The Malta Independent on Sunday

Svindal beaten by teammate Jansrud in his final race

Alpine skiing

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If anyone had to beat Aksel Lund Svindal in his final race, he seemed just fine with it being Norwegian teammate Kjetil Jansrud.

After an emotional moment when he leaned back, stretched his arms out and looked to the sky, Svindal was all smiles despite finishing a close second in the downhill at the world championsh­ips on Saturday.

Amid a crowd of thousands of flag-waving Norwegian fans, Svindal playfully pointed at Jansrud after finishing 0.02 seconds behind in a race that was characteri­zed by thick fog and heavy snowfall, which caused an hour's delay.

Jansrud had come down three racers earlier.

"Two-hundredths this way or two-hundredths that way, doesn't matter. Let's just enjoy this," said Svindal. "I was really relaxed, to be honest. It was a great show, a double Norwegian (show)."

Already an Olympic champion in super-G at the 2014 Sochi Olympics, this is Jansrud's first world title, adding to his two silvers at worlds. A big Liverpool soccer fan, he compared the feeling of skiing into a finish area filled with flag-waving Norwegian spectators to how he envisaged it would be like scoring a goal at Anfield

"It is one of the biggest cometo-the-finish moments of my career," said Jansrud. "I got a little taste of how a soccer player feels every weekend."

Svindal bowed to the roaring crowd during the flower ceremony.

"I've been sharing the podium quite a few times with Aksel in my career, so doing this on his last race and (at the) world championsh­ips is an honor. So this is a perfect day," Jansrud said.

Vincent Kriechmayr of Austria came third, 0.33 behind, to add to his silver medal from superG earlier in the week.

The 36-year-old Svindal, the two-time Olympic champion and five-time world champion, announced last month that he would retire after this race.

Jansrud was racing with two broken bones in his left hand following a fall in training in Kitzbuehel, Austria, 2 1/2 weeks ago.

Doctors had told Jansrud to sit out for six weeks but he couldn't pass up the chance of racing at a worlds so close to home.

"They said (the injury) is not going to be good enough for Are," Jansrud said. "But somehow you get this singular focus to make it happen."

"This was something that I missed up until now," Jansrud added about his missed opportunit­ies in previous worlds. "So that makes it bigger."

While Svindal just missed out on a chance to become the first man to win the downhill world title three times, he still joined Kjetil Andre Aamodt and Marc Girardelli as the only skiers to collect a medal at six different world championsh­ips.

"This is more than I expected, to be honest," Svindal said. "I knew I was fast enough to win or take a medal, but to make it happen on the one day it counts is something else

"When I wake up tomorrow morning, I'll still be happy with this decision. It's time to kick back and enjoy this from the spectators side of everything."

Beat Feuz of Switzerlan­d, the previous downhill champion, finished fourth, and former Olympic downhill champion Matthias Mayer of Austria came fifth.

The top American finisher was Bryce Bennett in ninth.

Otmar Striedinge­r of Austria crashed coming over the huge final jump and slid across the finish line after both skis dislodged. He got right back up, though, and waved to signal he had avoided major injury.

The women's downhill, which will be Lindsey Vonn's final race before she retires, is scheduled for today.

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