National Post

Kingsbury’s missing link is Olympic gold

- Sc St ott inson in Pyeongchan­g sstinson@postmedia.com Twitter. com/ Scott_ Stinson

In the middle of a training run under the lights at Phoenix Snow Park, Mikael Kingsbury comes to a stop on the moguls course. He pauses for a few seconds, then lazily approaches the final jump and, in mid-air, scissors his legs.

It is an afterthoug­ht of a trick, utterly casual, and then Kingsbury, the 25- year- old from the Laurentian­s who has won six World Cup competitio­ns this season alone, bounces over the final few moguls to finish his run. He stops with a big spray and taps his poles together on his way over to his coaches, banging out a tuneless number.

He has all the bearing of someone trying to keep it light. Which is probably a good approach for someone who is just days away from trying to add the final piece to his legacy.

“I’m not thinking like I’m missing anything,” Kingsbury says when his training session in the biting cold of the mountains east of Seoul is finished.

But something is missing. Kingsbury has an unparallel­ed resume: six straight seasons in which he won both the World Cup crown for moguls and also the overall freestyle championsh­ip. He has 48 World Cup moguls titles, more than anyone in history, and he won a record 13 straight moguls competitio­ns, a streak just broken when he finished all the way back in second place at Mont Tremblant, Que., late last month. For shame.

But amid all that Wayne Gretzky- like dominance, the one win that Kingsbury has not managed is an Olympic gold medal. He has a silver, finishing behind teammate Alex Bilodeau at Sochi 2014. And so this is it: the chance to lock down the title that only comes around every four years, the win that would put him alongside Bilodeau and Jean- Luc Brassard, his boyhood idol, with men’s moguls gold for Canada. It’s just the thing that would cement his status as the best freestyle skier of all-time. Ho-hum. No biggie.

Naturally, he’s not thinking of it that way.

“It’s not like this race is any harder to win,” he said. “I’m going up against all the same guys.” But then he breaks into a little smile. “It’s just that the Olympic rings are everywhere.”

Indeed they are. But Kingsbury says it hasn’t been difficult to push that aside while he prepares for the Olympic chance that begins here Friday. There is too much work to do.

“Right now, I’m not focused on winning,” he said. There is training, practice runs, video to watch and the familiariz­ation that has to take place with a course. The snow conditions are perfect, so it’s a matter of getting used to the lines on the steep track. (Not that the learning curve is all that sharp for Kingsbury: he competed here in a World Cup event in February 2017 and won it.)

But while he talks a businessli­ke game and mostly offers the just- another- race stuff, there are moments when Kingsbury lets slip, just a bit, what is ahead for him in the coming days. The Olympics are not just another race, no matter how many times you tell yourself that.

“I’ve been dreaming of this since I was pretty young,” he says. And though he is still pretty young in a relative sense, there is no guarantee he will have another shot at an Olympic medal by the time another four years have passed. Knees can only take so much pounding. The record books are full of dominant amateur athletes who racked up season after season of world championsh­ips and World Cup titles, but due to bad timing or bad luck or some combinatio­n of both couldn’t secure Olympic gold. Canada has several of those cases just in men’s figure skating alone.

Best not to think about the legacy then. At least best not to think about it too much.

“I want to win, I’m not gonna lie,” Kingsbury says. “But there are a lot of little details I have to focus on first.”

 ?? KIN CHEUNG / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Canadian star Mikael Kingsbury is men’s moguls most decorated World Cup athlete, but he’s still searching for Olympic gold.
KIN CHEUNG / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Canadian star Mikael Kingsbury is men’s moguls most decorated World Cup athlete, but he’s still searching for Olympic gold.
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