The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Germany wins gold in relay

- By Tim Reynolds

PYEONGCHAN­G, SOUTH KOREA » When the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee added a luge team relay to the program seven years ago, part of the rationaliz­ation was that it would provide more medal chances for women.

Natalie Geisenberg­er and Alex Gough surely approve.

Geisenberg­er became the first Olympian ever to win four luge gold medals by helping Germany win the team relay on Thursday night in the sport’s final event at the Pyeongchan­g Games. Canada won the silver, giving Gough her second medal in the last three days — which sounds even more remarkable when noting that her country was 0-for-forever in luge before her bronze in the women’s race on Monday.

Ask anyone in the race, and it will be unanimous: The team relay is a hit.

“It’s definitely a spectator favorite,” said Canada’s Sam Edney, who teamed with Gough and the doubles sled of Tristan Walker and Justin Snith for the

first Olympic medal of his career in what will almost certainly be his final slide before retirement. “The athletes love it, the coaches love it, the officials love it.”

Austria, with Madeleine Egle, men’s gold medalist David Gleirscher and doubles sliders Peter Penz and Georg Fischler was third. The U.S. was fourth, the team of Summer Britcher, Chris Mazdzer, Matt Mortensen and Jayson Terdiman missing a medal by about one-tenth of a second.

“I love my teammates, and I think the important thing that I feel incredibly lucky to be a part of this team and to have them in my life,” Britcher said.

Geisenberg­er has two singles golds and two relay golds, this one coming with Johannes Ludwig, Tobias Wendl and Tobias Arlt. Past luge stars like Germany’s Georg Hackl and Italy’s Armin Zoeggeler never got the chance to pad their Olympic resumes with a team relay, so there certainly won’t be a true consensus in the argument of whether Geisenberg­er is the best Olympic luger ever.

She doesn’t care about such debate, either.

“That’s not for me to say,” Geisenberg­er said.

The team relay has been a mainstay on the World Cup circuit for about a decade, but this was only the second time it’s been part of the Olympic program. It’s another chance at a medal — an obvious plus — but also gives a true team dynamic to an individual sport.

“It’s something different that we haven’t seen in the sport for a long time and it gave us that little kick,” Edney said. “It was a shot of espresso right when we needed it. It really perked the interest.” The format is simple. The execution isn’t always so simple.

There’s a men’s slider, a women’s slider and a doubles duo as part of each team, each of them getting one run down the track. At the finish line, they need to sit up — with the sled still going at basically top speed — and smack a pad that sends up an all-clear signal for the next sled to start making its way down the track (or stop the clock if it’s the third sled).

If someone misses the pad, it’s like dropping the baton in track and field. Game over.

“It’s tough. It takes some serious coordinati­on,” Edney said. “It’s not easy and that’s part of the fun, it throwing in that element. There’s a very good chance that someone will miss that pad.”

 ?? ANDY WONG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Natalie Geisenberg­er, Johannes Ludwig, Tobias Wendl and Tobias Arlt of Germany celebrate in the finish area after winning the gold medal after the luge team relay at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, Thursday, Feb. 15, 2018.
ANDY WONG - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Natalie Geisenberg­er, Johannes Ludwig, Tobias Wendl and Tobias Arlt of Germany celebrate in the finish area after winning the gold medal after the luge team relay at the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchan­g, South Korea, Thursday, Feb. 15, 2018.

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