x
Breaking News
More () »

Olympics top moments for Friday: Mikaela Shiffrin, Shaun White

The U.S. women's hockey team wins in the quarterfinals, while Katie Uhlaender makes history in skeleton.

BEIJING, China — Shaun White’s brilliant and transcendent Olympic career is over.

It ended with a fall on his final run down the halfpipe, a heartfelt ovation from the crowd and then a tearful farewell to a sport he helped define.

A few mountains away, Mikaela Shiffrin finally made it all the way down the Alpine ski hill. She finished ninth in super-G and then expressed relief.

There were no medals for two of the biggest American stars at the Beijing Olympics on Friday and different emotions.

Here are the top moments Friday at the Olympics.

Snowboarding

White said he wasn't sad. He cried a few times after his final run.

White didn't make the medal stand this time around, although he got oh so close. His score of 85.00 was 2.25 points away from bronze. 

RELATED: Farewell, GOAT: Shaun White heads into sunset, misses medals at Olympics

Alpine skiing

Mikaela Shiffrin was relieved and appreciative speaking with NBC's Todd Lewis following her ninth-place finish in the women's super-G.

RELATED: 'Quite a big relief': Mikaela Shiffrin finishes super-G after back-to-back disqualifications

Hockey

It wasn't pretty, but the U.S. women's hockey team took down the Czech Republic 4-1 with a sloppy effort in their quarterfinal tilt at the 2022 Winter Olympics.

RELATED: US survives scare from Czech Republic, advances to Olympic women's semifinal

Skeleton

Katie Uhlaender of Colorado competed in her first two of four runs, making her the first U.S. women's sliding sport athlete to compete in five Olympics and the first women's skeleton athlete of any nation to reach that feat.

RELATED: Meet Kelly Curtis: The first Black skeleton athlete to compete for US at Olympics

Short track

In the women’s 1,000-meter short track speedskating, Team USA’s Kristen Santos was involved in a collision during the final stretch, finishing fourth. She went into the race ranked second in the world.

Arianna Fontana of Italy was penalized for the lane change that caused the crash.

Suzanne Schulting of the Netherlands successfully defended her title, winning gold. Choi Minjeong of South Korea took silver. Hanne Desmet of Belgium earned bronze for her country's first medal in short track.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

RELATED: Nina O'Brien heading back to US after giant slalom crash

RELATED: Urgent hearing to see if Russian figure skater can compete in women's event

SUGGESTED VIDEOS: Beijing Olympic Games

Before You Leave, Check This Out