Los Angeles Times

Games on: A veteran Olympic observer predicts the U.S. medal count for Sochi.

- BY PHILIP HERSH phersh@tribune.com Twitter: @olyphil

ALPINE SKIING (two gold, eight medals)

Optimist (two gold, eight medals): No Lindsey Vonn means two fewer medals. Reigning world champion Mikaela Shiffrin wins the slalom and makes up for a missing Vonn medal by sneaking one in giant slalom. Julia Mancuso finally gets untracked this season and takes a medal in either super-G or combined. A surprise downhill medal comes from Stacey Cook or Leanne Smith. Ted Ligety wins giant slalom and gets medals in super-G and combined. Bode Miller, back from his year off, rustles up a medal. (Difference from April: one fewer gold and total.)

Pessimist (one gold, three medals): Ligety wins GS and one other medal. With Austria’s Marlies Schild fully recovered from injury, Shiffrin drops lower on the slalom podium. (Difference: one fewer total.) NORDIC COMBINED (one gold, four medals)

Optimist (two medals): World Cup results this season offer less hope. But the U.S. somehow wins the team event medal, and Bryan Fletcher gets an individual podium. (Difference: one fewer gold.)

Pessimist (0 medals): World Cup results don’t lie. (Difference: one fewer medal.) CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING (0)

Optimist (one gold, two medals): Reigning World Cup overall champion Kikkan Randall gets to ski her specialty in individual sprint (freestyle) at this Olympics and wins gold. Reigning team sprint world champions Randall and Jessica Diggins, who won that title in freestyle, find enough mojo in classic style to win a medal. (Difference: none.)

Pessimist (one medal): Randall wins medal in individual sprint. (Difference: none.) SKI JUMPING (0)

Optimist (one medal): Sarah Hendrickso­n, back on skis for barely a month after knee surgery, regains enough of her old form to get a medal in the inaugural Olympic women’s jumping competitio­n. (Difference: one fewer gold.)

Pessimist (0 medals): No comeback miracle for Hendrickso­n. (Difference: one fewer medal.) FREESTYLE SKIING (one gold, four medals)

Optimist (two gold, seven

medals): Hannah Kearney wins moguls gold and Patrick Deneen medals. Emily Cook returns from an injury-riddled 2013 to win an aerials medal. David Wise wins and comebackin­g Torin Yater-Wallace is on the podium in halfpipe. John Teller sneaks a medal in ski cross. Angeli VanLaanen, who has battled Lyme disease, is a surprise medalist in halfpipe. (Difference: none.)

Pessimist (one gold, three medals): Kearney wins. Both Wise and Deneen get medals. (Difference: one fewer gold and total.) SNOWBOARDI­NG (two gold, f ive medals)

Optimist (three gold, eight medals): Shaun White wins his third straight halfpipe gold and medals in the new slopestyle event. Danny Davis, who missed the 2010 Games after an ATV accident, makes up for lost time with a pipe medal. Kelly Clark and the kid, 17-year-old Arielle Gold, score a win and a medal in pipe. Nate Holland finally gets his medal in boardercro­ss. Lindsey Jacobellis not only is back on the SBX podium after an eight-year gap but wins gold. Newcomer Trevor Ja- cob, in his second year of SBX, gets a medal. (Difference: one more medal.)

Pessimist (three medals): At 27, age catches up to White, who gets just one medal. Women get one halfpipe medal. Jacobellis is on podium. (Difference: none.) BIATHLON (0)

Optimist (one medal): Tim Burke, silver medalist at 2013 worlds, breaks through for first U.S. medal in the sport. (Difference: none.)

Pessimist (0): Same old, same old, although Burke does improve on the best-ever U.S. individual finish of ninth. (Difference: none.) FIGURE SKATING (one gold, two medals)

Optimist (one gold, three medals): 2010 silver medalists Meryl Davis and Charlie White win ice dance. As favorites falter, Ashley Wagner returns to her fall 2012 form or Gracie Gold finds the consistenc­y she needs to snag a medal. U.S. takes silver in the new team event. (Difference: one fewer gold and total.)

Pessimist (two medals): Davis and White finish second to long- time rivals and reigning champions Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada. U.S. gets bronze in team event. (Difference: none.) HOCKEY (two medals)

Optimist (two gold): U.S. men win their first title since the 1980 Miracle on Ice; women take their first since 1998. (Difference: none.)

Pessimist (one medal): U.S. men lose in the bronze-medal match. Women finish second to Canada again. (Difference: none.) CURLING (0)

Optimist (one medal): After a fourth in the recent world championsh­ips and 10th at the 2010 Games, the women get bronze — the first U.S. women’s curling medal. (Difference: none.)

Pessimist (0): Women just miss, and U.S. men show why they needed a “last chance” qualifier to earn an Olympic spot. (Difference: none.) BOBSLED (one gold, two medals)

Optimist (two gold, three medals): Elana Meyers, who won bronze as a pusher in 2010, drives to gold with pusher Aja Evans. Steven Holcomb, reigning four-man champion driver, gets another four-man gold and a two-man medal. (Difference: two more gold.)

Pessimist (two medals): Holcomb manages a four-man medal, and Meyers takes another bronze. (Difference: one more medal.) SKELETON (0)

Optimist (one gold, two medals): Reigning world champion Noelle Pikus-Pace, who came out of retirement in 2012, finally gets her Olympic medal — and it is gold. Matt Antoine gets onto the men’s podium. (Difference: one fewer medal.)

Pessimist (one medal): Heavily favored Pikus-Pace has to settle for a podium finish. (Difference: none.) LUGE (0)

Optimist (0): Erin Hamlin, the 2009 world champion on home ice, or Kate Hansen would do well just by making the top five. (Difference: none.)

Pessimist (0): No one — men, women, doubles — cracks the top eight. (Difference: none.) SHORT-TRACK SPEEDSKATI­NG (six medals)

Optimist (one gold, three medals): J.R. Celski wins gold in the 1,000 and medals in either 500 or 1,500. Men’s relay takes silver. (Difference: one fewer total.)

Pessimist (one medal): Unable to shake the controvers­ies that shredded the team last season, only Celski is able to prevent a shutout. (Difference: one more medal.) LONG TRACK SPEEDSKATI­NG (one gold, four medals)

Optimist (three gold, six medals): In what is probably his Olympic last hurrah, Shani Davis wins a third straight 1,000 gold, a third straight 1,500 medal and leads the U.S. to gold in team pursuit. Brian Hansen scores silver in 1,500. Heather Richardson wins the 1,000, and Brittany Bowe gets a medal in either the 1,000 or 1,500. (Difference: none.)

Pessimist (four medals): Davis gets a medal in the 1,000, and U.S. takes third in team pursuit. Richardson and Bowe each win a medal. (Difference: one more medal.)

SOCHI, Russia — Last April, when the pre-Olympic winter sports season ended, the optimist and pessimist weighed in about U.S. medal chances for the 2014 Winter Olympics. Back then, the optimist liked the U.S. to improve its record total of 37 medals, with nine gold, from the 2010 Winter Olympics. The glass-very-full view showed 52 medals, including 20 gold. The glass-nearly-drained view showed just 22 medals, with three gold. As the Sochi Games’ opening ceremony looms, it’s time to revisit those prediction­s. They look almost the same in aggregate, with the optimist saying 49 and 18, the pessimist 21 and two. But snow and ice are slippery, and so is the prediction game for a Winter Olympics. Still, the optimist and the pessimist are weighing in again, with the 2010 U.S. medal totals in parenthese­s after each sport:

 ?? Alain Grosclaude Agence Zoom/Getty Images ?? JULIA MANCUSO won two silver medals at Vancouver in 2010 and a gold at Turin in 2006. She’s had a rocky season on the slopes so far but has rebounded from pre-Olympic struggles before.
Alain Grosclaude Agence Zoom/Getty Images JULIA MANCUSO won two silver medals at Vancouver in 2010 and a gold at Turin in 2006. She’s had a rocky season on the slopes so far but has rebounded from pre-Olympic struggles before.
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