GB’s Fear & Gibson miss out on figure skating medal

GB's Fear & Gibson miss out on figure skating medal
Emma Smith

BBC Sport journalist at Milano Ice Skating Arena
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Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson missed out on becoming the first British figure skaters in 32 years to win an Olympic medal, as they failed to make the ice dance podium at Milan-Cortina 2026.

Fear tripped on the second element of their free-dance routine, and despite skating cleanly for the remainder it proved too much of an obstacle to overcome.

After an embrace on the ice, Fear and Gibson left the rink to applause from the large British presence in the crowd. Fear was visibly upset as the scores came in to confirm they would not claim a place on the podium.

It means the wait goes on for British skating since Dame Jayne Torvill and Sir Christopher Dean won bronze at the Lillehammer Games in 1994.

And it continues Team GB’s disappointing Games so far, with no medals won yet.

Gold went to France’s Guillaume Cizeron and Laurence Fournier Beaudry, who top scored across both rhythm and free dance. It is Cizeron’s second successive Olympic gold after winning at Beijing 2022 with ex-partner Gabrielle Paparakis.

Cizeron and Fournier Beaudry have been at the centre of controversy in recent months, but have been the best couple in ice dance since partnering in November and outshone the competition in Milan.

Madison Chock and Evan Bates of USA won silver, with bronze going to Canada’s Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier. Fear and Gibson finished seventh.

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Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson Getty Images

Fear, 26, and 31-year-old Gibson were fourth after the rhythm dance – the first section of the ice dance competition – leaving them work to do. They scored 85.47 in their rhythm dance to lie behind Gilles and Poirier in third.

It meant Fear and Gibson needed to deliver a showstopping performance in their Scottish-themed free dance to earn Britain’s first medal of the 2026 Winter Games.

Resplendent in tartan, they danced to The Bonnie Banks of Loch Lomond, Auld Lang Syne and The Proclaimers hit I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles) – in a routine they had honed with highland dance experts to perfect the choreography.

And it started magnificently as they scored big on their complex opening, a multi-stage stationary lift.

But as they moved into their second element, sequential twizzles – a rotation while moving across the ice – Fear visibly wobbled. It meant they got a negative score on the grade of execution, a fatal blow in an Olympic final.

They skated clean thereafter and got good scores in their rousing finish – a series of Highland jigs combined with a dance lift – but the damage was done, as their overall technical score suffered greatly.

It was clear from their faces that they knew they had not been perfect. Fear had appeared nervous before the routine and looked devastated afterwards as it became clear that the pressure told.

The ‘Disco Brits’ are the darlings of British figure skating, and are popular internationally for their vibrant, skilful routines.

And they have had an impressive year in which they became the first Brits to win a medal at a World Championship for 40 years; they also got on the podium in Sheffield at their home European Championships. But there will be no Olympic medal to round it off.

Britain’s other representatives Phebe Bekker and James Hernandez, who made the final stage on their Olympic debuts aged just 24 and 20 respectively, finished 17th after setting a season-best overall score of 179.45.

Winter Olympics 2026

6-22 February

Milan-Cortina

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  • Winter Sports
  • Winter Olympics
  • Figure Skating

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