The Standard (St. Catharines)

Skier-snowboarde­r-winner. Ledecka does it again

- ANDREW DAMPF AND GRAHAM DUNBAR

SELVA DI VAL GARDENA, ITALY — The skier-snowboarde­r who stunned just about everyone by winning the Olympic super-G in February is finding her groove again.

Ester Ledecka led the second training session for a World Cup downhill by a comfortabl­e margin Monday — two days after winning a parallel giant slalom snowboardi­ng event.

“My first turns on skis were this morning — after two weeks — because I was just snowboardi­ng,” Ledecka told The Associated Press.

Actually, it has been nine days since Ledecka competed on skis, finishing 29th in a super-G in St. Moritz, Switzerlan­d, on Dec. 8. But considerin­g all that she’s done since then, it’s no wonder that it feels like two weeks.

Ledecka finished second in a snowboard race in Carezza, Italy, on Thursday and then won a night race in nearby Cortina d’Ampezzo on Saturday — meaning she was on skis in Val Gardena about 36 hours after her latest boarding victory.

“It was kind of crazy to come here, because it’s a new hill for everyone,” said Ledecka, who was 14th in the opening training session. “So I was a little insecure in the morning with my ski turns but I’m happy that I was able to feel good on my skis and have some good runs.”

Ledecka finished 0.40 seconds ahead of Selva native Nicol Delago and 0.43 ahead of Nicole Schmidhofe­r, the Austrian who won this season’s opening two downhills. “So far so good. But it’s still just a training,” Ledecka said. “All the girls are practicing and looking for the good lines.”

At the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, Ledecka followed her super-G victory in Alpine skiing by winning the parallel GS in snowboardi­ng — becoming the first athlete to win two golds at the same Winter Games using two different types of equipment.

In the Olympic super-G, Ledecka beat Anna Veith by 0.01 seconds — after U.S. broadcaste­r NBC had already declared Veith the gold medallist and switched its viewers to figure skating.

While the 23-year-old Czech athlete still lacks experience in skiing, this week’s races in Val Gardena on a slope that the women have not raced on before evens the playing field for her.

“This is an advantage for me,” she acknowledg­ed. “We’ll see how I can play with it.”

Ledecka’s Olympic success has made her one of the most popular athletes in the Czech Republic — rivalling even the country’s hockey stars. Barbie recently introduced a Ledecka doll in its “Role Models” series — replete with miniature equipment for both snowboardi­ng and skiing .

“The Barbie doll was a nice surprise and I hope they will make some more, because I (got) a lot of messages from my fans that they want to buy it,” Ledecka said. “On one side (the increased attention) is good, on the other side you kind of a little bit lost the privacy but I learned to work with it and I’m OK.”

Ledecka broke a bone in her left hand during snowboard training at Copper Mountain in Colorado last month and was left with a big scar on the top of her hand from surgery.

“I was snowboardi­ng and I put my hand on the ground and I hit the gate. I had to stop for one week,” Ledecka said.

“The good thing for me was that when I came back I was snowboardi­ng, so I didn’t have to hold the pole.”

Ledecka plans to keep switching back and forth between skiing and snowboardi­ng this season but she could run into a dilemma with the parallel GS at the world snowboard championsh­ips scheduled for Utah on Feb. 4 — the same day that the Alpine skiing worlds open in Are, Sweden.

Ledecka is the defending world champion in snowboardi­ng.

“Last year we were lucky, with the weather and everything so the whole plan fit,” said Tomas Bank, Ledecka’s coach. “This year I recognize it is not that easy.”

 ?? ALESSANDRO TROVATI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Czech Republic’s Ester Ledecka speeds down the course Monday in training for a women’s World Cup downhill in Val Gardena, Italy.
ALESSANDRO TROVATI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Czech Republic’s Ester Ledecka speeds down the course Monday in training for a women’s World Cup downhill in Val Gardena, Italy.

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