The fuboTV Guide to Watching the Olympics in Canada

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Canada's Beijing Olympics are complete.

The Canadians figured to again be among the best teams in the Winter Games. During the 2018 games in Pyeongchang, South Korea, Canada won the third-most gold medals (11) and third-most medals overall (29). It didn't match those numbers in China, but it still finished fourth overall.  

Here's all you need to know about Team Canada at the 2022 Beijing Olympics.

MORE: Stream CBC's Olympics coverage live on fuboTV

Olympic medals won by Canadians

Sport Athlete(s) Event Medal
Freestyle skiing Mikael Kingsbury Men's moguls Silver
Speed skating Isabelle Weidemann 3000m Bronze
Snowboard Max Parrot Men's slopestyle Gold
Snowboard Mark McMorris Men's slopestyle Bronze
Short track speed skating Kim Boutin Women's 500m Bronze
Ski jumping Alexandria Loutitt, Matthew Soukup, Abigail Strate, Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes Mixed team Bronze
Snowboard Meryeta Odine Women's snowboard cross Bronze
Short track speed skating Steven Dubois Men's 1500m Silver
Alpine skiing James Crawford Men's combined Bronze
Snowboard Eliot Grondin Men's snowboard cross Silver
Freestyle skiing Marion Thenault, Miha Fontaine, Lewis Irving Mixed aerials team Bronze
Speed skating Isabelle Weidemann Women's 5000m Silver
Snowboarding Eliot Grondin, Meryeta Odine Mixed team cross Bronze
Short track speed skating Steven Dubois Men's 500m Bronze
Bobsleigh Christine de Bruin Women's monobob Bronze
Snowboarding Max Parrot Men's big air Bronze
Speed skating Ivanie Blondin, Valérie Maltais, Isabelle Weidemann Women's team pursuit Gold
Short track speed skating Charles Hamelin, Steven Dubois, Jordan Pierre-Gilles, Pascal Dion Men's 5000m relay Gold
Ice hockey Team Canada Women's ice hockey  Gold
Freestyle skiing Marielle Thompson Women's ski cross Silver
Freestyle skiing Cassie Sharpe Women's freeski halfpipe Silver
Freestyle skiing Rachael Karker Women's freeski halfpipe Bronze
Curling Brett Gallant, Brad Gushue, Mark Nichols, Geoff Walker Men's curling tournament Bronze
Speed skating Ivanie Blondin Women's mass start Silver
Bobsleigh Justin Kripps, Ryan Sommer, Cam Stones, Benjamin Coakwell Four-man Bronze

Canada Olympics schedule today

(All dates and times are based on Eastern Standard. Beijing is 13 hours ahead of EST.)

Sunday, Feb. 20

7 a.m. — Closing ceremony

How many medals did Canada win?

Event Gold Silver Bronze Total
Alpine skiing -- -- 1 1
Biathlon -- -- -- --
Bobsleigh -- -- 2 2
Cross-country skiing -- -- -- --
Curling -- -- 1 1
Figure skating -- -- -- --
Freestyle skiing -- 3 2 5
Ice hockey 1 -- -- 1
Luge -- -- -- --
Nordic combined -- -- -- --
Short track speed skating 1 1 1 3
Skeleton -- -- -- --
Ski jumping -- -- 1 1
Snowboard 1 1 4 6
Speed skating 1 3 2 6
Total 4 8 14 26

Results by Canadian athletes

Day 18

Canada managed one medal on the final day of competition, for 26 total. The four-man bobsled team of Justin Kripps, Ryan Sommer, Cam Stones and Benjamin Coakwell slid to bronze. They prevented a German sweep of the medals by six one-thousandths of a second (3:55.09 to 3:55.15) in the final heat.

Cendrine Browne (16th) was the highest-finishing Canadian in the women's 30km mass start free cross-country skiing race. Katherine Stewart-Jones was 30th, Dahria Beatty was 39th and Laura Leclair was 51st out of 65 skiers.

The alpine skiing mixed team parallel competition took place a day after it was postponed because of high wind gusts. Canada was eliminated in the opening round by Slovenia.

Day 17

Speed skater Ivanie Blondin picked up her second medal of the Beijing Games, earning silver in the women's mass start to go with her earlier gold as part of Canada's women's team pursuit triumph. Valerie Maltais finished sixth in the mass start. In the men's mass start, Jordan Belchos placed 13th and Antoine Gelinas-Beaulieu was 15th. 

Canada's freestyle skiers failed to medal in the men's halfpipe. Noah Bowman finished a close fourth, 2.0 points behind bronze medalist Alex Ferreira of the USA, on a day of high winds in Beijing. Brendan McKay finished ninth and Simon d'Artois finished 10th.

Kirsten Moore-Towers and Michael Marinaro finished 10th in the pairs figure skating, while Vanessa James and Eric Radford were 12th. 

Olivier Leveille was Canada's top finisher in the cross-country skiing men's 50km mass start free, placing 27th, with Remi Drolet coming in 35th.

The four-man bobsleigh team of Justin Kripps, Ryan Sommer, Cam Stones and Benjamin Coakwell sat in third place after the first two heats. They trailed first-place Germany by 0.38 seconds heading into Heat 3 on Saturday night. Canada's other two teams were 11th and 21st, respectively, after two heats.      

Day 16

Two more medals for Canada in freestyle skiing. Cassie Sharpe and Rachael Karker snagged silver and bronze, respectively, in the women's halfpipe. Both finished behind American-born Chinese star Eileen Gu. Sharpe earned silver on her final attempt with a 90.75 score, 4.5 points behind Gu.

The men's curling team earned a bronze medal with an 8-5 victory over the USA early Friday. Skip Brad Gushue collects his second Olympic medal 16 years after winning gold for Canada at the 2006 Winter Games in Turin.

Laurent Dubreuil took home a silver medal in the men's 1000m speed skating event as he finished the event with a time of 1:08.32, just behind Netherlands' Thomas Krol (1:07.92) and ahead of Norway's Håvard Lorentzen (1:08.48). Connor Howe finished 12th (1:08.97) and Antoine Gélinas-Beaulieu was 22nd (1:10.075).

Freestyle skier Brady Lehman finished sixth overall in the men's ski cross. He came home second in the small final.  

Canada did not finish with medals in the men's 15km mass start biathlon as Christian Gow came in 13th (+2:48.1), Jules Burnotte placed 18th (+3:20.6) and Scott Gow finished 25th (+4:03.2).

After two runs in the 2-woman bobsleigh, Christine de Bruin and Kristen Bujnowski were fourth (+1.16), Cynthia Appiah and Dawn Richardswon Wilson were eighth (+1.59), and Melissa Lotholz and Sara Villani were 16th (+2.16). In the mixed pairs figure skating short program, Vanessa James and Eric Radford were 12th with a score of 63.03, while Kirsten Moore-Towers and Michael Marinaro had a score of 62.51, good for 13th.

Day 15

The women's ice hockey team has its revenge. It held off the archrival USA 3-2 in the gold-medal game, four years after losing to the Americans in Pyeongchang. Canadian captain Marie-Philip Poulin scored twice, including the game-winner, and added an assist. Poulin now has seven goals in Olympic gold-medal games (and three wins), and she is the only player (man or woman) to score in four gold-medal games.

Marielle Thompson brought home silver for Canada in the women's freestyle ski cross. She finished the runner-up to Sweden's Sandra Naeslund in the Big Final. Canada swept the top three spots in the Small Final (Brittany Phelan, Courtney Hoffos, Hannah Schmidt).       

Both Alexa Scott and Maddison Pearman finished outside medal range in the women's 1000m speed skating event, as Scott finished 12th (1:15.69) and Pearman placed 26th (1:17.66). Madeline Schizas finished 19th in the women's singles figure skating event after earning the 18th-best score in the free program at 115.03.

Men's curling qualified for the semifinals despite a 5-2 loss to Great Britain in its last round-robin game. The team finished third in the round robin thanks to a head-to-head tiebreaker over the United States. Canada then lost to Sweden 5-3 and the United States lost to Great Britain 8-4, setting up the North American foes in the battle for the bronze medal at 1:05 a.m. ET on Friday.

The Canadian women's curling team beat Denmark 10-4 to move to 5-4 in round-robin play and finish the group standings in fifth.

Canada advanced three freestyle skiers in the women's freeski halfpipe final: Rachael Karker (qualified second), Cassie Sharpe (sixth) and Amy Fraser (11th). The top 12 finishers in qualifying made it to the final. Canada also had three skiers qualify in the men's halfpipe as Brendan Mackay had the fifth-highest score (87.25), Noah Bowman was sixth (85.50) and Simon d'Artois had the eighth-best (82.50).

Roni Remme failed to complete her downhill run in women's skiing combined. She did not compete in the giant slalom, the second half of the event. 

Day 14

Canada won its third gold medal of the 2022 Beijing Olympics as Charles Hamelin, Steven Dubois, Jordan Pierre-Gilles and Pascal Dion posted a time of 6:41.257 in the men's 5000m short track relay. The first-place finish moved Hamelin to a tie for the most gold medals by a Canadian athlete in the Olympics, while it gave Dubois a bronze, silver and gold at the 2022 Winter Games.

Max Moffatt placed ninth in the men's slopestyle freestyle skiing event with a best run of 70.40 that came in his third trip down the slope. Americans Alexander Hall (90.01) and Nicholas Goepper (86.48) claimed gold and silver. Sweden's Jesper Tjäder finished third (85.35).

Erik Read finished the men's slalom alpine skiing event in 24th with a time +5.01 back of France's gold-medal-winning Clément Noël (1:44.09). Austria's Johannes Strolz earned silver (+0.61) and Norway's Sebastian Foss Solevåg earned bronze (+0.70). Canada's Trevor Philp did not finish his first run.

Canada's women's 4x6km relay biathlon unit of Emma Lunder, Megan Bankes, Emily Dickson and Sarah Beaudry placed 10th at +4:30.4. Sweden (1:11:03.9) won gold, the ROC (+12.0) took silver and Germany (+37.4) won bronze.

Kim Boutin and Courtney Lee Sarault each had strong showings in the Final B in the women's 1500m short track racing event, with Boutin placing third and Sarault finishing fourth. That ultimately meant the pairing placed 10th and 11th, respectively, with South Korea's Choi Min Jeong winning gold, Italy's Arianna Fontana winning silver and Netherlands' Suzanne Schulting earning bronze.

Antoine Cyr and Graham Ritchie finished just outside medal range in the men's team sprint classic style in cross-country skiing with a time +22.31 back of gold-medal winning Norway (19:22.99) to finish fifth. Finland (+2.46) earned silver and the ROC (+4.29) took bronze.

The women's curling team beat the United States 7-6 late Tuesday night (ET), but lost to China 11-9 to drop to 4-4 in the round-robin. It is tied with South Korea and Great Britain for fourth with a match to go.

The Canadian men's hockey team was eliminated from the tournament following a 2-0 defeat at the hands of Sweden in the quarterfinals. It marks only the second time Canada has failed to advance past the quarterfinals in the Olympic men's hockey tournament.

Canada did not have any women qualify for the women's team sprint classic style final in cross-country skiing as the pairing of Katherine Stewart-Jones and Dahria Beatty (+1:01.64) placed sixth in the first semifinal, needing to place at least fourth to reach the final.

Day 13

Canada claimed its second gold medal of the 2022 Beijing Olympics early Tuesday morning when Ivanie Blondin, Valérie Maltais and Isabelle Weidermann edged Japan in Final A of the women's team pursuit in speed skating with a time of 2:53.44 to Japan's 3:04.47. The Netherlands earned bronze in Final B with a time of 2:56.86.

The men's speed skating team pursuit of Jordan Belchos, Ted-Jan Bloemen and Tyson Langelaar won the Final C with a time of 3:40.39 to finish in fifth overall in the event.

Maxence Parrot earned the bronze medal in the men's big air snowboard competition with a final score of 170.25, just 1.50 behind Norway's Mons Røisland for silver and 12.25 back of China's Su Yiming for gold.

Jasmine Baird and Laurie Blouin came up short of medaling in the women's big air snowboard, finishing at 130.00 and 115.00, respectively. Austria's Anna Gasser (185.50), New Zealand's Zoi Sadowski-Synnott (177.00) and Japan's Kokomo Murase (171.50) claimed the medals.

Adam Runnalls, Christian Gow, Jules Burnotte and Scott Gow finished the men's 4x7.5km relay biathlon 1:56.3 back of the gold-medal-winning unit of Norway (1:19:50.2). France (+27.4) earned silver and ROC won bronze (+45.3).

Marie-Michele Gagnon finished 1.58 back of the gold-medalist Corrine Suter (1:31.87) in the alpine skiing women's downhill. Roni Remme placed 24th (+3.49). Olivia Asselin finished the women's slopestyle freestyle skiing event in 11th after picking up 16.83 in her first run and not starting in the final two runs.

After the fourth and final run of the two-man bobsleigh, Canada had pairings finish seventh (Chris Spring and Mike Evelyn, +2.37), 10th (Justin Kripps and Cameron Stones, +2.51) and 20th (Taylor Austin and Daniel Sunderland, +4.47).

Canada's men's curling team beat China 10-8 in the round robin Monday night, but lost to ROC 7-6 to move to 5-3 in the round robin, third place in the field of 10 after Tuesday morning. It will play Great Britain in a critical match Wednesday night to wrap up the group stage.

The Canadian men's hockey team beat China 7-2 in the qualification match for the quarterfinal. It will now face Sweden Wednesday morning.

Max Moffatt was Canada's only qualifier in the men's slopestyle freestyle skiing as he posted a top score of 74.06 in his first run to earn the 11th spot of 12. Edouard Therriault just missed the cut with a score of 70.40, 3.06 back of Sweden's Oliwer Magnusson for the 12th spot. Evan McEachran was 24th (40.90) and Teal Harle was 26th (36.05).

In the men's aerials freestyle skiing, Miha Fontaine just missed qualifying in the field of 12, finishing 13th with a top score of 115.05 to the 12th-best score of 115.49. Emile Nadeau was 17th (112.83) and Lewis Irving was 23rd (103.98).

Madeline Schizass placed 20th in the women's singles short program in figure skating with a score of 60.53.

Day 12

Canada's women's hockey team will play for gold after routing Switzerland 10-3 in the semifinals. The game was decided early; the Canadians led 5-1 after one period. They dominated in all phases, as evidenced by their 61-13 advantage in shots on goal. Marie Philip-Poulin scored twice and Sarah Nurse chipped in with four assists. Canada will face Team USA in the gold-medal game after winning the preliminary round meeting between the two powerhouses 4-2. 

Christine de Bruin earned Canada's 15th medal of the Beijing Olympics. She took home bronze in the inaugural women's monobob (single-person bobsled). De Bruin (4:21.03) finished 22 one-hundredths of a second out of a silver medal, behind American Elana Meyers Taylor. Former Canadian bobsled star Kaillie Humphries (4:19.27) won gold for the USA.

Snowboarder Max Parrot is in a position to win his — and Canada's — second gold medal of the games. He qualified first among the 12 who advanced to the men's big air final, which will take place Tuesday in Beijing. Laurie Blouin (156.25) secured a place in the women's big air final, which will be held Monday night Canada time. She finished fourth among 12 qualifiers.    

The country's curlers went 3-0 in round robin play. The women routed the ROC 11-5 and beat Great Britain 7-3, while the men defeated Italy 7-3.

Freestyle skier Marion Thenault (93.06) qualified for Final 1 of the women's aerials, but she just missed out on earning a spot to compete for a medal in Final 2. Thenault's score of 91.29 on her second and final jump left her in seventh place by just 0.71 with only the top six advancing. 

Canadian ice dancers finished well out of medal positions after the free dance. Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier had the best finish, seventh place.

Marie-Michele Gagnon (1:33.80) was fifth after the third training session of the women's downhill. Switzerland's Joana Haehlen (1:33.18) was the leader. The final is scheduled for Monday night Canada time.

Megan Oldham just missed out on advancing to the women's freeski slopestyle final. She finished 13th in qualifying; the top 12 moved on to the final. 

Day 11

Steven Dubois earned his second medal at the 2022 Beijing Olympics when he placed third in the men's 500m short track at 40.669. Hungary's Shaoang Liu won gold and ROC's Konstantin Ivliev took silver. Marsha Hudey placed 21st (38.79) and Brooklyn McDougall finished 22nd (38.84) in the women's 500m speed skating final.

Courtney Lee Sarault, Florence Brunelle, Kim Boutin and Alyson Charles finished just outside medal range in the women's 3000m relay in the short track racing at +0.920 behind gold-medal winner Netherlands (4:03.409). South Korea was second (+0.218) and China was third (+0.454).

Canada's Graham Ritchie, Antonie Cyr, Olivier Leveille and Remi Drolet placed 11th in the men's 4x10km cross-country skiing relay. The ROC won gold, Norway won silver and France took bronze. Erik Read placed 13th in the men's giant slalom (+3.09) and Trevor Philp placed 24th (+9.73).

In the women's 10km pursuit at the biathlon, Emma Lunder finished 54th (+7:32.4). Scott Gow finished 20th (+4:11.2), Jules Burnotte was 28th (+4:40.7), Adam Runnalls was 30th (+4:52.4) and Christian Gow was 35th (+5:03.0) in the men's 12.5km pursuit.

Jordan Belchos, Ted-Jan Bloeman and Connor Howe saw Canada place fifth in the men's team pursuit speed skating quarterfinal with a time of 3:40.17 that will move the unit to the Final C.

The early portion of the day was light. Men's curling defeated the USA 10-5 to move to 3-2 in round-robin play; women's monobob (one-person bobsled) racer Christine de Bruin was in second place after the opening two heats, 1.04 seconds behind American Kaillie Humphries.

The women's curling team fell to Switzerland 8-4 to drop to 1-3, eighth in the round-robin play. The men's ice hockey team bounced back with a 5-0 win against China to move up to second in the Group A standings.

Day 10

Canada's men's hockey team finds itself in some trouble after losing to the archrival USA 4-2 on Friday night. The loss — its first to the USA since 2010 — pushed Canada (1-1, three points) into second place in Group A behind the Americans. The first-place finishers in each of the three groups and the best second-place finisher will automatically advance to the quarterfinals. The other eight teams will have to play an elimination game.

Mat Robinson gave the Canadians a 1-0 lead 1:24 into the game but the USA answered 1:10 later. The Americans scored two more goals to go up 3-1 before Corban Knight cut the margin to 3-2 with a short-handed goal in the second period. Canada had a two-man advantage late in the third period but could not beat USA goalie Strauss Mann. 

Canada will play China in its final group game Sunday at 8:10 a.m. EST.     

The Canadian women lost a 7-6 decision to Sweden in curling round-robin play. The men faced Sweden and lost 7-4 to drop to 2-2 in the round robin. They'll take on the USA on Saturday night Canada time.

It was bronze for Canada in the inaugural mixed team snowboard cross Big Final. Eliot Grondin and Meryeta Odin earned the medal.

Laurent Dubreuil came up a split-second shy of medaling in the men's 500m speed skating with a time of 34.522. China's Gao Tingyu won gold (34.32), Korea's Cha Min Kyu took silver (34.39) and Japan's Wataru Morishige earned bronze (34.49). Canada's four contestants in the men's 10km biathlon sprint fell short of medaling as Christian Gow was 12th (+1:15.1), Jules Burnotte was 29th (+1:49.9), Scott Gow was 34th (+1:56.3) and Adam Runnalls was 35th (+2:00.1).

Canada's group of Katherine Stewart-Jones, Dahria Beatty, Cendrine Browne and Olivia Bouffard-Nesbitt finished ninth (+3:39.9) in the women's 4x5km cross-country skiing relay. The ROC won gold, Germany took silver and Sweden won bronze. 

Mirela Rahneva finished fifth in the women's individual skeleton +1.53 back of the gold-medalist Hannah Neise (Germany) and Jane Channell was 17th (+3.33).

Canada secured the top seed in the second semifinal with a time of 2:53.97 in the women's team pursuit speed skating event, just 0.36 seconds behind Japan.

Marie-Michele Gagnon (16th) and Roni Remme (45th) were well out of contention after the first run in the women's downhill. After the first round of the final men's individual large hill ski jumping, Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes was 33rd (119.2) and Matthew Soukup was 49th (90.8).

Canada had three groups finish in the top 15 of the figure skating mixed ice dance rhythm dance as Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier was sixth (83.52), Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Nikolaj Sørensen finished eighth (78.54), and Marjorie Lajoie and Zachary Lagha finished 13th (72.59).

Day 9

Marie-Michele Gagnon and Roni Remme finished well out of contention in the women's Super-G alpine skiing event. Gagnon (1:14.65) was 14th and Remme (1:15.78) was 24th. Switzerland's Lara Gut-Behrami 1:13.51) won the gold medal.

Canada's athletes in the men's 15km classic style cross-country skiing were also outside medal range, as Olivier Leveille finished 29th (+2:57.2), Remi Drolet was 33rd (+3:12.9) and Antoine Cyr placed 37th (+3:22.9). Finland's Iivo Niskanen won the gold at 37:54.8, ROC's Alexander Bolshnov won silver (+23.2) and Norway's Johannes Høsflot Klæbo took home bronze (+37.5).

Graeme Fish was sixth in the men's 10000m speed skating (12:58.80) and Ted-Jan Bloemen finished eighth (13:01.39). In the medal round for the women's 7.5km sprint, Emma Lunder was the highest-finishing Canadian at 32nd (+2:03.3). Megan Bankes finished 77th (+3:51.1), Sarah Beaudry finished 80th (+4:01.6) and Emily Dickson was 81st (+4:06.0). Blake Enzie finished 20th in the men's individual skeleton (+5.87) after the fourth and final run. Germany earned gold and silver with Christopher Grotheer (4:01.01) and Axel Jungk (+0.66), while China's Yan Wengag earned bronze (+0.76).

The quartet of Charles Hamelin, Maxime Laoun, Steven Dubois and Pascal Dion finished with the fourth-best time in the men's 5000m short track relay semifinal at 6:38.752 to qualify for Final A. Korea (6:37.879) had the best time in the field.

Canada's women's curling team lost 8-5 to Japan in the round robin to fall to 1-1 and move to a tie for third in the group standings. The men's curling team lost to Switzerland 5-3 to move to 2-1, tied for the second-best record in the round robin.

The women's ice hockey team thumped Sweden in the quarterfinal 11-0 to punch its ticket to the semifinal.

Both Canadian men in the men's large hill individual ski jumping moved past the qualification round, with Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes scoring 115.8 (18th) and Matthew Soukup scored 82.0 (47th).

Justin Kripps was second after three heats in two-man bobsled training. He was two one-thousandths of a second behind leader Francesco Friedrich of Germany. Christopher Spring ended the heat in ninth and Taylor Austin was 17th. Teams will go through three more heats, including one early on Friday, before the start of competition on Monday. 

Mirela Rahneva slid her way to a ninth-place standing after the first two heats of the women's skeleton competition. She was 0.83 seconds off the lead with two heats remaining. Her teammate Jane Channell was 17th among 25 racers. 

Dubois won his heat to qualify for the next round of the men's 500m short track and Jordan Pierre-Gilles finished second in his heat as both moved on to the quarterfinal. Laoun finished fourth in his heat. Courtney Lee Sarault and Alyson Charles both missed out on qualifying in the women's 1000m short track quarterfinal, with Sarault finishing third in her quarterfinal and Charles placing fifth.

Day 8

Isabelle Weidemann picked up her second medal of the Olympics, this one a silver in the 5000m speed skating with a time of 6:48.18. The Netherlands' Irene Schouten earned gold at 6:43.51.

Canada's mixed aerials freestyle skiing team of Marion Thenault, Miha Fontaine and Lewis Irving earned Canada's 11th medal by finishing with bronze with a score of 326.94 in the first final and 290.98 in the second final. The United States earned gold (330.55 and 338.34) and China earned silver (336.89 and 324.22).

Eliot Grondin nabbed Canada's 10th medal of the 2022 Olympics with a second-place finish in the men's snowboard cross Big Final. The 20-year-old finished behind Austria's Alessandro Haemmerle. Fellow Canadians Liam Moffitt and Kevin Hill failed to qualify for the finals.

Earlier Thursday, Alpine skier James Crawford earned Canada's ninth medal of the games, a bronze in the men's combined (downhill plus slalom). He missed silver by nine one-thousandths of a second. Broderick Thompson finished eighth and Brodie Seger finished ninth.

Elizabeth Hosking placed sixth in the women's snowboard halfpipe, which was won for a second consecutive Olympics by Chloe Kim of the USA. Hosking's highest score in the three-run final was 79.25 points, nine points behind bronze medalist Sena Tomita of Japan. Hosking's teammate Brooke D'Hondt (66.75 points) finished 10th among the 12 snowboarders who advanced to the final.

Dahria Beatty placed 18th in the women's 10km classic style cross-country skiing, 1:53.9 back of the gold-medalist. Katherine Stewart-Jones placed 36th (+3:02.3), Cendrine Browne was 48th (+3:41.6) and Olivia Bouffard-Nesbitt was 61st (+4:54.8).

Keegan Messing finished 11th in the men's individual figure skating competition, which was won by Nathan Chen of the USA. Messing entered the night ninth after the short program and was 10th-best in the free skate on Thursday in Beijing (Wednesday night in Canada).

Canada's mixed team relay unit of Trinity Ellis, Tristan Walker, Reid Watts and Justin Snith finished sixth in the luge event with a finish 1.829 back of first-place Germany (3:03.406).

Both the men's and women's curling teams collected wins early Thursday morning, with the men winning their round-robin game against Norway 6-5, and the women beating Korea 12-7. The men's ice hockey team beat Germany 5-1.

Blake Enzie was 19th among 25 competitors after the first two heats in the men's skeleton. A third and fourth heat will take place Friday. The slider with the fastest combined time from the four heats will win the gold medal.

Day 7

Canada collected another medal as Meryeta Odine claimed bronze in the women's snowboard cross final with a time 0.48 back of gold medalist Lindsey Jacobellis (USA). Tess Critchlow was second in the small final behind France's Julia Pereira De Sousa.

Steven Dubois earned a silver in the men's 1500m short track with a time just 0.035 back of South Korean gold medalist Hwang Dae Heon (2:09.219).

Canada's duo of Tristan Walker and Justin Snith finished seventh in the double luge with a time 1.364 back of the gold-medalist pairing from Germany, Tobias Wendl and Tobias Arlt at 1:56.554.

Evan McEachran placed ninth in the final round of the men's big air freestyle skiing event with a score of 115.50. Norway's Birk Ruud finished first at 187.75. Erin Mielzynski finished the women's slalom alpine skiing as the highest-placing Canadian with a 16th overall finish (+2.54), with teammate Laurence St-Germain right behind her at 17th (+2.59). Ali Nullmeyer was 21st (+2.98) and Amelia Smart was 27th (+4.34).

Canada picked up two qualifiers in the women's halfpipe snowboard with Elizabeth Hosking placing ninth (70.50) and Brooke D'Hondt placing 10th (70.00). Liam Gill did not qualify in the men's halfpipe qualification round, with his top score of 16.75 placing him 23rd.

There were two qualifiers in the women's 1000m short track as Courtney Lee Sarault (1:27.798) won the sixth heat and Alyson Charles (+.253) advanced after finishing third in the seventh heat. Kim Boutin missed qualification in the event.

Canada's group of Sarault, Florence Brunelle, Boutin and Charles was the top team in the second semifinal of the women's 3000m relay with a time of 4:05.893 to earn the third-highest spot in the final A round.

The Canadian men's group of Brad Gushue, Mark Nichols, Brett Gallant, Geoff Walker and Marc Kennedy opened up the men's curling round robin with a 10-5 win over Denmark.

Day 6

It was a relatively quiet day, with Canada earning no additional medals. But that doesn't mean there weren't still huge victories for Team Canada. Indeed, it beat rival USA in women's hockey, notching a 4-2 victory despite a significant shot disadvantage — 53-27 — to extend the team's streak to three wins in the series.

Canada survived a dominant opening period from the the U.S. before countering with a power-play goal from Brianne Jenner at 14:10 in the first. Team USA scored two goals in the second period to take a brief 2-1 lead before Canada answered.

Twenty-six seconds later, Jenner's drive to the net knotted the game at 2-2. Jamie Lee Rattray scored just over two minutes later to give the Canadians a 3-2 lead they would never surrender. Captain Marie-Philip Poulin converted on a penalty shot after she was tripped from behind on a shorthanded breakaway during a U.S. power play.

The win put Canada (4-0) at the top of Group A, while the U.S. (3-1) finished second. The game was merely for seeding purposes, as the entire group automatically qualified.

Elsewhere, Connor Howe had the best finish of three Canadians in the men's 1,500-meter speed skating final on Tuesday morning, finishing fifth; Tyson Langelaar and Antoine Gelinas-Beaulieu, finished 22nd and 23rd.

Canada also had four competitors in the men's 20-kilometer individual biathlon, with Scott Gow earning the best result (fifth). His brother, Christian Gow, finished 24th; Adam Runnalls finished 33rd and Jules Burnotte finished 36th.

In the women's singles luge final, Trinity Ellis finished 14th, Natalie Corless 16th and Makena Hodgson 17th. In figure skating, Keegan Messing finished ninth overall in the men's single skating short program to qualify for the free skate final on Thursday. Roman Sadovsky finished 29th out of 30 and will not advance.

Megan Oldham finished fourth in the women’s big air final — an event won by Eileen Gu — while countrywoman Olivia Asselin placed eighth. Megan Farrell advanced to the 1/8 finals in women’s parallel slalom where she lost to Austria’s Daniela Ulbing in the next round. Kaylie Buck finished 21st in the qualifying rounds. Jules Lefebvre had the best finish at 20th overall. Arnaud Gaudet and Sebastien Beaulieu placed 27th and 28th, respectively.

James Crawford finished sixth overall in the men's super-G skiing final; Trevor Philip placed 10th. And, in cross-country skiing, Dahria Beatty moved into the women's sprint quarterfinals in 28th place before failing to advance to the semis. Cendrine Browne, Olivia Bouffard-Nesbitt and Laura Leclair did not make the quarterfinals, finishing in 35th, 40th and 58th place, respectively.

Day 5

Finally, gold for Team Canada. Snowboarder Max Parrot flew to victory in the men's slopestyle, edging China's Su Yiming. Parrot recorded his winning 90.96 score on his second of three runs. Teammate Mark McMorris made a late bid in his third run but could only manage bronze. Parrot and McMorris doubled Canada's medal count for the Olympics, from two to four. Parrot's feat is sure to inspire: The Quebec native was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma in December 2018 and declared cancer-free in July 2019.

Canada picked up another couple of medals, both bronze, in short track speed skating and ski jumping. Kim Boutin won her second bronze medal in as many Olympic Games in the 500-meter event, logging a time of 42.724. Boutin, who has a world record in the event, was awarded bronze in Pyeongchang, South Korea, despite finishing fourth. It is her fourth Olympic medal.

Meanwhile, the four-person team of Alexandria Loutitt, Matthew Soukup, Abigail Strate and Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes secured Canada's first ski jumping medal in the mixed team event. First- and final-round finishes of 415.4 and 429.2 points, respectively, resulted in 844.6 points — just 8.3 points ahead of fourth-place Japan. Canada was helped onto the podium thanks to Norway, which was in second place after the first round with 457.4 points. But a disastrous second-round finish (just 250.5 points, good for last place) helped the Canadians podium once more.

The women's hockey team had a bizarre day at the rink. Its preliminary-round game vs. the ROC was delayed an hour, reportedly because the Russians did not provide their COVID-19 test results to the Canadians. The teams wore masks on the ice when play did begin. Canada was not distracted by the delay; it scored two goals in 20 seconds two minutes into the first period and rolled to a 6-1 victory. Six different players scored goals. The Canadians held the Russians to 12 shots on net. Up next is the archrival Americans on Monday night in the teams' final Group A game.

Canadian figure skaters came up short on the final day of the team competition. Vanessa James and Eric Radford finished fourth in the pairs free skate, Piper Gillies and Paul Poirier finished third in ice dance, and Madeline Schizas finished third in the women's free skate. That led to a fourth-place overall finish.

There will be no medal for the mixed doubles curling team of John Morris and Rachel Homan after their 8-7 loss to Italy. The duo finished fifth in the round-robin standings at 5-4. Sweden also finished 5-4 but held the head-to-head tiebreaker.

James Crawford just missed out on a medal in the men's downhill. He finished 0.07 seconds behind bronze medalist Matthias Mayer of Austria.

Skiers Valerie Grenier and Cassidy Gray failed to advance to the second round of the giant slalom.

Day 4

Lauren Blouin just missed earning a medal in the women's slopestyle snowboarding final as she placed fourth with a best score of 81.41. In the men's 2x15km skiathlon, Olivier Leveille (+7:32.2) placed 31st, Antonie Cyr (+9:16.2) finished 42nd and Remi Drolet was 57th (lap) in the finals.

The final men's individual normal hill ended with Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes placing 16th (252.6). Matthew Soukup finished 45th (103.0) in the first round of the final and did not advance to the final round. Reid Watts finished 17th in the men's individual luge at +4.558. Sofiane Gagnon and Chloe Dufour-Lapointe both qualified for the second final, but neither advanced to the third round. Dufour-Lapointe finished ninth and Gagnon finished 12th in the event.

Figure skating advanced to the final of the team competition by finishing fourth in qualifying. Canada was one of five teams to move on to the final. Madeline Schizas's third-place finish in the women's free skate earned the team eight points in the competition. Roman Sadovsky earned six points with a fifth-place finish in the men's free skate.

The mixed doubles curling team won again, beating the Czech Republic 7-5. It moved into second place in the round-robin standings at 5-2, behind undefeated Italy. It later lost 10-8 to Australia.

Ted-Jan Bloemen finished 10th in the men's 5,000-meter speed skating final, which was won by Sweden's Nils van der Poel. Mark McMorris qualified for the men's slopestyle snowboarding finals with a score of 83.30 in his second run. He has the second-highest qualifying score.

In the freestyle skiing women's moguls qualification, three Canadians qualified for the final, with Justine Dufour-Lapointe finished at 10th (71.45), Sofiane Gagnon was 11th (75.63) and Chloe Dufour-Lapointe was 16th (70.45).

Day 3

Mikael Kingsbury was unable to defend his Olympic gold medal from 2018 in the men's moguls on Saturday, but he still took home the silver medal behind Sweden's Walter Wallberg. Isabelle Weidemann earned a bronze medal in the women's 3,000-meter speed skating final with a time of 3:58.64. Valerie Maltais was 12th (4:04.27) and Ivanie Blondin was 14th (4:06.40).

Abigail Strate placed 23rd in the women's individual normal hill ski jumping final round, and Alexandria Loutitt was disqualified in the first round of the competition.

Canada was hit with a penalty in the short track speed skating mixed 2000m relay that eliminated the team from medal contention. The team had placed first in its semifinal and came in with the top time in the event. In the biathlon mixed 4x6km relay, Canada finished 14th in the final standings.

Cendrine Browne was 3:44.4 back in the women's 2x7.5 skiathlon in the cross country skiing to place 20th. Katherine Stewart-Jones finished the event in 23rd (+4:03.6), Dahria Beatty was 28th (+4:38.3) and Olivia Bouffard-Nesbitt was 44th (+5:58.0).

Canada's women's hockey team steamrolled its second opponent in a row, this time defeating Finland 11-1. Sarah Nurse and Brianne Jenner each scored a hat trick while Sarah Filler and Laura Stacey scored twice each. Natalie Spooner chipped in with four assists. Combined with their 12-1 victory over Switzerland on Wednesday, the Canadians have outscored opponents 23-2 in their first two games of the tournament.

The curling mixed doubles team dropped a 6-2 decision to Sweden, but later beat the United States 7-2 to move to 4-2 in the round robin.

Snowboarder Laurie Blouin advanced to the final of the women's slopestyle event. Blouin was in seventh place after qualifying with a score of 71.55; the top 12 competitors advanced to the final. Jasmine Baird finished 15th in qualifying and Brooke Voigt was 22nd.

Kirsten Moore-Towers and Michael Marinaro scored 67.34 in the pairs short program to place fifth. Canada moved up to sixth in the mixed team figure skating standings with 16 total points.

In the first run of the individual men's luge, Reid Watts placed 14th in the field of 35. He placed 25th in the second run, moving up to 17th in the overall standings. Jordan Pierre-Gilles and Pascal Dion each placed second in their respective heats at the short track speed skating men's 1000m to each qualify for the quarterfinals. Kim Boutin won her heat at the women's 500m short track speed skating, and Florence Brunelle placed second in her heat.

Day 2

Canada added another win in mixed doubles curling later with a 7-5 win against Switzerland. In the mixed team figure skating, Canada placed eighth in the men's short program qualifications with a score of 71.06 by Roman Sadovsky to earn three team points. Canada added seven more points in the mixed team rhythm dance qualification when Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier scored 82.72 to place fourth, moving Canada up to seventh in the standings.

The curling mixed doubles team also picked up an 8-6 win against China.

Day 1

Canada dropped its first Olympic event, losing to Great Britain in mixed doubles curling 6-4 in the round robin. Canada bounced back with a victory against Norway in curling, winning 7-6. The women's ice hockey team also opened its tournament run with a dominant 12-1 win against Switzerland in Group A.

In the women's moguls freestyle skiing qualifications, Justine Dufour-Lapointe finished 10th to qualify for the finals with a score of 71.45. Chloe Dufour-Lapointe finished 11th at 70.31, just outside the qualifying window. In the men's moguls, Mikael Kingsbury finished first in the qualifications with a score of 81.15. Laurent Dumais was 24th at 69.76, missing qualification for the finals.

Author(s)
Edward Sutelan Photo

Edward Sutelan is a content producer at The Sporting News.