BEIJING ā It was a miserable day on the mountains outside Beijing for American stars Mikaela Shiffrin and Red Gerard.
Shiffrinās opening race in the Beijing Olympics ended quickly with a rare mistake and a rare DNF ā Did Not Finish. Favored to defend her gold medal in the giant slalom, Shiffrin instead crashed out a few seconds and five gates into the race. She lost control coming around a left-turn gate and fell onto her hip on a course known as The Ice River at the Yanqing Alpine Skiing Center.
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The missed gate meant she was done early in the opening run of the two-leg event.
While Shiffrin is expected to have four more chances to add to her collection of three Olympic medals, including two golds, she said Mondayās wipeout will always stick with her.
āI wonāt ever get over this,ā Shiffrin said. āIāve never gotten over any.ā
Her stunning exit was her first DNF in a GS in more than four years, a streak of 30 races. Her last one was three weeks before she won the gold at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games.
āThatās what drives me to try to keep working and improving, so I can try to make it (so) those things donāt happen,ā she said. āBut sometimes they still do happen and, unfortunately, it happened today. I felt like there was a lot to look forward to, but, well, now we need to reset.ā
Shiffrin plans to race again Wednesday in the slalom, which she won as an 18-year-old at the 2014 Sochi Games. Itāll be her next chance to become the first Alpine ski racer from the United States to win three Olympic golds across a career.
āIām not going to cry about this because thatās just wasting energy,ā she said.
Sara Hector of Sweden won the gold with a two-run time of 1 minute, 55.69 seconds. Federica Brignone of Italy took silver and Lara Gut-Behrami of Switzerland earned bronze.
On the slopestyle course, Gerard not only failed to defend his gold medal, but he was knocked off the podium entirely. A run by Canadian rival Mark McMorris dropped Gerard into fourth.
āThereās nothing you can really complain about and I donāt want to be a judge or anything,ā Gerard said. āThere were a lot of landed runs out there, and itās hard. But yeah, I wouldāve liked to have been up there for sure.ā
CANCER SURVIVER WINS GOLD
Three years after feeling a cancerous lump in his neck, Canadian snowboarder Max Parrot completed an inspiring comeback by winning the gold medal in menās slopestyle on a course that includes replicas of the Great Wall of China.
Parrotās victory run was highlighted by his second jump, when he approached the kicker from an angle instead of straight on ā the only competitor to do so ā and flipped backward for 1440 degrees of spin, then stomped the landing.
āBy far, the biggest run of my entire career,ā he said.
Just like his battle back from being diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma 10 months after winning the silver medal at the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics. He underwent 12 chemotherapy treatments during the span of six months.
āI had to stop everything to fight,ā he said. āI went through hell. It was the first time I ever put my snowboard in the closet. I felt like a lion in a cage.ā
Su Yiming of China earned the silver and Mark McMorris of Canada took the bronze.
McMorris was happy for his countryman.
āMax beat (expletive) cancer and itās pretty sick to see him do well,ā McMorris said. āAnd he didnāt come to any slopestyle this year. Itās not his strong suit. Big air is, and he just won slopestyle today.ā
MENāS DOWNHILL
Beat Feuz of Switzerland won the gold medal in the menās downhill, the one major victory that was missing from his impressive career accomplishments.
āI canāt think of anything more beautiful than flying home with a gold medal around my neck,ā said Feuz, the four-time reigning World Cup downhill champion who won the silver medal in super-G and the bronze in downhill at the 2018 Olympics.
The diminutive downhiller edged 41-year-old Johan Clarey of France, with two-time Olympic champion Matthias Mayer of Austria getting bronze.
American skier Mikaela Shiffrinās boyfriend, Aleksander Aamodt Kilde of Norway, was fifth.
GOLDEN WĆST
Dutch speedskater Ireen Wüst became the first athlete to win individual gold medals at five different Olympics when she took the 1,500 meters in an Olympic-record time of 1 minute, 53.28 seconds at the Ice Ribbon oval.
She now has six gold medals, five in individual events that are evenly distributed over each of the Olympics sheās competed in. Sheās the most- decorated speedskater in Winter Olympic history with 12 medals.
āI donāt know what it is. I just see the rings and something magical happens,ā said the 35-year-old Wüst, who plans to retire after the Beijing Games.
SHORT TRACK MAYHEM
Ren Ziwei of China survived a wild finish to win the menās 1,000 meters in short track speedskating. Liu Shaolin Sandor of Hungary crossed the line first but was penalized twice and earned a yellow card. That elevated Ren, who crossed second, to the gold medal.
Liu appeared to bump Ren in taking the lead late in the race. Ren grabbed Liu approaching the finish line. Liu still managed to cross first before going down. The referee assessed the penalties to Liu.
Earlier, Arianna Fontana of Italy burnished her legacy as short trackās most decorated skater with her second Olympic medal in Beijing, the gold in the womenās 500. She let out a yell as she crossed the line to earn her 10th career medal.
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