What could have been a magic Monday for Team GB ended rather muted.

It started with an agonising fourth-place finish for skier Kirsty Muir in the slopestyle final, and finished the same for Mia Brookes in the snowboard big air – sandwiching a missed opportunity for a guaranteed curling medal for Bruce Mouat and Jen Dodds in the mixed doubles.

But it was so close to glory for Brookes, a backside 1620 trick – featuring four and a half rotations – landed before she over-rotated and her heel edge caught in the snow.

“That was a gold,” reported Ed Leigh on BBC Sport commentary.

“She so nearly held on to it. It would have been a world first in competition.”

Instead, the 19-year-old finished just off the podium with a combined score of 159.50 from her opening two runs.

Japan’s world champion Kokomo Murase won her maiden Olympic gold with 179 points, with New Zealand’s Zoi Sadowski Synnott and South Korean Yu Seungeun taking silver and bronze.

“It was insane. Obviously I’m bummed I couldn’t land that last trick,” Brookes told BBC Sport, later revealing it was the first time she had attempted it on snow.

“I had too much spin on it, which I didn’t think I would. Maybe I should have done an 1800 instead!”

Brookes is one of the biggest names in her sport and, despite her tender age, already has a medal collection that most would be jealous of.

In 2023, she became the sport’s youngest senior world champion with slopestyle gold in Georgia, a victory sealed by landing the first Cab 1440 double grab in a women’s event.

She has since become a two-time gold medallist at the X Games, an invitation-only event widely seen as the holy grail of action sports.

There are few athletes – if any – among Team GB’s ranks who have cut a more chilled out figure than Brookes at these Games so far.

An Olympic medal is not something she has ever “craved”, but the magnitude of this global event has perhaps hit home and she is “pretty excited” for another shot at a medal in the slopestyle, which starts with qualifying on 16 February.

“I’m hyped for it, everything good can come from it. I’m in a good headspace and ready to to do slopestyle.”

Mia Brookes rests on her snowboardImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Mia Brookes is making her Olympic debut in 2026

Curlers spurn chance to secure GB’s first medal

Media caption,

GB’s Dodds and Mouat suffer semi-final blow as Sweden advance into curling final

ByRichard Winton

BBC Sport in Cortina

Earlier, Dodds and Mouat spurned the chance to guarantee Team GB’s first medal of the 2026 Winter Olympics – and stirred up bad memories of missing out four years ago – in a surprise 9-3 mixed doubles curling semi-final defeat by Sweden.

Victory would have assured the British pair – who were imperious in the round-robin stage and topped the standings – of at least silver in Cortina.

But they faltered at the wrong time, and instead will come back here on Tuesday (13:05 GMT) to face hosts and defending world and Olympic champions Italy for bronze – live on the BBC – needing victory to avoid the same fate they suffered in 2022.

“We’re really gutted,” Mouat told BBC Sport. “We’ve had such a good week and it was quite exciting for us to go into this game feeling the way we were.

“But to come out and not even play close to the way we wanted to is hard to put into words really. They were the better team today.”

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At the Beijing Games, Dodds and Mouat blew a semi-final lead against Norway before losing to the inspired Swedes in the bronze-medal match.

Both Scots had spoken in the build-up about using that as fuel this time but, although this was a different Swedish pair, the outcome was the same.

The British duo had seen off Rasmus and Isabella Wranaa with relative ease on Friday, but the siblings started strongly and just got stronger in a flawless display.

They restricted GB to one in a scrappy first end, taking two themselves in the second, and stealing another in the third.

Dodds and Mouat were just not quite at it, their shots not quite coming off and the margins going against them. The Swedes could not miss, but the GB pair did. Time and again. Not by much, but by enough.

The fourth end again only brought one, leaving them trailing 3-2 at the interval, but then Dodds – the best women’s player here all week – belatedly found her touch.

The 34-year-old spied the chance to take out two Swedish stones. Mouat and coach Greg Drummond were wary. But Dodds was adamant she could execute. And she did.

The Swedes still had a chance to take one, but Isabella Wranaa erred for once and GB stole one to level the contest.

It turned out to be a brief flash of hope, though. Poor throws from both Dodds and Mouat left them chasing in the sixth end and their ruthless opponents took full advantage by taking five. It was a decisive moment.

Sweden were never likely to lose such a huge lead in the remaining two ends, and so it proved. The British pair, chasing a big score in the seventh, couldn’t find a miracle, gave up one more point, and shook hands with an end to spare.

“We don’t want this to affect our chances of a medal tomorrow so we’ll speak about the things that need to be spoken about and corrected and we’ll come out firing tomorrow,” Dodds told BBC Sport.

Muir misses out on Olympic medal by 0.41 points

Media caption,

Muir narrowly misses out on medal in slopestyle

ByKatie Falkingham

BBC Sport Senior Journalist in Livigno

The British agony had started earlier on in the day when freestyle skier Muir missed out on a medal by the narrowest of margins with her fourth-place finish in the women’s slopestyle.

Muir scored 76.05 points with a brilliant third run, finishing only 0.41 behind Canadian bronze medallist Megan Oldham in Livigno.

Having fallen on the penultimate jump of her opening run, Muir – who had qualified third – sat in sixth after her second.

But despite a vastly improved performance on her final attempt, a crestfallen Muir was left wanting more on the biggest stage.

“I put it out there on every run,” the 21-year-old told BBC Sport.

“I was so proud to put one down. I struggled to accept how close it was, but I know I’ve got more in me.”

In a final that demonstrated the strength of women’s freestyle skiing, Mathilde Gremaud successfully defended her Olympic title by only 0.38 points.

China’s Eileen Gu – the world’s fourth highest-paid female athlete in 2025 but arguably a bigger star off the slopes through her modelling and brand endorsements – took silver, but crashed on her final run to allow Gremaud a victory lap.

Gremaud soaked up her moment, a Switzerland flag tied around her neck and billowing in the wind as she floated down the course.

Media caption,

‘I struggled to accept how close it was’ – Muir reacts to missing out on medal

Muir is one of Team GB’s best medal hopes at the Milan-Cortina Games, and has another shot at the podium when she competes in the big air starting on Saturday.

“I just need to have a moment to process. I don’t want to dwell on it too much,” she reported.

“I’ve got at least a day or so until I hit the big air. I’m going to go through this, accept it and try and find the positives that I can from it, and then completely reset because the big air is just a completely different competition.”

Media caption,

Gremaud beats Gu to become back-to-back Olympic champion

Fear and Gibson fourth at ice dance halfway mark

Media caption,

Fear and Gibson in comfortable fourth after first ice dance event

ByEmma Smith

BBC Sport journalist at Milano Ice Skating Arena

At the end of a downbeat day for Team GB, Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson failed to match their performance in the team event as they began their quest to become Great Britain’s first Olympic figure skating medallists since Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean in 1994.

They scored 84.57 in the rhythm dance, lower than their season best recorded in Milan on Friday. It leaves them fourth – 0.71 off the podium – going into Wednesday’s free dance where the medals will be decided.

Performing to their popular Spice Girls medley, Fear, 26, lost her balance slightly on the sequential twizzles. But they brought it back big time in the rhythm sequence and concluding rotational lift to keep themselves in the podium hunt. They will perform in tartan to a Scottish-inspired routine on Wednesday.

In gold medal position are France’s Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron, who set a season best with a huge score, 90.18. Cizeron won the Olympic title four years ago with Gabriela Papadakis, with who he has since had a very acrimonious split.

He partnered with Fournier Beaudry in November, who herself needed a new partner in controversial circumstances when her boyfriend Nikolaj Sorensen was suspended amid sexual assault allegations, external. She has since publicly defended Sorensen,, external who has denied wrongdoing.

On the ice, Fournier Beaudry and Cizeron stormed to gold at the European Championships and are right in the mix for the Olympic title. Despite being ranked 25th in the world and performing sixth on the night, they held top spot for more than two hours after a technically perfect display to Madonna’s Vogue.

USA husband and wife Madison Chock and Evan Bates – who have already won gold in the team event and are three-time world champions – are in silver position after the final performance of the night scored 89.72.

Britain’s biggest rivals for a medal are likely to be Canada’s Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier, who are currently third with 86.18.

Italy’s Charlene Guignard and Marco Fabbri, who live and train in Fabbri’s home town of Milan, were very popular with the home fans but slightly underperformed. Their score of 84.28 leaves them in fifth.

Fear and Gibson’s compatriots James Hernandez and Phebe Bekker put on a season-best showing to secure their place in Wednesday’s final.

The duo, on Olympic debut, scored 72.46 with a clean rhythm dance performance to a George Michael soundtrack, ensuring they will return for the free skate.

It continues the young couple’s good form following an 11th place finish in January’s European Championship for Bekker, 20, and 24-year-old Hernandez.

Lilah Fear and Lewis GibsonImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson are aiming for Britain’s first Olympic figure skating medal in 32 years

Winter Olympics 2026

6-22 February

Milan-Cortina

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