Albuquerque Journal

David Wise of U.S. successful­ly defends his gold medal in halfpipe and teammate takes silver

Ferreira grabs silver as Americans go one-two

- BY JAKE SEINER ASSOCIATED PRESS

PYEONGCHAN­G, South Korea — At least the Americans have the Phoenix Snow Park halfpipe.

Freestyle skier David Wise successful­ly defended his gold medal Thursday, breaking through on his final run to give the U.S. its third gold medal in the halfpipe at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics.

Wise wiped out on each of his first two runs when his skis popped off his feet. After swapping out his skis and cranking up the bindings for his final try, he sneaked past countryman Alex Ferreira with a score of 97.20.

It was a dream run for Wise, who landed double corks in all four directions — front left, front right, switch (backward) left and switch right.

“Putting all four of them into a run is certainly the most challengin­g thing I’ve ever done,” he said.

It’s the seventh gold medal for the U.S. in Pyeongchan­g, five of which have come at Phoenix Snow Park, including those from snowboarde­rs Chloe Kim, Shaun White, Red Gerard and Jamie Anderson.

The snowboard and freestyle skiing crews have picked up the slack for the U.S. team in these Olympics. Those competitor­s have accounted for 10 of the country’s 19 medals, many of them at the snow park located an hour away from the Gangneung Olympic Plaza.

Ferreira took silver, and 16-year-old Nico Porteous from New Zealand got bronze. It was the second medal of the day for the Kiwis after snowboarde­r Zoi Sadowski Synnott won bronze in Big Air to end New Zealand’s 26-year Winter Games drought.

Porteous was so nervous before the competitio­n that he vomited three times, and yet on his second run, he pushed past Ferreira for the top spot, shocking even himself by landing five double corks and getting a score of 94.80. Porteous didn’t even bother trying on the third run, cruising through the halfpipe without a trick and waiting at the bottom for the other competitor­s.

“I had nothing left,” Porteous said. “That was me. That was all I had left in the bag. “

Ferreira stormed past Porteous on his second run. The 23-year-old American spun his right ski pole over his head at the bottom of the halfpipe, then threw up his hands when the judges gave him a 96.00.

Wise put down his double-cork dream run a few minutes later, and Ferreira could only counter with a 96.40.

 ?? LEE JIN-MAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Men’s halfpipe gold medalist David Wise, right, embraces U.S. countryman and silver medalist Alex Ferreira after their competitio­n in Pyeongchan­g.
LEE JIN-MAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Men’s halfpipe gold medalist David Wise, right, embraces U.S. countryman and silver medalist Alex Ferreira after their competitio­n in Pyeongchan­g.
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