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Nagano 1998
Highlights Of The Show
BS will air 128 hours of sport and spectacle from Nagano, a
record for the Winter Games. In addition, TNT will broadcast
more than 50 hours on cable. Nagano is 14 hours ahead of the
U.S. East Coast, so schedules will require some math. Opening
ceremonies, for example, will start at 11 a.m. Saturday in
Japan, but Americans will see them live Friday night.
ON TELEVISION
7
SATURDAY
The opening ceremonies will have 2,450 athletes from 72 nations
and much tradition. Sumo grand champion Akebono will perform an
ancient purification ritual.
8
SUNDAY
Women's hockey will make its debut. And the man to watch will be
Austrian Alpine skier Hermann ("Monster") Maier, who has had
eight monstrous wins this season.
9
MONDAY
Wendel ("Bullet Man") Suckow will try to win the U.S.'s first
ever luge medal. Though he hasn't had a great season, he did win
the World Cup event on Nagano's Spiral in 1997.
10
TUESDAY
Picabo Street will begin her comeback in the super-G. Pairs
figure skating will conclude. Hiroyasu Shimizu of Japan is a
favorite to win the 500-m speed skate.
11
WEDNESDAY
It's home advantage for the ski-jump team: the event takes place
on a holiday, so all Japan will be watching and cheering. Also,
the mogulists will hit the bumps.
12
THURSDAY
Snowboarders will be grabbing big air while Elvis hopes the
judges won't be cruel. Norway's freestyle star Bjorn Daehlie
will try for an Olympic-record sixth gold.
13
FRIDAY
Hockey's "Dream Teams" will take to the ice as the U.S. and
Sweden face off. America's world-class luge pairs (Grimmette and
Martin, Sheer and Thorpe) will see action.
14
SATURDAY
Picabo will have to beat out defending champ Katja Seizinger for
downhill gold. In women's hockey, it will be U.S. vs. Canada (a
preview of the finals?). Men's free skate.
15
SUNDAY
Two-man teams will bob for gold, while ski jumpers move to the
big hill. Russia's Grishuk and Platov will try to become the
first ice dancers to repeat as Olympic champs.
16
MONDAY
Hot stuff on ice: U.S. vs. Canada in men's hockey, a rematch of
the 1996 World Cup finals (won by the U.S.); speed-skating
(women's 1,500) and ice-dancing finals.
17
TUESDAY
The Japanese ski jumpers lost the team gold in 1994 on the last
jump, but Harada & Co. have renewed confidence. The gold-medal
game in women's ice hockey.
18
WEDNESDAY
Can the "Canadian Air Force," led by Nicolas Fontaine, fly away
with aerials skiing? The ladies' figure-skating short program: 2
min. 40 sec. of technical terror.
19
THURSDAY
Speed skaters Chris Witty of the U.S. and Catriona LeMay Doan of
Canada will duel in the 1,000 m. Kristina Koznick, a young
slalom skier, could be a surprise medalist.
20
FRIDAY
The Games will crown a new queen of the ice. Michelle Kwan was
perfection at the U.S. nationals. Tara Lipinski is the world
champion. No one else can beat them.
21
SATURDAY
The great Alberto Tomba has won three Olympic golds. No Alpine
skier has ever won four, and this is La Bomba's last chance at
glory in his best discipline, slalom.
22
SUNDAY
Men's gold-medal hockey game: Will the U.S. make it as expected,
or will it be Czeched out of the way? Nagano will bid sayonara
to the Games. Next: Salt Lake City, Utah.
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