Friday 20 February
12.00: Ski cross, ladies final. Sandra Näslund will try to defend her Olympic gold and is the gold favorite. She has come back in a fantastic way after the injury problems and impressed greatly in this winter’s World Cup with five victories.
14.15: Biathlon, men’s mass start 15 km. Last chance for a medal for Samuelsson and Ponsiluoma.
19.05: Curling, men’s bronze match. Niklas Edin & co can be here, but would rather play on Sunday as it is the final.
Saturday 21 February
11.00: Cross-country skiing, men’s 50 km mass start. Will this be William Poromaa’s day? A classic-style five-mile should be fine for him.
12.00: Ski cross, men’s final. Brothers Erik and David Mobärg have hopes of a medal. Big brother Erik was fourth in the last Olympics and David has shown good form in the World Cup with, among other things, a podium place.
14.05: Curling, ladies bronze match. Anna Hasselborg, Sara McManus, Agnes Knochenhauer and Sofia Schabrak can be included here.
14.15: Biathlon, ladies mass start 12.5 km. Elvira Öberg won her first major individual gold last year when she won the mass start in the WC. She, like sister Hanna and Anna Magnusson, is great hope here.
19.05: Curling, men’s final. Can Niklas Edin’s team defend the gold from the Beijing Olympics? The EC gold earlier this winter bodes well.
20.40: Ice hockey, men’s bronze medal match. Tre Kronor may well be included here – or have they managed to make it to the final?
Sunday 22 February
10.00: Cross-country skiing, ladies 50 km mass start. Frida Karlsson won the WC gold in the five mile last year – can she repeat it now? She faces stiff competition, including from other Swedes.
11.05: Curling, ladies final. Team Hasselborg is of course looking for the gold. In 2018 they won and four years ago it was bronze.
14.10: Ice hockey, men’s final. Lillehammer 1994, Turin 2006 – will Milan 2026 be a new milestone in Swedish hockey history? The dream would be to defeat Canada’s superstars here.