The Olympics So Far

While Alpine Skiing is looking ahead to the Olympic debut of the Team Event on Sunday, the past week has been nothing short of excitement and big surprises.

Medallists

 

Gold

 

Silver

 

Bronze

 

 

Alpine combined men

 

 

Marcel Hirscher (AUT)

 

 

Alexis Pinturault (FRA)

 

 

Victor Muffat-Jeandet (FRA)

 

 

Downhill men

 

 

Aksel Lund Svindal (NOR)

 

 

Kjetil Jansrud (NOR)

 

 

Beat Feuz (SUI)

 

 

Super-G men

 

 

Matthias Mayer (AUT)

 

 

Beat Feuz (SUI)

 

 

Kjetil Jansrud (NOR)

 

 

Super-G ladies

 

 

Ester Ledecka (CZE)

 

 

Anna Veith (AUT)

 

 

Tina Weirather (LIE)

 

 

Slalom ladies

 

 

Frida Hansdotter (SWE)

 

 

Wendy Holdener (SUI)

 

 

Katharina Gallhuber (AUT)

 

 

Giant slalom men

 

 

Marcel Hirscher (AUT)

 

 

Henrik Kristoffersen (NOR)

 

 

Alexis Pinturault (FRA)

 

 

Giant slalom ladies

 

 

Mikaela Shiffrin (USA)

 

 

Ragnhild Mowinckel (NOR)

 

 

Federica Brignone (ITA)

 

 

Downhill ladies

 

 

Sofia Goggia (ITA)

 

 

Ragnhild Mowinckel (NOR)

 

 

Lindsey Vonn (USA)

 

Biggest surprises

Double Snowboard World Champion Ester Ledecka produced one of the biggest surprises, and most amazing feats in the history of the Olympic Winter Games when she won gold in the Alpine Skiing super-G. Many had declared Austrian Anna Veith the winner, when Ledecka came down with a later bib to grab the gold by 0.01 seconds.

Ledecka is an accomplished alpine skier in the speed disciplines, but she is ranked number one in the Snowboard parallel event, as current FIS parallel overall World Cup Champion and is leading the parallel overall standings this season. She will also contest the Snowboard parallel event for an unprecedented doubling up.

She had never finished higher than 19th in a World Cup super-G previously, although showed her alpine speed credentials with 7th in the Lake Louise downhill in December.

The 22-year-old’s reaction in the finish area was priceless. Ledecka stood in disbelief believing there had to be a mistake with the timing until the cameraman told her that she was the winner.

Further surprises include Ragnhild Mowinckel (NOR) who won silver in downhill adding to her unexpected silver in the giant slalom, when she became the first Norwegian lady since 1936 to take an Olympic medal. The 25-year-old had never finished higher than sixth on the Audi FIS Ski World Cup downhill tour and was not expected to challenge the leaders.

She screamed in delight after her run, when she became the first Norwegian lady to win an Olympic downhill medal. Tina Weirather, her close friend who she bumped off the podium, was the first to congratulate her in true Olympic spirit. 

Upcoming events

 

 

Thu, 22 Feb

 

 

Slalom men

 

 

10:00/13:30 local time

 

 

2:00/5:00 CET

 

 

Thu, 22 Feb

 

 

Alpine combined ladies

 

 

11:30/15:00 local time

 

 

3:30/7:00 CET

 

 

Sun, 24 Feb

 

 

Team event

 

 

11:00 local time

 

 

3:00 CET

 

Freestyle Skiing

Athletes from twelve nations have stood on the podium in Freestyle Skiing which has completed eight of ten medal events.

Medallists 

 

 

 

Gold

 

Silver

 

Bronze

 

 

Moguls ladies

 

 

Perrine Laffont (FRA)

 

 

Justine Dufour-Lapointe (CAN)

 

 

Yulia Galysheva (KAZ)

 

 

Moguls men

 

 

Mikael Kingsbury (CAN)

 

 

Matt Graham (AUS)

 

 

Hara Daichi (JPN)

 

 

Aerials ladies

 

 

Hanna Huskova (BLR)

 

 

Xin Zhang (CHN)

 

 

Fanyu Kong (CHN)

 

 

Aerials men

 

 

Oleksandr Abramenko (UKR)

 

 

Jia Zongyang (CHN)

 

 

Ilia Burov (OAR)

 

 

Slopestyle ladies

 

 

Sarah Hoefflin (SUI)

 

 

 

Mathilde Gremaud (SUI)

 

 

Isabel Atkin (GBR)

 

 

Slopestyle men

 

 

Oystein Braaten (NOR)

 

 

 

Nicholas Goepper (USA)

 

 

Alex Beaulieu-Marchand (CAN)

 

 

Halfpipe ladies

 

 

Cassie Sharpe (CAN)

 

 

Marie Martinod (FRA)

 

 

Brita Sigourney (USA)

 

 

Ski cross men

 

 

Brady Leman (CAN)

 

 

Marc Bischofberger (SUI)

 

 

Sergey Ridzik (OAR)

 

Biggest surprise

Sarah Hoefflin (SUI) claimed the Olympic gold medal in slopestyle, while Sochi gold medallist Dara Howell (CAN) was eliminated in qualifying and none of the top-10 in the FIS World Cup standings got on the podium.

Both Hoefflin and her teammate Gremaud made their intentions known early as they had the two highest scores of the first round. Hoefflin, currently 12th in the FIS World Cup, then raised the bar even further as she improved her score to take the lead off her compatriot and win gold. Britain claimed its first ever Olympic medal on skis through 19-year-old Isabel Atkin.

Snowboard

After seven of ten medal events, Snowboarding is looking ahead to the much anticipated Olympic debut of big air especially after excellent qualification rounds which have excited a nearly full Alpensia stadium early morning on Monday and Wednesday.

Medallists 

 

 

Gold

 

Silver

 

Bronze

 

 

Halfpipe ladies

 

 

Chloe Kim (USA)

 

 

Jiayu Liu (CHN)

 

 

Arielle Gold (USA)

 

 

Halfpipe men

 

 

Shaun White (USA)

 

 

Ayumu Hirano (JPN)

 

 

Scotty James (AUS)

 

 

Slopestyle ladies

 

 

Jamie Anderson (USA)

 

 

Laurie Blouin (CAN)

 

 

Enni Rukajarvi (FIN)

 

 

Slopestyle men

 

 

Redmond Gerard (USA)

 

 

Max Parrot (CAN)

 

 

Mark McMorris (CAN)

 

 

SBX ladies

 

 

Michela Moioli (ITA)

 

 

Julia Pereira de Sousa Mabileau (FRA)

 

 

Eva Samkova (CZE)

 

 

SBX men

 

 

Pierre Vaultier (FRA)

 

 

Jarryd Hughes (AUS)

 

 

Regino Hernandez (ESP)

 

Biggest surprises

Snowboard star Ester Ledecka (CZE) not only stunned the alpine skiing world, but also the snowboard community with her surprise gold in super-G.

Further surprises include snowboard cross silver for teen sensation Julia Pereira de Sousa Mabileau, becoming the third French female to medal in this event after Deborah Anthonioz won silver in Vancouver 2010 and Chloe Trespeuch bronze in Sochi 2014.

Regino Hernandez’s bronze medal in snowboard cross marked the third time that Spain has won an Olympic Winter Games medal and the first in snowboard, following Francisco Fernandez Ochoa’s gold in slalom in Sapporo 1972 and his sister Blanca Fernandez Oachoa’s bronze in slalom in Albertville 1992.

Favourite behind the scenes story

Jasey Jay Anderson (CAN) is the sole snowboarder who has competed in all editions of the Olympic Winter Games since snowboarding was introduced to the Olympic programme in Nagano 1998. In Vancovuer 2010, the now 42-year-old became Olympic Champion in parallel giant slalom.

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