The Day

Russia ends drought, Canada upset in hockey

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Pyeongchan­g, South Korea — The Russians finally won a gold medal at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics. The Canadian men’s hockey team won’t even get the chance after losing to Germany.

Alina Zagitova edged training partner Evgenia Medvedeva on Friday in figure skating, giving the Russians a reason to celebrate a 1-2 finish.

“I haven’t fully realized yet that I’ve won,” the 15-year-old Zagitova said. “I think I need some time to understand that I won the Olympic Games.”

She and Medvedeva tied in the free skate with 156.65 points, but Zagitova had won the short program Wednesday — giving her the edge by only 1.31 points.

“I can’t believe I am the champion,” Zagitova said.

The Russians’ gold drought had been one of the ongoing story lines of the games, and they were running out of time to get one — although those concerns were eased a bit by Zagitova and Medvedeva coming into the day in prime position to win.

Now, the Russians should have a great shot at another gold medal with the men’s hockey team advancing to the final after a 3-0 victory over the Czech Republic. They’ll face the Germans, who shocked two-time defending champion Canada 4-3 to advance to Sunday’s title game.

Germany jumped out to leads of 3-0 and 4-1 before Canada rallied to get back in the game during the third period. They came close, but will do no better than bronze when they face the Czech Republic on Saturday.

“We deserve to be there and the best team will win,” Russian forward Ilya Kovalchuk said. “We will be ready for the game, for sure.”

Switzerlan­d topped Canada to win the bronze medal in men’s curling. The gold-medal game between the U.S. and Sweden is today.

Kelsey Serwa of Canada won the gold in women’s skicross, adding to the silver she won four years ago in Sochi.

Kjeld Nuis of the Netherland­s took the men’s 1,000 meters in speedskati­ng, edging Havard Lorentzen of Norway by 0.04 seconds. Nuis also won the 1,500 last week.

Martin Fourcade fell short in his bid for his fourth Olympic gold medal in South Korea as France finished fifth in the men’s 4x7.5-kilometer biathlon relay, won by Sweden.

In Gangneung, Zagitova skated first and she nailed everything during her program to “Don Quixote.” The 18-yearold Medvedeva matched Zagitova — but that wasn’t good enough to bring home the gold.

“I put everything out there that I had,” Medvedeva said. “I left everything on the ice. I have no regrets.”

Kaetlyn Osmond of Canada, who had considered retirement, won the bronze.

A few hours later, Vasily Koshechkin stopped all 31 shots he faced to help the Russians advance in men’s hockey.

Nikita Gusev and Vladislav Gavrikov scored goals 27 seconds apart in the second period, and Kovalchuk added an empty-netter with 20.9 seconds left to seal the Russians’ first trip to the final since 1998.

“It is huge for us and the players and for the country,” Russian forward Mikhail Grigorenko said of playing for the gold. “It would mean everything to us.”

Swiss don’t miss

Switzerlan­d’s men’s team clinched the bronze in curling when Benoit Schwarz took out two Canadian stones with his last throw of the 10th and final end.

Canada had just one throw left, so it was unable to score the two points it needed to force an extra end.

“Very fortunate that maybe they didn’t play their absolute best game and we had a pretty good game,” Switzerlan­d’s Peter de Cruz said. “So that was enough to win it.”

The loss was an upset for Canada, which had won the last three men’s competitio­ns.

“We feel dishearten­ed, disappoint­ed, just kind of gutted, really,” Canada’s Brent Laing said. “That’s not the way it was supposed to go, wasn’t what we planned, but the better team won today and unfortunat­ely it wasn’t us.”

Speed racer

At Phoenix Snow Park, Serwa took the lead early and had a big advantage when she completed the course.

“I knew that there was no way to let up, that these girls would be right behind, fighting,” Serwa said. “I tried to stay as compact and aerodynami­c as possible and all the way to the finish line.”

Canadian teammate Brittany Phelan, a close friend of Serwa, used an impressive pass late in the run to finish second.

“We didn’t come out here to participat­e. We came out here to win, and to do it together is unbelievab­le,” Serwa said. “I’m so pumped.”

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