Sochi Winter Olympics Recap — U.S. Ties Norway For Overall Medal Lead
Team USA forged a tie with Norway for the overall medal lead, and Japan won its first Olympic gold medal in men's figure skating. Here's a recap of Friday's action in Sochi:
Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu Wins Figure Skating Gold
Despite falling twice in his free skate program, Yuzuru Hanyu of Japan won his nation's first Olympic gold medal in men's figure skating on Friday. Hanyu, 19, earned the medal in part because he took a nearly four-point lead heading into the final skate.
Canada's Patrick Chan had a chance to claim the gold, but he made several errors during his free skate program and settled for silver. Denis Ten of Kazakhstan won the bronze.
Noelle Pikus-Pace Wins Silver In Skeleton
American Noelle Pikus-Pace won the silver medal in the women's skeleton in the final race of her career on Friday night. The U.S. slider from Eagle Mountain, Utah redeemed herself after narrowly missing a medal in Vancouver in 2010.
Britain's Lizzy Yarnold won the gold, and Russia's Elena Nikitina edged American Katie Uhlaender by .04 seconds for the bronze.
U.S. Struggles In Alpine Events
The United States continued to struggle in the Alpine skiing events, finishing out of the medals in the men's super combined. Sandro Viletta of Switzerland won gold, Ivica Kostelic of Croatia claimed silver and Christof Innerhofer of Italy earned bronze.
Defending champion Bode Miller of the U.S. finished sixth, going wide on his run and pushing himself out of medal contention. World champion Ted Ligety placed 12th for the Americans, who have just one Alpine medal at Sochi.
Canada's Hockey Machine Rolls On
Jeff Carter had a hat trick in the second period alone, and Canada routed Austria, 6-0, in men's hockey at Sochi on Friday. Canadian goalie Roberto Luongo made 23 saves, as the defending Olympic champs continued playing very well in the Olympic hockey tournament.
Elsewhere, Finland beat Norway, 6-1; Sweden topped Switzerland, 1-0 and the Czech Republic stopped Latvia, 4-2.
Medal Count
Noelle Pikus-Pace's silver medal in the women's skeleton allowed the United States to pull into a tie with Norway atop the overall medal count with 13.
Norway (13)
4 gold; 3 silver; 6 bronze
United States (13)
4 gold; 3 silver; 6 bronze
Netherlands (12)
4 gold; 3 silver; 5 bronze
Russia (12)
2 gold; 5 silver; 5 bronze
Canada (11)
4 gold; 5 silver; 2 bronze