Home United States USA — Sport Olympics Live Updates: A Bumper Year for Australia’s Winter Sports

Olympics Live Updates: A Bumper Year for Australia’s Winter Sports

160
0
SHARE

Jaclyn Narracott is a contender heading into in the women’s skeleton final. The 15-year-old star of Russia’s figure skating team, Kamila Valieva, tested positive for a banned substance.
Feb.12,8:23 a.m. Jaclyn Narracott is a contender heading into in the women’s skeleton final. The 15-year-old star of Russia’s figure skating team, Kamila Valieva, tested positive for a banned substance. For Australia, the Winter Games may be fertile ground for gold. A star Russian figure skater tested positive for a banned substance before the Games. What is trimetazidine? Would it have helped Kamila Valieva of Russia? An athlete from Ukraine protests against war during his skeleton competition. U.S. prime-time broadcast coverage includes snowboarding, biathlon and hockey. Yan Wengang wins bronze in men’s skeleton, China’s first medal in a sliding sport. Australia’s Olympic history dates all the way back to 1896, when it took gold in two events at the first modern Games. The country has continued to collect gold medals, thanks to greats like the swimmers Dawn Fraser and Ian Thorpe, the track athletes Cathy Freeman and Betty Cuthbert, and various cyclists, rowers and sailors. For reasons of climate and geography, though, Australia is not a Winter Olympics powerhouse. It had a total of only five gold medals coming into Beijing, compared with the 164 gold medals it has in the Summer Games. But 2022 is developing into a bit of a bumper year for winter sports Down Under. Jakara Anthony won the women’s moguls event in freestyle skiing. And Jaclyn Narracott leads after two heats going into the women’s skeleton final on Saturday. The third run is at 7:20 a.m. Eastern and the final run is at 8:55 a.m. Narracott,31, finished 16th four years ago, and though she won one World Cup race this year, she was not considered among the prerace favorites. (To date, a 10th-place finish is Australia’s best ever in a sliding sport.) “We are going to have an Australian leading at the halfway mark of the women’s skeleton,” the commentator Alister Nicholson said on Australian television. “I can’t quite believe what I’m seeing.” His remarks summed up the reaction of many Australians, who are discovering that the Winter Games may also be fertile ground for gold. Australia’s first Winter gold was one of the biggest flukes in the history of the Games, as Steven Bradbury took a short-track speedskating race only after every skater in front of him fell. His reaction afterward? “Hang on. This can’t be right. I think I won.” Australia added a second gold in 2002 — a moment that is often forgotten — with Alisa Camplin’s victory in the freestyle skiing aerial event. More gold followed for the country in 2006, for freestyle skiing, and in 2010, for freestyle skiing and snowboarding. Then the gold medals stopped — until Beijing. As the 2022 Games reach their midway point,52 gold medals have been awarded. Lindsey Jacobellis of the United States is hoping to add one more to the country’s total of four with a win in the mixed team snowboard cross final on Saturday. Gold medals are also up for grabs in the women’s 1,000-meter short track final, where Kristen Santos of the United States hopes to make the podium. And after making its Beijing debut with a victory over China, the U.S. men’s hockey team is hoping to come out on top in its game against Canada. — Victor Mather The 15-year-old star of Russia’s figure skating team who powered it to a win in the team figure skating competition tested positive for a banned substance less than seven weeks before the Olympics, throwing into question her team’s gold medal and her continued participation in the Beijing Games. The skater, Kamila Valieva, already considered one of the top athletes in the sport and a favorite to win an individual gold medal next week, was found to have used trimetazidine, a banned heart medication, according to a statement Friday from the International Testing Agency. The drug, which is not approved for use in the United States, is believed to improve endurance by helping the heart work more efficiently. Several top athletes, including the Chinese swimmer Sun Yang and the Russian bobsledder Nadezhda Sergeeva, have served doping bans in recent years after testing positive for the drug. The revelation has upended the Olympic skating competition and generated a slew of questions, including whether Valieva, who was favored to win the singles event beginning Tuesday, will be allowed to compete and whether Russia will be awarded its team gold medal. The United States, led by the men’s gold medalist Nathan Chen, finished second in that event. The news of the positive test also highlighted the presence of Russian athletes at the Games even though their country is serving a multiyear ban from global sports for a previous doping scandal.

Continue reading...