NBC Olympics Schedule 2022: Event Guide, Live-Stream Info and Tuesday Picks
NBC Olympics Schedule 2022: Event Guide, Live-Stream Info and Tuesday Picks

Alex Hall will lead Team USA into the finals of the Big Air competition, streaming Tuesday night on Peacock and NBCOlympics.com.
The competitor will be joined by Colby Stevenson and Mac Forehand as the Americans seek to add to their Olympic medal count.
Elsewhere, the Russian Olympic Committee looks to shake off its rough start in women's hockey and take down the 2018 bronze medalists, Finland.
What other events are lined up for Tuesday? Find out now with this preview of the day's action and where and when you can stream it.
Event Schedule

Women's Hockey Preliminary
Russian Olympic Committee vs. Finland (8:00 a.m., Peacock)
Sweden vs. Denmark (8:00 a.m., Peacock)
Luge: Women's Singles
Final Run (8:30 a.m., USA and Peacock)
Speed Skating
Men's 1500m (9 a.m., USA and Peacock)
Biathlon
Biathlon: Men's 20K (10:30 a.m., USA and Peacock)
Snowboarding: Parallel Giant Slalom
M/W Finals (12:00 p.m., USA and Peacock; Re-air)
Women's Snowboard Cross Finals (1:30 a.m., USA and Peacock)
Mixed Doubles Curling: Medal Games
Gold-Medal Match: Norway vs. Italy (12:00 p.m., USA and Peacock; Re-airs CNBC at 8:00 p.m)
Bronze-Medal Match: Sweden vs. Great Britain (5:00 p.m., Peacock)
Freestyle Skiing
Women's Big Air Final (5:00 p.m., USA, Re-air)
Alpine Skiing
Men's Event Super G (5:30 p.m., USA, Re-air)
Figure Skating
Men's Event Short Program (6:30 p.m., USA, Re-air)
Luge
Women's Event Third, Final Runs (7:30 p.m., USA, Re-air)
Snowboarding
Women's Halfpipe Qualifying (8:30 p.m., USA and Peacock)
Alpine Skiing
Women's Event Slalom Run 1 (9:15 p.m., Peacock)
Freestyle Skiing
Men's Big Air Final (10:00 p.m., Peacock)
Snowboarding
Women's Snowboard Cross Qualifying (1:00 a.m., USA and Peacock)
Cross-Country Skiing
Individual Sprint Finals Freestyle (11:30 p.m., USA, Re-air)
Snowboarding
Men's Halfpipe Qualifying (11:30 p.m., Peacock)
All events also stream on NBCOlympics.com
Prediction: Women's Hockey

The Russian Olympic Committee will have the opportunity to make up for two early blowout losses to the United States and Canada when it looks for its first win of the Games, against Finland.
The ROC team has yet to medal in women's hockey and, beyond that accomplishment, is seeking respect on an international stage. Running up against the two most celebrated and decorated teams in the Olympics wasn't the ideal start for achieving such a feat.
Outscored 11-1 thus far, it will have the chance to atone for that when it faces a Finnish team that has been outscored 11-3 against the American and Canadian teams.
It will not be easy for the ROC squad, though.
Finland has won three bronze medals in the team's history, including one in 2018. The team they beat for that medal? The ROC.
However, the lack of offensive output in the ROC team is a concern.
Look for them to get physical in pursuit of the win that has eluded them to this point, but Finland have the greater Olympic experience in women's hockey.
Prediction: Finland defeats ROC
Prediction: Men's Big Air Final

Big Air Skiing makes its debut in the Olympics this year, with a competitive field vying to etch their names in the history books as the first to take home a gold medal.
Alex Hall is fresh off an X-Games win in the event, and momentum is on Team USA's side as it fields three competitors in the finals.
None of those three are the top qualifier.
That distinction belongs to Norway's Birk Ruud, who will look to collect his country's 10th gold in freestyle skiing. A two-time world cup champion (2020-21), he is a triple threat of an athlete. Ruud competes in Big Air, slopestyle and halfpipe, per Chloe Merrell of Olympics.com.
He is also a Winter Youth Olympic Games gold medalist, giving him vital experience on an international stage.
Brushing off suggestions that he may be a bit reckless when taking to the slopes, he told Danish outlet TV2 (h/t Merrell), "I certainly have barriers, but I am very good at dividing up what is scary and difficult." He continued, "When I put it in perspective, I think it’s good that I’m scared. It just means I’m sharpened and staying focused."
For the athletes competing in Wednesday morning's competition (Tuesday night in the U.S.), history beckons. For Ruud, it is an opportunity to put an exclamation point on his many accomplishments on the road to Beijing.
Even in the face of three American competitors, expect him to do just that.
Prediction: Ruud wins gold