Houston Chronicle

BEST FOR LAST

White seals legacy as greatest snowboarde­r, wins 3rd halfpipe gold with dazzling final run

- By Adam Kilgore

BONGPYEONG, South Korea — The durability of snowboardi­ng, both as an Olympic event and a sport capable of lingering on the edge of the mainstream, can now be validated by its capacity for reinventio­n. It has been around long enough — and grown embedded enough in cultural consciousn­ess — to facilitate second acts.

Shaun White was 19 and raggedy when he won his first gold medal, 23 and exultant when he won his second, 27 and corporate when he suffered a letdown and arrived at a profession­al fork.

Wednesday on Pyeongchan­g Halfpipe, White completed his competitiv­e revival at 31 with a reinforcem­ent and a declaratio­n. He remains the unquestion­ed greatest snowboarde­r ever, and he is again the unquestion­ed greatest snowboarde­r in the world, now with a magnificen­t final chapter.

White won the third Olympic gold medal of his career, placing himself among America’s greatest Winter Olympians and defeating a loaded field by making the final run of the contest the best run of the contest. In his earlier Olympic triumphs, White could be assured none of his competitor­s had the ability to approach his best runs. That wasn’t the case Wednesday, not against 19-year-old Japanese sensation Ayumu Hirano, Australian Scotty James and even countryman Ben Ferguson.

White stood on the top of the pipe for his third run trailing Hirano, who had posted a 95.25 in his second run and fallen in his third. White was the

last man on the mountain. He adjusted his goggles and dropped in.

White destroyed the run. He hit consecutiv­e 1440s and backto-back 1260s, one of those with a flair called the Tomahawk. When he crossed the line, White raised both arms in the air.

He watched and waited. Silence replaced mayhem. The score flashed: 97.75. White flipped his board in the air, letting it spin just like its owner. He dropped to his knees and dabbed at his face. Shaun White, a goofy hellraiser when America first fell for him, had been reduced to tears.

“What can I say? I won the Olympics,” White said. “Three gold medals. I was just hoping they’d give it to me. I was pretty sure I put it down, but it took a little while. Just trying not to make eye contact with the judges.”

White took on all comers and beat them, raising the bar in a sport he has owned for a dozen years yet again. White revealed the seriousnes­s of his intent Tuesday in the qualifying round, when he unleashed a 98.5-point masterpiec­e in his final run, even though his first run had been plenty to push him into the field.

White bettered himself Wednesday and took the gold medal. His renaissanc­e from earlier this calendar year may have been more remarkable than his rebound from disappoint­ment in Sochi. While training in New Zealand in October, White split his face open attempting a double-flip 1440, a crash that required 62 stitches. He opened the season with an 18th-place finish, then followed it later with an 11th at the Winter X Games, his worst showing since he was 13 years old.

“He wears the weight of the country and the world on his shoulders for this,” said J.J. Thomas, White’s longtime coach. “This is our Super Bowl.”

White stood atop the pipe for his first run immediatel­y after watching James, the feisty Aussie who wears red mittens in the shape of boxing gloves, put down the best run of the day to that point, a 92. White responded with a monstrous 94.25, which he punctuated by ripping off his helmet and chucking it into the sky.

Hirano, who posted a 99 in competitio­n earlier this year, took over the top spot with his second run, executing consecutiv­e 1440s en route to a 95.25. So when White stood at the top of the pipe a second time, he was chasing.

White responded with a furious beginning to his run, leading off with a 1440 and then landing another. But then, trying to land one of his trademark moves — the Tomahawk — White fell on his backside.

His third run would be no victory lap. It would be only victory, genius in nature, the latest and maybe sweetest triumph of a career.

 ?? Gregory Bull / Associated Press ?? Nailed it! Even before his score was flashed after his final halfpipe run Wednesday, American Shaun White raised his arms in triumph. And when his winning 97.75 was revealed, he let his board do one last flip.
Gregory Bull / Associated Press Nailed it! Even before his score was flashed after his final halfpipe run Wednesday, American Shaun White raised his arms in triumph. And when his winning 97.75 was revealed, he let his board do one last flip.
 ?? Gregory Bull / Associated Press ?? Shaun White’s world was upside down when he failed to medal at Sochi in 2014. The same could be said, but in a good way, during Wednesday’s halfpipe finals at Phoenix Snow Park.
Gregory Bull / Associated Press Shaun White’s world was upside down when he failed to medal at Sochi in 2014. The same could be said, but in a good way, during Wednesday’s halfpipe finals at Phoenix Snow Park.

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