Sochi 2014: Day-by-day guide to the Winter Olympics
This page is your guide to the main events, big names and best stories of each day at the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics.
You can access the action across the BBC on television, red button and radio, with up to six live streams available online, connected TVs, mobiles, tablets and the BBC Sport app.
Guidance on BBC Red Button services for the Winter Olympics
All times are scheduled start times, in GMT.
Day three: Monday, 10 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (women's super combined), biathlon (men's pursuit), freestyle skiing (men's moguls), short track speed skating (men's 1500m), speed skating (men's 500m).
“You need to be up early to see Britain's curlers start their Olympics”
Britons in action: GB curling teams, Elise Christie, Charlotte Gilmartin and Jack Whelbourne (short track).
Day in a sentence: A first look at Britain's short track speed skaters.
Highlights include:
05:00 Curling - GB men v Russia. 10:00 GB women v Sweden. 15:00 GB men v Sweden. You need to be up early to see Britain's men. The world bronze medallists, start their Olympic campaign with a round-robin game against hosts Russia. Britain's women face Sweden, the team they beat to win last year's world title, in their first group game.
"It's the one medal that we're missing, we know if we perform as we know we can we'll be close," women's skip Eve Muirhead told BBC Sport in the build-up to Monday's opening ties. Men's counterpart David Murdoch said: "We're giving everything to try and achieve a medal, and I think with this team we're certainly capable."
07:00 Alpine skiing - women's super combined. There has only been one super combined women's World Cup this season, won by Marie-Michele Gagnon, the first Canadian ever to reach the podium in the discipline. However, Maria Hofl-Riesch - Germany's defending world and Olympic champion - is the one to watch.
09:45 Short track - men's 1500m. Jack Whelbourne will be Britain's top male short track prospect at Sochi 2014. However, expect South Korea and Canada to be dominant forces at the Games. Keep an eye out for Russia's Viktor Ahn - he won this event at Turin 2006, while racing for South Korea under the name Ahn Hyun-soo. He changed his name when he switched to Russia ahead of the Sochi Games, citing differences with his Korean coaches.
Elise Christie begins her Olympics in the women's 500m heats. The 1,000m is her strongest race but she wants to be competitive over all three individual distances in Sochi. Christie heads into the Games famed for her carefree, chatty nature on the start line, which can put rivals off: "I think that makes them think I'm not very nervous. 'Oh God, she's fine.' And it's because I am fine. I mean, what's going to happen on the ice is going to happen. I can't do much about it. So I just chat to them about other stuff."
14:00 Freestyle skiing - men's moguls. Canadian duo Mikael Kingsbury and Alex Bilodeau (the winner in Vancouver four years ago) have been utterly dominant in moguls this season. American Patrick Deneen will try to stand in their way during an event which runs late into the Sochi night, but Canada are on a roll after Dufour-Lapointe sisters Justine and Chloe took a one-two in the women's event on Saturday.
Also: Ice hockey (women's group games), luge (women's singles first and second run).
BBC Two
GB v Russia men's curling, women's super combined, 05:00-09:00
Men's curling, women's super combined, short track speed skating & GB v Sweden women's curling, 09:00-12:00
Women's ice hockey, USA v Switzerland & men's curling - GB v Sweden, 13:00-16:10
Men's curling, men's speed skating, men's biathlon, women's luge & men's mogul, 16:10-19:00
Today at the Games, 19:30-20:00
BBC Red Button 1
Today at the Games, 04:00
Men's curling, Russia v GB, 05:00
Women's curling, Sweden v GB, 10:00
Men's speed skating 500m, 13:00 & highlights 19:30
Women's single luge, 16:30
Men's mogul freestyle skiing, 18:00 & highlights 22:00
Women's super-combined downhill repeat, 20:00
Ice hockey highlights, 21:00
Women's short-track relay highlights, 21:30
Today at the Games, 22:30
BBC Red Button 2
Women's super-combined downhill, 06:50 & highlights 12:30
Men & Women's short-track relays, 09:45
Men's mogul, 14:00
Men's curling, Sweden v GB, 15:30
Men's biathlon replay, 18:00
Women's curling, Sweden v GB, repeat 19:25
Best of today's ice hockey, 22:00
Day four: Tuesday, 11 February
Medals won today: Biathlon (women's pursuit), cross country skiing (individual sprints), freestyle skiing (women's slopestyle), luge (women's singles), ski jumping (women), snowboard (men's halfpipe), speed skating (women's 500m).
Britons in action: Andrew Musgrave, Posy Musgrave, Callum Smith and Andrew Young (cross country skiing), GB curling teams, Stacey Kemp and David King (figure skating), Katie Summerhayes (freestyle skiing), Dom Harington and Ben Kilner (snowboard). Depending on earlier results: Amanda Lightfoot (biathlon).
Day in a sentence: Women's ski jump makes its Olympic debut.
Highlights include:
06:00 Freestyle skiing - women's slopestyle. GB's Katie Summerhayes won silver at the last World Cup prior to the Olympic Games, marking a successful injury comeback. X Games champion Tiril Sjastad Christiansen of Norway has withdrawn, leaving Germany's Lisa Zimmermann as a name in the frame for medals. The final begins at 09:00.
10:00 Cross country skiing - individual sprints. Britain's Andrew Musgrave made the front pages of Norwegian newspapers when he won the country's national championships in January, defeating a number of top skiers from the world's leading cross country nation. He wants to reach at least the semi-finals at the Olympics. Can he go further? The final is scheduled for 13:30.
10:00 Snowboard - men's halfpipe. Shaun White has had a busy few years since he won this event at Vancouver 2010: the American has cut his famed "flying tomato" hair, been arrested for vandalism, played guitar in a rock band, and dominated the X Games circuit. Can he win again? Not since 1998 has the United States failed to take Olympic men's halfpipe gold. The final will be at 17:30.
17:30 Ski jump - women. After a court battle and years of pressure, women have at last been given the chance to jump at the Games. This historic contest promises to look stunning under floodlights. Diminutive Japanese teenager Sara Takanashi will be the favourite if American world champion Sarah Hendrickson fails to recover from ligament damage sustained in the autumn.
Also: Curling (group games, GB men v Germany 10:00, GB women v US 15:00), figure skating (pairs short programme), ice hockey (women's group games).
BBC Two
Women's slopestyle, Women's curling, & GB v Germany men's curling, 07:00-12:00
Men's and women's cross-country, speed skating, men's halfpipe, women's curling GB v USA, & men's half-pipe snowboarding, 13:00-16:00
Curling, men's half-pipe snowboarding & figure skating, 16:00-19:00
Today at the Games, 19:00-20:00
BBC Red Button 1
Today at the Games, 04:00
Women's slopestyle, 06:00 & 09:00 & highlights 22:30
Men's halfpipe snowboarding, 10:00
Women's ice hockey, Germany v Sweden, 13:00 & highlights 23:00
Women's curling, GB v USA, 15:00
Women's individual ski jumping, 18:00
Women's speed skating highlights, 23:30
Today at the Games, 00:00
BBC Red Button 2
Ice hockey, 04:00
Women's curling, Russia v USA, 05:00
Men's curling, GB v Germany, 10:00
Women's speed skating, 13:00
Figure skating pairs, 15:45 & highlights 22:00
Women's single luge, 18:30
Women's biathlon highlights, 19:20
Women's slopestyle highlights, 20:00
Men's halfpipe snowboarding repeat, 20:30
Best of today's ice hockey, 21:00 & repeat 00:00
Women's speed skating, 21:30
Day five: Wednesday, 12 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (women's downhill), figure skating (pairs), luge (doubles), Nordic combined (normal hill), snowboard (women's halfpipe), speed skating (men's 1,000m).
Britons in action: Chemmy Alcott (alpine skiing), GB curling teams. Depending on earlier results: Stacey Kemp and David King (figure skating).
Day in a sentence: Without Lindsey Vonn, who will shine on the Sochi slopes?
Highlights include:
07:00 Alpine skiing - women's downhill. Olympic champion Lindsey Vonn pulled out of the Sochi Games at the start of the year as her attempt to overcome a succession of injuries failed. In Vonn's absence, this is an open contest.
Germany's Maria Hofl-Riesch has two World Cup victories to her name this season, with Austrian 2010 bronze medallist Elisabeth Gorgl and Switzerland's Marianne Kaufmann-Abderhalden also recent winners. Despite a dip in form, Slovenia's Tina Maze - a sensation all last season - could feature.
09:30 Nordic combined - men's normal hill. As per its name, this sport combines two events: cross country skiing and ski jumping. "Normal hill" refers to the size of the ski jump, as opposed to large hill (which follows later in the Games). Watch out for Germany's Eric Frenzel, the overall World Cup series champion, who won large hill gold at Vancouver 2010.
15:45 Figure skating - pairs free skate. Today's free skate concludes a pairs contest likely to star Russians Tatiana Volosozhar and Maxim Trankov. Volosozhar switched from Ukraine after Vancouver 2010 to team up with Trankov, and the two won world gold last year. They set a world-record points total in October and will, of course, be on home ice. Germany's Aliona Savchenko and Robin Szolkowy could be their closest rivals for gold.
Also: Curling group games (GB women v Canada 10:00, GB men v Switzerland 15:00), ice hockey group games.
Day six: Thursday, 13 February
Medals won today: Biathlon (men's individual), cross country skiing (women's classic), freestyle skiing (men's slopestyle), luge (team relay), short track speed skating (women's 500m), speed skating (women's 1,000m).
Britons in action: Lee Jackson (biathlon), Posy Musgrave (cross country skiing), GB curling teams, James Woods (freestyle skiing), Jon Eley, Richard Shoebridge and Jack Whelbourne (short track), Shelley Rudman and Lizzy Yarnold (skeleton). Depending on earlier results: Elise Christie and Charlotte Gilmartin (short track).
Day in a sentence: Skeleton begins and James Woods goes for freeski gold as Russia launch their bid to win the Olympic men's ice hockey title.
Highlights include:
06:15 Freestyle skiing - men's slopestyle. Ever since the confirmation of slopestyle's place in the Sochi Games, James "Woodsy" Woods has been labelled a leading British medal contender. Woods, 22, developed his craft on a now-abandoned artificial slope in Sheffield before becoming a world silver medallist and X Games bronze medallist. Can he go one better on his Olympic debut? The final runs from 09:30.
07:30 Skeleton - women's first and second heats. Britain boasts not only the world champion, in Shelley Rudman, but this season's stand-out athlete in Lizzy Yarnold, who has won four World Cup titles in the past few months. British medal hopes could not be higher, but Noelle Pikus-Pace of the US has denied both Rudman and Yarnold on several occasions and may yet take the gold. The event concludes on Friday.
12:30 Ice hockey - men's group games. Hosts Russia have not won the Olympic ice hockey title since the Unified Team, of which they formed a part, triumphed in 1992 after the Soviet Union dissolved. This year's team are under immense pressure to win, but Sweden, Finland, Canada and the US are all major threats. Russia's campaign begins against Slovenia while the US start against Slovakia at the same time. Canada's tournament gets under way against Norway at the later time of 17:00.
16:15 Luge - team relay. In an Olympics packed with new events, luge gets in on the act with the debut of Olympic team relay. Each squad goes in order: female competitor, then male, then the doubles team. Each time an athlete gets to the bottom of the track, they hit a touchpad which releases their next team-mate in line, like a baton change. The fastest overall time wins. Germany, winners of the past 10 relay world titles, are the crushing favourites.
Also: Curling (group games, GB women v China 05:00, GB men v US 10:00), figure skating (men's short programme).
Day seven: Friday, 14 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (men's super combined), biathlon (women's individual), cross country skiing (men's classic), figure skating (men), freestyle skiing (women's aerials), skeleton (women).
Britons in action: Amanda Lightfoot (biathlon), Andrew Musgrave, Callum Smith and Andrew Young (cross country skiing), GB curling teams, Kristan Bromley, Dom Parsons, Shelley Rudman and Lizzy Yarnold (skeleton).
Day in a sentence: Will Lizzy Yarnold or Shelley Rudman emulate Amy Williams and bring home skeleton gold for Britain?
Highlights include:
07:00 Alpine skiing - men's super combined. Ted Ligety has had an up-and-down season, but America's 2013 super combined world champion will be one of the biggest threats in this event. Croatian veteran Ivica Kostelic won one of his three Olympic silver medals in super combined four years ago, and this may be the all-rounder's best chance to reach the top of an Olympic podium.
15:00 Figure skating - men's free skate. Canada's Patrick Chan leads the field for the men's event, which concludes with today's free skate. Chan's closest rivals may be Japanese duo Daisuke Takahashi and Yuzuru Hanyu, with Spain's Javier Fernandez also in the mix. Kazakhstan's Denis Ten, who controversially lost out to Chan for last year's world title, sat out some of the current season but may yet push for a medal in Sochi. Current Olympic champion Evan Lysacek gave up his injury-hit bid to reach Sochi late last year, having failed to produce a single competitive appearance since his victory in Vancouver.
15:40 Skeleton - women's third and fourth heats. At Vancouver 2010, Amy Williams rode a sled named Arthur to victory over the favourite, Canada's Mellisa Hollingsworth. This time around, the Britons are the favourites: world champion Shelley Rudman and World Cup leader Lizzy Yarnold. Can they hold off the pack after a season of success? Expect news of the medals around 17:15.
Also: Curling group games (GB women v Japan 10:00, GB men v Denmark 15:00), ice hockey group games, ski jump (men's large hill qualifying).
Day eight: Saturday, 15 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (women's super-G), cross country skiing (women's relay), short track speed skating (women's 1,500m, men's 1,000m), skeleton (men), ski jump (men's large hill), speed skating (men's 1,500m).
Britons in action: Chemmy Alcott (alpine skiing), GB curling teams, Elise Christie and Charlotte Gilmartin (short track), Kristan Bromley and Dom Parsons (skeleton). Depending on earlier results: Jon Eley, Richard Shoebridge and Jack Whelbourne (short track).
Day in a sentence: Skeleton concludes with the men's event as men's ski jump reaches a peak and the "Miracle on Ice" is relived when US take on Russia in ice hockey.
“Russia and the US, stars of 1980's "Miracle on Ice", meet again in men's ice hockey”
Highlights include:
10:00 Short track - women's 1500m, men's 1,000m. One day after Valentine's Day, Canadian duo Charles Hamelin and Marianne St-Gelais have the chance to recreate some Olympic magic. When he won gold at Vancouver 2010, Hamelin shared a globally televised kiss on the ice with team-mate and girlfriend St-Gelais. Can he reproduce the feat in Sochi? Hamelin is currently the world's leading athlete over today's 1,000m distance.
12:30 Ice hockey - men's group game, US v Russia. The "Miracle on Ice" of the Lake Placid 1980 Games, in which the US defeated the Soviet Union, lingers long in American memories. That was the last time the US won men's ice hockey gold. More than 30 years later, this meeting between two of the tournament's strongest teams, on Russian ice, promises to be an intense and gripping spectacle.
14:45 Skeleton - men's third and fourth heats. It is a day for partnerships - Kristan Bromley, Shelley Rudman's partner, races for Britain in the finale of the men's skeleton. However, beating Latvian legend Martins Dukurs will take some doing. Dukurs has won a string of World Cup races heading into Sochi. He was deprived of gold in 2010 by Canada's Jon Montgomery, who has since failed to qualify for the 2014 Games.
17:30 Ski jump - men's large hill. Poland's Kamil Stoch comes into his third Winter Olympics as a leading contender for his first gold medal, having won the last world title and led the season standings to date. Switzerland's Simon Ammann, who won both individual ski jump titles at both Salt Lake City 2002 and Vancouver 2010, should mount a strong bid for a fifth Olympic win.
Also: Curling group games (GB women v Korea 05:00 and v Switzerland 15:00, GB men v Canada 10:00).
Day nine: Sunday, 16 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (men's super-G), biathlon (men's mass start), cross country skiing (men's relay), snowboard (women's snowboard cross), speed skating (women's 1,500m).
Britons in action: Lamin Deen and Craig Pickering (bobsleigh), GB curling teams, Penny Coomes and Nick Buckland (figure skating), Zoe Gillings (snowboard).
Day in a sentence: Will snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis have another shot at gold?
Highlights include:
05:00 Curling - men's group game, GB v Norway. The only British encounter of the day, as the women played twice on Saturday, pits David Murdoch and his team against a Norwegian line-up famed for their colourful trousers. Norway first made a splash with crazy clothing at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics. Heading into the Sochi Games, a Facebook page dedicated to the trousers had more than half a million likes.
07:00 Snowboard - women's snowboard cross. Britain's Zoe Gillings competes in her third Olympics, having come 15th in her sport's Olympic debut at Turin 2006, then eighth in Vancouver four years later. Gillings suffered a fall at January's X Games in Colorado, where American Lindsey Jacobellis - famed for throwing away the 2006 gold medal when she fell while showboating to victory - raced to a record eighth career victory. The final begins at 09:40.
15:00 Figure skating - ice dance (short dance). This is the first half of the ice dance contest at Sochi 2014, expected to be one of the biggest battles for gold in the sport's history. Canadians Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir are the defending Olympic champions, but American duo Meryl Davis and Charlie White are the 2013 world champions and may have the edge. Nobody else is expected to get a look-in.
Also: Bobsleigh (two-man first and second heats), ice hockey group games.
Day 10: Monday, 17 February
Medals won today: Biathlon (women's mass start), bobsleigh (two-man), figure skating (ice dance), freestyle skiing (men's aerials), ski jump (men's team), snowboard (men's snowboard cross).
Britons in action: Lamin Deen (bobsleigh), GB curling teams. Depending on earlier results: Penny Coomes and Nick Buckland (figure skating).
Day in a sentence: The US versus Canada for ice dance supremacy as bobsleigh's first medals are awarded.
Highlights include:
12:30 Ice hockey - women's semi-finals. US and Canadian teams have dominated women's ice hockey since its introduction to the Olympic programme. In Monday's semi-finals we will see if Sweden, Finland and Russia - all billed as potential contenders - can have any impact on the big two. Watch out for Joy Tottman, a top British referee, who will be officiating at her third Olympic Games.
14:30 Bobsleigh - two-man third and fourth heats. Steven Holcomb has had an extremely successful season for the United States and is the favourite for two-man gold, but will be challenged by Switzerland's Beat Hefti, Russia's Alexander Zubkov and Canada's Lyndon Rush. Winston Watts will pilot the Jamaican two-man sled as his nation makes its first bobsleigh appearance since the Salt Lake City Games of 2002.
15:00 Figure skating - ice dance (free dance). Thirty years ago, the free dance bore witness to Torvill and Dean's Bolero and the birth of a legend. Now, Canada and the US battle for gold while British skaters Penny Coomes and Nick Buckland will be aiming for a top-10 finish. Buckland had heart surgery in October but picked up European bronze with Coomes in January after a remarkable recovery.
Also: Curling group games (GB women v Russia 05:00 and v Denmark 15:00, GB men v China 10:00).
Day 11: Tuesday, 18 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (women's giant slalom), freestyle skiing (men's ski halfpipe), Nordic combined (men's large hill), short track speed skating (women's relay), speed skating (men's 10,000m).
“Violin sensation Vanessa Mae will ski for Thailand in the giant slalom”
Britons in action: Chemmy Alcott (alpine skiing), Paula Walker and Bex Wilson (bobsleigh), Murray Buchan and James Machon (freestyle skiing), Elise Christie, Jon Eley, Charlotte Gilmartin and Jack Whelbourne (short track). Depending on earlier results: GB curling teams.
Day in a sentence: A violinist on skis and a 10km skate to glory.
Highlights include:
07:00 Alpine skiing - women's giant slalom. If you have ever wanted to see techno-acoustic violin sensation Vanessa Mae on skis, now is the time. The 5ft 3in musician, now 35, will ski for Thailand - her father's country of birth - in the giant slalom at Sochi 2014. She is unlikely to be found among the medals, with the likes of Austria's Anna Fenninger, Switzerland's Lara Gut and American Mikaela Shiffrin expected to shine.
09:30 Short track - women's 1,000m heats. This is the main event for Elise Christie, the 23-year-old Scottish skater billed as Britain's best short track hope. Christie must first come through Tuesday's heats before Friday's final rounds - look for her preferred strategy of leading races from start to finish. The women's 3,000m relay event (in which GB does not have a team) is also decided.
13:00 Speed skating - men's 10,000m. The ultimate in long-distance speed skating at the Games, the 10,000m is highly likely to be won by a Dutchman - the Netherlands swept the podium at the 2013 World Championships, also held in Sochi. Having said that, Dutch fans probably felt the same way at Vancouver 2010, only to see hero Sven Kramer disqualified for a lane violation having finished first.
Also: Bobsleigh (women's first and second heats), curling (tie-breakers if required), ice hockey (classification matches).
Day 12: Wednesday, 19 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (men's giant slalom), biathlon (mixed relay), bobsleigh (women's), cross country skiing (team sprints), snowboard (parallel giant slalom), speed skating (women's 5,000m).
Britons in action: Dave Ryding (alpine skiing), Paula Walker and Bex Wilson (bobsleigh), Andrew Musgrave and Andrew Young (cross country skiing), Jenna McCorkell (figure skating). Depending on earlier results: GB curling teams.
Day in a sentence: Lolo Jones completes her maiden outing as a US Olympic bobsleigher after finishing fourth in the 100m hurdles at London 2012.
Highlights include:
14:30 Biathlon - mixed relay. The first time a mixed-gender biathlon event has been held at the Olympic Games, featuring three loops of a 2km course for women and three 2.5km loops for men. Teams contain two women and two men. Host Russia will be under pressure to perform after considerable investment from oligarch Mikhail Prokhorov, but the Czech Republic won this season's only World Cup mixed relay to date, ahead of Norway.
16:15 Bobsleigh - women's third and fourth heats. Paula Walker and brakewoman Bex Wilson are the British entrants in the women's bobsleigh event, with Canadian pilot Kaillie Humphries the pre-race favourite. Watch out for US sprinters-turned-brakewomen Lolo Jones and Lauryn Williams, though another American crew - Elana Meyers and Aja Evans - may be best-placed to challenge for gold.
10:00 Curling - semi-finals. Neither of the British teams reached the semi-finals at Vancouver 2010, with Eve Muirhead's women a disappointing seventh after the round-robin stage and David Murdoch's men fifth. Based on their recent performances at world and European championships, both teams are expected to reach the final four in Sochi. Women's semis take place from 10:00 and the men's semis from 15:00.
Also: Figure skating (women's short programme), ice hockey (men's quarter-finals).
Day 13: Thursday, 20 February
Medals won today: Curling (women), figure skating (women), freestyle skiing (men's ski cross, women's ski halfpipe), ice hockey (women), Nordic combined (team).
Britons in action: Rowan Cheshire and Emma Lonsdale (freestyle skiing). Depending on earlier results: GB curling teams, Jenna McCorkell (figure skating).
Day in a sentence: Several of the biggest women's events at the Games reach their conclusion.
Highlights include:
13:30 Curling - women's final. Sweden triumphed over hosts Canada at Vancouver 2010 and are once again odds-on to reach the final in Sochi, having taken Scotland all the way at last year's World Championships before Eve Muirhead and her team came through to win world gold. Canada and the United States will also have a good chance of making it this far. The bronze-medal play-off begins at 08:30.
14:30 Freestyle skiing - women's halfpipe. Rowan Cheshire, 18, became the first British woman to win a halfpipe World Cup title when she triumphed in Calgary one month before the Games. American skier Maddie Bowman - an X Games champion - and Switzerland's world champion Virginie Faivre will be contenders for gold. The late Canadian freeskier Sarah Burke, who died after a training crash in early 2012, will be held in the memory of competitors in Sochi.
15:00 Figure skating - women's free skate. The final competitive action of the 2014 Olympic figure skating tournament is the women's free skate. South Korea's Yuna Kim is the favourite for Olympic gold despite missing some of the 2013-14 Grand Prix season through injury, with Japan's Mao Asada another leading candidate, while Russian 15-year-old Julia Lipnitskaia should also impress.
17:00 Ice hockey - women's final. Canada's women caused controversy in 2010 when they returned to the ice wielding champagne, beer and cigars in celebration after their victory over the US. However, the US overpowered Canada 3-2 in last year's World Championships - once again on Canadian ice, in Ottawa - to establish their credentials for Sochi 2014. First, both must reach Thursday's final, which is likely but not quite guaranteed.
Day 14: Friday, 21 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (women's slalom), biathlon (women's relay), curling (men), freestyle skiing (women's ski cross), short track speed skating (women's 1,000m, men's 500m, men's relay).
Britons in action: Depending on earlier results: GB curling teams, Elise Christie, Jon Eley, Charlotte Gilmartin and Jack Whelbourne (short track).
Day in a sentence: Elise Christie and David Murdoch lead British medal opportunities but American eyes will be trained on the women's slalom.
Highlights include:
12:45 Alpine skiing - women's slalom. Mikaela Shiffrin is the Colorado 18-year-old thrust into the NBC network's spotlight in the absence of Lindsey Vonn. The slalom is her main event and the teenager is already the world champion - can she deliver gold at her first Games? Austria's Marlies Schild has World Cup wins to her name this season and could challenge, as might Tina Maze and Maria Hofl-Riesch.
13:30 Curling - men's final. David Murdoch has twice been to a major world final and won, but the last time was in 2009. Can he win an Olympic medal for the first time on behalf of Great Britain? The men's medal matches take place on Friday and Murdoch will be hoping to improve on fourth in Turin eight years ago, then fifth at Vancouver 2010. Sweden are the world champions going into Sochi, defeating Canada last year in a tournament where Scotland won bronze.
16:30 Short track - women's 1,000m final. Elise Christie will have one of the last major opportunities for a British medal at the Winter Olympics if, as expected, she goes in the latter stages of the women's 1,000m contest. China's Wang Meng, who won the Olympic title in Vancouver, dropped out of Sochi with a broken ankle - but several South Korean skaters, alongside Italy's Arianna Fontana and Canada's Valerie Maltais, will rival Christie for medals.
Also: Ice hockey (men's semi-finals), speed skating (team pursuit knockout stages).
Day 15: Saturday, 22 February
Medals won today: Alpine skiing (men's slalom), biathlon (men's relay), cross country skiing (women's mass start), ice hockey (men's bronze), snowboard (parallel slalom), speed skating (team pursuit).
Britons in action: Dave Ryding (alpine skiing), John Baines, Stuart Benson, Lamin Deen, Joel Fearon, John Jackson, Craig Pickering, Benjamin Simpson and Bruce Tasker (bobsleigh).
Day in a sentence: Men's slalom concludes the Sochi 2014 alpine skiing programme on the Games' penultimate day.
“The team pursuit is speed skating's head-to-head knockout contest”
Highlights include:
05:15 Snowboard - parallel slalom. Making its debut at Sochi 2014, the parallel slalom is contested by many of the athletes who take part in the similarly named parallel giant slalom. The difference here, as in alpine skiing, is the distance between the gates is shorter in slalom than in giant slalom. Riders race each other down separate but identical courses to determine a winner. Watch out for Justin Reiter, the US competitor who has been living in his own truck. Finals from 10:45 GMT.
12:45 Alpine skiing - men's slalom. Austria's Marcel Hirscher is the reigning world champion and has been a regular presence on the World Cup podium all season. Having narrowly missed out on a medal at Vancouver 2010, the slalom - Sochi 2014's last alpine event - could be Hirscher's last chance for another four years. France's Alexis Pinturault and Germany's Felix Neureuther are in with a chance, while Europa Cup champion Dave Ryding goes for Britain.
13:30 Speed skating - team pursuit. The team pursuit is speed skating's head-to-head knockout contest, after an Olympic Games otherwise dominated by time trials. Like track cycling, your team of skaters must get around the course (eight laps for men, six for women) before your rivals lined up on the other side of the ice. The Dutch are the women's favourites in the absence of Germany, who failed to qualify, while the US will give the Netherlands a fight for men's gold.
Also: Bobsleigh (four-man first and second heats).
Day 16: Sunday, 23 February
Medals won today: Bobsleigh (four-man), cross country skiing (men's mass start), ice hockey (men's gold).
Britons in action: John Baines, Stuart Benson, Lamin Deen, Joel Fearon, John Jackson, Craig Pickering, Benjamin Simpson and Bruce Tasker (bobsleigh), Andrew Musgrave (cross country skiing).
Day in a sentence: The men's ice hockey final wraps up Sochi's Olympics ahead of the closing ceremony.
Highlights include:
07:00 Cross country skiing - men's mass start. The last skiing event of the 2014 Winter Olympics is the straightforward mass start, the longest distance race of any sport at the Games. Athletes start together, ski for 50km and the first across the line wins. Norwegian superstar and favourite Petter Northug has long maintained a fierce (if light-hearted) rivalry with his Swedish neighbours, whose hopes here are led by Johan Olsson.
09:30 Bobsleigh - four-man third and fourth heats. John Jackson has faced a tough year of recovery from a ruptured Achilles tendon to reach this point, but the GB pilot won silver at a World Cup in Lake Placid at the back end of 2013, suggesting he still has a chance of pulling off a remarkable comeback in Sochi. That said, Steven Holcomb of the US will be the favourite alongside Germany's Maximilian Arndt.
12:00 Ice hockey - men's final. One gold medal is left to be won by this point, and it may well be the most important for at least two nations. Canadians cannot consider a Winter Olympics to be a success if they have not claimed hockey gold, while Russia's players are under immense pressure to replicate the Soviet team's successes and triumph on home ice. Will they reach the final? Who will earn four years of glory?
16:00 Closing ceremony. The last action of the Sochi Olympic Games features speeches, the lowering of the Olympic flag and a ceremonial handing-over to Pyeongchang, South Korea, which will host the next Winter Games in 2018. However, Sochi's Games are by no means over - the Winter Paralympics begin on 7 March and run until 16 March, featuring a number of British medal prospects.
If you missed any of the action you can catch up with the BBC's coverage on iPlayer.
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