National Post

Guay adds to his legacy

Second medal of the week at alpine worlds

- Vicki Hall in Calgary

The Lou Marsh Trophy is awarded every December — usually amid much controvers­y — to Canada’s top athlete, amateur or profession­al.

It’s only February, but Erik Guay stormed into contention Sunday by winning silver in the men’s downhill at the 2017 FIS Alpine World Ski Championsh­ips in St. Moritz, Switzerlan­d.

The medal comes just four days after the pride of Mont-Tremblant, Que., became the oldest man ever to win a world alpine title with gold in super- G at age 35.

“In what is the most competitiv­e winter sport, Erik Guay just did the biggest achievemen­t ever — period,” said Dominick Gauthier, who co- founded the B2ten group of silent benefactor­s who provide money and resources to Canadian Olympic athletes to get them on the podium.

“With this week’s performanc­e in St. Moritz, Erik just catapulted himself into the very elite of ski racing history,” said Max Gartner, former president of Alpine Canada and a high-performanc­e sports consultant.

“What an amazing achievemen­t for a Canadian skier.”

On Sunday, Guay, t he most decorated alpine skier in Canadian history, slashed across the finish line just 0.12 seconds behind Switzerlan­d’s Beat Feuz. Max Franz of Austria claimed bronze.

After the race, Guay def l ected the credit to his support team — thanking everyone from his physiother­apists to his doctors to his coaches.

He gushed about t he course report he received a top the mountain via telephone from fellow Canadian Manny Osborne-Paradis, who won bronze in the super- G, but settled for 31st in the downhill.

“And my ski serviceman made my skis rocket ships today,” Guay said. “So that was great.” After six knee surgeries, Guay has said his next major injury will be his last. Dogged over the years by chronic back and knee pain, Guay is determined to walk away from the highimpact sport still able to ski with his kids for years to come.

“It’s emotional, for sure, knowing what I’ ve been through and knowing what my family’s been through and just having clawed back from all these injuries,” he said. “But I never lost faith. I knew I had it in me. I know that when I’m healthy, I can be competitiv­e. That’s never left me.”

Staying healthy is a constant challenge in a sport that involves hurling oneself down a slick mountain at speeds exceeding 140 km/h.

So while Guay is considered an early medal favourite for the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Olympics, he refuses to think that far ahead.

“The Olympics are a year away and in a year of sport, a lot can happen between now and then,” he said. “You need to take it step by step and focus on these next races and then you start focusing on the off-season.”

Guay credits his off- season training last summer for helping him peak at the world championsh­ips. He plans to use the same blueprint in his preparatio­ns for Pyeongchan­g.

Known f or his steady, calm demeanour, Guay is philosophi­cal about his two near misses on the Olympic stage. He lost out on the bronze by a mere tenth of a second in the super- G at the 2006 Turin Winter Games. Four years later in Vancouver, he posted a pair of agonizing fifth-place finishes.

The super- G race proved particular­ly heartbreak­ing, with the Canadian stopping the clock just three hundredths of a second back of bronze and six hundredths away from silver.

But with t hree world championsh­ip medals on his resume — he won also won the world downhill title in 2011 — Guay’s place in history is already guaranteed.

“I feel better than I have in the last five, six years,” he said. “I’m able to run. I’m able to train. I’m able to do everything I did back when I was 25 years old.

“Age doesn’t seem to be a factor right now.”

With Guay’s silver, Canada tied the record for the most world championsh­ip medals in a single year with three — a feat also accomplish­ed in 1958 ( Lucille Wheeler, two golds and a silver) and a decade later in 1968 ( Nancy Greene, two golds and a silver.)

NOTES: Snowboarde­r Sebastien Toutant, of Montreal, won gold Sunday at a World Cup slopestyle stop in Stoneham, Que. Regina’s Mark McMorris seized silver, a day after l ocking up the World Cup overall title in big air with a victory over silver- medallist Max Parrot, of Bromont. Que. On the women’s side, Brooke Voigt, of Fort McMurray, Alta, captured bronze in Sunday’s slopestyle event.

In men’s slopestyle, Canada’s Alex Beaulieu- Marchand won bronze a World Cup event in his hometown of Quebec City on Sunday.

In ski cross at Idre Fjall, Sweden, Marielle Thompson, of Whistler, B. C., and Calgary’s Brady Leman both won World Cup gold Sunday.

I FEEL BETTER THAN I HAVE IN THE LAST FIVE, SIX YEARS.

 ??  ?? Erik Guay
Erik Guay

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