Winter Paralympics daily guide: Three golds to be decided on Thursday

Elizabeth Hudson

BBC Sport journalist

The Winter Paralympics will feature almost 660 athletes from more than 50 countries competing for 79 gold medals at Milan-Cortina.

Competitors will take part in six sports – Para-Alpine skiing, Para-biathlon, Para-cross-country skiing, Para-ice hockey, Para-snowboard and wheelchair curling.

The action started on Wednesday, 4 March with wheelchair curling action, while the the opening ceremony took place in Verona two days later.

Great Britain’s team features 25 athletes – a mix of seasoned campaigners and talented newcomers.

Neil Simpson and guide Rob Poth won GB’s first medal of the Games on Tuesday, clinching silver in the men’s alpine combined.

Here is your guide to what is happening each day and who to look out for.

Day 6: Thursday, 12 March

Medals: Three

Daily highlights

The female skiers take centre stage in Cortina with two giant slalom runs starting at 08:00, with the visually impaired division followed by the standing and seated skiers. Run two follows in the same order from 11:00.

Britain’s Menna Fitzpatrick won silver in the event in Pyeongchang but finished out of the medals in Beijing, where Austrian Veronika Aigner won gold.

Aigner has won three of the four World Cup giant slalom races staged this season, with compatriot Elina Stary taking the other.

Britain’s Hester Poole will be making her Paralympic debut aged 18 with guide Ali Hall.

But she will not be the youngest competitor in the field with American teenager Meg Gustafson, who is guided by her older brother Spencer, only 16.

Four years ago, Ebba Aarsjoe of Sweden was second after the first giant slalom run in the standing division on her Games debut but failed to finish her second run, leaving her bitterly disappointed.

Though she did win gold in both the slalom and super combined and bronze in the downhill, she will be keen to make up for missing out in this event four years ago.

This season she is leading the giant slalom World Cup standings thanks to a pair of wins in St Moritz, but France’s Aurelie Richard and veteran German Andrea Rothfuss will be among those to push her.

Swedish skier Ebba Aarsjoe negotiates a gate during a run at St MoritzGetty Images

The wheelchair curling mixed team round-robin comes to an end. GB finish their campaign against Norway (17:35), who are fourth in the world rankings and include Jostein Stordahl, who is competing at his ninth Games.

Good to know

Para-ice hockey has been part of the Paralympic programme since 1994, but was originally developed in Sweden in the 1960s.

Previously known as sledge hockey, each team has six players on the ice (including the goalie) at a time.

The players use sledges with two blades and two sticks to push themselves and handle the puck, and games consist of three 15-minute periods.

Great Britain competed when the sport made its Games debut – finishing fourth – but their last appearance was in 2006, when a team featuring Richard Whitehead, who later went on to win Paralympic athletics gold in London and Rio, finished seventh.

Day 7: Friday, 13 March

Medals: Nine

Daily highlights

Like the women’s giant slalom, the men’s event is over two runs (from 08:00 and 11:30) with the visually impaired athletes starting each run, followed by standing and seated athletes.

Austria’s Johannes Aigner will be out to retain his title in the visually impaired event but Italian Giacomo Bertagnolli is the world champion and aiming to go one better than Beijing, where he won silver. Canada’s Kalle Ericsson could also figure.

Alpine combined silver medallist Neil Simpson will be hoping to improve on his fifth place from Beijing alongside guide Rob Poth, Fred Warburton goes with guide James Hannan, and it will be an exciting day for 19-year-old Sam Cozens and his guide Adam Hall, who make their first appearance at the Paralympics in the event.

France’s Arthur Bauchet will be aiming to upgrade his bronze from four years ago in the standing event but his compatriot Jules Segers and Robin Cuche of Switzerland will be among the main challengers.

Nordic sit-skier Scott Meenagh in action at the Beijing ParalympicsParalympicsGB

In the wheelchair curling, the mixed team semi-finals take place at 09:05. It will be a quick turnaround for the semi-final losers, with the bronze-medal match at 17:35.

Briton Scott Meenagh completes his Para-biathlon campaign in the men’s sprint pursuit seated event (qualifying 09:15; final 11:45) in which missed shots mean a 20-second time penalty rather than a penalty loop.

Meenagh was seventh at last year’s World Championships and has had three top-eight finishes over the distance in this year’s World Cup races.

In the visually impaired races, Germany’s Leonie Walter and Oleksandr Kazik of Ukraine will be aiming to add the Paralympic title to their 2025 world crowns.

And in the standing division, Canada will be aiming for a double through Natalie Wilkie and five-time Paralympian Mark Arendz, with both landing World Cup wins this season.

Good to know

In Para-biathlon, athletes do not carry their rifles during the skiing stage but receive them at the biathlon range.

Competitors with vision impairments use rifles that make a sound to help them aim. Depending on the signal intensity, the noise indicates when the athlete is on target.

Day 8: Saturday, 14 March

Medals: Ten

Daily highlights

The Para-snowboarders are back in action for their second event – the banked slalom.

Athletes race against the clock down a winding course with tight turns. Each athlete has two runs and the best decides their final ranking.

Nina Sparks will create history as Britain’s first female Paralympic snowboarder in the women’s LL2 event, which starts the day with run one from 09:00 and run two from 10:50.

Ollie Hill won Britain’s first Paralympic medal in the sport with bronze in this event four years ago, and he will go again in the men’s LL2 (Lower Limb) event from 10:06 and 11:56.

Compatriot James Barnes-Miller, who was ninth in Beijing, will aim to challenge for a medal in the men’s UL (upper limb) event but Chinese riders will again be the ones to watch (09:22 and 11:12).

Briton Matt Hamilton makes his Games debut in the same division while Davy Zyw, who is thought to be the first snowsport athlete with motor neurone disease (MND) to compete at the Games, is scheduled to be in action in his second event.

The women’s Para-Alpine skiing programme comes to an end with the slalom across the three divisions – visually impaired, standing and seated – with run one starting at 08:00 and run two from 12:00.

Briton Menna Fitzpatrick narrowly missed out on a medal in this event in Beijing, finishing fourth as Austria’s Veronika Aigner beat older sister Barbara.

Aigner will be favourite to retain her crown but will need to get the better of the likes of compatriot Elina Stary, who leads the World Cup standings, Italy’s Chiara Mazzel and Alexandra Rexova of Slovakia.

Briton Hester Poole goes in the second of her two events with guide Ali Hall, with the teenager hoping to gain more experience of top-level competition.

In the seated division, Germany’s Anna-Lena Forster will hope to power her way to a third title in a row in the event but faces two tough Chinese rivals in Wenjing Zhang – the 2022 silver medallist – and Sitong Liu.

The wheelchair curling tournament comes to its climax with the mixed team final at 14:05.

Good to know

The wheelchair curling events at the 2026 Games are taking place at the Cortina Curling Stadium a couple of weeks after it hosted the Olympics, during which Bruce Mouat’s rink won silver in the men’s event.

The venue was originally built in 1955 for the Cortina d’Ampezzo 1956 Olympic Winter Games, and back then staged the opening ceremony and figure skating competitions.

Day 9: Sunday, 15 March

Medals: Ten

Daily highlights

Para-skier Neil Simpson and guide Rob Poth will be aiming to finish their Games on a high in the men’s visually impaired slalom on the final day of the Paralympic programme.

Run one starts from 08:00 with visually impaired skiers followed by standing and seated, with run two to come at 11:00 in the same order.

Simpson was ninth in this event in Beijing but he and Poth lie fourth in the World Cup standings.

Giacomo Bertagnolli of Italy is defending champion and would like nothing better than to end his home Games with a medal, but Johannes Aigner of Austria is always a danger. France’s Hyacinthe Deleplace and Poland’s Michal Golas have shown good form in World Cup races this season.

Simpson and Poth will be joined on the start line by fellow Britons Sam Cozens and Adam Hall, and Fred Warburton and James Hannan, with Cozens and Warburton aiming to learn more lessons at their debut Games.

It will also be a learning experience for Dom Allen in the standing division, where France’s Arthur Bauchet will be aiming to retain his title and Russia’s Aleksei Bugaev could be among the big dangers. Norway’s Jesper Pederson will hope for back-to-back wins in the seated event.

The Para-cross-country skiing programme comes to an end with a test for both male and female athletes over 20km.

This is the first time the women have raced over the distance at a Paralympics and it will be a brutal examination for everyone at the end of a busy schedule.

Scott Meenagh goes for GB in the seated division but China’s defending champion Peng Zheng and world championship silver medallist Pavlo Bal of Ukraine could be among the frontrunners.

American Jake Adicoff won silver over the distance in Beijing in the men’s visually impaired event and is the current world champion, with Zebastian Modin of Sweden possibly his main rival.

Malik Jones of the USA and Tyler McGregor of Canada battle for the puck in the Para-ice hockey final at the 2022 Winter Paralympics in BeijingGetty Images

It would be a major surprise if the United States and Canada do not figure in the Para-ice hockey final at 15:05, which brings the curtain down on the sporting action at these Games.

The two nations have dominated the sport for many years, with the US going for a fourth title in a row on the back of winning their seventh world title last year.

Canada’s most recent Paralympic gold came in 2006 but they did win the 2024 World Championship.

Good to know

Winter sports attention will switch after these Games to French Alps 2030, which will be the 15th edition of the Winter Paralympics.

They will take place from 1-10 March 2030 – 38 years after the Albertville 1992 Paralympic Winter Games.

France is a Paralympic Games stalwart, having been part of every Winter Games since the first edition in 1976 and also hosting the 2024 Summer Games.

The six sports that were part of this year’s programme will all be in again with plans to split the action between Nice (curling and Para-ice hockey) and the French Alps (Para-Alpine skiing, Para-biathlon, Para-cross-country and Para-snowboard).

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GB curling misery continues with two more losses

Elizabeth Hudson

BBC Sport journalist

The Great Britain wheelchair curling mixed team remain rooted to the foot of the table at the Winter Paralympics in Milan-Cortina with just one victory from eight round-robin games after defeats to China and Latvia on Wednesday.

The GB team’s slim hopes of a semi-final place had disappeared on Tuesday when their loss to Italy, combined with China’s victory over Latvia, meant they could not qualify for the knockout stage.

And although Great Britain played well in the first six ends against the Chinese, who are two-time defending champions, on Wednesday morning in Cortina, a dreadful seventh end saw their opponents steal three to go 9-4 ahead and bring an early end to proceedings.

After conceding four in the opening end on Wednesday night against Latvia, who had won two of their seven games, GB steadied the ship but were 5-4 down after four ends.

Despite getting into good positions, they were unable to execute the shots they wanted at key times and Latvia edged further ahead with three in the next two ends and held firm for an 8-5 success.

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UN Security Council adopts Gulf countries’ draft resolution

NewsFeed

The UN Security Council has passed a resolution put forward by Gulf Cooperation Council members calling on Iran to halt its attacks on Gulf countries. The measure was adopted with 13 votes in favour and two abstentions, while no member states voted against it.

UN Security Council adopts Gulf countries’ draft resolution

NewsFeed

The UN Security Council has passed a resolution put forward by Gulf Cooperation Council members calling on Iran to halt its attacks on Gulf countries. The measure was adopted with 13 votes in favour and two abstentions, while no member states voted against it.

Ecuador prepares for attack on ‘criminal economy’ with Trump backing

The government of Ecuador has announced that, starting this weekend, it is prepared to launch a sweeping military offensive against criminal networks in the country, with the support of the United States.

In an interview on Wednesday with Ecuador’s Radio Centro, Interior Minister John Reimberg framed the upcoming assault as a shift in tactic for the administration of President Daniel Noboa.

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“Last year, we dedicated ourselves to catching all the heads of the [criminal] structures, which led them to fight among themselves for the same criminal economy,” Reimberg said.

“This year, we are going to attack the criminal economy.”

Illegal mining and drug trafficking operations would be among the targets of the latest sweep, the minister added. No further details were provided about the scope of the operations.

Ecuador imposes curfew

Reimberg’s statements follow the announcement of a curfew for four Ecuadorian provinces: El Oro and Guayas along the Pacific coast, plus the eastern central areas of Santo Domingo de los Tsachilas and Los Rios.

The curfew is expected to stretch for more than two weeks, from March 15 through March 30, requiring that residents stay indoors during designated hours.

Should travel be necessary during curfew hours, officials warned that residents must be prepared to show documentation to justify their trip.

In Wednesday’s remarks, Reimberg argued that such restrictions were necessary to avoid civilian casualties.

“We don’t want collateral damage from the attacks we’re going to carry out,” he told the radio show.

“We need the roads clear because there will be troop movements. We need to have the roads clear to be able to carry out the operations.”

Reimberg added that the operation is expected to be of “greater magnitude” than previous crime busts.

“What’s the difference? The force with which we’re going to act,” he said. “Basically and in summary, we are going to destroy.”

Tightening relations with Trump

The curfew was announced on March 2, as President Noboa addressed Ecuador’s national police force.

He told the law enforcement officers to be prepared for increased operations to combat criminal networks in the country: “The next phase of the fight against organised crime begins now.”

Within days of his speech, the US issued a statement confirming that it had launched joint military operations with Ecuador. So far, the US appears to be focused on offering support in the form of military logistics and intelligence.

But the coalition comes as US President Donald Trump pressures Latin American leaders to take more aggressive action against local criminal networks, several of which he labelled “foreign terrorist organisations”.

Trump and Noboa, in particular, have forged a tight bond, with Noboa appearing to echo the US leader’s hardline positions towards countries like Cuba and Colombia.

Noboa recently expelled Cuba’s diplomats from Ecuador, amid a US fuel blockade on the Caribbean island. And as Trump called for Colombia to crack down on its illicit narcotics trade, Noboa imposed tariffs on the country for the same reason.

Top US officials — including outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and the head of the US military’s Southern Command, General Francis Donovan — have also visited Noboa in recent months to discuss regional security.

The Trump administration has said it would like the US to exert its “preeminence” throughout the Western Hemisphere.

It has also attacked Venezuela and dozens of vessels in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean, on the grounds of combatting drug trafficking into the US. Those attacks, however, have been condemned by experts as illegal under international law.

A spike in crime

After coming to power in 2023 for an abbreviated term, Noboa was re-elected in 2025 on a platform based in large part on tackling the growth in Ecuador’s gang activity.

Once considered an area with relatively little violent crime, Ecuador experienced a surge following the COVID-19 pandemic.

Experts say the reasons are multipronged. Ecuador’s economy had been weakened by the pandemic, and youth unemployment was high.

Then, there’s the country’s geography. Ecuador sits between Colombia and Peru, the two largest cocaine producers in the world, and its position on the Pacific Coast made it an attractive port for illicit exports.

That, in turn, has resulted in criminal networks increasingly trying to assert control over Ecuadorian territory and trafficking routes.

Last year, in 2025, Ecuador once again saw a spike in its homicide rate, with an estimated 9,216 murders reported — an increase of more than 30 percent over the preceding year.

In an effort to bring down those numbers, Noboa has resorted to hardline tactics that critics compare to the “mano dura” or “iron-fisted” approach of countries like El Salvador.

Noboa himself has likened Ecuador’s conflict with drug gangs to a “war”. Last year, he unsuccessfully championed a voter referendum to allow foreign military bases on Ecuadorian soil, arguing that such measures are key to stopping drug trafficking.

Ecuador has banned foreign military bases since 2008, in part because of allegations of abuse. The referendum was ultimately defeated.

But the Trump administration had backed the ballot initiative and praised Noboa as a key ally in the US’s ongoing “war on drugs”.

Though no bases will be built, on Wednesday the Trump administration announced that it would be opening its first field office for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in Ecuador.

Norrie wins and may face Alcaraz in quarter-final

Phil Cartwright

BBC Sport journalist

Great Britain’s Cameron Norrie beat Australian qualifier Rinky Hijikata in the last 16 at Indian Wells and could meet world number one Carlos Alcaraz in the quarter-finals.

Norrie is yet to drop a set at this year’s tournament, backing up his win over sixth seed Alex de Minaur in the previous round with an impressive 6-4 6-2 victory over world number 117 Hijikata in one hour and 16 minutes.

The 30-year-old left-hander broke Hijikata’s serve in the opening game of the match and, after wrapping up the first set, broke twice more in the second to race into the last eight.

On his own serve, the 27th seed faced only one break point in the match.

Norrie has a good record at the hard-court event in California.

This is his eighth appearance in the men’s singles and it is the fourth time that he has made it to at least the quarter-final stage.

He won the title in 2021, but lost in the last eight in the following two years.

Alcaraz will hope to secure his quarter-final place against Norwegian 13th seed Casper Ruud later on Wednesday.

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Norrie told BBC Sport he has gained confidence from his results at Indian Wells so far – and also from an “unreal” pre-tournament practice session with world number two Jannik Sinner.

“Since I arrived here, I have been practising unreal,” he said.

“I had a practice with Jannik Sinner, it was my first practice here. We had the centre court and it was meant to be two hours, but we were both having an unreal practice and both enjoying it.

“He’s like, ‘No, come on man, let’s keep going’. I had something to do for the tournament and he had a photoshoot to do, and he was just like, ‘Cancel that’.

“I had to text my agent and postpone my thing and we kept going. I think we played about three hours and 20 minutes.

Meanwhile, British duo Jack Draper and Sonay Kartal are also scheduled to play their last-16 matches later.

Draper, the defending champion at Indian Wells, will face Serbia’s 24-time Grand Slam winner Novak Djokovic.

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