The Phnom Penh Post

US teen makes history as wind pummels Olympics

- Talek Harris

WILD winds disrupted the Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics yesterday as a 17-year-old American snowboarde­r made history by becoming the first Games gold medallist born this millennium.

Red Gerard, born on June 29, 2000, celebrated a storming win in slopestyle, which also made him the second youngest individual winner in Games history.

“I’m super-psyched!” Gerard said, adding: “I cannot believe it. I’m shaking right now, maybe from the cold or the excitement, I don’t know. But I’m ecstatic. I can’t believe it.”

Slopestyle was one of the events that did not fall victim to high winds yesterday, when the showpiece men’s downhill skiing was aborted until Thursday following a pre-dawn meeting of ski chiefs.

Later, as the gusts continued to swirl around Pyeongchan­g, the women’s slopestyle qualificat­ion was scrapped with the competitor­s all going straight into today’s final.

A day of extremes started with a surprise earthquake alert, after a 4.7-magnitude quake rattled eastern South Korea, with its epicentre about 260 kilometres from the Games.

South Korea isn’t known for deadly earthquake­s, but organisers gave assurances that the Olympic venues had been built to stand up to a major tremour.

“All the facilities in the Games area are built so they can withstand strong earthquake­s over 7.0 . . . so I assure you there was no issue regarding these facilities,” said Sung Baik-you, spokesman for the Pyeongchan­g organisers.

The severe chill which has made Pyeongchan­g one of t he coldest Games in histor y was set to worsen, with temperatur­es forecast to plunge to -14 degrees Celsius today – wit h a rea l feel of -25C.

“People are advised to dress warmly and wear hats and gloves to keep themselves warm,” warned Sung.

On the second day of full competitio­n, Simen Hegstad Krueger led a Norwegian sweep in the men’s skiathlon after recovering from an early fall and breaking a pole.

“It is an indescriba­ble feeling,” Krueger said. “It is an amazing day but it started in the worst way with the fall after the first 100 metres and a broken pole.

“I was completely last in the group so I had to start the race again and switch focus to catch up with the guys. When I did it I was, ‘OK, take one lap, two laps, three laps and just get into it again, and try to do it on the final lap’.”

Dutchman Sven Kramer roared to a third straight Olympic title in the men’s 5,000m speed skating, and Germany’s Arnd Peiffer upstaged French hope Martin Fourcade to win the men’s 10km sprint biathlon.

From near-death to podium

Perrine Laffont claimed France’s first gold medal when she beat defending champion Justine DufourLapo­inte to win freest yle’s women’s moguls.

And there was drama in the luge when reigning champion and hot favourite Feli x Loch fluffed his final run to finish out of the medals and hand v ictor y to Austria’s David Gleirscher.

In the slopestyle, Canada’s Mark McMorris staked an early claim for the most inspiratio­nal story of the Games after taking bronze – just 11 months after a near-fatal crash.

In a snowboardi­ng accident last year, McMorris broke 17 bones and suffered a collapsed lung and ruptured spleen, leaving him fighting for his life.

“I don’t want to think too much about the past today, but I appreciate the fact I’m here on my snowboard,” he said, smiling.

 ?? ODD ANDERSEN/AFP ?? Russia’s Denis Spitsov (left), Russia’s Andrey Larkov and Norway’s Simen Hegstad Krueger (right) recover following a collision during the men’s 15km + 15km cross-country skiathlon at the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games yesterday.
ODD ANDERSEN/AFP Russia’s Denis Spitsov (left), Russia’s Andrey Larkov and Norway’s Simen Hegstad Krueger (right) recover following a collision during the men’s 15km + 15km cross-country skiathlon at the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games yesterday.

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