Tuesday at the Milan‑Cortina Games fires out of the gate with a schedule that refuses to breathe. NBC, USA Network, CNBC, and Peacock stack the day with medal rounds, elimination games, and primetime drama. Every hour delivers something sharp, fast, and worth shouting about. Peacock streams every event live, giving fans the full buffet from sunrise in Italy to late‑night replays in the U.S.
Early‑morning action sets the tone
The day starts before dawn for American viewers. Curling hits the ice first, with women’s round‑robin matchups streaming on Peacock around 3:05 a.m. ET, including China vs. Canada and Denmark vs. Great Britain. USA Network rolls out re‑airs of the Women’s Large Hill ski jump at 1:15 a.m. ET, followed by the pairs’ figure skating short program at 2 a.m. ET. These early windows warm up the engines for a stacked day.
Midday brings speed, precision, and pressure
As the morning unfolds, Peacock becomes the command center. Fans jump between cross‑country heats, biathlon rounds, and speedskating battles. NBCOlympics.com and Peacock carry every lane change, every shot, every sprint. NBC’s daytime block folds in Alpine skiing, hockey updates, and live cut‑ins from venues across Northern Italy. The energy stays high, the pace stays ruthless, and the stakes climb with every event.
Men’s hockey steals the spotlight
Tuesday also marks a turning point in the men’s hockey tournament. The qualifying round drops the puck with elimination pressure baked into every shift. Teams fight for survival after a wild preliminary round that ended February 15. Canada and the United States already punched byes into the quarterfinals, but everyone else scrambles for their Olympic lives. The action streams live on Peacock and appears across NBC platforms throughout the day.
Primetime in Milan delivers the heavy hitters
NBC’s primetime window at 8 p.m. ET hits like a hammer. Mikaela Shiffrin and Paula Moltzan attack the giant slalom. The figure skating pairs return for the short program. NBC and Peacock run these events side‑by‑side, giving fans the perfect dual‑screen night. The network leans into the drama, the speed, and the artistry, turning Tuesday into one of the Games’ signature nights.
Tuesday refuses to let go
The day ends the same way it began—loud, fast, and full of Olympic fire. NBC, USA Network, CNBC, and Peacock keep the pipeline flowing with replays, extended coverage, and late‑night breakdowns. Tuesday doesn’t just fill the schedule. It dominates it. It pushes the Games forward. It gives fans a reason to stay locked in from the first stone thrown in curling to the final skate under the primetime lights.




