Ice Prince Yuzuru Hanyu clinched the first back-to-back men’s Olympic
figure skating titles in 66 years yesterday as snowboarder Ester Ledecka
pulled off an unbelievable shock by skiing to women’s super-G gold.
Hanyu, back from injury, lost his balance twice in his free skate but a
total score of 317.85 gave the peerless Japanese gold with room to spare
over compatriot Shoma Uno and Spain’s Javier
Fernandez.
America’s Nathan Chen had earlier become the first skater to land six
quads in competition but despite his Olympic free-skate record of
215.08, it was only enough for fifth.
Hanyu, greeted by a shower of Winnie the Pooh stuffed toys, his mascot,
air-kissed Uno and theatrically leapt onto the podium at the award
ceremony.
The 23-year-old becomes the first man since America’s Dick Button in
1952 to take the title twice in a row – and into the bargain, wins the
landmark 1,000th gold medal in Winter Olympics history.
“I’m not fully healed, I really pushed it hard and there were some jumps
and elements that I could not perform, but I forced myself to do so,”
said Hanyu, who damaged ankle ligaments in November.
“My injuries were more severe than I thought, but I’ve been fortunate to
make it to the Olympics, and that I’m able to smile now explains what
I’m feeling.”
While Hanyu was favourite for gold, Ledecka produced one of the great
Winter Games shocks when she won the super-G, with American star Lindsey
Vonn sixth.
The Czech, favourite in the snowboard parallel giant slalom in a week’s
time, clocked 1min 21.11sec to edge defending champion Anna Veith of
Austria by one-hundredth of a second. Liechtenstein’s Tina Weirather
took ronze.
‘Definitely shocking’
Not only did Ledecka deprive Veith of what looked like a rare double,
she pushed Vonn further down the leaderboard as the American paid the
price for an error at the bottom of the course.
“All the other girls didn’t risk a lot. There must be a lot of pressure
on them. I was just trying to do my best run,” said Ledecka, who
appeared stunned by her achievement.
“I am so surprised about all of it. I’m really trying to win and do a
good run every time, but I didn’t really realise that this really can
happen.”
Vonn said the outcome was “definitely shocking”.
“I feel like in the Olympics a lot of things can happen, it’s not that
she didn’t deserve it, but there’s a lot of pressure on the favourites,”
Vonn said.
Also yesterday’s, Marit Bjoergen equalled her compatriot Ole Einar
Bjoerndalen as the most decorated athlete in Winter Games history as she
anchored Norway to victory in the 4x5km cross country relay, claiming
her 13th medal.
Slovakia’s Anastasiya Kuzmina won the women’s biathlon 12.5km mass
start, while Switzerland’s Sarah Hoefflin won the women’s ski
slopestyle.
South Korea’s world record-holder Choi Min-jeong seized a convincing
victory in the women’s 1,500m short track, and Canada’s Sam Girard won
the men’s 1,000m after a mid-race pile-up cost home hope Lim Hyo-jun a
shot at a second gold.
Lizzy Yarnold became the first two-time Olympic skeleton champion when
she successfully defended her women’s title, securing Britain’s first
gold of the Games.
And Poland’s Kamil Stoch produced a mighty leap under pressure to win
his second straight gold medal in the men’s large hill ski jumping.
Japan’s gold medallist Yuzuru Hanyu poses on the podium during the medal ceremony for the figure skating men’s singles event of the Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang. (AFP) Right:Gold medallist Ester Ledecka of the Czech Republic celebrates on the podium of the Alpine Skiing Women’s Super-G event yesterday. (Reuters)