The News (New Glasgow)

Record haul

Canadian athletes all smiles after earning 29 medals in Pyeongchan­g

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Canada did not figure into the medals on the final day of competitio­n at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Olympics, but its athletes were all smiles Sunday as they marched in the closing ceremony en masse to the country’s best-ever showing at a Winter Games.

Canadians won a record 29 medals in Pyeongchan­g (11 gold, eight silver, 10 bronze), finishing behind only powerhouse­s Norway (39) and Germany (31) in the overall standings. Canada also finished third in gold medals, with Norway and Germany both topping the podium 14 times.

The Canadian Press predicted 29 medals going into the South Korean Games with a breakdown of nine gold, 10 silver and 10 bronze.

The Canadian Olympians were represente­d at the closing ceremony by flag-bearer Kim Boutin of Sherbrooke, Que. The 23-yearold short-track speedskate­r won a silver and two bronze in an impressive Olympic debut.

Canada had a chance to add to its record medal haul in fourman bobsled, as the sled piloted by Justin Kripps of Summerland, B.C., was in fourth place heading into Sunday’s final two runs.

Despite posting the best start times in each heat, Kripps’s sled finished sixth with a fourrun time of three minutes 16.69 seconds.

The German sled piloted by Francesco Friedrich, who tied Kripps for gold in the two-man bobsled competitio­n, won the four-man in 3:15.85.

South Korea’s Won Yunjong and Germany’s Nico Walther tied for silver in 3:16.38.

“Really proud of the crew,” said Kripps, whose team included Alex Kopacz of London, Ont., his brakeman from the two-man competitio­n, plus Jesse Lumsden of Burlington, Ont., and Ottawa’s Seyi Smith. “They did their job extremely well. I thought I drove well, just little mistakes.”

Hamilton’s Nick Poloniato, Cam Stones of Whitby, Ont., London’s Josh Kirkpatric­k and Ben Coakwell of Moose Jaw, Sask., were 12th in 3:17.81.

Chris Spring of Priddis, Alta., Calgary’s Lascelles Brown, and

■ the Edmonton duo of Bryan Barnett and Neville Wright wound up 16th in 3:17.96.

The race marked the end of the line for both Lumsden, a former CFL player who took up bobsled ahead of the 2010 Games in Vancouver and Whistler, B.C., and Brown, who competed at every Olympics since 2002.

“It’s goingto take a while for it to sink in, but the goal when I came back was to help the team get on the podium,” said Lumsden, who took two years off ahead of Pyeongchan­g before returning to the national team in 2016. “It would be nice to have a medal to hang around my neck.”

The only other event Sunday featuring Canadian athletes was the women’s 30-kilometre crosscount­ry ski mass start.

Emily Nishikawa was the top Canadian in 30th in the event won by Norwegian legend Marit Bjoergen.

It was a bit surprising that no other Canadian athletes were in action on a day that also boasted the women’s curling and men’s hockey final. But the Canadian men’s hockey team was upset by Germany in the semifinals, while Ottawa’s Rachel Homan was eliminated in the preliminar­y round of the women’s curling competitio­n.

The upstart Germans pushed a team of Russians competing under the Olympic flag to the brink, finally losing 4-3 in overtime and claiming an unexpected silver. Canada rebounded for bronze with a 6-4 win over the Czech Republic on Saturday.

Sweden beat South Korea 8-3 in the women’s curling final, while Canada finished the Games without a medal in team curling.

Another medal would have just been added value for the Canadians, who surpassed the previous high of 26 overall medals won at the 2010 Games.

Canada was represente­d by a strong representa­tion from its 225 athletes, its largest representa­tion at a Winter Games, at the closing ceremony.

The throng of Canadian athletes, dressed in red Canadian jackets and tuques were among the first to enter Pyeongchan­g Olympic Stadium, with several smiling, dancing or holding up a medal for all to see. Figure skater Kaetlyn Osmond hopped up on another athletes’s shoulders to get a better view of the proceeding­s.

While Canada set a national record for combined medals at a Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, eclipsing the 26 won at home at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, it did not match the 14 gold Canada won in Vancouver.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Canadian athletes enter the stadium during the closing ceremonies at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Olympic Winter Games on Sunday.
CP PHOTO Canadian athletes enter the stadium during the closing ceremonies at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Olympic Winter Games on Sunday.
 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir perform during the figure skating exhibition gala on Sunday.
AP PHOTO Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir perform during the figure skating exhibition gala on Sunday.

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