Vancouver Sun

BLONDIN GOLDEN BEFORE OLYMPICS

Ottawa speedskate­r plays part in Canada’s winning weekend, Dan Barnes writes.

- dbarnes@postmedia.com

Ivanie Blondin conjured up a blast from the Canadian past with a gold medal in the 3,000-metre event at a speedskati­ng World Cup in Erfurt, Germany, on Sunday.

A Canadian woman hadn’t won World Cup gold at this distance since Cindy Klassen did it in March 2006. Kristina Groves won gold at the World Championsh­ips in 2008.

It was Blondin’s fourth medal of the World Cup season and first gold. It vaults the Ottawa native into the Pyeongchan­g Olympics next month on a high.

“I think this whole week, I’ve had a really calm mindset. I just did what I had to do and focused on the right things,” said Blondin, who finished in 4:04.86 to beat Antoinette de Jong of the Netherland­s (4:05.45) and Martina Sablikova of the Czech Republic (4:05.91).

“It was a great race, super steady. I was conservati­ve in the beginning a little bit and I think that it helped me maintain the right pace today on this ice.”

Alex Boisvert-Lacroix, of Sherbrooke, Que., won a bronze in the men’s 500 metres, and was just 0.15 behind race winner Havard Holmefjord Lorentzen of Norway. Jan Smeekens of the Netherland­s took silver.

“My coach over the last four seasons, Gregor Jelonek, told me that I could even have won the race,” Boisvert-Lacroix said. “Over the last few metres, I tensed up when I felt the Norwegian skater (Holmefjord Lorentzen) gain some ground on me. But these are adjustment­s we will make before the Games.”

Canadian skaters won 22 medals through the first five World Cups of the season, matching the total collected by the previous squad heading into the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver. It’s also 12 more than the team managed before the Sochi Games in 2014.

Moguls skier Justine DufourLapo­inte stood at the top of the podium for the first time this season and enjoyed the view — perhaps more than ever before.

“I don’t think I’ve ever been so proud to win a World Cup,” she said at Mont Tremblant, Que., on Saturday. “The start of the season was a little rockier, but I’m really happy to finally get to this point. Today the crowd gave me that energy boost I needed, and I appreciate­d it all day long.”

Fellow Canadian Andi Naude was right on her heels, winning silver.

“I’m thrilled to be on the podium today right before the Games,” Naude said. “I think this was one of the most enjoyable competitio­n days I’ve ever had. Going into the Games with a second-place finish and sharing the podium with my teammate is more than I could have hoped for.”

In men’s action, overall World Cup leader Mikael Kingsbury was denied a 14th straight win when Ikuma Horishima bumped him down to silver. The margin of victory was just 0.61 points.

“I skied my best, but Ikuma did a run that I couldn’t beat. I made a tiny error before the bottom jump and the jump wasn’t my best. He is completely deserving of his win,” Kingsbury said.

The Canadian bobsled squad is heading into the Olympics with confidence and great expectatio­ns.

Kaillie Humphries and Justin Kripps wrapped up overall titles in women’s and two-man action respective­ly this weekend by finishing on the podium yet again at a World Cup in Konigssee, Germany.

With Alex Kopacz in the back seat, Kripps took bronze in the two-man race and will head to Pyeongchan­g as the top two-man driver on the circuit. It’s his first title. He’s also fourth in the fourman standings.

Humphries, who won her fourth overall championsh­ip, paired on Saturday with Phylicia George to win a silver medal in Konigssee.

The only other time two Canadian sleds secured overall titles was 2013, when Humphries and Lyndon Rush were on top.

“Winning the overall is absolutely huge,” Kripps said. “It’s been a dream of mine since I started driving. I’m really proud of both Alex and Jesse (Lumsden), who both pushed very well to share the two-man workload. It’s incredible we didn’t finish worse than fourth the whole season.”

Kripps drove to a gold, three silver, a bronze and three fourthplac­e finishes in the eight World Cup stops this season.

Humphries also had a consistent campaign with three wins, five podiums and a ninth-place finish. She had both George and Melissa Lotholz in her sled this season.

Georgia Simmerling crashed and broke her left leg in ski cross action at Nakiska, a resort in the Alberta Rockies, on Saturday. She will miss the Olympics.

Simmerling, from West Vancouver, B.C., was fourth overall on the World Cup and was seen as a medal contender.

Canadian Brian McKeever won silver on Sunday in the men’s 20-kilometre cross-country Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee World Cup skate-ski race in Obberried, Germany.

McKeever and his guide Graham Nishikawa finished the race in 42 minutes 36.3 seconds for second place in the visually impaired classifica­tion.

In the men’s standing classifica­tion, Mark Arendz backed up his career-best cross-country ski classic race with a fifth-place finish. Arendz, of Hartsville, P.E.I., completed the five-lap course in a time of 45:15.5.

Emily Young of Kelowna, B.C., also finished fifth in the women’s standing division. Brittany Hudak, of Prince Albert, Sask., was seventh at 49:55.4.

 ?? JENS MEYER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Speedskate­r Ivanie Blondin competes in the women’s 3,000 metres in Erfurt, Germany, on Sunday.
JENS MEYER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Speedskate­r Ivanie Blondin competes in the women’s 3,000 metres in Erfurt, Germany, on Sunday.
 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Justine Dufour-Lapointe celebrates her World Cup moguls run on Saturday in Mont-Tremblant Que.
JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS Justine Dufour-Lapointe celebrates her World Cup moguls run on Saturday in Mont-Tremblant Que.

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