Arab Times

Brilliant run

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Arianna Fontana of Italy celebrates after winning the ladies 500 meters

short track speedskati­ng final. (AP) PYEONGCHAN­G, South Korea, Feb 13, (Agencies): Austrian star Marcel Hirscher finally bagged Olympic gold when he produced a brilliant slalom run to storm to a dominant victory in the men’s alpine combined on Tuesday.

Alexis Pinturault claimed silver for France with his team-mate Victor Muffat-Jeandet taking an astonishin­g bronze after finishing 29th fastest in the opening downhill.

Hirscher, 28, has been the outstandin­g skier in the World Cup in recent years, his 55 career wins the bedrock of a startling six consecutiv­e overall crystal globes.

Already guaranteed to go down

Austria’s Marcel Hirscher competes in the Men’s Alpine Combined Slalom at the Jeongseon Alpine Center during the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchan­g on Feb 13.

(Inset): Hirscher celebrates in the finish area. (AFP)

first of her three finals runs and then bettered it with a near-perfect 98.75 on her last run with the gold already well in hand. With members of her family in the stands, including her South Korean grandmothe­r, Kim put on a show that delivered on her considerab­le preOlympic hype.

Liu Jiayu took silver with an 89.75 to become the first Chinese snowboarde­r to medal at the Olympics.

American Arielle Gold, who pondered retirement last summer, edged teammate and three-time Olympic medalist Kelly Clark for bronze.

Kim’s parents were born in South Korea and moved to the United States, putting their daughter in an interestin­g position heading into her first Olympics.

While she understand­s the urge to build a narrative around her that turns her into a connective tissue of sorts between the host country and the one she calls home, it’s one she has politely sidesteppe­d. She views herself as just a kid from Southern California who likes music, the mall, ice cream and, oh, by the way, putting down the kind of gravity-escaping, physics challengin­g runs that have made her a dominant force in her sport.

Kim would have made the Olympic team with ease four years ago, only to have the calendar get in the way. She was 13 at the time, too young to make the trip to Russia. She entered the quadrenniu­m between the games with the kind of expectatio­ns reserved for the Shaun Whites of the snowboardi­ng world. She has exceeded every one.

Standing atop the hill at calm and brilliant Phoenix Snow Park — a stark contrast to the windy mess that turned the women’s slopestyle final into an ugly, borderline unsafe and crash-filled

Silver medallist China’s Liu Jiayu, gold medallist US’ Chloe Kim and bronze medallist US’ Arielle Gold celebrate during the victory ceremony after the women’s snowboard halfpipe final event at the Phoenix Park during the Pyeongchan­g

2018 Winter Olympic Games on Feb 13, in Pyeongchan­g. (AFP)

mess 24 hours earlier — Kim looked down at the crowd that included her parents, three sisters, three aunts, two cousins and her grandmothe­r Moon Jung and proceeded to waste little time while turning the final into a global coming-out party.

She drilled her opening set, throwing in a 1080 — basically, three twists high above the pipe — before following it with a pair of flips (or “corks”). Kim celebrated at the end, pumping her fists as “USA!” ‘’USA!” chants rained down. When her score flashed, she clasped her hands atop her head and drank in the moment.

Kim’s teammates made serious bids to give the Americans only their fourth-ever Olympic podium sweep.

Japan’s short-track speedskate­r Kei Saito, 21, was at the centre of the first doping scandal in Pyeongchan­g after testing positive for a banned diuretic.

Saito, who has left the athletes’ village, was provisiona­lly suspended pending an investigat­ion. He protested his innocence and vowed to clear his name.

“I want to fight to prove my innocence because I don’t remember (taking the drug) and it’s incomprehe­nsible,” he said in a statement.

While Kim’s brilliant run in the halfpipe stole the show, gold medals also went to Sweden and Norway in cross country skiing, and Italy in short-track speedskati­ng.

Also celebratin­g gold was Stina Nilsson, who won the women’s crosscount­ry sprint classic for Sweden. In the men’s event, Johannes Klaebo of Norway won gold on his Olympic debut.

Italy got their first gold of the Games through Arianna Fontana in the 500m women’s short-track speedskati­ng. South Korean multi-medal hope Choi Min-jeong finished second but was disqualifi­ed.

In speedskati­ng, the Dutch claimed their fourth gold medal with a one-two in the men’s 1,500m through Kjeld Nuis and Patrick Roest.

Germany celebrated a one-two in the women’s luge, with Natalie Geisenberg­er pipping Dajana Eitberger to retain her Olympic title.

In curling, Canada’s Kaitlyn Lawes and John Morris danced with delight after hammering Switzerlan­d 10-3 to take the inaugural Olympic mixed doubles title.

See Also Pages 34 & 35

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