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15.2.26

Winter Olympics TV schedule today: How to watch every event on Sunday

12:22:00 AM
Winter Olympics TV schedule today: How to watch every event on Sunday

The 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics are off and running with 16 sports taking over 25 different venues. Here's a look at the TV schedule for Sunday, Feb. 15 and how to watch all the action. The games are exclusively airing across NBC's suite of networks with many events airing live on its streaming service, Peacock, which you cansign up for here.

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USA TODAY Sports has a team of more than a dozen journalists on the ground in Italy to bring you behind the scenes with Team USA and keep you up to date with every medal win, big moment and triumphant finish. Get ourChasing Gold newsletterin your inbox every morning andjoin our WhatsApp channelto get the latest updates right in your texts.

All times Eastern and accurate as of Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026, at 2:02 p.m.

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Feb. 15 Winter Olympics TV Schedule

  • 1:00 AM - PRIMETIME IN MILAN (REPLAY) Cross-Country Skiing, Alpine Skiing, Speed Skating NBC, PEACOCK

  • 1:00 AM - BIATHLON (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Women's 7.5km Sprint USA NETWORK

  • 2:00 AM - SPEED SKATING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's 500m USA NETWORK

  • 2:45 AM - FREESTYLE SKIING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Women's Dual Moguls Final USA NETWORK

  • 3:30 AM - ALPINE SKIING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's Giant Slalom: Run 2 Final USA NETWORK

  • 4:00 AM - ALPINE SKIING (LIVE) Women's Giant Slalom: Run 1 USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 4:30 AM - FREESTYLE SKIING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Men's Dual Moguls Final USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 6:00 AM - CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Men's 4x7.5km Relay USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 6:10 AM - ICE HOCKEY: Switzerland vs Czechia (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round CNBC, PEACOCK

  • 7:00 AM - CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's 4x7.5km Relay NBC

  • 7:30 AM - 2026 WINTER OLYMPICS COVERAGE (LIVE) USA NETWORK

  • 7:30 AM - ALPINE SKIING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Women's Giant Slalom: Run 2 Final NBC, PEACOCK

  • 7:45 AM - SNOWBOARDING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Mixed Team Cross Final USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 8:30 AM - CURLING: United States vs China (LIVE) Women's Preliminary Round CNBC

  • 8:30 AM - SNOWBOARDING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Mixed Team Cross Final NBC

  • 8:45 AM - BIATHLON (LIVE) (Medal Event) Women's 10km Pursuit NBC, PEACOCK

  • 8:45 AM - SKI JUMPING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's Large Hill USA NETWORK

  • 9:30 AM - BIATHLON (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's 12.5km Pursuit USA NETWORK

  • 9:30 AM - BOBSLED (REPLAY) Women's Singles: Heat 1 NBC

  • 10:00 AM - SPEED SKATING (LIVE) Men's Team Pursuit Qualification, Women's 500m NBC, PEACOCK

  • 10:30 AM - BOBSLED (REPLAY) Women's Singles: Heat 2 NBC

  • 10:40 AM - ICE HOCKEY: Canada vs France (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 11:00 AM - CURLING: United States vs Sweden (REPLAY) Men's Preliminary Round CNBC

  • 11:00 AM - SPEED SKATING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Women's 500m NBC, PEACOCK

  • 11:45 AM - BIATHLON (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's 12.5km Pursuit NBC

  • 12:30 PM - FREESTYLE SKIING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's Dual Moguls Final NBC

  • 1:00 PM - SNOWBOARDING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Mixed Team Cross Final USA NETWORK

  • 1:10 PM - ICE HOCKEY: Denmark vs Latvia (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round CNBC, PEACOCK

  • 1:15 PM - SKELETON (LIVE) (Medal Event) Mixed Team NBC

  • 1:30 PM - FIGURE SKATING PREVIEW (LIVE) USA NETWORK

  • 1:30 PM - FREESTYLE SKIING (LIVE) Men's Big Air Qualification NBC, PEACOCK

  • 1:45 PM - FIGURE SKATING (LIVE) Pairs' Short Program USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 3:00 PM - FIGURE SKATING (LIVE) Pairs' Short Program NBC

  • 3:10 PM - ICE HOCKEY: United States vs Germany (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round USA NETWORK, PEACOCK

  • 3:30 PM - CURLING: Denmark vs Italy (REPLAY) Women's Preliminary Round CNBC

  • 5:30 PM - BIATHLON (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's 12.5km Pursuit USA NETWORK

  • 6:00 PM - ICE HOCKEY: Canada vs France (REPLAY) Men's Preliminary Round CNBC

  • 6:15 PM - CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Men's 4x7.5km Relay USA NETWORK

  • 7:15 PM - BIATHLON (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Women's 10km Pursuit USA NETWORK

  • 8:00 PM - PRIMETIME IN MILAN (REPLAY) Speed Skating, Alpine Skiing, Figure Skating, and more NBC, PEACOCK

  • 8:00 PM - CURLING: Norway vs United States (REPLAY) Men's Preliminary Round CNBC

  • 8:00 PM - SKI JUMPING (REPLAY) (Medal Event) Women's Large Hill USA NETWORK

  • 8:45 PM - ICE HOCKEY: Denmark vs Latvia (REPLAY) Men's Preliminary Round USA NETWORK

  • 10:15 PM - BOBSLED (REPLAY) Women's Singles: Heat 1 & 2 USA NETWORK

  • 11:00 PM - ICE HOCKEY: United States vs Germany (REPLAY) Men's Preliminary Round USA NETWORK

  • 11:35 PM - OLYMPIC LATE NIGHT (REPLAY) Snowboarding, Freestyle Skiing, and more NBC, PEACOCK

Feb. 15 Winter Olympics Streaming Schedule

Sign up for Peacock here

  • 3:05 AM - CURLING: Germany vs Great Britain (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 3:05 AM - CURLING: Norway vs Italy (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 3:05 AM - CURLING: United States vs Sweden (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 4:00 AM - BOBSLED (LIVE) Women's Singles: Heat 1 and 2 PEACOCK

  • 5:15 AM - BIATHLON (LIVE) (Medal Event) Men's 12.5km Pursuit PEACOCK

  • 8:00 AM - GOLD ZONE: DAY 9 (LIVE) Digital Exclusive PEACOCK

  • 8:05 AM - CURLING: Japan vs South Korea (LIVE) Women's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 8:05 AM - CURLING: United States vs China (LIVE) Women's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 8:05 AM - CURLING: Denmark vs Italy (LIVE) Women's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 8:05 AM - CURLING: Great Britain vs Sweden (LIVE) Women's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 12:00 PM - SKELETON (LIVE) (Medal Event) Mixed Team PEACOCK

  • 12:45 PM - SKI JUMPING (LIVE) (Medal Event) Women's Large Hill PEACOCK

  • 1:05 PM - CURLING: Italy vs Czechia (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 1:05 PM - CURLING: Great Britain vs Switzerland (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 1:05 PM - CURLING: China vs Canada (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

  • 1:05 PM - CURLING: Norway vs United States (LIVE) Men's Preliminary Round PEACOCK

Meet Team USA 2026:Get to know the athletes behind the games

More 2026 Winter Olympics

See the full Milano Cortina Games schedule

See the 2026 Medal Count Here

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Winter Olympics TV schedule today: How to watch every event on Sunday

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Anthony Kim's comeback complete with stunning LIV Golf win at Adelaide

12:22:00 AM
Anthony Kim's comeback complete with stunning LIV Golf win at Adelaide

Anthony Kim added a stunning-yet-true chapter to his storybook return to professional golf by winning LIV Golf Adelaide on Sunday.

The 40-year-old American came from five strokes back after three rounds with an emphatic three-shot victory after his bogey-free round of 9-under 63 at The Grange Golf Club.

"I really don't know what to say right now," said Kim, who has been open and honest about his past struggles and how he got sober. "It's been overwhelming. I'm never not going to fight for my family. God gave me a talent and I was able to produce some good golf today. I knew it was coming. Nobody else has to believe in me but me. For anybody who's struggling, you can get through anything."

The build-up to Sunday focused on Jon Rahm of Spain and American Bryson DeChambeau, co-leaders at 19 under after three rounds and arguably LIV Golf's biggest stars. Kim, at 14 under, was somewhere out of the frame even though he was in third place.

The current stars were basically left in his dust, as Kim carded birdies at Nos. 4, 5, 7 and 9, then a run from Nos. 12-15 and on the par-4 No. 17 as an exclamation point to his first professional win in nearly 16 years since the 2010 Shell Houston Open on the PGA Tour.

"I knew this was going to happen, but for it actually happen is pretty insane," Kim said. "Thank you to everyone that's been in my corner. I'm going to keep doing it."

Rahm shot 1-under 71 for finish three strokes back at 20 under for his second consecutive second-place finish. His unremarkable round featured birdies at Nos. 4 and 16 -- both par-4 holes -- and a bogey at the par-4 No. 8.

"In a weird way, as a competitor, I probably shouldn't say this, but that was a joy to watch," Rahm said of Kim. "To see that image on 18 of him hugging his wife and daughter, any man with a soul is going to have a soft spot for that. I was almost tearing up."

DeChambeau posted a 2-over 74 to fall to a tie for third with England's Tyrrell Hatton (67 on Sunday) and Peter Uihlein (68) of the United States.

DeChambeau encountered trouble on the front nine with bogeys at Nos. 2, 3, 6 and 7. He birdied the first two holes of the back nine and made par on the rest.

Kim's bogey-free effort -- which tied the course record -- followed rounds of 67, 67 and 68 with a total of three bogeys and one eagle in the third round at the par-5 No. 9. He also collected the $4 million prize for first place.

His tournament performance is all the more impressive because of his journey to be in this position, which was his first start as a member of 4Aces GC.

Kim joined Dustin Johnson's LIV Golf team before the second event of the 2026 season, replacing Patrick Reed on a full-time basis.

The one-time rising star, who turned pro in 2006, returned from a 12-year hiatus in 2024 and played the past two seasons on this tour as a wild card. However, he was relegated after the 2025 season and had to go through the Promotions event, where he made the cut on the number before finishing third to regain his place in the league.

But it wasn't until Reed announced his intention to return to the PGA Tour that a spot on a team finally opened up for Kim. It wasn't an automatic yes for Kim, who said he was drawn to the 4Aces because he likes Johnson and fellow new teammates Thomas Pieters and LIV newcomer Thomas Detry.

A three-time winner across six seasons on the PGA Tour in his 20s, Kim had Achilles tendon surgery in 2012 and has been open about his rehab from drug and alcohol addiction during his hiatus from professional golf.

Kim failed to finish better than 36th and placed 50th or worse in five of 11 LIV Golf events in 2024. He played in 13 events last year, with a T25 in Dallas and a T29 in Miami his only finishes better than T44.

Kim wound up in the relegation zone, and it appeared his LIV Golf days could be numbered. But he rebounded to earn a wild-card spot in the Promotions event and then was signed to 4Aces after opening the season with a T22 in Riyadh last week.

In addition to his T22 last week, Kim closed out 2025 with a T5 at the PIF Saudi International. He has risen from 4,221st in the Official World Golf Ranking two years ago to No. 847, and that climb can continue with LIV players now receiving world rankings points for top-10 finishes. The win Sunday will boost Kim that much more up the rankings.

"If it wasn't one of us this week, to have (Kim) win here in Adelaide at our premier event is pretty cool," said Cameron Smith, team captain of all-Australian Ripper GC. "I'm so happy for him. He's worked hard. I actually played with Anthony his first round back in Saudi a few years ago, and it was scrappy to say the least, and I was very skeptical at the start. But what he's been able to do over the past couple of seasons and dig deep and grind out and then do what he did today is pretty special."

Ripper GC claimed the team title at 55 under after a 15 under on Sunday. Lucas Herbert (69) tied for third individually at 16 under and Smith (70) tied for eighth.

Rahm's Legion XIII placed second at 53 under after 8 under on the day, and 4Aces GC, boosted by Kim's winning effort, finished third at 52 under.

--Field Level Media

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Whether in the kitchen or on the ice, US Olympic bobsledder Frank Del Duca is cooking

12:22:00 AM
Whether in the kitchen or on the ice, US Olympic bobsledder Frank Del Duca is cooking

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — Frank Del Duca is proud of his bolognese sauce. He's always tinkering with his meatball recipe, searching for the elusive perfect ratio of everything. His first job was making pizza, he raves about his lasagna, and he knows the best Italian dishes have just a few ingredients.

TheMilan Cortina Gamesare 4,000 miles from Del Duca's house in Maine.

He feels right at home.

The pilot of the USA-1bobsled— chosen by his peers to be one of the two U.S. flag bearers whenthese games opened— is, as one might have guessed, an Italian American, with three of his four grandparents hailing from the country where the Olympics are taking place. And Monday, he'll compete on the soil of their homeland, in the field with brakeman Josh Williamson for the start of the two-man competition in Cortina d'Ampezzo.

"I like that the track is in Italy," Del Duca said. "I really do, for many reasons."

Del Duca — now a two-time Olympian in two- and four-man racing — is coming off a pair of fourth-place finishes in last year's world championships. And right now, fourth place tends to be the limit for most men's bobsleds; first, second and third seem to always go to Germany, which won 38 of a possible 42 medals on the World Cup circuit this season.

In Italy, Del Duca's heritage could serve as added inspiration. He doesn't skip any steps; he prepares as diligently for a World Cup race in November as he does for the Olympic Games. But he makes no secret that these races carry extra meaning.

"I don't know that he gets the credit he deserves," U.S. women's pilot Elana Meyers Taylor said.

How $40 almost changed everything

He was a state high school skiing champion in Maine, then walked onto the University of Maine's track team. Del Duca thought he would become a professional strength and conditioning coach, but the money coming in wasn't matching the money that had to go out. Student loans and other bills were choking him, so he moved in with a friend.

His room, such as it was, had a futon mattress on the floor and a dresser.

"That was it," Del Duca said.

He wanted to try out for USA Bobsled by going to one of its combines, which is fancy way of saying some physical testing. Athletes get measured by their power, speed and explosiveness, to see if they have what it takes to get a sled going down a hill.

The registration fee was $40. Del Duca didn't have an extra $40.

"I've come from a bit of a struggle," Del Duca said. His family didn't even know he was sleeping on a floor, much less that he needed the $40. Eventually, the money got scraped together. He went to the combine. He made the team.

It wasn't the first time the cost of bobsled would require some sacrifice.

"He may not be a five-time gold medalist," said Haley Del Duca, the slider's wife. "But he works like one."

His dream car had to go

One of the ways Del Deca — a bit of a speed freak — made money back then was to pick up cars or scooters, fix them up and then flip them for a little bit of profit.

Eventually, he got his hands on a 2002 Audi TT, a six-speed with 225 horsepower, a car that could go from 0 to 60 mph in less than 7 seconds. His dream car. He loved that car. He didn't want to sell the car.

But he wanted to be a bobsled pilot. And runners, the steel tubes on the bottom of sleds, are expensive. The car was an asset. The runners were a need. He sold the car for $4,500, which was enough to put a deposit down on a set of runners.

"That tells you how cheap my dream car was," Del Duca said, "and how expensive runners can be."

The Army gave him opportunity

Del Duca is now a sergeant in the U.S. Army, part of its World Class Athlete Program. There are no fewer than nine current U.S. Olympic sliders and coaches who are, or were, part of WCAP — which provides athletes with some of the financial backing they need to compete.

The military salary helped Del Duca buy the right equipment, allowed him to eat better, to not stress as much about day-to-day life.

"They've been extremely supportive," Del Duca said. "It's an honor and I'm so grateful to serve my country and represent my country with the military, with the Army and then with Team USA."

Being the driver of USA-1 comes with responsibility. The late Steven Holcomb — an Olympic champion and generally considered the best American bobsledder ever — held that role when Del Duca was just breaking into the sport. Del Duca still has some of Holcomb's tools in his equipment box, partially as a tribute, partially because he wants to feel like Holcomb is always with him.

Holcomb was the leader, whether dealing with men's or women's sliders. Del Duca, quietly, assumes that same role now.

The Olympic team selection process wasn't easy on Meyers Taylor. She was a lock for the team, but the decision about who would be in her two-woman sled was contentious. The U.S. selection committee wound up going with rookie Jadin O'Brien, which led to some hurt feelings and appeal proceedings from other athletes. Meyers Taylor was in the center of it all. And a few days ago, she basically broke down.

"I consider myself a strong person. But I have my moments of weakness, too," Meyers Taylor said. "So, one day, we were in sports medicine. I am trying to just relax and trying to put everything behind me. But I completely lost it, like an ugly cry, breaking down. And Frankie just gets up slowly. Just turns to me and just gives me a hug. And he will not let go until I let go."

Her makeup was smearing his shirt. He didn't care.

"Everything's going to be OK," he kept telling her. Meyers Taylor, finally, felt better.

"That's the kind of person he is," she said.

It is fitting, in a way, that Del Duca and Meyers Taylor still have those moments together. He took his first bobsled ride way back when with her as a pilot. Little did either of them know what they were starting.

Much like with cooking, there was trial and error. But now, he's got it just about figured out.

"In the beginning, I didn't see Olympic medals or the Olympics. I saw a lot of ups and downs," Del Duca said. "When I started driving, I felt comfortable. It set my soul on fire and that's when I felt that I was doing what I was really supposed to do."

AP Olympics:https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

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14.2.26

Cannabis smoke fills the air as Nepal marks Shivaratri festival

11:42:00 PM
Cannabis smoke fills the air as Nepal marks Shivaratri festival

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — Hindu holy men and mostly young devotees openly puffed on cannabis smoke on Sunday, marking one of Nepal's biggest annual festivals.

Tens of thousands lined up to pray at the Pashupatinath, the temple of the Hindu god Shiva in the capital Kathmandu, during theShivaratri festival.

Marijuana is usually banned in the South Asian country, but exceptions are made to celebrate Shiva, who has strong links to the practice and has often been depicted smoking pot.

Devotees prayed and danced to religious songs at the temple, a landmark for Hindus who constitute about 81% of Nepal's population. Others from neighboring India also traveled to Kathmandu for the festival.

Across the Bagmati River from the temple, holy men with their bodies smeared in ashes could be seen smoking marijuana, as well as many Nepali men and some women, on the forested Bankali hills.

Generally, the use of marijuana in Nepal is punishable by prison sentences of up to a month for users and 10 years for traffickers.

Nepal was famous for marijuana and other narcotics in the 1960s, when hippies made their way to the Himalayan nation. Shops and tea houses used to advertise and sell it legally. However, marijuana was outlawed in 1976.

There have beenefforts to decriminalize marijuanain Nepal by both campaigners and parliament members to legalize its farming and use, but progress has stalled.

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Israeli airstrikes kill 9 in Gaza, including tent camp, Palestinian officials say

11:42:00 PM
Israeli airstrikes kill 9 in Gaza, including tent camp, Palestinian officials say

By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Steven Scheer

Reuters Mourners react during the funeral of Palestinians killed in an overnight Israeli strike, according to medics, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, February 15, 2026. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed Mourners react during the funeral of Palestinians killed in an overnight Israeli strike, according to medics, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, February 15, 2026. Reuters/Ramadan Abed Mourners attend the funeral of Palestinians killed in an overnight Israeli strike, according to medics, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, February 15, 2026. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed

Funeral of Palestinians killed in an overnight Israeli strike, according to medics, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis

CAIRO/JERUSALEM, Feb 15 (Reuters) - At least nine Palestinians were killed in Israeli airstrikes in the northern and southern Gaza Strip ‌on Sunday, Palestinian civil defence and health officials said, in what Israel's military ‌called a response to Hamas ceasefire violations.

Medics said an Israeli airstrike on a tent encampment housing displaced families ​killed at least four people, while health officials said another strike killed five in Khan Younis in the south.

"In recent hours, the IDF has begun striking in response to Hamas's blatant violation of the ceasefire agreement yesterday in the Beit Hanoun area," an Israeli military official ‌said, adding that "terrorists emerged from ⁠a tunnel east of the yellow line".

The official called Sunday's strikes "precise" and in line with international law, and said the Palestinian militant group ⁠had committed more than six violations of an October ceasefire, including deploying east of the "Yellow Line" agreed under the ceasefire to demarcate Israeli- and Hamas-controlled areas.

"Crossing the yellow line in the ​vicinity of ​IDF troops, while armed, is an explicit ceasefire ​violation - and demonstrates how Hamas systematically violates ‌the ceasefire agreement with intent to harm IDF troops," the official said.

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Israel and Hamas have repeatedly accused each other of violating the ceasefire deal, a key element of U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to end the Gaza war.

On Saturday, the military said it had identified armed "terrorists" near IDF personnel operating in the northern Gaza Strip.

The IDF said it continued ‌to destroy underground tunnels in the northern Gaza ​Strip in accordance with the agreement.

It said it observed ​several gunmen emerging from what it ​said was a tunnel and entering beneath the rubble of a ‌building east of the Yellow Line.

The military ​said Air Force aircraft ​had attacked the building and eliminated two gunmen and that it was likely that additional militants were eliminated in the strike.

The Gaza health ministry said at least ​600 Palestinians have been ‌killed by Israeli fire since the Gaza deal began. Israel said four soldiers ​were killed by militants in Gaza over the same period.

(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi ​and Steven Scheer; Editing by William Mallard)

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