National Post

CASSIE SHARPE IN HALFPIPE, MEN’S BOBSLED DELIVER GOLD FOR CANADA.

CANADIANS TIE FOR FIRST, REPEAT BOBSLED HISTORY

- Sc ott St inson

I was just so excited and everyone started mobbing into the track. I saw the Germans, and they were super excited, too, and I was like, ‘ that’s nice, they’re really excited we won the gold.’ Ju stin Kr ipps sdfsdfsdfs­df

PY EONGCH A NG • Justin Kripps drove his sled across the finish line at the Olympic Sliding Centre, and all he saw was the number one next to his name. First place, with no one left to go. Gold medal.

“I was just so excited and everyone started mobbing into the track,” Kripps said. “And I saw the Germans, and they were super excited, too, and I was like, ‘ that’s nice, they’re really excited we won the gold.’ ”

In the chaos of the moment, it took awhile for the Canadians to figure out that the Germans — Francesco Friedrich and Thorsten Margis — also had a number one next to their name. Over four heats, the two sleds had a time of 3:16.86.

Because they don’t time bobsled races to the thousandth of a second — and why would they, really? — that meant both teams won gold. Latvia’s Oskars Melbardis and Janis Strenga won bronze in 3: 16.91. Six one- hundredths of a second separating three sleds that had raced just over five-anda-half kilometres. That close.

The win was the first for Canada in the event since Pierre Lueders tied for gold with an Italian sled in 1998. It was the first medal of any colour for Canada in the discipline since Lueders won silver in 2006.

The final run at Olympic Sliding Centre saw Kripps fall narrowly behind off the start, climb just back in front as his sled wound down the tricky track, and then cross the line in a dead heat.

Heading into the final of four runs, the sleds were grouped in an almost impossibly tight bunch. Kripps had overtaken first place with his third run, but there were four more sleds — three Germans and a Latvian — within 13 one-hundredths of a second, the first time that is believed to have happened in an Olympic bobsled event, with one run to go.

Kripps, 31, of Summerland, B.C., and Kopacz, 28, of London, Ont., were mobbed by their Canadian teammates — and the Germans — at the finish line. Kripps said he knew he had driven a great race, but with the times so close there was no way to know if it was good enough in the moment. “And then I saw the 1, and basically blacked out. It was an eruption after that,” he said.

Canada’s Nick Poloniato finished seventh and teammate Chris Spring was 10th.

As was the case last week at this same track when a pair of luge medals touched off communal bedlam among t he Canadian t eam, t he bobsled contingent was gleeful on Monday night. Jesse Lumsden, who had pushed for Kripps in many races over the past few years and was in Poloniato’s sled on Monday night, said he was honoured to have played a role in helping get his former driver to the top of a podium.

“It’s outrageous,” he said of the tie, adding that he was just relieved that the gold didn’t slip away. “They earned that medal. Four good pushes, four consistent runs, and that’s how you win Olympic gold.”

The Kripps sled was in second place after the first two runs on Sunday night, one- tenth of a second be- hind Nico Walther of Germany and just nine one-hundredths of a second ahead of Johannes Lochner, also from Germany. Both those teams would finish out of the medals, a testament to how absurdly tight the times were at the top of the standings.

Before Monday night, Kripps had spent years in the slow build toward a potential podium spot at the Olympics. He was part of the four- man team piloted by Lueders at Vancouver 2010 — they finished out the medals — and moved into the pilot role himself a year later.

Success eventually followed with a World Cup win in 2014, and at the Sochi Olympics, Kripps piloted his two-man sled to a sixth-place finish. ( He also crashed a four- man sled at the same Games, after Canada Bobsleigh conducted a l astminute shuffle of drivers and pilots.)

But Kripps really started to make an impression on the bobsled circuit in recent years, i ncluding podium finishes at the world championsh­ips in 2017 and a stel- lar campaign this season, in which he only finished outside of the top three once in eight World Cup races — that time a fourth.

Last week, Kripps said he felt good on the Pyeongchan­g track. “I like it, it’s fun to drive,” he said. “It’s a little tricky in some spots, but we are usually pretty fast, so it’s going to be all about consistenc­y.”

The medal was the third of the Games for Canada at the Sliding Centre, following two in the luge events, the first-ever such medals in this country’s Olympic history.

That is one medal of each colour for Canada so far at the track, in the right progressio­n: bronze in women’s singles luge, silver in the luge relay and now gold in men’s two-man bobsled.

Kripps said sharing the podium was a special moment. “You j ust became Olympic champions. We’ve been friends and rivals with these guys for years. We’re really happy for them, and they are for us, too.”

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 ?? QUINN ROONEY / GETTY IMAGES ?? Justin Kripps and Alexander Kopacz make their final run during the two-man bobsled competitio­n at the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympics.
QUINN ROONEY / GETTY IMAGES Justin Kripps and Alexander Kopacz make their final run during the two-man bobsled competitio­n at the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympics.

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