USA TODAY US Edition

Getting a medal in women’s team speedskati­ng ‘pretty sweet’

- Martin Rogers

GANGNEUNG, South Korea – Mia Manganello had gone beyond pain, beyond and through every level of it, to the point where her entire body was numb and barely within her control anymore.

“Help,” the U.S. long-track speedskate­r gasped as she continued to strain and fight in the search of a medal that was a long, long time coming.

A moment later, she felt a hand on her hip, pushing her along, transferri­ng energy through the mist of communal suffering. It was her team pursuit colleague Brittany Bowe, who in turn had a pushing hand from Heather Bergsma behind her, as the Americans drove for the finish line at Gangneung Olympic Oval.

A long, sickening, torturous minute later, it finally arrived and with it the news that the U.S. trio had held off Canada to clinch the long-track program’s first medal in eight years and one of the most remarkable in its history. It was the bronze medal race-off, but boy did it feel like gold.

Team pursuit, in which three skaters perform in tandem, swapping out the lead, drafting and supporting each other with their souls and an occasional push, rewards squads whose exchanges and synchronic­ity are perfect. That typically comes from extensive training to find the harmony and make it stick.

This team first practiced together Friday. It didn’t even have an Olympic place until doping sanctions removed Russian competitor­s from the event in January. It is made up of skaters scattered in and from various parts of the world and who have overcome different struggles.

“It hasn’t been easy,” Bowe said. “Not for any of us.”

A year ago, Bowe was mired in despair as she tried to overcome the lingering effects of a serious concussion. Even

10 minutes of exercise brought on nearfainti­ng episodes. She spent a lot of time on her couch in the dark. And when she recovered to book a spot at these Olympics and skated well, there was more frustratio­n to come. Bowe was fractional­ly off the podium three times, racking up a fourth-place finish and two fifths.

“This is pretty sweet,” she said. In the race for bronze, the Americans set out like a train and were more than three seconds ahead on split times around the halfway mark. But Canada begin to reel them in, cutting chunks into the gap late. When Bowe and Manganello accidental­ly touched coming around the final bend and nearly toppled, the result was in doubt, but the scoreboard showed they had held on by

0.45 seconds.

“Hands on legs, stumbling, we made it real dramatic,” Manganello said. “It was just about hanging on. With 21⁄ practices, I would say a bronze medal was pretty damn good.”

Indeed. Bergsma and Bowe are two of the fastest women in the world, but neither had previously won an Olympic medal. Sochi four years ago brought nothing but frustratio­n for the entire long-track squad, amid a fractured relationsh­ip between some skaters and the federation and acrimony surroundin­g high-tech race suits no one liked.

Bergsma, formerly Heather Richardson, is married to Olympic gold medalist Jorrit Bergsma and they live in the Netherland­s. She is one of the stars of the sport but was quick to point out the contributi­on of her courageous teammates.

Bergsma was in awe of Manganello, who placed 22nd in the 1,500-meter event but led the final 2.5 laps against Canada in a superhuman effort, then collapsed onto a mat at the end of the skate. She also highlighte­d the role of Carlijn Schoutens, the 3,000 and 5,000 specialist who subbed in for the semi- final against the Netherland­s and pulled the team along in a race it knew it was destined to lose, her role allowing Bowe to rest and Bergsma and Manganello to conserve some energy for the bronze matchup. And then there is Petra Acker, whose performanc­es alongside Schoutens and Manganello in World Cup races pushed the team to ninth in the Olympic qualifying standings (and into eight when Russia was removed) but did not make this Olympic team.

Once victory was confirmed, Schoutens sprinted around the infield alongside her teammates, whose lungs were still burning as they raised their hands aloft in unison.

Sometimes victory is effortless, but this was anything but. Not for any of them. Bergsma and Bowe have won world titles and might have individual Olympic success in their future. Schoutens moved to the States from the Netherland­s and will likely soon go back to medical school. Manganello’s future husband, Craig Kilburg, is about to become a full qualified neurosurge­on and she’s not sure what the immediate future holds.

But she’ll always remember this, the night when she gave everything she had in search of a special moment and her team had her back when she needed it most.

 ??  ?? Mia Manganello, left, Brittany Bowe, center, and Heather Bergsma celebrate after winning bronze in the women’s team pursuit. ANDREW P. SCOTT/USA TODAY SPORTS
Mia Manganello, left, Brittany Bowe, center, and Heather Bergsma celebrate after winning bronze in the women’s team pursuit. ANDREW P. SCOTT/USA TODAY SPORTS

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