New York Daily News

NOW START THE PARTY!

Years after early celebratio­n cost her Olympic glory, Jacobellis gets her gold medal

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIJING — Lindsey Jacobellis is finally an Olympic gold medalist.

Let that sink in for a moment because Jacobellis has been trying for 16 years.

Jacobellis, of Roxbury, Connecticu­t, helped make the wild sport of snowboardc­ross famous. Who could forget her premature celebratio­n as she approached the finish line in the 2006 Turin Games, an ill-timed board grab that sent her tumbling out of the lead? In a way, she became one of the best-known silver medalists of all time.

On that day in Italy, she was far in the clear in the gold-medal race, but she bent her legs up and grabbed her board and gave a flashy little twist toward the grandstand. A method grab. It was a showy move saved for winning runs in a game where style trumps almost everything.

But Jacobellis fell. A hot-dogger and a showoff, some critics labeled her. Got what she deserved, others said.

Now Jacobellis will be remembered as the first American gold medalist at the Beijing Olympics. She reached the top of the podium hours after Mikaela Shiffrin suffered another stunning early exit on the Alpine ski hill.

Jacobellis rode hard to the finish of the snowboardc­ross final on Wednesday, beating Chloe Trespeuch of France and covering her heart with her hands as she slowed.

Jacobellis was 20 when she made the mistake in Turin. Now 36 and in her fifth Olympics, she became the oldest U.S. woman to win a gold. The 16 years is also the longest gap between medals for any U.S. woman.

She never stopped reaching for a gold medal. “They can keep talking about it all they want because it really shaped me into the individual that I am,” Jacobellis said. “It kept me hungry and really kept me fighting in this sport.”

A glum Olympics for the Americans actually began to brighten a few hours earlier when California snowboarde­rs Chloe Kim and Shaun White, the defending gold medalists, delivered joyful rides through the halfpipe. Kim earned the top spot in women’s qualifying while White, a three-time gold medalist in his fifth and final Olympics, was fourth in the men’s qualifying.

Jacobellis’ performanc­e lit up the Genting Snow Park. “This feels incredible because the level that all the women are riding at today is so much higher than it was 16 years ago,” Jacobellis said.

Jacobellis said she’d advise young riders to not let mistakes define them. “Especially if you’ve made it to this stage, you’re a winner. And look at what you’ve learned from the experience and take that with you later in life.”

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 ?? GETTY ?? Sixteen years after she let the gold medal slip away, Lindsey Jacobellis can celebrate for real.
GETTY Sixteen years after she let the gold medal slip away, Lindsey Jacobellis can celebrate for real.

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