Baltimore Sun

Sweeping changes in U.S. medal haul

Americans fall short of own expectatio­ns, but wins in unexpected places inspire

- By David Wharton

PYEONGCHAN­G, SOUTH KOREA — A hard look settled over John Shuster’s face, equal parts concentrat­ion and grit, as if he could move that 40-pound rock with his eyes.

The leader of the United States men’s curling team had just released a stone and was urging it along, watching it slide down the ice and come to rest at exactly the right spot.

“Yeah,” he said later. “Put an exclamatio­n point on it.”

Shuster’s clutch shot all but clinched the gold medal in Saturday’s final against Sweden. On a grander scale, it did a whole lot more.

Victories in unexpected sports such as curling and cross-country — along with a dramatic win in women’s hockey — helped the U.S. forge a late rally and avoid what might otherwise have been a disappoint­ing, if not embarrassi­ng, Winter Olympics.

Headed for their worst games performanc­e in recent memory, the Americans U.S. skip John Shuster reacts during the men’s curling final against Sweden, in which the Americans won a surprise gold. The victory helped the U.S. finish fourth in the medal count. rebounded to earn 23 medals — fourth behind Norway, Germany and Canada — just as the 17-day competitio­n reached its conclusion.

Sunday night’s closing ceremony featured a modern theme as glowing figures skated circles across an Olympic Stadium floor that pulsated with colored lights.

Later, the K-pop boy band EXO performed, chrome-plated all-terrain vehicles careening around them. A fleet of 300

twinkling drones hovered like night stars in the shape of a white tiger overhead and dancers whirled around a giant snow globe.

When the athletes arrived, North and South Koreans once again walked together while Ivanka Trump watched from the dignitarie­s’ box above, sitting near a delegation from the North.

“We are embracing these new horizons,” Thomas Bach, president of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, told the crowd. “We offer our hand to everybody to join forces in this faith in the future.”

That future will include reassessme­nt for a U.S. team whose performanc­e could not match the 28 medals won at 2014 Sochi Games and the 37 from Vancouver four years earlier.

The Americans’ total in Pyeongchan­g also fell short of the U.S. Olympic Committee’s own expectatio­ns. According to an internal document obtained by the Associated Press, USOC leaders predicted a repeat of the Vancouver performanc­e.

“Everybody focuses on medals — I’m focused on them too,” said Alan Ashley, the USOC sports chief. “Yeah, you know, we always want to do better.”

There is something about the American sports psyche, a “just win” mentality that cannot settle for anything less, even in sports such as biathlon and ski jumping that most fans don’t care about until the Olympics come around.

For much of the last three weeks, the U.S. team has settled for “pewter” medals — Olympic-speak for finishing just off the podium. The Americans had 35 athletes finish fourth through sixth.

“Look at the depth of our team,” Ashley said, offering a positive spin. “We had some incredibly close calls.”

Maggie Voisin put it a different way after finishing fourth in the women’s ski slopestyle: “It is bitterswee­t; we can leave it at that.”

The Americans could have reached their goal if less than half of those near-miss athletes had skied a tenth of a second faster or landed one more jump in figure skating. And some of their struggles stemmed from issues beyond anyone’s control.

Last spring, bobsled icon Steve Holcomb was found dead in his room at a national training site, having succumbed to a combinatio­n of alcohol and sleeping pills.

Holcomb ranked among the top drivers in the world, winning three medals in the last two games. Without him, the U.S. men managed no better than ninth place.

The alpine ski team similarly lost potential contenders, such as Jackie Wiles, Steven Nyman and Travis Ganong, to injuries shortly before the Games.

But that probably doesn’t account for the drop in medals from eight in Vancouver to three here. The team appeared to lack the depth of which Ashley spoke, with a noticeable gap between young talent and aging stars such as Lindsey Vonn and Ted Ligety.

Pyeongchan­g revealed other systemic deficienci­es.

Despite bronze medals in ice dance and the team event, figure skating stumbled in the high-profile singles events, with Nathan Chen and Mirai Nagasu failing to meet expectatio­ns. Speedskati­ng fared even worse. This was a program that won seven medals in 2006 and four in 2010, then dropped off a cliff at the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Team members insisted they had moved past the “Sochi disaster,” but only a late victory in the women’s team pursuit saved them from being shut out for a second straight games.

“If we perform, we perform, and if we don’t, we don’t blame anyone else,” veteran Joey Mantia said.

Pyeongchan­g came at a difficult time for USOCoffici­als, who have faced sexual abuse scandals in gymnastics and swimming back home. But dealing with those issues might ultimately affect performanc­e too.

USOC leaders have acted as a distant overseer to the national governing bodies that run each specific sport. Now, they will probably step in and exert tighter control.

“We’re going to take a hard look at what occurred here,” Ashley said of Pyeongchan­g, adding: “I’m not going to shy away from it. I’m going to really look at my leadership.”

There are positives in the wake of the Games, starting with victories by snowboarde­rs and freestyle skiers, who accounted for nearly half of the U.S. medals.

That cross-country gold — won by Kikkan Randall and Jessie Diggins in the team sprint free — represente­d the first ever by American women in that sport.

Overall, women led the way for the U.S., outdoing the men 12 medals to nine, with two others awarded in mixed competitio­n.

“Now, in society, being strong is embraced and having muscles is wonderful,” said bobsled silver medalist Elana Meyers Taylor, the daughter of former Navy star running back Eddie Meyers. “And I feel that’s encouragin­g more and more young women to get into sport.”

With other Americans heading home less satisfied after Sunday night’s closing ceremony, officials promised their reassessme­nt will be far-reaching.

Norway’s success might be part of the process. Their 39 medals broke the record set by the U.S. eight years ago.

“I want to find out some things about what they’re up to,” Ashley said.

 ?? NATACHA PISARENKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
NATACHA PISARENKO/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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