Closing Ceremony
The PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics comes to a close. And the Closing Ceremony was wonderful.
Highlights:
It's the Hyooman tribe from Adventure Time!
I didn't realize that Ooo was in the Parade of Nations! Damn you. NBC, for cutting away to commercial!
I love watching the athletes enjoy the festivities:
This is a boy band? Exactly how many people are in this band?
They've got enough people to race a short track speedskating relay final!
Just fantastic fun.
It's TRON!
Next up, Beijing 2022!
Thank you, PyeongChang! It has been an exciting Olympics. Thank you, volunteers and staff, and locals for welcoming us to your home. It has been a spectacular experience.
Sunday, February 25, 2018
PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics Day 16
Day 16
Last day of competition and the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics are over. What a fantastic Olympics it has been!
Olympic Fanfare and Theme by John Williams and the Boston Pops Orchestra
Highlights
Curling Women's Gold Medal Match (Sweden vs South Korea)
South Korea's Team Kim (dubbed Garlic Girls by Korean Press) have made an incredible Cinderella run for gold.
Taking nicknames from their favorite breakfast foods, Kim Cho-hee 'Chocho' (Cookie), Kim Yeong-mi 'Pancake', Kim Seon-yeong 'Sunny' (Side Up Eggs), Kim Kyeong-ae 'Steak', and Kim Eun-jung 'Annie' (Yogurt Brand) faced off against Sweden's Anna Hasselborg, Sara McManus, Agnes Knochenhauer, Sofia Mabergs, and Jennie Wåhlin.
It was breakfast versus Swedish meatballs! And in the final face off, Sweden had better handle on the ice and better shots, and they take the gold after a concession from South Korea, 8-3.
The Swedes played better and took an early lead that they held and extended all the way to the end.
And a fantastic job to the home team, winning silver, South Korea's first ever curling medal.
I was totally rooting for South Korea, because I love rooting for the underdogs. And they've had an amazing run! And the Swedes totally earned that gold in the match. They played better.
A fantastic job to both teams!
My only disappointment was the medal ceremony. I was kind of hoping that the Swedish anthem would be a song from ABBA or Ace Of Base.
Four Man Bobsled
Germany has swept gold in all three bobsled events, just as they did at Tornio 2006. With the four man bobsled gold, Germany has set a new record of being the first country to win six sliding golds at a single Winter Olympics.
German pilot Francesco Friedrich with Candy Bauer, Martin Grothkopp and Thorsten Margis clocked in four runs in 3 minutes, 15.85 seconds to win by more than a half-second. The Korean sled driven by Won Yunjong and the German sled driven by Nico Walther tied to share the silver, the second sliding medal tie in these games after they finished in 3 minutes, 16.38 seconds.
The German team of Nico Walther, Kevin Kuske, Alexander Rödiger, and Eric Franke adds a shared silver to the German medal haul, making up for a terrible Sochi 2014 experience, when Germany failed to medal.
And Won Yun-jong, Jun Jung-lin, Seo Young-woo, and Kim Dong-hyun deliver South Korea the silver, its second sliding sports medal ever!
Switzerland's Rico Peter, Thomas Amrhein, Simon Friedli, and Michael Kuonen had the third fastest time. But there is a stupid rule in the Olympics that prevents them from getting a well earned bronze.
Since there is a tie at silver, there is no bronze awarded! And if there's a tie at gold, there's no silver awarded! The second place finished gets bronze instead!
Ice Hockey Gold Medal Match (Germany vs OAR)
Tied at 3-3, the game went into overtime. A power play gave the OAR the edge to score one more goal and claim the gold.
At the medal ceremony, the Olympics anthem was played while Russians tried to sing their national anthem. Russia is "banned" from participating in the Games for its state sponsored doping, most notably when it hosted Sochi 2014. The Russian athletes invited to participate have been competing under the neutral Olympics flag, designated as the Olympic Athletes from Russia (OAR). All medals they won are NOT counted under Russia.
The last time Russia won hockey gold was at Albertville 1992, when they were the Unified Team after the break up of the Soviet Union.
Germany put in a stellar performance to take silver. It is a fantastic showing for a nation no one counted on to even make the podium. But they have surprised everyone and earned a spot to play for gold. The silver win is a great win.
Canada won bronze after playing Czech Republic.
Cross-country Skiing Women's 30km Mass Start Classic
Marit Bjoergen is the Queen of the Winter Olympics!
Marit Bjoergen won the Women's Cross-country Skiing 30km Mass Start. She clocked in at 1 hour, 22 minutes and 17.6 seconds — more than 1 minute, 49 seconds ahead of silver medalist Krista Parkakoski from Finland. Sweden's Stina Nilsson won bronze.
Marit Bjoergen had time to stop and pick up a Norway flag to wave triumphantly as she crossed the finish line.
Marit Bjoergen had such a large lead in the race, that in the last 7km, the skier following her, Austria's Teresa Stadlober lost sight of her and took a wrong turn! By the time she realized this and corrected herself, it was too late. She had been in second place but accidentally took a wrong turn and finished ninth.
Marit Bjoergen is the only athlete to win five medals in the Pyeongchang Games. She now has a record 15 Olympic medals in the Winter Games overall, making her the most decorated Winter Olympian of all time!
This win also gave Norway its 14th medal overall in cross-country in Pyeongchang. This breaks the Olympic record of 13 set by the then-Soviet Union at Calgary 1988. Norway is now the most successful Winter Olympics nation. It has won a record 39 medals and tied Germany with 14 golds apiece.
And so ends a dramatic and fantastic PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics. We witnessed some great and surprising performances and the heartbreak of some tough losses. To witness champions coming from all over the world and getting along is inspiring. This Olympics is historical for many reasons.
I am glad to see the IOC still banning Russia from being represented at the Games for state sponsored doping. The IOC still has a very long way to go to keep the Games clean and keep doping nations out! Champions don't cheat! Dopers are losers!
Yet amid the controversies that always plague the Games, it was wonderful to see athletes from all over the world display what the human spirit and human body is capable of, and how inspiring it was to watch them overcome the challenges and win a place on the podium. Anything can happen at the Olympics. And they did!
But most of all, it was a monumental event to see Korean athletes from the North and South walk and play side by side. It is a signal of hope that someday, maybe there might be a better future for a possible reunified or at least peaceful Korea. It shows that underneath the politics and propaganda are real people. And by seeing real people working together, there is hope for better relations and a peaceful future.
The Closing Ceremony end the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics, and the torch will be passed on to Beijing 2022. Beijing will become the first city to host both the Summer and Winter Olympics.
Last day of competition and the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics are over. What a fantastic Olympics it has been!
Olympic Fanfare and Theme by John Williams and the Boston Pops Orchestra
Highlights
Curling Women's Gold Medal Match (Sweden vs South Korea)
South Korea's Team Kim (dubbed Garlic Girls by Korean Press) have made an incredible Cinderella run for gold.
Taking nicknames from their favorite breakfast foods, Kim Cho-hee 'Chocho' (Cookie), Kim Yeong-mi 'Pancake', Kim Seon-yeong 'Sunny' (Side Up Eggs), Kim Kyeong-ae 'Steak', and Kim Eun-jung 'Annie' (Yogurt Brand) faced off against Sweden's Anna Hasselborg, Sara McManus, Agnes Knochenhauer, Sofia Mabergs, and Jennie Wåhlin.
It was breakfast versus Swedish meatballs! And in the final face off, Sweden had better handle on the ice and better shots, and they take the gold after a concession from South Korea, 8-3.
The Swedes played better and took an early lead that they held and extended all the way to the end.
And a fantastic job to the home team, winning silver, South Korea's first ever curling medal.
I was totally rooting for South Korea, because I love rooting for the underdogs. And they've had an amazing run! And the Swedes totally earned that gold in the match. They played better.
A fantastic job to both teams!
My only disappointment was the medal ceremony. I was kind of hoping that the Swedish anthem would be a song from ABBA or Ace Of Base.
Four Man Bobsled
Germany has swept gold in all three bobsled events, just as they did at Tornio 2006. With the four man bobsled gold, Germany has set a new record of being the first country to win six sliding golds at a single Winter Olympics.
German pilot Francesco Friedrich with Candy Bauer, Martin Grothkopp and Thorsten Margis clocked in four runs in 3 minutes, 15.85 seconds to win by more than a half-second. The Korean sled driven by Won Yunjong and the German sled driven by Nico Walther tied to share the silver, the second sliding medal tie in these games after they finished in 3 minutes, 16.38 seconds.
The German team of Nico Walther, Kevin Kuske, Alexander Rödiger, and Eric Franke adds a shared silver to the German medal haul, making up for a terrible Sochi 2014 experience, when Germany failed to medal.
And Won Yun-jong, Jun Jung-lin, Seo Young-woo, and Kim Dong-hyun deliver South Korea the silver, its second sliding sports medal ever!
Switzerland's Rico Peter, Thomas Amrhein, Simon Friedli, and Michael Kuonen had the third fastest time. But there is a stupid rule in the Olympics that prevents them from getting a well earned bronze.
Since there is a tie at silver, there is no bronze awarded! And if there's a tie at gold, there's no silver awarded! The second place finished gets bronze instead!
Ice Hockey Gold Medal Match (Germany vs OAR)
Tied at 3-3, the game went into overtime. A power play gave the OAR the edge to score one more goal and claim the gold.
At the medal ceremony, the Olympics anthem was played while Russians tried to sing their national anthem. Russia is "banned" from participating in the Games for its state sponsored doping, most notably when it hosted Sochi 2014. The Russian athletes invited to participate have been competing under the neutral Olympics flag, designated as the Olympic Athletes from Russia (OAR). All medals they won are NOT counted under Russia.
The last time Russia won hockey gold was at Albertville 1992, when they were the Unified Team after the break up of the Soviet Union.
Germany put in a stellar performance to take silver. It is a fantastic showing for a nation no one counted on to even make the podium. But they have surprised everyone and earned a spot to play for gold. The silver win is a great win.
Canada won bronze after playing Czech Republic.
Cross-country Skiing Women's 30km Mass Start Classic
Marit Bjoergen is the Queen of the Winter Olympics!
Marit Bjoergen won the Women's Cross-country Skiing 30km Mass Start. She clocked in at 1 hour, 22 minutes and 17.6 seconds — more than 1 minute, 49 seconds ahead of silver medalist Krista Parkakoski from Finland. Sweden's Stina Nilsson won bronze.
Marit Bjoergen had time to stop and pick up a Norway flag to wave triumphantly as she crossed the finish line.
Marit Bjoergen had such a large lead in the race, that in the last 7km, the skier following her, Austria's Teresa Stadlober lost sight of her and took a wrong turn! By the time she realized this and corrected herself, it was too late. She had been in second place but accidentally took a wrong turn and finished ninth.
Marit Bjoergen is the only athlete to win five medals in the Pyeongchang Games. She now has a record 15 Olympic medals in the Winter Games overall, making her the most decorated Winter Olympian of all time!
This win also gave Norway its 14th medal overall in cross-country in Pyeongchang. This breaks the Olympic record of 13 set by the then-Soviet Union at Calgary 1988. Norway is now the most successful Winter Olympics nation. It has won a record 39 medals and tied Germany with 14 golds apiece.
And so ends a dramatic and fantastic PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics. We witnessed some great and surprising performances and the heartbreak of some tough losses. To witness champions coming from all over the world and getting along is inspiring. This Olympics is historical for many reasons.
I am glad to see the IOC still banning Russia from being represented at the Games for state sponsored doping. The IOC still has a very long way to go to keep the Games clean and keep doping nations out! Champions don't cheat! Dopers are losers!
Yet amid the controversies that always plague the Games, it was wonderful to see athletes from all over the world display what the human spirit and human body is capable of, and how inspiring it was to watch them overcome the challenges and win a place on the podium. Anything can happen at the Olympics. And they did!
Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Canada perform during the Figure Skating Gala Exhibition PyeongChang 2018 February 25, 2018 South Korea. Feb. 24, 2018 - Source: Getty Images AsiaPac |
Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford of Canada perform during the Figure Skating Gala Exhibition PyeongChang 2018 February 25, 2018 South Korea. Feb. 24, 2018 - Source: Getty Images AsiaPac |
But most of all, it was a monumental event to see Korean athletes from the North and South walk and play side by side. It is a signal of hope that someday, maybe there might be a better future for a possible reunified or at least peaceful Korea. It shows that underneath the politics and propaganda are real people. And by seeing real people working together, there is hope for better relations and a peaceful future.
The Closing Ceremony end the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics, and the torch will be passed on to Beijing 2022. Beijing will become the first city to host both the Summer and Winter Olympics.
Saturday, February 24, 2018
PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics Day 15
Day 15
What a dramatic Day 15 of the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics.
Highlights:
Men's Snowboard Big Air
In the Olympics debut of a sport where the snowboarders jump off a tall hill and are scored by the tricks they do in the air, Sebastien Toutant scored a 174.25, the best total points in two out of three runs. He wins gold, the eleventh gold for Canada at these PyeongChang Games.
Kyle Mack of the United States took silver with a score of 168.75. He sat on his final third run, unable to put together a higher score to take that top spot. But a fantastic effort in a dangerous sport were crashes are common.
Billy Morgan of Great Britain earned bronze as the crowd cheered for the amazing feats and moaned at the hard crashes.
It was a spectacular debut of a new sport at the Winter Olympics, one that was a crowd pleaser and definitely pushes the limits of human ability and sensibilities!
Alpine Skiing Team Event
It is the debut of Alpine Skiing Team Skiing Event. The event has 16 countries seeded for a bracket-style tournament. Each team has four racers--two men and two women--competing in 1-on-1, side-by-side parallel runs. First to cross the finish with fastest time wins.
Each race victory is worth one point. If the score ends up at 2 each in a tie, then the lower combined time of each team's fastest man and fastest woman will decide the winner.
The tie breaker was used in the bronze match between Norway and France tying 2 race victories each. The combined fastest time of each team's fastest man and fastest woman gave Norway the edge and the first bronze in the debut of the event.
And in the gold medal match, Switzerland was up 2-1 in the final race between Swiss ski racer Daniel Yule and Austrian Marco Schwarz. It started fast and furious out of the gate, but halfway down, Marco Schwarz skied out along the side-by-side parallel slalom course.
Switzerland finishes the race alone and takes the gold. And Austria takes silver.
Gold medalists were Switzerland's Ramon Zenhaeusern, Daniel Yule, Luca Aerni, Wendy Holdener, and Denise Feierabend.
Austria's silver medalists were Marco Schwarz, Michael Matt, Manuel Feller, Katharina Liensberger, Katharina Gallhuber, and Stephanie Brunner.
Norway's bronze medal team consisted of Jonathan Nordbotten, Leif Kristian Nestvold-Haugen, Sebastian Foss-Solevaag, Maren Skjoeld, Kristin Lysdahl, and Nina Haver-Loeseth
Women's Snowboard Parallel Giant Slalom
Ester Ledecka of the Czech Republic won a gold medal in the snowboarding parallel giant slalom on Saturday, and made history by becoming the first woman to win gold in two sports at a single Winter Olympics. She won the skiing super-G a week ago.
Germany's Selina Joerg took silver. And another German, Ramona Hofmeister, claimed bronze, by beating OAR’s Alena Zavarzina.
Ester Ledecka is the first woman to win gold in two different sports at the same Winter Olympics. She is the second woman to medal in two different sports at the same Winter Olympics.
Jorien ter Mors of the Netherlands won gold in the 1000m long-track speedskating, and then she earned a bronze in the chaotic and thrilling 3000m relay in short-track. Her team set a new world record, winning the B Final. Then when second finisher China and third finisher Canada were disqualified in the A Final, third place Italy got bumped up to silver, and the record setting B Final Dutch team were elevated to third place, granting Jorien ter Mors her bronze, her second medal at the same Olympics, from a different sport.
Ester Ledecka is the third athlete, male or female, to win gold in two sports at the same Winter Olympics--her gold in Alpine Skiing Super G and gold in Snowboarding Parallel Giant Slalom. The first athlete to earn gold in two sports at the same Winter Games was Norway's Thorleif Haug at Chamonix 1924, with two golds in cross-country skiing (18km and 50km) and the gold in Nordic combined. The second athlete to win gold in two sports at the same Winter Olympics is another Norwegian, Johan Grøttumsbråten, who took gold in cross-country skiing (18km) and gold in Nordic combined at St Moritz 1928.
Men's Snowboard Parallel Giant Slalom
Switzerland's Nevin Galmarini, the 2014 Olympic silver medalist, takes the gold.
And Lee Sang-Ho of South Korea captured the host nation's first-ever Winter Olympic medal on snow with the silver. It was a fantastic race.
I quite enjoyed watching Lee Sang-Ho make his Olympics debut run, with the crowd cheering him on in all his races. He is nicknamed affectionately as the "Napa Cabbage Boy," because when he was a small child, he learned to snowboard on a frozen cabbage patch that was turned into a sledding slope. And this cabbage patch kid gave his cheering home crowd a fantastic run that ended with a silver medal.
Slovenia's Zan Kosir outraced Sylvain Dufour of France in the small final to win bronze. It's Zan Kosir's third Olympic medal after earning bronze in the Parallel Giant Slalom and silver in Parallel Slalom at Sochi 2014.
Curling Men's Gold Medal Game (United States vs Sweden)
History was also made as the US won its first ever gold in men's curling, leaving Sweden the silver.
John Shuster scored the United States a 10-7 victory on Saturday for only the second curling medal in U.S. history, a bronze from Torino 2006. John Shuster was a part of that bronze team. But his lackluster performance at Vancouver 2010 and Sochi 2014 led to him being denied a spot on a team picked in 2014 and was specifically being trained for Pyeongchang 2018.
John Shuster gathered Matt Hamilton, John Landsteiner, who were also rejected, and with alternate Joe Polo, plus Tyler George (who didn't apply for the high performance team training) and formed their own team, "The Rejects". They trained, got healthy, and go on a hard path for the next four years. They won a bronze medal at the worlds, two national titles and then finished first in the U.S. Olympic trials, beating out the high performance trained team and earned a spot at PyeongChang 2018.
But they ran into serious trouble in Pyeongchang, and were on the verge of being eliminated if they lost to defending Olympics champions Canada. They defeat Canada and earned a spot in the gold match against number one seeded Sweden.
John Shuster, Tyler George,Matt Hamilton, John Landsteiner, and Joe Polo of the US win gold.
A small mixup occurred when the men were accidentally given the women's gold medals. Only John Polo had the right medal. The situation was immediately remedied with the right medals. Although John Shuster said that a gold medal is a gold medal. So true!
Sweden's Niklas Edin, Oskar Eriksson, Rasmus Wranå, Christoffer Sundgren, and Henrik Leek take silver.
Benoît Schwarz, Claudio Pätz, Peter de Cruz, Valentin Tanner, Dominik Märki of Switzerland take bronze. Switzerland won the bronze by defeating Canada.
Curling Women's Bronze Medal Game (Japan vs United Kingdom)
Satsuki Fujisawa, Chinami Yoshida, Yumi Suzuki, Yurika Yoshida, and Mari Motohashi of Japan won the bronze match against Great Britain's Eve Muirhead, Anna Sloan, Vicki Adams, Lauren Gray, and Kelly Schafer.
This bronze is Japan's first ever Olympic medal in curling, and they become the first Asian nation to medal in Olympic curling.
South Korea will face off Sweden later in the gold medal match.
Cross-Country Skiing Men's 50km Mass Start Classic
Iivo Niskanen has captured Finland's first gold medal of the Pyeongchang Games, clocking in the marathon event at 2 hours, 8 minutes, 22.1 seconds.
Iivo Niskanen beat out Russian Alexander Bolshunov with a strong sprint to the finish in the 50km mass start. In the last 11km of the marathon, Alexander Bolshunov and Iivo Niskanen broke away and made a two man race to the gold. At the last kilometer, Iivo Niskanen kicks up the speed and Alexander Bolshunov could not match. He finished more than 18 seconds after Iivo Niskanen to take silver for the OAR. Another OAR, Andrey Larkov, took the bronze.
It's the first time in 11 races that Norway has failed to medal in a cross-country race here. Norwegian ski star, three time gold medalist Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo, decided to skip the final men's race of the Olympic Games. He returned home to Norway despite having a chance to become the only Olympian at the Pyeongchang Games to win four gold medals.
Ice Hockey Men's Bronze Medal Game (Canada vs Czech)
Two time defending champions Canada took the bronze medal at the Pyeongchang Games by beating the Czech Republic 6-4.
A surprise, outstanding performance by Germany got them a shot at the gold medal in the final match later against OAR.
Speed Skating Women's Mass Start Final
Any time you put a bunch of people on the ice and have them race, you're going to get glorious crashes.
In the Olympics debut of the mass start, Japan's Nana Takagi blasted past opposition in the final straightaway to win the first gold of women's mass start. She adds that gold to a team pursuit gold she won earlier in the week.
Kim Bo-reum of South Korea grabs silver. And Irene Schouten of the Netherlands, who was leading into the final straightaway, went too wide on the final corner and had to settle for bronze Saturday.
Speed Skating Men's Mass Start Final
South Korea's Lee Seung-hoon skated a deft race, taking the last corner in a brilliant move that left the other skaters chasing him. He wins South Korea's first gold in long track speedskating of the PyeongChang Games, much to the delight of the home crowd.
Belgian inline skater Bart Swings held on to take silver. And Koen Verweij of the Netherlands finishes third for the bronze.
In the tactical mass start race, 5000m champion Sven Kramer went for gold with four laps to go, but the Dutchman was caught just as he entered the final lap. The top three passed him. From then on, it was Lee's exceptional skills on maneuvering the tight final corner that paid off and won the first gold awarded in the men's speedskating mass start.
And so ends a historic Day 15 of the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics. Only a few events are left as the Pyeongchang 2018 Games come to a close.
What a dramatic Day 15 of the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics.
Highlights:
Men's Snowboard Big Air
In the Olympics debut of a sport where the snowboarders jump off a tall hill and are scored by the tricks they do in the air, Sebastien Toutant scored a 174.25, the best total points in two out of three runs. He wins gold, the eleventh gold for Canada at these PyeongChang Games.
Sebastien Toutant of Canada competes during the Men's Big Air PyeongChang 2018 February 24, 2018 South Korea. Feb. 23, 2018 - Source: Al Bello/Getty Images AsiaPac |
Kyle Mack of the United States took silver with a score of 168.75. He sat on his final third run, unable to put together a higher score to take that top spot. But a fantastic effort in a dangerous sport were crashes are common.
Kyle Mack of the United States competes during the Men's Big Air Final PyeongChang 2018 February 24, 2018 South Korea. Feb. 23, 2018 - Source: Matthias Hangst/Getty Images AsiaPac |
Billy Morgan of Great Britain earned bronze as the crowd cheered for the amazing feats and moaned at the hard crashes.
Billy Morgan of Great Britain competes during the Men's Big Air PyeongChang 2018 February 24, 2018 South Korea. Feb. 23, 2018 - Source: Matthias Hangst/Getty Images AsiaPac |
It was a spectacular debut of a new sport at the Winter Olympics, one that was a crowd pleaser and definitely pushes the limits of human ability and sensibilities!
Alpine Skiing Team Event
It is the debut of Alpine Skiing Team Skiing Event. The event has 16 countries seeded for a bracket-style tournament. Each team has four racers--two men and two women--competing in 1-on-1, side-by-side parallel runs. First to cross the finish with fastest time wins.
Each race victory is worth one point. If the score ends up at 2 each in a tie, then the lower combined time of each team's fastest man and fastest woman will decide the winner.
The tie breaker was used in the bronze match between Norway and France tying 2 race victories each. The combined fastest time of each team's fastest man and fastest woman gave Norway the edge and the first bronze in the debut of the event.
And in the gold medal match, Switzerland was up 2-1 in the final race between Swiss ski racer Daniel Yule and Austrian Marco Schwarz. It started fast and furious out of the gate, but halfway down, Marco Schwarz skied out along the side-by-side parallel slalom course.
Switzerland finishes the race alone and takes the gold. And Austria takes silver.
Gold medalists were Switzerland's Ramon Zenhaeusern, Daniel Yule, Luca Aerni, Wendy Holdener, and Denise Feierabend.
Austria's silver medalists were Marco Schwarz, Michael Matt, Manuel Feller, Katharina Liensberger, Katharina Gallhuber, and Stephanie Brunner.
Norway's bronze medal team consisted of Jonathan Nordbotten, Leif Kristian Nestvold-Haugen, Sebastian Foss-Solevaag, Maren Skjoeld, Kristin Lysdahl, and Nina Haver-Loeseth
Women's Snowboard Parallel Giant Slalom
Ester Ledecka of the Czech Republic won a gold medal in the snowboarding parallel giant slalom on Saturday, and made history by becoming the first woman to win gold in two sports at a single Winter Olympics. She won the skiing super-G a week ago.
Ester Ledecka of the Czech Republic competes during the Ladies' Parallel Giant Slalom PyeongChang 2018 February 24, 2018 South Korea. Feb. 23, 2018 - Source: Clive Rose/Getty Images AsiaPac |
Germany's Selina Joerg took silver. And another German, Ramona Hofmeister, claimed bronze, by beating OAR’s Alena Zavarzina.
Ester Ledecka is the first woman to win gold in two different sports at the same Winter Olympics. She is the second woman to medal in two different sports at the same Winter Olympics.
Jorien ter Mors of the Netherlands won gold in the 1000m long-track speedskating, and then she earned a bronze in the chaotic and thrilling 3000m relay in short-track. Her team set a new world record, winning the B Final. Then when second finisher China and third finisher Canada were disqualified in the A Final, third place Italy got bumped up to silver, and the record setting B Final Dutch team were elevated to third place, granting Jorien ter Mors her bronze, her second medal at the same Olympics, from a different sport.
Ester Ledecka is the third athlete, male or female, to win gold in two sports at the same Winter Olympics--her gold in Alpine Skiing Super G and gold in Snowboarding Parallel Giant Slalom. The first athlete to earn gold in two sports at the same Winter Games was Norway's Thorleif Haug at Chamonix 1924, with two golds in cross-country skiing (18km and 50km) and the gold in Nordic combined. The second athlete to win gold in two sports at the same Winter Olympics is another Norwegian, Johan Grøttumsbråten, who took gold in cross-country skiing (18km) and gold in Nordic combined at St Moritz 1928.
Men's Snowboard Parallel Giant Slalom
Switzerland's Nevin Galmarini, the 2014 Olympic silver medalist, takes the gold.
And Lee Sang-Ho of South Korea captured the host nation's first-ever Winter Olympic medal on snow with the silver. It was a fantastic race.
Sang-ho Lee of Korea competes during the Men's Parallel Giant Slalom PyeongChang 2018 February 24, 2018 South Korea. Feb. 23, 2018 - Source: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images AsiaPac |
I quite enjoyed watching Lee Sang-Ho make his Olympics debut run, with the crowd cheering him on in all his races. He is nicknamed affectionately as the "Napa Cabbage Boy," because when he was a small child, he learned to snowboard on a frozen cabbage patch that was turned into a sledding slope. And this cabbage patch kid gave his cheering home crowd a fantastic run that ended with a silver medal.
Slovenia's Zan Kosir outraced Sylvain Dufour of France in the small final to win bronze. It's Zan Kosir's third Olympic medal after earning bronze in the Parallel Giant Slalom and silver in Parallel Slalom at Sochi 2014.
Curling Men's Gold Medal Game (United States vs Sweden)
History was also made as the US won its first ever gold in men's curling, leaving Sweden the silver.
John Shuster scored the United States a 10-7 victory on Saturday for only the second curling medal in U.S. history, a bronze from Torino 2006. John Shuster was a part of that bronze team. But his lackluster performance at Vancouver 2010 and Sochi 2014 led to him being denied a spot on a team picked in 2014 and was specifically being trained for Pyeongchang 2018.
John Shuster gathered Matt Hamilton, John Landsteiner, who were also rejected, and with alternate Joe Polo, plus Tyler George (who didn't apply for the high performance team training) and formed their own team, "The Rejects". They trained, got healthy, and go on a hard path for the next four years. They won a bronze medal at the worlds, two national titles and then finished first in the U.S. Olympic trials, beating out the high performance trained team and earned a spot at PyeongChang 2018.
But they ran into serious trouble in Pyeongchang, and were on the verge of being eliminated if they lost to defending Olympics champions Canada. They defeat Canada and earned a spot in the gold match against number one seeded Sweden.
John Shuster, Tyler George,Matt Hamilton, John Landsteiner, and Joe Polo of the US win gold.
A small mixup occurred when the men were accidentally given the women's gold medals. Only John Polo had the right medal. The situation was immediately remedied with the right medals. Although John Shuster said that a gold medal is a gold medal. So true!
Sweden's Niklas Edin, Oskar Eriksson, Rasmus Wranå, Christoffer Sundgren, and Henrik Leek take silver.
Benoît Schwarz, Claudio Pätz, Peter de Cruz, Valentin Tanner, Dominik Märki of Switzerland take bronze. Switzerland won the bronze by defeating Canada.
Curling Women's Bronze Medal Game (Japan vs United Kingdom)
Satsuki Fujisawa, Chinami Yoshida, Yumi Suzuki, Yurika Yoshida, and Mari Motohashi of Japan won the bronze match against Great Britain's Eve Muirhead, Anna Sloan, Vicki Adams, Lauren Gray, and Kelly Schafer.
This bronze is Japan's first ever Olympic medal in curling, and they become the first Asian nation to medal in Olympic curling.
South Korea will face off Sweden later in the gold medal match.
Cross-Country Skiing Men's 50km Mass Start Classic
Iivo Niskanen has captured Finland's first gold medal of the Pyeongchang Games, clocking in the marathon event at 2 hours, 8 minutes, 22.1 seconds.
Iivo Niskanen beat out Russian Alexander Bolshunov with a strong sprint to the finish in the 50km mass start. In the last 11km of the marathon, Alexander Bolshunov and Iivo Niskanen broke away and made a two man race to the gold. At the last kilometer, Iivo Niskanen kicks up the speed and Alexander Bolshunov could not match. He finished more than 18 seconds after Iivo Niskanen to take silver for the OAR. Another OAR, Andrey Larkov, took the bronze.
It's the first time in 11 races that Norway has failed to medal in a cross-country race here. Norwegian ski star, three time gold medalist Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo, decided to skip the final men's race of the Olympic Games. He returned home to Norway despite having a chance to become the only Olympian at the Pyeongchang Games to win four gold medals.
Ice Hockey Men's Bronze Medal Game (Canada vs Czech)
Two time defending champions Canada took the bronze medal at the Pyeongchang Games by beating the Czech Republic 6-4.
A surprise, outstanding performance by Germany got them a shot at the gold medal in the final match later against OAR.
Speed Skating Women's Mass Start Final
Any time you put a bunch of people on the ice and have them race, you're going to get glorious crashes.
In the Olympics debut of the mass start, Japan's Nana Takagi blasted past opposition in the final straightaway to win the first gold of women's mass start. She adds that gold to a team pursuit gold she won earlier in the week.
Kim Bo-reum of South Korea grabs silver. And Irene Schouten of the Netherlands, who was leading into the final straightaway, went too wide on the final corner and had to settle for bronze Saturday.
Speed Skating Men's Mass Start Final
South Korea's Lee Seung-hoon skated a deft race, taking the last corner in a brilliant move that left the other skaters chasing him. He wins South Korea's first gold in long track speedskating of the PyeongChang Games, much to the delight of the home crowd.
Seung-Hoon Lee of Korea competes in the Men's Speed Skating Mass Start Final PyeongChang 2018 February 24, 2018 South Korea. Feb. 23, 2018 - Source: Robert Cianflone/Getty Images AsiaPac |
Belgian inline skater Bart Swings held on to take silver. And Koen Verweij of the Netherlands finishes third for the bronze.
In the tactical mass start race, 5000m champion Sven Kramer went for gold with four laps to go, but the Dutchman was caught just as he entered the final lap. The top three passed him. From then on, it was Lee's exceptional skills on maneuvering the tight final corner that paid off and won the first gold awarded in the men's speedskating mass start.
And so ends a historic Day 15 of the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympics. Only a few events are left as the Pyeongchang 2018 Games come to a close.
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