Curling Bronze Showdown: Stolz Returns | Analysis by Brian Moineau

A busy Saturday at the Games: bronze curling, Stolz back on the ice, and more drama

The sound of stones colliding and blades slicing ice — that’s the rhythm of a Winter Games Saturday. Milan Cortina delivered a little bit of everything: an emotional bronze-medal curling matchup between the U.S. and Canada, Jordan Stolz returning to the ice with Olympic expectations on his shoulders, and a slew of results that kept the medal table in constant motion. If you want a snapshot of why these Games feel so alive, this Saturday was your primer.

Why this day mattered

  • Curling’s bronze match wasn’t just another consolation game. Team USA was playing for its first-ever Olympic women’s curling medal — and Canada, led by Rachel Homan, came in as the favorite and a standard-bearer for the sport.
  • Jordan Stolz’s return to competition kept the spotlight on one of the Olympics’ breakout stars. After earlier wins, every race he skated carried the possibility of history — and the inevitable weight of expectation.
  • Beyond those headline stories, Saturday’s slate illustrated a recurring theme in Milan Cortina: veteran experience meeting youthful audacity, and the small margins that separate podium glory from heartbreak.

Highlights from the day

  • Canada beat Team USA 10–7 to claim bronze in the women’s curling. It was a back-and-forth match that turned decisively in Canada’s favor in the middle ends, when a three-point end opened a gap the Americans couldn’t fully close. For the U.S., finishing fourth tied its best Olympic result in women’s curling; for Canada, it was the sport’s long-awaited return to the podium. (See coverage from NBC Olympics and Sports Illustrated.) (nbcolympics.com)

  • Jordan Stolz continued to be the storyline in speed skating. The 21-year-old American—already a multiple-world champion and Olympic gold medalist at these Games—returned to contest additional distances, drawing comparisons to historic U.S. skaters and stoking talk of multi-gold runs. Broadcasters and previews framed him as a potential multi-event champion and a face of these Games. (nbcolympics.com)

  • The day’s action reinforced an Olympic truth: momentum swings fast. One missed draw, one tactical miscue, or one perfectly timed sprint can rewrite a team’s destiny — whether that’s a curling squad aiming for history or a skater chasing another podium.

What the curling result tells us

  • Experience and composure won out. Rachel Homan’s Canadian rink leaned on its pedigree in the middle ends, turning a close early game into a comfortable margin.
  • Team USA showed it belonged in the conversation. Reaching the bronze match — and matching the country’s best Olympic finish in the sport — marks clear progress for U.S. women’s curling and gives the program momentum heading into the next Olympic cycle.
  • The margin for error at this level is tiny. A couple of misses in a crucial end were enough to tilt the game; that’s the kind of lesson teams study for years.

What Stolz’s presence means for the Games

  • He’s both an engine and a measuring stick. Stolz’s run of fast times and record-setting performances has energized U.S. speed skating and raised the competitive bar for rivals.
  • The “Stolz effect” radiates beyond medals. Young athletes and broadcasters alike gravitate to storylines of a young phenom chasing historic marks — which helps put speed skating and these Games in front of a broader audience.
  • Pressure is real — and in sport, it’s a two-edged sword. Exceptional athletes thrive on it, but every return-to-race after a big win invites fresh scrutiny. That tension makes for compelling viewing.

Quick takeaways from Saturday

  • Canada’s women’s curling program remains elite; the bronze was a reminder of depth and consistent execution.
  • Team USA’s fourth place in women’s curling is progress — painful in the short term, promising for the long term.
  • Jordan Stolz is the signature individual story of these Games: potential history-maker, headline magnet, and a focus for both fans and competitors.

My take

There’s something electric about a day that mixes team strategy (curling) with individual brilliance (speed skating). Saturday captured the Olympics’ dual identity: intimate tactical battles where a single shot matters, and broad heroic narratives where athletes chase their place in history. Team USA left Cortina with both frustration and optimism — a fourth-place finish stings, but it also signals that U.S. curling is closing the gap. And Stolz? He’s both a measuring stick for rivals and a reminder that the next Olympic legend can emerge at any age.

Sources

(News coverage and live updates consulted to shape perspective and context for this recap.)




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.

Shiffrin’s Fifth Straight Slalom Triumph | Analysis by Brian Moineau

Mikaela Shiffrin’s night in Semmering: five-from-five and a reminder that dominance still has edges

There are performances that look effortless on paper and fights that reveal a champion’s guts. Sunday night in Semmering gave us both. Mikaela Shiffrin — the skier who has made technical alpine racing look like a science — added another headline to an already absurd résumé, but this win came with grit, complaint and a reminder that even the best can be pushed to the limit. (fis-ski.com)

Why this race mattered

  • Shiffrin won the Semmering slalom to make it five wins from five slalom starts this 2025–26 season — a perfect start in the discipline that keeps the “Mother of Slalom” label feeling earned. (fis-ski.com)
  • It was career World Cup victory number 106 for Shiffrin, and her sixth consecutive slalom win counting the final race of last season — milestones that stack up into historical territory. (reuters.com)
  • The race was not a stroll: tricky snow, course debates and a razor-thin margin of 0.09 seconds to Camille Rast made this one of the tougher tests she’s faced this season. (fis-ski.com)

The night unfolded like this

The first run felt chaotic. Softer, breaking snow left the lower section especially treacherous and the field visibly frustrated; many racers struggled and race officials even tweaked the course before the second run after skier input. Shiffrin herself called the piste “pretty rotten” and later said parts of the course were “past the limit.” (fis-ski.com)

Shiffrin came out for run two with a different tone — more urgency, fresher aggression. Where the first descent left her fourth and 0.54 seconds behind the leader, her second run was a strategic, full‑throttle masterclass: crisp, snappy turns and one fewer mistake than her nearest rival. That was enough to claw back the deficit and edge ahead by 0.09 seconds for the win. (fis-ski.com)

Camille Rast pushed hard all night and nearly nudged Shiffrin off the top; Lara Colturi continued her breakout season with another podium for Albania, and the race felt like a microcosm of the shifting slalom guard — brilliance from Shiffrin, but not uncontested. (fis-ski.com)

What this says about Shiffrin right now

  • Consistency and adaptability: Winning five slaloms from five starts is about more than speed — it’s judgment, recovery and the ability to read conditions and opponents. This Semmering win highlighted all three when it counted. (fis-ski.com)
  • Experience under pressure: Several rivals matched or even outskied her at points, but Shiffrin’s race management and capacity to deliver when it mattered turned a tense night into another victory. (reuters.com)
  • The narrative is changing around the field: younger names like Lara Colturi are no longer surprises but real threats; Camille Rast’s form shows that margins are getting thinner. That’s good for the sport and makes future matchups more compelling. (fis-ski.com)

The controversy and safety question

This wasn’t just a drama about timing. Skiers criticized the condition of the piste — Shiffrin included — saying parts of the course were beyond acceptable limits and that the snow was breaking down early in the start list. Officials adjusted the course, but the episode revived conversation about athlete safety, course setting and how organizers should respond in night races when temperature swings can wreck the surface. Those debates will likely follow into the next events. (fis-ski.com)

What to watch next

  • Kranjska Gora on 4 January will be the first slalom after the New Year and the next chance to measure whether this perfect slalom run continues. The pressure is accumulating on competitors to find a way past Shiffrin — and on organisers to deliver fair, safe racing. (fis-ski.com)
  • The duel between established dominance (Shiffrin) and rising stars (Colturi, Rast) will be the storyline to follow; the slalom podium is tightening into a true battlefield. (snowindustrynews.com)

My take

Shiffrin’s win in Semmering felt like a hallmark of greatness: not the effortless triumph that becomes a comfortable stat, but a teeth‑gritted, high‑stakes reply to adversity. That’s compelling sport. The race also underlined an important tension for alpine skiing in 2025–26 — the thrill of elite performance versus the real need for consistent, athlete‑first course management. If we get more nights like Semmering, we’ll get drama and historic numbers, but we’ll also have to keep asking where the safety line is drawn.

Sources




Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.


Related update: We recently published an article that expands on this topic: read the latest post.