Saturday, February 13, 2010

“6th medal makes Ohno top US Winter Olympian - YAHOO!” plus 3 more


6th medal makes Ohno top US Winter Olympian - YAHOO!

Posted: 13 Feb 2010 08:55 PM PST

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VANCOUVER, British Columbia – Apolo Anton Ohno glided around the ice with a U.S. flag tucked under an arm, flashing a handful of fingers plus one.

That makes six, as in matching Bonnie Blair as the most decorated Winter Olympian from the United States.

This one was a silver in the 1,500 meters, and it typified the wild world of short-track speedskating. Ohno was fourth going into the last turn when two of the three Koreans in front of him wiped out, giving him a clear stretch to the finish line behind Lee Jung-su of South Korea.

It also paved the way to bronze for J.R. Celski, just five months after the blade of his right skate sliced his left thigh to the bone during a crash at the U.S. short track championships.

Ohno and Celski put the United States on the medal stand for the first time at the Vancouver Games. Then Hannah Kearney won the women's moguls to put an American on the top step for the first time. Teammate Shannon Bahrke earned bronze, so the United States ended the day with four medals and an early lead in the overall chase.

Of course, the first day of competition was filled with Vancouver Olympics firsts, such as Swiss ski jumper Simon Ammann landing the first of 86 gold medals to be awarded and Dutch speedskater Sven Kramer setting the first Olympic record while winning the 5,000 meters.

It also was a day of continued mourning for the 21-year-old luger from the republic of Georgia who died Friday, and the fallout from it.

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Luge

Competition began on a repaired, reconfigured track the day after Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvilia died in a crash during a training run.

The men were pushed up 600 feet to the women's start ramp, while women and doubles moved 800 feet to the junior start ramp.

The changes produced slower speeds, as intended. They also drew some backlash, with the Canadians saying they lost their home-ice advantage and a top American luge official saying, "The elite deserve to race from the hardest test."

After practice in the morning, the race began at night with IOC president Jacques Rogge and Vancouver organizing chief John Furlong in attendance. A moment of silence was held in memory of Kumaritashvili, and his photo was displayed on the video scoreboard near the finish line.

The only other Georgian in the field, Levan Gureshidze, withdrew.

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Ski Jumping

If Ammann's name doesn't ring a bell, maybe this will: He's the Swiss ski jumper who looked a lot like Harry Potter back at the 2002 Olympics, when he won two gold medals.

Now 28 — and no longer a double for the boy wizard — Ammann's victory was decisive with longest jumps in both rounds. It was an impressive rebound from '06, when he failed to advance to the final round.

"I'm back at the top of the world," said Ammann, who became the first two-time champion on the normal hill and matched Finnish great Matti Nykanen's record of three individual golds.

With Vice President Joe Biden watching, none of the three U.S. ski jumpers made it to the final round. Peter Frenette and Nick Alexander tied for 41st, while Anders Johnson was 49th.

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Speedskating

In the 5,000 meters, a trio of Americans failed to crack the top 10 — but they dominated the next 10. Chad Hedrick finished 11th, with Shani Davis 12th and Trevor Marsicano 14th.

Haralds Silovs of Latvia entered the record books, too, becoming the first Olympian to compete in long and short track events — and doing it on the same day.

Silovs finished 20th in the 5,000 meters on the big oval around midday, then finished fifth in the B finals of the 1,500 around the short track at night.

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Downhill

Alpine skiers woke up Saturday to news of another day of delays, then got a new schedule: Seven events in seven days.

That is, if the weather cooperates.

The 10-day forecast is not very encouraging: Highs in the mid-40s almost every day, and at or below freezing only three nights, never getting colder than 29. There's a good chance of rain, and perhaps snow showers, on Sunday and Tuesday, then turning partly cloudy and finally sunny by next weekend.

The men's downhill, which was supposed to produce the first gold medal of these Olympics, is scheduled to kick things off at 10:30 a.m. Monday.

American sensation Lindsey Vonn is loving the layoff because it gives her more time to heal from a shin injury. And to bake. She tweeted that she spent the afternoon making banana bread.

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Protesters

After several mostly civil demonstrations Friday, a downtown protest turned violent Saturday, shattering three large plate-glass windows at a popular department store selling Olympic souvenirs. They also shattered windows of a bank.

More than 200 people wearing masks caused an estimated $10,000 in damage, said Rich Gorman, regional vice president for Hudson's Bay Company. They were subdued by officers carrying clubs and shields, with seven people getting arrested. There were no immediate reports of injuries.

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Figure Skating

Memo to anti-fur folks: Johnny Weir won't be wearing any animal skins in Vancouver.

Weir said he's received "very serious threats" from activists since adding white fox fur to his costume at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships last month. They were so serious that he moved into the Olympic village, something he really didn't want to do but felt it was best for his safety.

However, he insists there are other reasons for his decision to go with a fur-free costume.

"It was not because I was pressured to change it," he said. "I'm just switching back to another costume."

The men's short program is Tuesday, and the free skate is Thursday.

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Men's Hockey

Steve Yzerman is pushing the puck to Russia.

Rather than saddling the Canada men's team — of which he's the executive director — with the hopes and sky-high expectations of their countrymen, Yzerman proclaimed the two-time defending world champions the team to beat.

"They've got some of the top forwards in the world right now," Yzerman said. "With a little bit of luck the other countries can dethrone them."

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Women's Hockey

Canada opened its run at a third straight gold medal with a goal just 99 seconds in and went on to ring up the biggest blowout in Olympic history: 18-0 over Slovakia.

The reigning silver medalists from Sweden beat Switzerland 3-0 in the first match of the women's hockey tournament.

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Biathlon

Slovakia's Anastazia Kuzmina won the women's 7.5-kilometer biathlon sprint. The top American, Sara Studebaker, finished 45th, more than two minutes behind.

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Opening Ceremony Ratings

The Nielsen Co. says an estimated 32.6 million people watched NBC's telecast Friday night, 48 percent more than the 2006 Turin Olympics and approaching the 34.2 million who watched the opening in Beijing.

The Canadian broadcast was easily the most-watched TV event ever in the country, topping the 2002 telecast of the men's hockey finals in Salt Lake City. Nearly half the country was watching when the opening ceremony began and two-thirds of the country saw at least some of it.

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Olympic Daily Preview - Sunday, February 14th - Tri-City Herald

Posted: 13 Feb 2010 10:43 PM PST

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Five more gold medals are scheduled to be handed out Sunday at the Vancouver Olympics.

The final two runs of men's luge singles will take place Sunday to determine the medal winners for that event.

German sliders Felix Loch and David Moeller held the top positions after the first two runs of men's luge singles were completed Saturday, one day after the tragic death of a Georgian athlete.

The track at Whistler Sliding Center was modified in the aftermath of Nodar Kumaritashvili's deadly crash on Friday. A wall was built above the curve where he slipped off the track and struck a metal pole going at a high rate of speed.

The track was also shortened by almost two hundred meters to decrease speed on a course where concerns had been raised about safety even before Kumaritashvili's accident.

Saturday, the men began their runs from the women's start and two-time reigning gold medalist Armin Zoeggeler was in third place behind the two Germans. He was followed by 2006 silver medalist Albert Demtschenko of Russia.

Tony Benshoof enters Sunday as the top American after placing in seventh in Saturday's runs.

Also on Sunday, the U.S. women speedskaters will get their first chance at redemption after failing to win a medal four years ago in Turin. However, the Americans are not among the favorites in the 3,000-meter race at Richmond Olympic Oval. Catherine Raney-Norman, who finished 11th at this distance in Turin, represents the best chance at a medal for the U.S.

Martina Sablikova of the Czech Republic is considered to be the best in the world at 3,000 meters and will try to bounce back from a seventh-place finish in this event at the 2006 Games.

Clara Hughes, Canada's flagbearer at the opening ceremony, won a bronze at this distance in Turin and will be back to try and claim another prize. Hughes also has a Summer Games medal to her credit, winning cycling bronze nearly 14 years ago in Atlanta.

The men's moguls will be held Sunday after the women's competition produced high-drama the day before, with American teammates Hannah Kearney and Shannon Bahrke taking gold and bronze, respectively, and Canada's own Jennifer Heil winning silver.

In the men's competition, Australia's Dale Begg-Smith -- who was born in Vancouver -- is the reigning Olympic gold medalist and three-time World Cup champion, which makes him the favorite on Cypress Mountain.

Because Heil finished second in the women's competition, Begg-Smith can become the first freestyle skier in Olympic history to win two gold medals. He will face strong competition from Canada's Alexandre Bilodeau, who is one of the many athletes trying to win Canada's first Olympic gold medal on home soil.

The biathlon competition began on the women's side Saturday and the men will get their first chance at a gold medal on Sunday with the 10-kilometer sprint. Athletes will ski three laps on a 3.3-kilometer loop and stop twice at the shooting range.

Tim Burke is quite possibly the greatest American biathlete of all time and he will try to claim the first-ever biathlon medal for the U.S. Burke is ranked fourth in the current overall individual World Cup standings.

However, Norway's Ole Einar Bjoerndalen, the be the best-ever biathlete from any nation, will try to win his 10th Olympic medal on Sunday. Nicknamed "Der Meister" the 36-year-old Bjoerndalen already owns the record for most biathlon golds at the Olympics with five.

The first medals for nordic combined will be awarded Sunday in the men's normal hill/10-kilometer individual event at Whistler Olympic Park. The event consists of one ski jump of 95 meters, followed by the 10-kilometer cross- country pursuit race. The jump is held in the morning and the race takes place in the afternoon.

Felix Gottwald of Austria has won six Olympic medals in nordic combined, including a pair of golds, and he's back for another shot at glory. Finland's Hannu Manniinen, meanwhile, has 47 World Cup titles to his credit, but has never won an individual Olympic medal. Todd Lodwick and Bill Demong are the best hopes in this event for the United States.

In addition to events handing out medals, the docket also includes the first action in figure skating at these Games as the pairs event gets underway with the short program. Germany's Aliona Savchenko and Robin Szolkowsky are the two-time reigning world champions in pairs, but they will receive stiff competition from a trio of talented Chinese teams. Caydee Denney and Jeremy Barrett make up the lone U.S. team. The duo finished ninth at last year's World Championships.

Ice hockey will also continue on Sunday with the women's tournament featuring games between U.S. and China as well as a battle between Finland and Russia.

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Ohno wins silver in 1,500 for 6th Olympic medal - Tulsa World

Posted: 13 Feb 2010 09:03 PM PST

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Figure skater may not medal, but she wins hearts - Los Angeles Times

Posted: 13 Feb 2010 10:21 PM PST

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Reporting from Vancouver, Canada - Three forces of nature blew into the area late last week.

Rain, snow and Mirai Nagasu.

The weather wiped out the entire first weekend of alpine skiing at Whistler, forcing postponements of the men's downhill and women's super combined.

Nagasu filled some of the entertainment gap with the mix of witticisms, wisdom, wacky observations about herself and her experiences, and the often self-critical honesty that already have made her a one-woman media show.

Saturday, at a news conference for the two U.S. entrants in women's figure skating, the 16-year-old Nagasu once again left her audience to marvel at her no-words-barred approach.

Anything that crosses her mind, she says, often in stream-of-consciousness ramblings.

The candor can get her in deep, as it did three weeks ago with her explanation for why she was so looking forward to the swag that would be hers for having made the Olympic team by finishing second at the U.S. Championships.

"I guess I can be stereotypical and say that Asians are very cheap," said Nagasu, a Japanese American.

When the subject came up again Saturday in a question about what she had received, Nagasu said an Asian American friend who is "very Americanized" had scolded her about the comment.

"But I've already said what's been said," Nagasu continued, then explained how she regretted having arrived only Thursday because a lot of her sizes no longer were available in the clothing provided by the U.S. Olympic team.

And so it went, with Nagasu deadpanning that the change she has made in her free skate routine since nationals was to add a quadruple jump, then following it with a perfectly timed, "Just kidding."

It might take such a rare athletic feat -- only one woman, Japan's Miki Ando, has landed a quad in competition -- to contend with the overwhelming favorite, Kim Yuna of South Korea. Nagasu, as usual, had an interesting take on Kim's position.

"Being the heavy favorite is not always the good thing," Nagasu said. "It's the Olympics, so the whole world is watching.

"Hopefully, I will be able to just stand next to Yuna, and while she is carrying the weight of the world on her shoulders, I will just be holding it up with a finger."

Although Nagasu's chances for a medal here are minimal, especially with judges inclined to downgrade some of her jumps for incomplete rotations, she is on the way to becoming a star in two countries.

Panasonic, a Japanese company and global Olympic sponsor, signed her to an endorsement deal after nationals. That provided her with more swag -- still and video cameras and a High Definition 3D home theater system -- and enough money to allow her parents to close their 28-seat sushi restaurant in Arcadia and travel to Vancouver for the women's competition next week.

Nagasu will go back to Los Angeles on Sunday because there is little practice ice available here for the women until the end of this week. She returns to Vancouver on Friday.

Even though she will be spending relatively little time in the Olympic Village, Nagasu still is envious of U.S. ice dancer Tanith Belbin, who is sharing a two-bedroom, two-bathroom suite with men's skater and fashionista Johnny Weir.

"I wish I could room with Johnny and get tips on makeup and styling," she said.

Nagasu already has a style all her own.

phersh@tribune.com

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