Sherbrooke Record

Canada gets skating gold, American Anderson wins slopestyle

- By Dennis Waszak Jr. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Canada skated to the gold it had been dreaming about for four years. American Jamie Anderson got another to match the one she won in Sochi.

The Canadians kicked off the third day of full competitio­n at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics on Monday by winning the team figure skating competitio­n, finishing with the medal they had set their sights on since taking silver in 2014. And, they clinched it before the ice dance _ the third event of the day _ even began.

“We think we're the best in the world,” said ice dancer Scott Moir of Ilderton, Ont. “Winning this is like winning hockey and winning curling.”

The Canadians won the men's moguls title for the third consecutiv­e Olympics, with six-time world champion Mikael Kingsbury of of Deux-montagnes, Que., filling the only hole in his resume.

In other night finals, Ireen Wust won her fifth Olympic title and the Dutch speedskate­rs picked up gold and bronze in the 1,500 metres, biathlon No. 1 Martin Fourcade won the 12.5-kilometre pursuit, and Maren Lundby of Norway won the women's ski jumping normal hill.

Anderson showed she's tops in women's slopestyle, defending her title from the 2014 Games and becoming the first female snowboarde­r to win two Olympic golds.

That came despite some big-time weather concerns that caused a 75minute delay, left the course unpredicta­ble and sparked criticism from some competitor­s and analysts.

“I was trying to keep the spirits high, like, 'Let's run it,”' Anderson said. “A handful of the girls were like, 'No, it's not safe' and things like that. It's not like what we're doing is safe anyhow.”

The windy conditions postponed the women's giant slalom until Thursday, the same day as the already-postponed men's downhill at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics.

In Gangneung, the Canadian skaters entered the day with a big lead and never were threatened despite some outstandin­g individual performanc­es by Mirai Nagasu, who became the first American woman and third overall to land a triple axel at the Olympics, and Russian Alina Zagitova, who soared to a first-place finish in the women's free skate.

The top spot was clinched for Canada when Gabrielle Daleman of Newmarket, Ont., finished third, giving her country 63 points to 58 for the Russians with only the ice dance remaining. The United States repeated its showing in the 2014 Sochi Games with a bronze medal.

“We have such an incredible, strong team,” Daleman said, “and I'm proud to say we've won and I'm prouder to have been part of it.”

NAILED IT

Nagasu made some figure skating history, accomplish­ing her rare feat just 21 seconds into the women's free skate. She was the first of the five women to skate and led her routine with the triple axel.

“Going into it, I was like a train and I was like, 'Get on the tracks and get some speed,”' she said. “And, I tripped a couple times. I don't know if you could tell. It was more something I could feel, but to nail it the way I did, even out of the corner of my eye, I could see my teammates standing out of excitement.

“And at that moment, I wanted to stop the music and get off, but I still had my whole program ahead of me.”

Nagasu had landed triple axels in previous competitio­ns, but never in such a pressure-packed situation as the Olympic stage. She joined Japan's Midori Ito and Mao Asada as the only women to land triple axels during the Olympics.

KEEPING HER COOL Anderson was one of the few riders in the final to navigate the tricky series of rails and jumps safely as the wind wreaked havoc on the field.

She posted a score of 83.00 in her first run, then washed out in her second _ with the gold medal already wrapped up.

Laurie Blouin of Stoneham, Que., finished second, with Finland's Enni Rukajarvi third.

HIGH-FIVE FOR WUST

Wust won her fifth Olympic gold medal, using a stirring last lap to set a time of one minut, 54.35 seconds. She jumped into the arms of her coach when Miho Takagi of Japan finished 0.20 seconds behind in the last pairing to prevent another Dutch sweep of the medals.

Marrit Leenstra picked up bronze for the Netherland­s, which has six of nine medals awarded so far.

BACK IN BIATHLON Fourcade bounced back from a disappoint­ing eighth-place finish in the sprint race to hit 19 of his 20 targets in the pursuit to claim his third Olympic gold medal. Sebastian Samuelsson of Sweden took silver and Benedikt Doll of Germany earned bronze.

LUNDBY'S LEAP

Lundby turned World Cup ski jumping domination into Olympic gold with a jump of 110 metres for 264.6 points. It was Norway's second gold medal of the games. Katharina Althaus of Germany was second, followed by Sara Takanashi of Japan.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada