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Team USA Ninth In Men’s 4x10k Team Relay

By Tom Horrocks
February, 13 2022
Kevin Bolger
Kevin Bolger competes during the Men's Cross-Country Sprint Free Qualification on Day 4 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at The National Cross-Country Skiing Centre on February 08, 2022. in Zhangjiakou, China. (Photo by Matthias Hangst/Getty Images)

With a strong finishing kick, Kevin Bolger powered Team USA to ninth-place in the Men’s 4x10k Team Relay at the Kuyangshu Nordic Center, in Zhangjiakou, China, Sunday.

The Russian Olympic Committee team skied away from the field early in the 12-lap race on a cold, snowy day to win the gold with a time of 1:54:50. Norway’s Johannes Klaebo dropped Maurice Manicat on the final lap to secure the silver medal for the Norweigan team with a time of 1:55:57, while France took the bronze with a time of 1:56:07.

Luke Jager opened up the first 10k classic leg for Team USA. Jager was comfortably in the lead group until Russia’s Alexey Chervotkin dropped the hammer and blew up the lead group. 

“The course was really hard, the altitude was really hard, and 10k, it is a lot different than say 5 or 7.5k,” said Jager, who is competing in his first Olympic Winter Games and was a member of the two-time U.S. Junior Men’s World Championship winning relay team. “I learned a lot from it, and now I feel like I need to go home and train a lot more.”  

Jager tagged off to Scott Patterson in 13th, who picked off two places before tagging off to Gus Schumacher. “That was a hard race,” said Patterson, who found himself in no man's land for most of the second leg. “It would have been nice to have a group to ski with out there today.”

Patterson tagged off to Gus Schumacher, who skied a solid 10k. He tagged off to Bolger who picked off Canada’s Remi Drolet and then set his eyes on Japan’s Haruki Yamashita, catching him on the final climb into the finish arena, and easily putting 50 meters on him at the line.

Three races remain on the Cross Country program for the 2022 Olympic Winter Games. The Classic Team Sprint takes place Wednesday, followed by the men’s 50k mass-start freestyle on Saturday, and the women’s 30k mass-start freestyle on Sunday, Feb. 20.

 

RESULTS
Men’s 4x10k Team Relay

 

HOW TO WATCH
*All times EST.

Please note: Streaming services and apps are third-party services and subject to such parties’ terms of use and data privacy. U.S. Ski & Snowboard disclaims any and all liability for use of third-party services and apps.

 

Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2022
4:00 a.m. Cross Country Skiing - Team Sprint Classic Semifinals, Finals, Kuyangshu Nordic Center, Zhangjiakou, CHN, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com
6:00 a.m. Cross Country Skiing - Team Sprint Classic Semifinals, Finals, Kuyangshu Nordic Center, Zhangjiakou, CHN, USA Network

 

Sport-specific broadcast and streaming schedules are available below:

Broadcast and streaming schedules are updated on a daily basis throughout the season.

 

 

Radamus Fourth In Olympic Debut; Ford 12th In Return From Injury

By Mackenzie Moran
February, 13 2022
River Radamus
River Radamus reacts in the finish following his second run during the men's giant slalom at National Alpine Ski Centre on February 13, 2022, in Yanqing, China. (Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images)

River Radamus led the United States men in Saturday’s giant slalom, finishing just off the podium in fourth. Tommy Ford earned 12th, a monumental finish for his first race back post-injury in 2021. 

Saturday, Feb. 13, saw a large amount of snowfall in Yanqing, China, the most the region has seen in one day in eight years, and conveniently on the day of the men’s giant slalom during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games. While other events were getting canceled, the men’s race was still on, but the athletes were ready to fight for Olympic gold no matter the weather. Ski racing is unpredictable, and the athletes never know what weather they’ll get on race day.

Radamus, who celebrated his 24th birthday just one day before his Olympic debut, sat in sixth, headed into the second run. Excessive snowfall on course tripped up many athletes on their hunt for the finish, but Radamus was able to hang on while carrying enough speed to grab a career-best result. 

“My approach this whole season has been process-based; focusing on the things I can control, making sure I take the steps to prepare, and knowing that this is an outdoor sport and things happen on race day, and I can’t control the outcome,” said Radamus. 

He’s come close to the podium results he craves before. In Alta Badia and Soelden, Radamus finished sixth, matching his World Cup career-best twice in the 21/22 season. But in the Olympics, he pushed hard enough to do even better. Sporting a zebra-stripe hairdo and 

“(Fourth is) tough to swallow right now, but I know in my heart that I did everything to prepare for today. But pressure is a privilege,” Radamus said, “and I tried to relish in it and execute as hard as I could. I didn’t want to back off, I wanted to make sure that I left everything I had on that course, and I did that and then some.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by 🏁 (@riverradamus)

For Ford, competing in the Olympic Games is a milestone in his recovery. In 2021, a hard crash near the finish of the Adelboden giant slalom knocked him unconscious. He was subsequently airlifted off the course for evaluation. Soon after, doctors discovered he obtained a concussion, two torn ligaments in his right knee, a shredded meniscus, a broken tibia plateau, and a broken left wrist. He needed four surgeries to repair the damage. Headed into the Games, Ford was not sure he would be ready to compete, let alone finish two runs given the conditions.

Yet ever since, Ford has been working hard on the road to recovery and training diligently on snow back in the United States since November. So much so that getting back out in a giant slalom course on race day felt “like riding a bike.” 

"I'm just happy to be alive and skiing and out here,” said Ford. “There's part of me that knows I can win a medal here, but (now) it’s a different time and I've learned a lot in this past year.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Tommy Ford (@tommyford)

 

Switzerland's Marco Odermatt walked away with giant slalom gold, followed by Slovenia's Zan Kranjec in silver, and France's Mathieu Faivre in bronze. Faivre finished 0.26 ahead of Radamus in fourth.

Ryan Cochran-Siegle, silver medalist in the men’s super-G, did not finish his first run. Luke Winters also did not finish his first run but has the men’s slalom to look forward to on Tuesday, Feb. 15. Winters will be the sole representative of the United States in Tuesday’s slalom.

 

RESULTS
Men’s giant slalom

 

HOW TO WATCH
*All times EST

Please note: Streaming services and apps are third-party services and subject to such parties’ terms of use and data privacy. U.S. Ski & Snowboard disclaims any liability for using third-party services and apps.

Sunday, Feb. 13, 2022
10:00 p.m. Alpine Skiing - Women's Downhill Training, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com

 

Monday, Feb. 14, 2022
10:00 p.m. Alpine Skiing - Women's Downhill, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, NBC Broadcast, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com

 

Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022
2:35 a.m. West Coast Encore - Women’s Aerials Final (freestyle), Women’s Big Air Final (snowboarding), Women’s Downhill (alpine), NBC Broadcast
9:15 p.m. Alpine Skiing - Men's Slalom, First Run, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, NBC Broadcast, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com

 

Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2022
12:45 a.m. Alpine Skiing - Men's Event Slalom Run 2, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, NBC Broadcast, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com
2:35 a.m. West Coast Encore - Alpine Skiing - Men’s Slalom, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, NBC Broadcast
6:05 a.m. Primetime - Alpine Skiing - Men’s Slalom, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, NBC Broadcast
 

Sport-specific broadcast and streaming schedules are available below:

Broadcast and streaming schedules are updated on a daily basis throughout the season.

 

Jacobellis, Baumgartner Take Gold In Mixed Snowboard Cross Team Debut

By Mackenzie Moran
February, 12 2022
Lindsey Jacobellis and Nick Baumgartner
Gold medallists Lindsey Jacobellis and Nick Baumgartner pose with their gold medals during the Mixed Team Snowboard Cross medal ceremony at Zhangjiakou Medal Plaza on February 12, 2022 in Zhangjiakou, China. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

Lindsey Jacobellis, 36, and Nick Baumgartner, 40, came out on top at the inaugural Mixed Snowboard Cross Team event, earning a gold medal for the United States.

Jacobellis battled with Italy's Michaela Moioli for the entire length of the course before taking over the lead at the final right-banked turn in Saturday's big final. Jacobellis was able to hang on to her lead through the final jump by a margin, barely finishing ahead of Moili and claiming victory for the United States.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by NBC Olympics (@nbcolympics)

The gold is Baumgartner's first Olympic medal, making him the oldest snowboarder to ever win an Olympic medal. 

"I think for any athlete, getting pushed out by a younger generation really sucks," he said after the race. "So for us to go out there and put our stamp of approval on it and say "we're not done yet, we just got to work a little bit harder and we're willing to put that work in." So it's a good feeling."  

For Jacobellis, the victory is her second of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games after she won gold in the individual snowboard cross event earlier this week. In her first four Olympics, gold evaded her. Now, in her fifth, she's finally claimed the top spot, not once, but twice.

"It's a pretty incredible thing to be able to come and get a gold medal with a long-time teammate," said Jacobellis. "We've been through a lot together and we've seen each other through our ups and downs and our struggles so to be able to come together to work as a team and learn from each other on how the courses were changing with speed. I thought that we did great today with our execution and we had a lot of fun."

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by NBC Sports (@nbcsports)

 

Jake Vedder and Faye Guilini made it to the quarterfinal round but did not qualify for the small or big final. 

 

RESULTS
Mixed Snowboard Cross Team

HOW TO WATCH
*All Times EST

Sunday, Feb. 13, 2022
8:00 p.m. Snowboarding - Women's Big Air Qualifying, Secret Garden, CHN, NBCOlympics.com, Streaming Peacock

Monday, Feb. 14, 2022
12:30 a.m. Snowboarding - Men's Big Air Qualifying, Secret Garden, CHN, NBC Broadcast
1:30 a.m. Snowboarding - Women's Big Air Qualifying, Secret Garden, CHN, NBC Broadcast
1:30 a.m. Snowboarding - Men's Big Air Qualifying, Secret Garden, CHN, USA Network
4:30 a.m. Primetime Plus - Women's Slopestyle Final, Women's Big Air Qualifying (re-air), NBC Broadcast
4:00 p.m. Snowboarding - Men's Big Air Qualifying, Secret Garden, CHN, NBC Broadcast
8:30 p.m. Snowboarding - Women's Big Air Final, Secret Garden, CHN, NBC Broadcast
10:00 p.m. Alpine Skiing - Women's Downhill, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, NBC Broadcast, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com
10:00 p.m. Snowboarding - Men's Big Air Qualifying, Secret Garden, CHN, USA Network

Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022
12:00 a.m. Snowboarding - Men’s Big Air Final, Secret Garden, CHN, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com
12:05 a.m. Primetime - Men’s Snowboarding Big Air Final & Freeski Slopestyle Final, NBC Broadcast
2:35 a.m. West Coast Encore - Women’s Aerials Final (freestyle), Women’s Big Air Final (snowboarding), Women’s Downhill (alpine)

 

McCabe Shines in 4x5k Relay For Team USA

By Tom Horrocks
February, 12 2022
Novie McCabe
Novie McCabe competes during the Women's Cross-Country 4x5km Relay on Day 8 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics at The National Cross-Country Skiing Centre on February 12, 2022 in Zhangjiakou, China. (Photo by Lars Baron/Getty Images)

Novie McCabe may be the new kid on the team, but she skied like a wily veteran for Team USA in Saturday’s 4x5k women’s Team Relay at the Kuyangshu Nordic Center, in Zhangjiakou, China.

“It was so cool to be part of a team with three legends,” the 20-year-old McCabe said of her teammates Jessie Diggins, Rosie Brennan, and Hailey Swirbul. “I had a lot of fun doing it, even though I was extremely nervous beforehand.”

McCabe skied the third leg for Team USA and posted the sixth-fasted freestyle time, which was 10 seconds faster than Diggins’ fourth lap time, as Team USA finished sixth. The Russian Olympic Committee took the gold, with Germany winning a surprise silver, and Sweden taking the bronze.

“I’m really, really proud of this team,” Diggins said. “Every one of these girls went out and skied so hard...and we gave it everything we had. Some days that ends up with the result of your life, and some days it doesn’t. But either way, the only thing we can control is going out there and skiing as hard, and as smart as we can, and this team did that!”

Following the race, the team was surprised with an Athlete Moment, an opportunity to connect with friends and family back home in the U.S. on a big screen in the finish area.

“Some of my friends from high school, and also some of our former teammates - Holly Brooks and Sadie Bjornsen - they had a watch party with my boyfriend (Tyler Kornfield) in Alaska, so we got to wave and say hi to them,” Brennan said. 

As is customary on relay day, the team wears special relay socks. And, ironically, Bjornson had on a pair of relay socks at the watch party - she competed on the U.S. relay team at the World Championships in Oberstdorf, Germany, last season. 

“Honestly, I wouldn’t expect anything less from her,” Brennan said of Bjornsen. 

“We have been missing a pair,” Diggins added. “That explains a lot!”

Fun and games aside, the women have a few days of rest and recovery before Wednesday’s classic team sprint. Team USA will be announced on Tuesday for Wednesday’s event. Up next, the men compete in the 4x10k relay Sunday. Luke Jager and Scott Patterson will ski the classic first and second legs, with Gus Schumacher and Kevin Bolger skiing the freestyle third and fourth legs.

 

RESULTS
Women’s 4x5k Relay

 

Shiffrin Ninth In Super G; Wright Returns To Competition

By Mackenzie Moran
February, 11 2022
Mikaela Shiffrin Super-G
Mikaela Shiffrin reacts during the women's super-G on day seven of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at National Alpine Ski Centre on February 11, 2022, in Yanqing, China. (Getty Images-Alex Pantling)

Mikaela Shiffrin came back in Friday's super-G reset and ready to race, finishing ninth overall, 0.79 off of gold medalist Lara Gut-Behrami's pace. Austria's Mirjam Puchner grabbed the silver medal, while Switzerland's Michelle Gisin rounded out the podium with the bronze. 

The nerves built up from the past couple of days had not disappeared, but the feeling of getting back out on skis reminded her that not every day at the Beijing 2022 Olympics is going to feel like a bad day. As she wrote in her Instagram post after the event, "the girl who failed...could also fly."

"I feel more positive, and a little bit of relief after skiing the super G, to know that it’s not so difficult," she said. "Good skiing is good skiing. I feel a lot more optimistic right now."

Since her second DNF at the Winter Olympic Games, Shiffrin has received an outpouring of support from fans across the globe. And Shiffrin, ever-humble, does not feel like she deserves it. The sheer number of positive messages she's received has been "insane" she said, and there's not enough time in the day for her to fully express to each and every person how much their efforts to cheer her up means to her. 

"I would never have expected in this moment, severely underperforming in an Olympics, that humans can be so kind," she gushed. "It’s the most surprising thing of my Olympic experience. How kind people have been in the face of my failure. It is a failure, and I’m okay saying that. I’m sorry for it, but I was also trying, and I’m proud of that."

In her first competition back since she fractured her tallus bone in the second of two FIS Ski World Cup super-G races in St. Moritz, Switzerland, Bella Wright pulled out a 21st place finish in her Olympic debut.

"Honestly I didn't know what to expect (of my Olympic experience), but the snow is absolutely amazing, the hill is one of the coolest hills I've ever skied, and I'm loving it," Wright said after she cleared through the finish.

Keely Cashman finished 27th in her Olympic debut. Alix Wilkinson did not finish, but showed some promising skiing in the first two intervals and is OK.

The women kick off downhill training on Saturday, Feb. 12. Over the next couple of days, the athletes have the opportunity to train on the course before the competition gets underway on Tuesday, Feb. 15. The race will air on NBC Primetime at 10 p.m. EST on Monday, Feb. 14. 

RESULTS
Women's super-G

HOW TO WATCH
*All times EST

Friday, Feb. 11, 2022
8:00 p.m. Primetime – Alpine Skiing Women’s Downhill (Live) & Snowboarding Mixed Team Snowboardcross (Live), NBC Broadcast

10:00 p.m. Alpine Skiing – Women’s Downhill Training, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com

Saturday, Feb. 12, 2022
4:05 a.m. Mixed Team Snowboardcross Finals & Women’s Alpine Downhill Training (re-air), NBC Broadcast

9:15 p.m. Alpine Skiing - Men's Giant Slalom, First Run, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, NBC Broadcast, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com

11:00 p.m. Alpine Skiing - Women's Downhill Training, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, USA Network

11:30 p.m. Alpine Skiing - Men's Giant Slalom - First Run, Freeski - Women’s Slopestyle Qualifying, Ski Jumping - Men’s Large Hill Final, NBC Broadcast

 

Sunday, Feb. 13, 2022
12:45 a.m. Alpine Skiing - Men's Giant Slalom, Run 2, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com

5:30 a.m. Primetime - Men's Giant Slalom, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, NBC Broadcast

10:00 p.m. Alpine Skiing - Women's Downhill Training, National Alpine Skiing Center, Yanqing District, Beijing, CHN, Streaming Peacock, NBCOlympics.com

 

Shaun White's Final Olympic Ride

By Mackenzie Moran
February, 11 2022
Shaun White
Shaun White takes a final bow at the Winter Olympic Games Beijing 2022. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard/Mike Dawson)

After his fifth Olympic appearance, Shaun White has decided to call it quits. The 35-year-old has led a storied career and will go down in snowboarding history as a pioneer of the sport. White is a three-time Olympic gold medalist and a five-time Olympian. He's a 20-time X Games medalist and the only athlete to ever score a perfect 100 in the superpipe. He also has five Summer X Games medals in skateboarding, becoming the first athlete to compete and medal in both the Summer and Winter X Games. He's spent the entirety of his career pushing the boundaries of the sport. Now it's time for him to pass the torch. 

“Everyone was asking me what my legacy in this sport has been and I’m like, you’re watching it," exclaimed White. "These younger riders, I mean they’ve been on my heels every step of the way and to see them finally surpass me is, I think deep down what I always wanted you know. To be beaten, to finally walk away without feeling like I could have done this or.”

White finished fourth in his final Olympic run, a symbolic moment of legend morphing into legacy. Of course, he wanted one last medal and he wanted it to be gold. He wanted that "Kelly Slater pull into the barrel moment", in his own words.

"The best of us - Tom Brady, Mikaela (Shiffrin) - know it's hard to step into the spotlight and own it time and time again," he said. "To be at the top of the sport for so long, that's a true highlight of my career and that's the thing I'm going to hang my hat on."

White has been at the top for so long, but he knows it's time for the next adventure. He wants to have a family of his own, build his brand Whitespace, and support up-and-coming snowboarders in pursuing their own Olympic dreams. 

"Shaun White has made an indelible mark on snowboarding, helping to put the sport on the map globally and advancing its popularity," said U.S. Ski & Snowboard CEO, Sophie Goldschmidt. "Winning three gold medals across five Olympics, Shaun is the ultimate competitor and set the standard for which snowboard athletes are measured. As he finishes his Olympic career, we celebrate Shaun as the most influential athlete in competitive snowboard history and an American sports icon. His legacy as a titan of snowboarding will forever inspire athletes and fans of the sport. We are proud of all his accomplishments and wish him the best of luck as he enters the next stage of his career."

His teammates, Taylor Gold and Chase Josey finished fifth and seventh. Gold medalist Ayumu Hirano topped out at 96 points, followed by Scotty James with silver.  The next-gen of snowboarders are ready to step into the spotlight.

RESULTS
Men's halfpipe final

 

Kim Defends Olympic Gold

By Mackenzie Moran
February, 10 2022
Chloe Kim Gold Medal
(U.S. Ski & Snowboard/Mike Dawson))

Thursday, Feb. 10, Chloe Kim repeated Olympic gold in women’s snowboard halfpipe ahead of Spain’s Queralt Castellet and Japan’s Sena Tomita.

Kim quickly reminded the rest of the women's field why she's the one to beat, throwing down a high-scoring 94 right out of the gate in the first run. All 12 women in the finals gave their best, showing their progression and throwing down 1080s that haven’t been seen in previous women’s Olympic halfpipe finals, but still, no one could touch Kim’s initial statement. So in her final two runs, Kim decided to up her degree of difficulty, and go for a cab 1260. She’s landed them in practice before but had yet to attempt the trick in competition or in a 22-foot pipe. She took a couple of spills in her final two runs, but it didn’t take away from the glory of the moment.

“My butt hurts,” Kim laughed after the awards ceremony. “But it was worth it to try, 1000%, that’s what keeps me going. I’m really excited I did it. Wish I landed it but, next time.”

Before the final, Kim had struggled in practice. She only landed her run twice, which rattled her a bit, since she’s used to consistently putting it down, at least eight times before a competition she said. It was “the worst practice ever”, she said, but Kim put faith in her experience. The 21-year-old has been competing professionally since she was 13, and knew what it would take to go out and send it on the big stage. When Kim stomped her first run, she was overcome with emotion. There were still two runs left but she felt like she had already won. 

“That kind of put me in a weird headspace because it felt so inconsistent,” Kim said.  “So I was just overflowed with emotion when I was able to land it on the first go and it opened up a whole opportunity for me to try something new.”

Kim has gone out of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics with a bang, and will head back to the United States as a freshly minted two-time Olympic gold medalist. 


RESULTS
Women's halfpipe

 

Caldwell, Lillis, Schoenfeld Win Mixed Team Aerials Gold

By Mackenzie Moran
February, 10 2022
Mixed Team Aerials Gold
Gold medallists Ashley Caldwell, Christopher Lillis and Justin Schoenefeld of Team United States celebrate during the Freestyle Skiing Mixed Team Aerials flower ceremony on Day 6 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics at Genting Snow Park on February 10, 2022 in Zhangjiakou, China. (Photo by Mike Dawson/U.S. Ski & Snowboard)

Ashley Caldwell, Justin Schoenfeld, and Chris Lillis made Olympic history Thursday, Feb. 10 as the first trio to ever win a Mixed Team event Olympic Gold.

The competition has already made its rounds on the World Cup circuit but made its Olympic debut in Beijing 2022, and the team knew what they had to do if they wanted to come out on top ahead of the veteran Chinese team. Each athlete needed to perform to their highest degree of difficulty. 

Lillis, 23, threw down a near-perfect quintuple twisting triple, earning him 135 points, the highest score of the night at the Secret Garden Olympic Aerials course. He ran second. With Caldwell's jump already in the bag scoring an 88.89, the pair patiently awaited on Schoenfeld to see if they could pull out the win. 

"We knew that he just needed to put down a solid jump that he does every single day in training and then we'd end up with the gold medal," said Lillis. "Ashley and I were just sitting there on pins and needles just waiting for that moment to come and honestly, I knew it was gonna happen. I was fully prepared to freak out the second that he put it down."

Schoenfeld stomped his back double full full full, securing the first Olympic medal for the United States aerials team since 2010.

"I honestly tried not to think about that that was the final jump that could potentially win for my team," said Schoenfeld. "I tried to keep my cool and do what I needed to do."

This is Caldwell's fourth Olympics, but her first Olympic medal. It is also the first Olympic medal for a female aerialist since Nikki Stone in 1998. 

"I feel incredible. It's almost dream-like," reflected Caldwell. "We were all very anxious and excited to compete tonight, and there were a lot of pre-competition jitters, but we did exactly what we needed to do, alongside my boyfriend and best friend."

RESULTS
Mixed Team aerials final

 

 

Diggins Eighth, McCabe 24th In Olympic Debut

By Tom Horrocks
February, 10 2022
Novie McCabe
Novie McCabe competes during the Women's Cross-Country 10km Classic on Day 6 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics at The National Cross-Country Skiing Centre on February 10, 2022, in Zhangjiakou, China. (Photo by Federico Modica/NordicFocus/Getty Images)

Competing in what she admits is her weakest event at the 2022 Olympic Winter Games, Jessie Diggins still put down an impressive performance in the women’s 10k classic, finishing eighth Thursday at the Kuyangshu Nordic Center, Zhangjiakou, China.

For Team USA, Rosie Brennan was 14th, followed by Novie McCabe, making her Olympic debut in 24th; and Hailey Swirbul in 32nd.

“This is undoubtedly my weakest event, but I was just so focused on enjoying it,” Diggins said. “I was just like ’great, no pressure,’ it was my day to go out there and enjoy racing at the Olympics, and especially seeing Novie doing her first Olympic race.”

Norway’s Therese Johaug won her second gold medal of the 2022 Games with a time of 28:06.3, just 0.4 seconds ahead of Finland’s Kerttu Niskanen. Finland’s Krista Parmakowski took the bronze 31.5 seconds back.

Following her fourth-place finish in the freestyle sprint, Brennan walked away from Thursday’s race confident her classic skiing is coming around at a convenient time with the women’s 4x5k relay coming up Saturday.

“I was really happy with the way I skied…I was a little disappointed to see the result thereafter,” Brennan said. “But I was focusing on how I felt and the fact that my classic (skiing) is coming along, and now we’ll turn to the relay.”

 

RESULTS
Women’s 10k Classic

 

Moltzan 8th; Shiffrin DNF In Slalom

By Mackenzie Moran
February, 9 2022
Paula Moltzan

In her Olympic debut, Minnesota's Paula Moltzan has racked up back-to-back impressive results. Following her 12th-place finish in the giant slalom on Monday, Moltzan led the way on Wednesday with an impressive eighth-place result. Teammate and two-time Olympic champion Mikaela Shiffrin did not finish. 

It’s not often that Shiffrin falls, but when she does, it’s heartbreaking. Not because she’s failed, but because her love for competition and executing fast, precise turns is so powerful that her utter disappointment is palpable.

At 26, life and loss have humbled Shiffrin. She's experienced the highest of highs and the lowest of lows. And she’s not afraid of the weight of external expectation anymore; it’s not the worst thing she’s ever experienced, she says. What she does feel is betrayed, betrayed by the number one thing she trusts most in the world – her skiing. 

After skiing out at the fifth gate in her second consecutive race of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games, Shiffrin moved to the side of the slalom course, took a moment, then quickly popped off her skis. She sat, resting her head on her knees, and stayed there for 25 minutes before skiing down to the finish. 

She walked reporters through what happened. She slipped. She was going full gas, and she didn’t have space to recover. It’s ski racing, and things happen fast. At one moment, she was charging, and the next, she was out of the course. Her emotions ran high, and Shiffrin fought to keep her composure.

When asked what she was still processing after her run, she took a deep breath and sighed. “Pretty much everything.”

“My entire career has taught me to trust in my skiing if it’s good skiing,” Shiffrin explained later on. “That’s all that I have to rely on these race days. When there is pressure, and there’s some nerves and the feeling that I want to do well, I just always go back to that fundamental idea that good skiing will be there for me.”

“It’s not the end of the world, and it’s so stupid to care this much,” she added fighting back tears. “But I feel…I feel that I have to question a lot now.”

In moments of self-doubt, Shiffrin used to turn to her father Jeff for support. Since his passing in 2020, that source of comfort is forever lost. “Right now, I would really like to call him,” she choked. “So that doesn’t make it easier. And he would probably tell me to just get over it, but he’s not here to say that.”

Shiffrin paused again and took a moment to flip through the onslaught of emotions. Residual grief from her father's loss, disappointment in herself for not skiing up to her standard, and guilt that she has put herself and her team through so much work, all for nothing. Until she found the thing she needed to help put things in perspective, the thing that’s kept her on skis these past couple of years – hope. 

“Despite everything that I’m feeling,” she continued. “If you take a look around, it’s a pretty beautiful day. I have incredible teammates here. One of them got a silver medal yesterday. My boyfriend is here, he got a bronze. He’s been working so hard to get an Olympic medal his whole career and he’s had some really bad luck. And I have three medals. I mean, those are still back home in my closet. As disappointed as I feel and as much as I’m feeling right now, there’s so much to be optimistic about.”

Shiffrin’s absence on the pitch did not take away from an American reason to celebrate. Moltzan had a fantastic first run that put her in sixth and allowed her to hang on to an eighth-place finish by the end of the second run. Katie Hensien posted a top 30 in her Olympic debut, in 26th. AJ Hurt finished 34th. And Shiffrin was there in the finish to cheer them on until the end. 

“I’m pretty grateful to have some teammates that are also strong and can put on this show because on a basic level for ski racing in the United States, it's so special to have such a strong group of women competing,” she said. “I feel like my performance is a huge letdown so far. But there’s so much to be proud of for my teammates.”

If she decides to ski, Shiffrin has another shot at an Olympic medal come Thursday, Feb. 10th, in the women's super-G.
 

RESULTS 
Women’s slalom