THIS MESSAGE (MATERIAL) IS CREATED AND (OR) DISTRIBUTED BY A FOREIGN MASS MEDIA PERFORMING THE FUNCTIONS OF A FOREIGN AGENT AND (OR) A RUSSIAN LEGAL ENTITY PERFORMING THE FUNCTIONS OF A FOREIGN AGENT.
Today, at the Olympics, the Russians won three bronze medals, and they could also have won gold, and they had “two attempts” for it, but our biathletes did not convert them. A little bit doesn’t count.
Luge. Single. Women
1. Natalie Geisenberger (Germany), 2. Anna Berreiter (Germany), 3. Tatyana Ivanova (Russia).
Ski race. Sprint. Men
1. Johannes Klebo (Norway), 2. Federico Pellegrino (Italy), 3. Alexander Terentiev (Russia).
Snowboard. Parallel giant slalom. Men
1. Benjamin Karl (Austria), 2. Tim Mastnak (Slovenia), 3. Vic Wild (Russia).
Biathlon. 20 km individual race. Men
1. Quentin Fillon-Maillet (France), 2. Anton Smolsky (Belarus), 3. Johannes Beh (Norway). Maxim Tsvetkov, unfortunately, has a “wooden” medal.
Ski race. Sprint. Women
1. Yunna Sundling (Sweden), 2. Maya Dahlqvist (Sweden), 3. Jessica Diggins (USA).
Skates. 1 500 meters. Men
1. Kjeld Neiss (Netherlands), 2. Thomas Krol (Netherlands), 3. Kim Min Suk (Korea).
Freestyle. Big air. Women
1. Elin Gu (China), 2. Tess Ledot (France), 3. Mathilde Gremo (Switzerland).
Skiing. Supergiant. Men
1. Matthias Mayer (Austria), 2. Ryan Cochran-Siegl (USA), 3. Alexander Kilde (Norway.)
Curling. Mixed
1. Italy, 2. Norway, 3. Sweden.
The Russians are still leading in terms of the number of awards won – they have 10 of them, but only two “gold”. Therefore, in the unofficial team standings, the Swedes are ahead of all with four gold medals, they also have one silver and one bronze.
Source: Rosbalt

Tristin is an accomplished author and journalist, known for his in-depth and engaging writing on sports. He currently works as a writer at 247 News Agency, where he has established himself as a respected voice in the sports industry.