The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Dutch speedskate­r wins gold in 5,00 meters

- By Dennis Waszak Jr. The Associated Press

On the second full day of competitio­n, Dutch speedskate­r Sven Kramer broke his own Olympic record in the men’s 5,000 meters to win his third straight medal in the event.

PYEONGCHAN­G, SOUTH KOREA » Kicking off the second day of full events at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, Dutch speedskate­r Sven Kramer broke his own Olympic record in the men’s 5,000 meters to win his third straight medal in the event, Felix Loch missed his shot at a third straight luge title with a wobble on the last run and, in a biathlon stunner, Martin Fourcade and Johannes Thingnes Boe missed their targets and both missed out on medals.

Earlier, Simen Hegstad Krueger led a Norwegian sweep and won the men’s 30-kilometer cross-country skiathlon — despite crashing on the first lap.

The men’s downhill was postponed until Thursday because of strong winds. But other medals were scheduled to be awarded in the men’s 10-kilometer sprint in biathlon, the ladies’ moguls in freestyle skiing and men’s luge singles.

Record breaker

Kramer won the 5,000 in 6:09.76, besting the mark of 6:10.76, which he set in 2014 in Sochi.

He also became the first man to win three golds in the event, using a late kick to beat Canada’s Ted-Jan Bloemen.

Kramer has a chance at winning two more golds in other events: the 10,000 next Thursday and the team pursuit.

No loch in the luge

Loch’s reign came to a sudden and shocking end, with David Gleirscher a surprise men’s luge gold medalist and Chris Mazdzer giving USA Luge its first men’s singles medal. Germany’s Johannes Ludwig took third.

Gleirscher, who had never medaled in a World Cup singles race, finished his four runs in 3:10.702 for the gold, Austria’s first in men’s luge in 50 years.

Loch struggled in the final run and slipped all the way to fifth, ending his bid to become the second slider to win the event three consecutiv­e times.

Targeting biathlon

The 10-kilometer biathlon, expected to be a twoman race between Martin Fourcade and Johannes Thingnes Boe, sent shockwaves through the biathlon world.

Arnd Peiffer of Germany connected on all 10 of his targets to win gold, ahead of Michal Krcmar of the Czech Republic and Dominik Windisch of Italy.

The top-ranked Fourcade missed three of five shots from the prone position, forcing him to do three penalty laps. The Frenchman finished eighth overall. Thingnes Boe, a Norwegian ranked No. 2, missed three from the prone position and one from the standing position to finish a distant 31st.

Moguls gold for France

Perrine Laffont gave France its first women’s gold medal in the moguls in the 26-year history of the event, landing both her jumps without a bobble in the snow and cold.

The 19-year-old Laffont’s score of 79.72 was more than two points better than 2014 gold medalist Justine Dufour-Lapointe of Canada, who had to settle for silver. Yulia Galysheva of Kazakhstan won bronze.

Crash and burn — the field

An early crash couldn’t keep Krueger from gold. His Norwegian teammates then helped complete a sweep in the cross-country ski race.

Krueger slipped when the mass start began and his right ski came out from under him, causing him to fall. Russian athletes Andrey Larkov and Denis Spitsov toppled over Krueger and the three ended up at the rear of the field by the time they untangled.

Krueger stormed back, though, and took the lead with 5 kilometers remaining and powered his way to gold. Norwegian teammates Martin Johnsrud Sundby and Hans Christer Holund completed the 1-2-3 finish.

Not so fast

The men’s downhill was supposed to be the first race of the 11-event Alpine program, and it had been scheduled for Sunday. But race organizers ruled that it needed to be reschedule­d three hours before it was supposed to start because the gondola lift used to carry teams and officials up the mountains couldn’t operate.

The first race of the Alpine program will now be the women’s giant slalom on Monday.

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 ?? JOHN LOCHER — ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gold medalist Sven Kramer of The Netherland­s celebrates after the men’s 5,000 meters race on Feb. 11 at the Gangneung Oval at the Winter Olympics.
JOHN LOCHER — ASSOCIATED PRESS Gold medalist Sven Kramer of The Netherland­s celebrates after the men’s 5,000 meters race on Feb. 11 at the Gangneung Oval at the Winter Olympics.

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