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How to Watch Friday’s Winter Olympics: A Complete TV Schedule and Streaming Guide

For fans following every medal chase and arena-defining routine, the Los Angeles Times presents an updated TV schedule for Friday’s Winter Olympics action — including broadcast windows, streaming options and must-see matchups so you don’t miss a moment.

Friday at a Glance: Highlights and Prime-Time Events

Friday’s slate delivers a balanced mix of morning qualifiers, afternoon finals and a dramatic prime-time lineup. Expect technical alpine runs early, explosive speed skating heats midday, and evening showpieces that include top-tier ice hockey and the ladies’ free skate. Networks will rotate live coverage with analyst breakdowns, behind-the-scenes segments and athlete features to keep viewers engaged throughout the day.

Top events to bookmark (Eastern Time)

  • 10:00 AM ET — Women’s Slalom Qualifiers (Alpine)
  • 1:30 PM ET — Men’s 500 m Speed Skating Heats
  • 4:00 PM ET — Men’s Skeleton Final Runs
  • 7:00 PM ET (Prime Time) — Ice Hockey: USA vs. Canada
  • 9:30 PM ET — Ladies’ Free Skate (Figure Skating)
Start Time (ET) Event Where to Watch
10:00 AM Women’s Slalom Qualifiers NBC / Peacock
1:30 PM Men’s 500 m Speed Skating Heats USA Network
4:00 PM Men’s Skeleton Final MSNBC
7:00 PM Ice Hockey: USA vs. Canada NBC
9:30 PM Figure Skating – Ladies’ Free Skate NBC

Must-Watch Competitions and Athletes to Follow

This Friday features several narrative-driven contests that could change the medal table. Watch for experienced defenders and emerging challengers as rivalries intensify.

Who to watch

Defending downhill champion Luca Moretti (Italy) enters the day with pressure to repeat, while Japan’s Mina Sato — coming off a streak of World Cup podiums — looks poised to push the established favorites. On the ice, the reigning ice-dance pair Anna Korhonen and Viktor Kuznetsov are scheduled to perform their free program to a contemporary piece, a routine widely anticipated by judges and fans alike.

In the halfpipe, American rising talent Harper Nguyen impressed in qualifying and will face seasoned competitors like Swiss veteran Noah Steiner and Canada’s Maya Dupont, making the final a true test of risk and consistency.

  • Men’s Downhill Final: Luca Moretti / Mina Sato
  • Ice Dance Free Program: Anna Korhonen & Viktor Kuznetsov
  • Women’s Snowboard Halfpipe: Harper Nguyen, Noah Steiner, Maya Dupont
Event Time (ET) Channel
Men’s Downhill Final 10:30 AM NBC
Ice Dance Free Program 7:00 PM Olympic Channel
Women’s Snowboard Halfpipe Final 9:00 PM ESPN

Practical Streaming Advice: Apps, Services and Scheduling

With coverage spread across linear networks and digital platforms, viewers benefit from a deliberate plan. Consolidation services and the official broadcasters’ apps are the simplest way to follow multiple events without juggling dozens of channels.

Recommended platforms

  • Peacock — simulcasts NBC’s live coverage and offers on-demand clips.
  • Hulu + Live TV and YouTube TV — useful for combining networks and setting reminders across channels.
  • Olympics.com / Olympic Channel — reliable for live streams, highlights and region-specific schedules.
  • Sling TV, Fubo and ESPN apps — additional options for catching select events, depending on your package.

Tips to avoid missing key moments

  1. Use platform reminder features or subscribe to push notifications for specific events or athletes.
  2. Sync event start times to your phone calendar (Google Calendar, Apple Calendar) so you receive automatic alerts.
  3. Keep backup streams ready: if one app experiences buffering, switch to the network’s alternate stream or the Olympic Channel.
  4. Consider cloud DVR or on-demand playback if you can’t watch live — many services keep event replays for several hours to days after broadcast.

Sample personal-viewing template

Event Primary Channel Streaming Service Start Time (ET)
Men’s Alpine Skiing NBC Peacock 10:00 AM
Figure Skating Pairs USA Network Hulu + Live TV 1:30 PM
Ice Hockey — Women’s Final Olympic Channel Olympics.com 4:00 PM

Network Breakdown: Where Major Events Will Air

Major U.S. networks are splitting coverage to reach the widest audience possible. NBC remains the primary home for marquee evening events, while cable partners and streaming platforms carry additional heats and niche competitions.

Event Type Likely Network Typical Broadcast Window (ET)
Figure Skating (Finals) NBC 7:00 PM – 11:00 PM
Snowboarding Finals ESPN / ABC 8:30 PM – 10:30 PM
Cross-Country & Nordic Events ABC / Olympic Channel 12:00 PM – 4:00 PM
  • Tip: Check local listings and your cable/streaming provider’s guide for preemptions and late-breaking schedule changes.
  • Tip: Follow official network social accounts for real-time updates, clips and results summaries.

Why Friday Matters: Context and Viewing Trends

Friday often shapes weekend storytelling at the Games: standout performances can become headline narratives, while surprise upsets influence team strategies for subsequent events. In recent editions of the Winter Olympics, digital viewership has risen markedly — driving broadcasters to expand online offerings and highlights packages so fans can catch pivotal moments on demand.

Whether you’re watching for national pride, technical mastery, or edge-of-your-seat finishes, Friday’s combination of morning qualifiers, afternoon finals and prime-time showdowns makes it an essential day for both casual viewers and dedicated followers.

Final Notes

Plan ahead, set reminders and choose the streaming setup that fits your routine. For ongoing schedules, real-time updates and expert analysis, keep checking the Los Angeles Times’ Winter Olympics coverage throughout the Games. Enjoy the competition — and may the best athletes win.

A journalism icon known for his courage and integrity.

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