The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

No Olympic medal as Shaun White takes flight for final time

- By Bernie Wilson

BEIJING » Shaun White’s brilliant and transcende­nt Olympic career is over. It ended with a fall on his final run down the halfpipe, a heartfelt ovation from the crowd and then a tearful farewell to a sport he helped define.

A few mountains away, Mikaela Shiffrin finally made it all the way down the Alpine ski hill, finished ninth in super-G and then expressed relief.

There were no medals and different emotions Friday for two of the biggest American stars at the Beijing Olympics.

Shiffrin could have two more chances to become the first Alpine ski racer from the United States to win three Olympic golds across a career.

White, though, is finished. His fifth and final Olympics ended when he clipped the wall trying to land his second trick of his third run. Knowing it was over, he pulled off his helmet and acknowledg­ed the crowd as he slowly rode the rest of the way down the halfpipe. Trying to win his fourth gold medal, he instead finished fourth.

“I’m not sad,” White said, although he cried a few times, including during an interview with NBC when he struggled to keep his composure.

“I’m proud of what I put down,” White said. “And I can’t help but think if I would have hit the podium in third, I would have wanted second. And if I’d have gotten second, I would’ve wanted first. It’s just the fighter in me, and I’m always hoping for more.”

White came shredding into the Olympics 16 years ago, a teenager from a San Diego suburb nicknamed “The Flying Tomato” because of his shaggy mop of red hair. He won the gold medal at Turin and repeated in 2010 in Vancouver. After finishing fourth in Sochi, he was back on the top of the podium in 2018.

Along the way he became a pop culture crossover.

Now 35 and his hair wellcoiffe­d, White had his legacy on display all around him in the Secret Garden Olympic halfpipe.

“I’m sure every single person who competed today looked up to him for a very long time,” said bronze medalist Jan Scherrer of Switzerlan­d. “It’s a very cool moment.”

The gold medalist, 23-year-old Ayuma Hirano of Japan, was one of them. He proved to be a worthy successor to White with an epic final run that included a trend-setting triple-cork, or three head-over-heels spins while twisting above the pipe, for a score of 96.

“I hoped I could send a message to him by showing my ride to him,” said Hirano, who grew up idolizing White.

SHRIFFIN FINISHES » Mikaela Shiffrin made it across the finish line of The Rock course on the Alpine hill for the first time in three races in the Beijing Games. She placed ninth in the super-G, well off the pace set by gold medalist Lara Gut-Behrami of Switzerlan­d.

“It’s a really big relief to be here now in the finish, having skied a run well,” Shiffrin said. “I wasn’t skiing safe or anything. But I also did get to the finish and that’s really nice for my heart to know that it’s not totally abandoning everything I thought I knew about the sport.”

Her performanc­e in the super-G came after she crashed out of the giant slalom on Monday and skidded out of the slalom on Wednesday, both races ending just a few seconds after she started. Those were her best events and the ones in which she had won gold medals, the slalom at Sochi in 2014 and the giant slalom four years later at Pyeongchan­g.

The 26-year-old from Colorado said she had felt emotionall­y fatigued.

“But when we got out today, I just feel a little bit more settled. A little bit quieter. Trying to keep some calmness and just trying to focus on the task at hand, so I could put my attention where I wanted and ski the hill and the course properly.”

Shiffrin could compete twice more individual­ly in Beijing. She’ll have a few days to practice the downhill and decide if she’ll enter that race on Tuesday.

‘NO WAR’ SIGN » Ukrainian skeleton athlete Vladyslav Heraskevyc­h held up a small sign that read “No War in Ukraine” at the end of his third run. The sign was printed on a blue-andyellow piece of paper, the colors of Ukraine’s flag.

It is possible the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee could consider Heraskevyc­h’s act a violation of Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter, which prohibits political demonstrat­ions or propaganda during the games. But it also could fall into a gray area since the sign did not explicitly disrespect an opponent or criticize any political target.

Heraskevyc­h finished 18th in a competitio­n ultimately won by Germany’s Christophe­r Grotheer.

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