Ottawa Citizen

Harvey makes history with his podium finish

29-year-old became first North American to medal at Tour de Ski cross-country event

- DAN BARNES dbarnes@postmedia.com twitter.com/sportsdanb­arnes

Alex Harvey capped a breakthrou­gh weekend with a historymak­ing podium finish in the gruelling Tour de Ski in Val di Fiemme, Italy, on Sunday.

Harvey, the 29-year-old crosscount­ry skier from Saint-Ferreol-les-Neiges, Que., finished third overall in the Tour de Ski, becoming the first North American to stand on the podium at the end of the final stage. A day earlier, he reached the podium for the first time this World Cup season.

“I think on paper this may not be as big as winning world championsh­ips, but for me in terms of satisfacti­on, this is the No. 1 achievemen­t in my career. To be steady throughout 10 days of skiing and never really have a bad day, that gives me huge satisfacti­on.”

Harvey’s previous best tour finish was fifth in 2016, while Devon Kershaw led the way with a fourth-place finish at the 2012 event.

“This is just a great feeling. It is a podium for the entire Canadian team,” Harvey said. “Devon, Lenny (Valjas), Ivan (Babikov) and I have all had great success on the tour over the years, but we have always come up short in the overall.

“I always left the tour with a little disappoint­ment because we were good, but not quite good enough. One of us always came up just a bit short. I’m happy we finally got it done.”

Switzerlan­d’s Dario Cologna won the tour for a fourth time, while Martin Johnsrud Sundby of Norway was second. This year’s tour was shortened to six stages due to inclement weather. All downhill from here: Canada’s bobsled team is riding a seemingly unstoppabl­e wave of momentum toward PyeongChan­g.

Veteran driver Kaillie Humphries teamed with newbie Phylicia George in the back seat to set a track record and win the women’s race in Altenberg, Germany, on Saturday, while Justin Kripps and Alex Kopacz turned back-to-back track start records into gold in the two-man race.

“Things are definitely rolling. To win here in Altenberg on such a tough track is just awesome,” Kripps said. “Everything is coming together. I have more experience driving now. I went out and got the exact equipment and runners that I wanted, which is making a big difference.”

The victory was Humphries’s third of the season, and she leads the overall World Cup standings. George, a two-time Olympic hurdler who moved to winter sport in September, celebrated her first bobsled World Cup podium in just her second race.

“This is one of the hardest gold medals to get on the World Cup. To show up in the lion’s den here in Germany and be able to perform and win is the real deal,” said Chris Le Bihan, Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton’s high performanc­e director.

Humphries and George followed a first-run track record of 56.22 with a solid second to finish at 1:52.62. American rivals Jamie Greubel Poser and Aja Evans took silver in 1:53.31. Canadians Alysia Rissling and Heather Moyse were 10th, while Christine de Bruin and Cynthia Appiah were 13th.

To show up in the lion’s den here in Germany and be able to perform and win is the real deal.

“To be able to come out and perform in only Phylicia’s second race is great,” Humphries said. “We made big gains today with good pushes and I’m happy with how I drove. We are happy to walk away with the track record and we know there is lots of room to grow.”

Kripps and Kopacz shared the podium with two German sleds. Francesco Friedrich and Martin Grothkopp slid to silver, while Nico Walther and Christian Poser won bronze. Canadians Nick Poloniato and Neville Wright were fifth, and Chris Spring and Jesse Lumsden 13th.

In the four-man race on Sunday, Team Kripps finished fourth, just .35 seconds short of the podium. He shared the sled with Lumsden, Kopacz and Seyi Smith. The race was won by Walther, while Friedrich drove to silver and Latvia’s Oskars Kibermanis to bronze. Spring piloted another Canadian four-man sled to 13th, while Poloniato drove the third entry to 20th. Moguls master: Mikael Kingsbury’s reign as the king of moguls is in no danger of ending soon.

On Saturday in Calgary, the 25-year-old from Sainte-Agathedes-Monts, Que., rang up a startling 11th consecutiv­e win dating back to last year. It was also his for 46th career World Cup victory and seventh in Alberta.

“I skied my first career World Cup here,” he said. “It didn’t go all that well, but I’ve since learned a lot and won six events in a row, took second last year and came looking for my seventh victory here today. It’s incredible.”

Canadian Justine DufourLapo­inte was third in the women’s event and teammate Andi Naude finished fourth.

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