Red, white ... and gold!
Parrot, McMorris kick off Canada’s medal count with silver and bronze in snowboard slopestyle
Canada's Scott Moir, left to right, Tessa Virtue, Gabrielle Daleman, Eric Radford, Meagan Duhamel, Kaetlyn Osmond, and Patrick Chan celebrate winning Canada’s first gold medal at the Pyeonchang Winter Olympics Monday, February 12 in Gangneung, South Korea, for the team figure skating event. Kicking off things this weekend, Mark McMorris and Max Parrot were the first Canadians to earn medals, with bronze and silver in the Men's Slope Style snowboarding event, while Laurie Blouin won a silver medal in the women's snowboard slopestyle final, long-track speedskater Ted-Jan Bloemen won silver in the men's 5,000 metres, and Justine Dufour-Lapointe took the silver medal in women's moguls. Canada also opened with win over Russians in women's hockey. For more Olympic coverage,
Justine Dufour-Lapointe was close to making Olympic history. The Montreal freestyle skier had a chance to become the first woman to defend an Olympic moguls title, and she knew her fast and aggressive final run in Sunday’s final would be tough to beat.
She ended up coming just short, edged off the top of the podium by France’s Perrine Laffont. But Dufour-Lapointe’s silver medal capped an impressive Day 2 for Canada at the Pyeongchang Olympics that saw its athletes pick up three silver medals plus a bronze.
Snowboarders Max Parrot and Mark McMorris got things started claiming silver and bronze, respectively, in men’s slopestyle. Parrot fell in his first two runs but nailed his third to bump McMorris out of the silver medal position with a score of 86.00.
“It’s my first Olympic medal, so it’s a little check next to that,” said Parrot, who is from Bromont, Que. “It’s mission accomplished for me here. I’m really happy.”
Later, Calgary speedskater Ted-Jan Bloemen took the silver in the men’s 5,000 metres, finishing second only to Dutch legend Sven Kramer.
Bloemen, the world-record holder in the distance, didn’t feel he had his best performance Sunday but said he gave it everything he had.
“That perfect race where you get into a flow and just fly to the finish, it doesn’t always happen and it didn’t happen today,” Bloemen said. “But I made the most out of it and I got everything out of myself that I had. I’m a little bit disappointed that I didn’t have more to give today. But overall I’m really happy and really proud to be on the podium and it’s a really big reward for my whole team.”
In other results, Canada’s mixed-doubles curling team of John Morris and Kaitlyn Lawes finished round-robin play with a 7-3 rout of South Korea. The Canadians finished the round robin at 6-1 and had already qualified for the semifinals. In figure skating, ice dancers Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir, women’s singles skater Kaetlyn Osmond and pairs stars Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford made sure made sure Canada kept a solid grip of first place in the team event.
In women’s hockey, Rebecca Johnston and Melodie Daoust each scored twice as Canada opened its quest for a fifth straight Olympic women’s hockey title with a 5-0 win over the Olympic Athletes from Russia.
And in luge, Calgary’s Sam Edney finished sixth in his final Olympic men’s singles race. That’s the best ever Olympic result for Canada in the event.
After two days of competition, Canada’s four medals is good for a third place tie with Germany on the overall medals table. Norway leads with eight, followed by the Netherlands with five.
Germany leads all nations with three gold medals.
McMorris had been sitting atop the standings after his second-run score of 85.20 before American Redmond Gerard surpassed him with 87.16 points in his final attempt. McMorris fell in his last trip down the course.
It’s the second Olympic bronze for McMorris, who is coming back from lifethreatening injuries suffered in a backcountry crash less than a year ago.
The 24-year-old from Regina suffered breaks to his jaw and left arm, a ruptured spleen, a stable pelvic fracture, rib fractures and a collapsed left lung. He spent 10 days in hospital and was on a liquid diet for six weeks.
“I’m on the podium. I probably shouldn’t even be here,” said McMorris.
From the start of his recovery, he was determined to get back to his previous snowboarding form. McMorris showed he could do it by winning a World Cup just eight months after the crash.
“The lowest point (was) not being able to move,” he said of the time after the crash. “Being super uncomfortable, not being able to talk, that sucked. It was for one stupid mistake. I wish I could take that back every day of my life.”