GB’s Treacy crashes out but women’s curling hopes stay alive

GB’s Treacy crashes out but women’s curling hopes stay alive

Emma Smith

BBC Sport journalist at Milano Ice Skating Arena

Team GB’s Niall Treacy suffered his third crash in as many short track speed skating events as his Winter Olympics ended when he failed to progress from the 500m heats.

The only British representative in short track, Treacy surprisingly reached the 1500m final on Saturday but crashed out and then also fell in the 1,000m heats.

The 25-year-old says the shortest distance is his least favourite, declaring himself to be “not a natural sprinter”.

Treacy had a wobbly start as he was clipped on the opening corner by South Korea’s Rim Jong-un – an 18-year-old high school student who won bronze in the 1,000m – to require a restart.

But there was no reprieve for Treacy, as he skidded out midway through the full race under no pressure.

It ends British interest in short track, and the sport has struggled since losing £4.8m in UK Sport funding after failing to win a medal at PyeongChang 2018.

GB sent a team of five to short track events eight years ago – but that is down to one in Milan.

Dutchman Jens van’T Wout, who has already won both the 1,000m and 1500m, remains in the hunt for a golden treble after avoiding a mass pile-up to win his heat.

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Richard Winton

BBC Sport in Cortina

Team GB’s women curlers delivered their best stuff in the biggest moment as they beat Denmark 7-2 to keep alive their semi-final hopes at Milan-Cortina 2026.

Having lost three of their opening four matches, Rebecca Morrison’s rink woke up on Monday not just in northern Italy but also in must-win territory.

Realistically, they need victories in at least four of their final five matches to have any chance of salvaging a place in Friday’s last four – and they began that quest well.

An aggressive start was rewarded with an early 2-0 advantage and the British rink maintained that to lead 3-2 at the break.

Another fine two-point haul in the sixth, followed by a steal in the seventh, opened up a four-point gap with three ends to play.

The Scottish quartet managed the rest of the contest admirably to close out the game with two ends to spare and add to their previous win over world champions Canada.

The women are back on the ice against the Swiss at 18:05 GMT, but before then the men resume their round-robin campaign against Norway at 13:05.

Women's curling tableBBC Sport

‘Back to the drawing board’ for Hall & Lawrence

Brad Hall and Taylor Lawrence compete for Team GB in bobsleigh at Olympics in CortinaGetty Images

British two-man bobsleigh team Brad Hall and Taylor Lawrence suffered a disappointing start to their Olympic campaign – now sitting eighth at the halfway point of the competition.

Their combined time of 1:51:54 after two heats leaves them 1.64 seconds off the pace of German team Johannes Lochner and Georg Fleischhauer in top spot with two more German teams occupying the other podium places before Tuesday’s medal-deciding runs.

Hall and Lawrence, who is a serving Royal Marine, were unable to improve on their run-one position after a heavy bump near the top of the track on their second heat led to more errors and a struggle to make up time.

“It was definitely a very difficult day. The track is extremely difficult to be consistent down, especially in a bobsleigh,” said Hall, who is GB’s most decorated bobsleigh World Cup pilot.

“We didn’t quite do well enough on our second run, we lost quite a bit of time to some and gained on others. We need to go back to the drawing board and see what we can do better tomorrow.”

Winter Olympics 2026

6-22 February

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Related topics

  • Short Track Skating
  • Curling
  • Winter Sports
  • Bobsleigh
  • Winter Olympics

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Source: BBC
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