The Columbus Dispatch

Goepper has right perspectiv­e in making run to silver medal

- By Will Graves

PYEONGCHAN­G, South Korea — Nick Goepper wasn’t ready four years ago. He can admit that now.

A bronze medal in Sochi, when slopestyle skiing made its Olympic debut, gave the 19-year-old a taste of fame he didn’t know how to deal with. He partied with his friends back in Indiana for weeks. He drank too much. The edge that he brought to competitio­ns across the world dulled. His motivation waned. Depression set in.

The journey back included a stint in rehab in the summer of 2016, some serious selfexamin­ation and more than a little growing up. Unassuming by nature, Goepper decided to talk openly about his struggles not necessaril­y to become a role model for those dealing with mental health concerns but simply to help with his own healing process.

Full circle arrived on Sunday, when he stood on a mountain in South Korea and once again delivered under Olympic-sized pressure, drilling his third and final run down the demanding course at Phoenix Snow Park. His score of 93.60 earned him a silver go to with that bronze from Sochi, a moment the now-23-year-old feels infinitely more prepared to handle.

Sure, he’ll head back home to celebrate. But only a bit. He’ll do the post-Games media tour. But only a bit. Best not to stray too far away from the sport and the structure that life on the World Cup circuit provides.

“I just love skiing and I love competing,” Goepper said. “I really want to get back to it as quick as I can.”

The proof came during what Goepper and gold medalist Oystein Braaten of Norway described as the greatest slopestyle competitio­n ever. The top five all put up runs in the finals that scored 90 or better. That list didn’t include Goepper until his final run, when he looked down from the starting gate at the crowd at the bottom of the hill — a group that included his parents, three younger siblings and girlfriend — and focused on clearing his mind.

“I was just visualizin­g myself landing on the last jump, arms open, just screaming,” Goepper said. “It just all came to fruition.”

Emphatical­ly. Goepper raised his arms after drilling his triple cork 1440, one that included both a mute grab and a Japan grab (basically three off-axis flips combined with four twists and a couple of stylish ski grabs mixed in). It was the same final jump he used in Sochi to assure the U.S. of a podium sweep, along with gold medalist Joss Christense­n and silver medalist Gus Kenworthy.

Only this time, it propelled Goepper into second. And this time, he feels prepared for what comes next.

“I just feel like I appreciate this a lot more because I’m a little bit older and I can reflect and reminisce on the last 10 years of my career and look forward to the next 10,” Goepper said.

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