The Manila Times

USA ends 20-year hockey drought, Russian curler admits doping

- AFP

PYEONGCHAN­G, South Korea: America’s women broke an ice hockey gold medal drought stretching back 20 years on Thursday as a Russian curler admitted doping and was stripped of bronze at the Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics.

American skier Mikaela Shiffrin was denied gold in the women’s combined, while veteran teammate Lindsey Vonn disappoint­ingly bombed out of the same event — her final Olympic race.

In the ice hockey, USA edged fierce rivals Canada 3-2 on penalties, celebratin­g ecstatical­ly when goaltender Maddie Rooney saved the decisive attempt from Canada’s Meghan Agosta.

America’s hockey win snapped a 24game Olympic winning streak for Canada, the four-time defending champions. It also edged USA 12-11 ahead over their major rivals in Olympic and world titles.

But away from competitio­n, Russia’s Alexander Krushelnit­sky was stripped of his mixed doubles curling bronze medal after testing positive for meldonium, an endurance booster.

The 25-year-old was one of 168 Russian athletes who passed rigorous testing to compete as neutrals in Pyeongchan­g, after Russia were banned over a major doping scandal.

“The athlete has admitted the anti-doping rule violation; he is disqualifi­ed from the mixed doubles curling event,” the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport said in a statement.

Krushelnit­sky’s case comes as the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee ponder whether to lift Russia’s suspension in time to fly their flag at Sunday’s closing ceremony.

In skiing, Shiffrin was restricted to second place in the women’s combined, meaning she ends the Games with one gold and one silver — a far cry from the potential five titles she had targeted.

“I came into these Olympics knowing I could be a medal threat in multiple discipline­s. I didn’t even know how many I would ski,” the 22-year-old said.

After the gold in the giant slalom, I was really hopeful and positive. Then I had a tougher day in the slalom (when as defending champion, she lost her title) but it still feels good.”

Vonn, 33 and competing at her last Olympics, led the combined after the downhill race, but she only lasted a couple of gates in the slalom before skiing out.

‘It means everything’

There was a shock in the men’s slalom as the favourites Marcel Hirscher and Henrik Kristoffer­sen both imploded, allowing Sweden’s Andre Myhrer to become the event’s oldest champion at 35 years and 42 days.

Austria’s Hirscher, seeking his third gold medal in Pyeongchan­g, crashed out in the morning run and Kristoffer­sen of Norway followed suit in the afternoon, leaving the stunned Myhrer to top the podium.

“It means everything. I’ve been training my whole life for a moment like this,” said the Swede.

In the men’s ski halfpipe, American defending champion David Wise kept his nerve despite crashing out of his first two runs to seal a gripping victory on the final attempt.

Wise, 27, twice lost a ski on his first two runs but he recovered to notch up a scintillat­ing 97.2 on his final run and lead a USA one-two ahead of Alex Ferreira.

“I’m honestly just in disbelief right now,” Wise said.

“Winning, losing, whatever. Just the fact that I landed that run in the moment when it needed to happen, on that third run, just felt so good.”

Later on Thursday, South Korean teenager Choi Min-jeong will go for her third gold of the Games in the women’s 1,000m as the short track speed skating competitio­n concludes, with three titles up for grabs.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? USA’s Cayla Barnes ( left) hugs USA’s Alex Rigsby after they won the gold in a penalty shootout in the women’s gold medal ice hockey match between Canada and the US during the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games at the Gangneung Hockey Center in...
AFP PHOTO USA’s Cayla Barnes ( left) hugs USA’s Alex Rigsby after they won the gold in a penalty shootout in the women’s gold medal ice hockey match between Canada and the US during the Pyeongchan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games at the Gangneung Hockey Center in...

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