reported.

    That’s before Kelce and Mahomes announced their plans to open their steakhouse, according to The Kansas City Star.

    Advertisement

    Trademark attorney Josh Gerben of Gerben IP, who doesn’t represent either company, told ESPN that the suit boils down to the unregistered rights that the sneaker company claimed before it filed its trademark applications in 2025.

    More specifically, that application didn’t come until October of last year. It’s still being reviewed by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, per ESPN.

    Yet because the sneaker company launched its business before the steakhouse, the suit reportedly alleges the sneaker company has first use of “1587.” It’s important to note, though, that Kelce’s and Mahomes’ restaurant applied for the trademark “1587 Prime” in December 2023, according to ESPN, which also reported that the “1587 Prime” trademark is in the bar and restaurant category, whereas the sneaker company’s “1587” trademark application is in the clothing category.

    Advertisement

    “I think it’s a tough case for the sneaker company,” Gerben told ESPN. “Trademarks can coexist in different industries. … Given that the marks are essentially identical here, is a restaurant and a shoe company too close? Are consumers likely to be confused in thinking they are affiliated with one another?”

    The sneaker company is alleging that confusion is in fact happening and is requesting Kelce and Mahomes’ restaurant no longer use the name “1587 Prime,” in addition to stop selling apparel merchandise with the name on it. The steakhouse currently sells caps and a shirt on its website.

    “The company was understandably concerned that such a high-profile project choosing a brand name virtually identical to that of its own would overshadow it and cause irreparable damage,” the suit reads, according to The Kansas City Star.

    “It did. And continues to do so up to this very present day, forcing the AAPI-company towards the cliff of collapse.”

    King said in a written statement that 1587 Sneakers continues “to hope to resolve this matter amicably,” per ESPN.

    That said, the sneaker company is reportedly seeking unspecified damages.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Austrian bobsledder Jakob Mandlbauer hospitalized after crash during 4-man race

    Austrian bobsledder Jakob Mandlbauer was hospitalized following his team’s crash during the second heat of Saturday’s 4-man bobsled competition.

    Mandlbauer, 27, was the driver of the Austrian bobsled, making a left turn on Curve 7 when the sled tipped onto its side and lost control on the track. Teammates Daniel Bertschler, Sebastian Mitterer and Daiyehan Nichols-Bardi ducked into the bobsled to protect their heads.

    Advertisement

    Unfortunately, Mandlbauer didn’t avoid injury and was quickly attended to by medical personnel as the race was delayed by 20 minutes. The driver was feeling neck pain, according to the Austrian team.

    Austria's Daiyehan Nichols-Bardi (C), Austria's Daniel Bertschler (L) and Austria's Sebastian Mitterer (R) react as medics bring off Austria's Jakob Mandlbauer after a crash in the bobsleigh men's 4-man heat 2 at Cortina Sliding Centre during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Cortina d'Ampezzo on February 21, 2026. (Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP via Getty Images)

    The other three members of Austria’s 4-man bobsled team — Daiyehan Nichols-Bardi, Daniel Bertschler and Sebastian Mitterer (R) — suffered no apparent injuries after a crash that required driver Jakob Mandlbauer to be taken away by stretcher. (Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP via Getty Images)

    (TIZIANA FABI via Getty Images)

    Mandlbauer was taken from the course on a stretcher and rushed to a hospital. However, he is apparently OK after being checked as a precaution, according to Austrian officials.

    “Jakob is on his way to hospital,” Austrian team press attaché Christoph Iglhauser told The Athletic. “He’s not so bad. It’s just a check. Everyone else is fine.”

    Austrian news outlet Krone reported that Mandlbauer showed movement in his legs, arms and head.

    The Austrian team was not the only one to tip over during the race. Bobsleds for France and Trinidad and Tobago also tipped over as they attempted to navigate Curve 7, a U-shaped turn on the course.

    Advertisement

    U.S. bobsledder Frank Del Duca crashed during a training run, though his accident occurred at Curve 4, The Athletic reported. Teammate Charlie Volker suffered a concussion in that crash and subsequently retired from competition.

    Neither the French team nor the Trinidad and Tobago team suffered any apparent injuries, with their athletes able to walk away from their respective accidents. But all three teams that crashed were not able to cross the finish line and were thus listed as “Did Not Finish” in the final results. Germany took all three top spots in Heat 2.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: U.S. women’s curling falls short of first medal as Canada prevails for bronze

    The Canadian women’s curling team scored three in the sixth and eighth ends and held on to win 10-7 in the 10th during the bronze-medal game against the United States on Saturday during the Milan Cortina Olympics.

    The American women fell just short of their first medal in the event.

    Advertisement

    Team USA staked itself to a 1-0 lead in the first end, but Canada answered right back to start what became a back-and-forth affair in Cortina.

    The U.S. recorded singles in the first, third and fifth ends, entering a pivotal sixth with a 3-2 advantage.

    But that’s when Canada capitalized on a pair of costly American mistakes. Tara Peterson sent a shot through the house, and her sister, Tabitha, didn’t create enough momentum to take a Canadian stone out of the paint, enabling the Canadians to score three in the end and take a 5-3 lead.

    Fortunately for the U.S., it bounced back in the seventh end to tie the game.

    Advertisement

    After Canada’s Rachel Homan threw a great freeze, Tabitha, the Americans’ skip, split a pair of stones with a draw that ultimately tapped off a Canadian rock and rested in the button, awarding the Americans a much-needed multiple.

    Any relief the U.S. felt was short-lived, though. The Americans left Team Canada another chance for three in the eighth end, and Homan — a three-time world champion who was in search of her first Olympic medal — seized the opportunity, making it an 8-5 game.

    Team USA wasn’t going away lightly. It made the most of the ensuing hammer, as Peterson’s final throw of the ninth end knocked a Canadian stone out of the four foot and nestled next to another American rock for two.

    Advertisement

    Down 8-7, the Americans needed a steal in the 10th end. They couldn’t conjure a last bit of Olympic magic to make it happen.

    Peterson’s final throw didn’t squeak past Canada’s guard, and the Canadians rejoiced to the tune of their 10-7 victory.

    After going 6-3 in round-robin play, the U.S. women made the Olympic playoffs for the first time since 2002.

    As was the case in Salt Lake City 24 years ago, the Americans fell to Switzerland in the semifinals. Also like the 2002 Games, Canada defeated the U.S. in the bronze-medal game.

    Team Canada got off to an uncharacteristically rough start to this year’s Games, winning just one of its first four games in round-robin competition. During that span, the American women notched their first Olympic win over a Canadian team that previously had their number in a sport that was introduced to the Games in 1998.

    Advertisement

    Led by Homan, though, the Canadians still found their way into the four-team playoff field.

    After winning five consecutive medals upon women’s curling’s Olympic debut, notably two golds, Canada finished just sixth in the 2018 Pyeongchang Games and fifth in the 2022 Beijing Games, missing the playoffs both times, including once with Homan as skip.

    In this year’s Games, however, Homan and Team Canada persevered for bronze.

    Still, the United States’ run to the semifinals is encouraging. Earlier in this year’s Games, Cory Thiesse became the first American woman curler to win a medal, earning silver in the mixed doubles.

    Advertisement

    On Saturday, Thiesse eclipsed 190 ends played in these Games, the most anyone has ever played in one Olympics. Taylor Anderson-Heide swept her heart out, and the Peterson sisters gave it their all.

    The Americans just fell short.

  • Winter Olympics 2026: Mia Manganello races to bronze with final push in mass start

    MILAN — Mia Manganello narrowly missed the 2010 Olympics. She won bronze eight years later in Pyeongchang. And in her final Olympic race, she’s a bronze medalist again.

    It came in the women’s mass start — the most chaotic, unpredictable race in speedskating.

    Advertisement

    “It means everything. It means a journey for my parents, sacrificing everything, my loved ones, relationships, friends, coaches, teammates,” she said. “This is the ultimate goal. Any color, honestly.”

    Manganello is one of the handful of U.S. speedskaters who got their start inline skating before finding her way to the ice. But after coming up short of qualifying for the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, Manganello hung up her skates, hopped on a bike and became a professional cyclist.

    In 2016, she returned to the skates, qualified for the 2018 Games, where she took bronze in team pursuit. Four years ago in Beijing, she took fourth in the mass start — missing the podium by a little more than a second.

    Saturday, in the final race of her Olympic career, the 36-year-old won her first individual medal.

    Advertisement

    For most of the 16-lap race, where 16 racers are on the ice at the same time, the pack remained in tact, unlike in the men’s race moments earlier. It wasn’t until the bell lap that the race really began.

    Marijke Groenewoud of the Netherlands and Manganello were first to sprint out, followed tightly by Canada’s Ivanie Blondin. From there, it was a three-woman race for gold. Groenewoud pulled ahead of Manganello, then Blondin caught the American — beating Manganello to the line by .30.

    Groenewoud took gold with a time of 8:34.70, just ahead of Blondin (8:35.09) and Manganello (8:35.39).

    After crossing the line, Manganello raised her arms in triumph. Sixteen years after her first attempt at the Olympics ended before she ever got there, she’s won a second bronze on her way out.

    Advertisement

    “Did you see me cross the line? I screamed so loud. I started bawling; there was no other emotion but disbelief. It’s the most surreal moment of my life. It’s something that I envisioned every single day since I’ve been here.

    “It seemed so far-fetched. We discussed impostor syndrome a bit (before), not quite believing that I could be there. So to cross the line was a little bit of disbelief, even on the back stretch when I was in second, thinking to myself, ‘Hold it together, hold it together’.

    “To cross the line, the emotion just escaped me.”