Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Austria’s Mayer wins super-G, and breaks Norway’s streak

- The Associated Press

Matthias Mayer has broken Norway’s 16-year grip on the Olympic men’s super-G title with his victory Friday at the Pyeongchan­g Games.

The Austrian skier won the speed race by 0.13 seconds from Beat Feuz of Switzerlan­d, who added the silver medal to his bronze from downhill a day earlier.

Defending champion Kjetil Jansrud of Norway was third, 0.18 seconds behind Mayer, on another near-perfect clear and cold day for Alpine racing. It is Jansrud’s fifth career Olympic medal after getting downhill silver.

Norway had won the past four Olympic men’s super-G races — a streak begun at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics.

Aksel Lund Svindal, the 2010 Olympic champion in super-G, placed fifth the day after taking Mayer’s downhill title.

“Unbelievab­le,” said Mayer, adding that he grew up admiring the Olympic silver medal that his father, Helmut Mayer, won in the super-G at the 1988 Games in Calgary.

It’s been an up-and-down week for Mayer. He crashed into a course-side television cameraman Tuesday in the slalom leg of the combined event, won by his teammate, Marcel Hirscher.

He was still feeling the effects of that fall two days later, with a disappoint­ing ninth-place finish when he attempted to defend his 2014 Olympic downhill title.

“I didn’t know if I would start the downhill,” the 27-year-old Austrian said. “I had real pain in my hip.”

Still, Mayer has a history of recovering from severe injury since his first Olympic gold. He broke two vertebrae in his back in a crash at a World Cup downhill at Val Gardena, Italy in 2015. He underwent surgery and spent 11 days in a hospital before slowly making his way back to training.

The last non-Norwegian to win the men’s super-G gold medal was Hermann Maier at the 1998 Nagano Olympics. The Austrian great won that race three days after walking away unhurt from a spectacula­r cartwheeli­ng crash in downhill.

The super-G, short for super-giant slalom, is a single run raced on a slightly shorter, twistier course than downhill and is more unpredicta­ble. The skiers do not get to practice through the exact set of gates designed by a national team coach who is chosen by lottery.

An Italian coach set Friday’s 1 2/5-mile (2.3-kilometer) course, though that didn’t help his racer Peter Fill, the No. 1 starter. Fill missed a gate after taking the wrong launch angle over a jump.

Two pre-race medal contenders lost speed by striking the same flagged gate with their right arms. Hannes Reichelt of Austria was knocked off balance, and Aleksander Aamodt Kilde of Norway had his ski pole ripped out of his right hand.

Andrew Weibrecht could not make it three straight Olympics with a medal in super-G, having taken bronze in 2010 and silver four years ago. The often-injured American missed a gate after flying too far off a jump. Ted Ligety of the United States, the 2013 world champion in superG, also failed to finish.

Italy’s Moioli wins snowboardc­ross

PYEONGCHAN­G, SOUTH KOREA » Italy’s Michela Moioli won the gold medal in Olympic women’s snowboardc­ross Friday, overtaking American Lindsey Jacobellis about halfway down the course, then beating the rest of the field to the finish line.

Jacobellis placed fourth, continuing her hard-luck career at the Olympics. The sport’s most decorated rider, Jacobellis has failed to return to the podium since settling for silver after an ill-advised jump in 2006 while she was clear in the lead.

“Fourth place is fourth place at the Olympics,” Jacobellis said.

Julia Pereira de Sousa Mablieau of France took silver this time. Defending champion Eva Samkova of the Czech Republic got clipped from behind and skidded across the line for bronze.

Jacobellis had about a two-body-length lead on the field when Moioli overtook her on a curve. Samkova drafted behind and pushed Jacobellis out to the edge of the course and, from there, she couldn’t gain any ground.

This was the first time Jacobellis had even raced for the Olympic gold since she took the fall in Italy. At the two ensuing Olympics, she went off course in semifinals and had to settle for winning the consolatio­n bracket.

With her 27 World Cup wins, nine Winter X Games titles and a better than 60-percent rate of podium finishes, the 32-year-old American has shown amazing consistenc­y in a sport that’s often random because of the tight quarters and danger at every turn.

Her silver-medal performanc­e in Italy is still remembered as one of the grandest of Olympic mess-ups.

She was dominating the field that day and had nothing to do but coast to the bottom. But she celebrated too soon, going over the last jump with a stylish method grab. She lost her balance on the landing, fell, and got passed at the line. The winner that day was Tanja Frieden, though Jacobellis earned all the headlines.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Michela Moioli, of Italy, celebrates winning gold after the women’s snowboard finals at Phoenix Snow Park at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, Friday.
LEE JIN-MAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Michela Moioli, of Italy, celebrates winning gold after the women’s snowboard finals at Phoenix Snow Park at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, Friday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States