
Winter Olympics 2018 Schedule: Tuesday TV, Live-Stream Coverage from Pyeongchang
There will be plenty more medals up for grabs at the 2018 Winter Olympics on Tuesday as eight gold-medal events are scheduled to take place in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
The men's 1,500-metre speedskating will be among the highlights, as will the women's 500-metre final in the short-track speedskating.
In luge, the women's singles competition is underway and coming to its conclusion with Runs 3 and 4, while the mixed doubles curling gold-medal match will take place.
There will also be medals available in cross-country skiing.
Here's the schedule for Tuesday's top events, along with viewing information.
Note: Two of the eight gold-medal events have already been completed, with Austrian skier Marcel Hirscher taking top spot in the men's Alpine combined slalom and the United States' Chloe Kim nabbing first in the women's snowboarding halfpipe.
Selected Tuesday Schedule
All times ET.
Cross-Country Skiing
Women's sprint classic final (7:25 a.m.)
Men's sprint classic final (7:34 a.m.)
Curling
Mixed doubles gold-medal game, Canada vs. Switzerland (6:05 a.m.)
Luge
Women's singles Runs 3, 4 (Run 3 underway from 5:30 a.m.)
Short-Track Speedskating
Women's 500-metre final (7:09 a.m.)
Speedskating
Men's 1,500-metre (6 a.m.)
For the full schedule visit the competition website.
In the United States, the action will be streamed via the NBC Sports App. For the NBC schedule click here. Eurosport Player will stream the events for viewers in the United Kingdom.
Tuesday Preview
Zbigniew Brodka will look to defend his gold medal from the 2014 Sochi Games in the men's 1,500-metre speedskating event, but the Pole will face stiff competition from world champion Kjeld Nuis.
Brodka was well off the pace at the 2017 World Single Distance Speedskating Championships in 21st, while Dutchman Nuis claimed gold in the 1,500- and 1,000-metre events, as well as winning both in the ISU Speedskating World Cup.
Koen Verweij, who finished with a silver medal behind Brodka in Sochi by just 0.003 seconds, will also be going for gold after he returned from a year out with a kidney issue.

However, world-record holder Denis Yuskov will not be competing. The Russian, who served a ban for marijuana in the past, was deemed ineligible by the IOC's vetting procedure, and his appeal will not be heard by the Court of Arbitration for Sport until after the Games.
Representing the USA will be veteran Shani Davis, whose eight-year record Yuskov broke, and mass start 2017 World Championships winner Joey Mantia.
In the women's luge, the Germans dominated on Monday as expected, with three representatives in the top four after the first two runs.
Reigning gold medallist Natalie Geisenberger topped the standings ahead of Dajana Eitberger, with Tatjana Huefner behind third-placed Alex Gough of Canada.
American Erin Hamlin is hoping to challenge them for a podium place on Tuesday after finishing in fifth place on Monday. Summer Britcher will also be a threat after producing the best run of the field with her second attempt, per Team USA:
That was only enough to put her in ninth overall after two runs, but she could put herself in contention for a medal if she can carry that momentum into Tuesday's events.

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