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Odermatt wins snowy giant slalom for 1st Olympic medal

BEIJING (AP) — Marco Odermatt has owned the giant slalom this season, and now he owns an Olympic gold medal in the event. The 24-year-old Swiss skier plowed through snow and poor visibility Sunday to win the men’s giant slalom at the Beijing Games.
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Marco Odermatt, of Switzerland, celebrates winning the gold medal in the men's giant slalom at the 2022 Winter Olympics, Sunday, Feb. 13, 2022, in the Yanqing district of Beijing. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)

BEIJING (AP) — Marco Odermatt has owned the giant slalom this season, and now he owns an Olympic gold medal in the event.

plowed through snow and poor visibility Sunday to win the men’s giant slalom at the Beijing Games.

“I really risked everything in the second run because I wanted not just the medal, I wanted the gold medal,” Odermatt said. ”It’s difficult because you can lose everything but today it paid off."

It was the first time snow fell during an Alpine skiing race at this year’s Olympics and the bad weather conditions caused the second run to be postponed by 1 hour, 15 minutes.

“It was a hard day, with the conditions, with such a long wait between the two runs," Odermatt said. "It was more than five hours for me, it was such a long time to re-think everything and it was hard to stay focused. I tried to sleep some minutes in between.

"I actually never dreamt about it but now it still feels like a dream.”

Odermatt coped with the conditions and the delay — and a first-run mistake — to post a combined time of 2 minutes, 09.35 seconds.

Zan Kranjec of Slovenia took silver, 0.19 seconds behind, and of France earned bronze, 1.34 behind.

The skiers had been racing and training on artificial snow until the real thing started to fall on Saturday at the Yanqing Alpine Skiing Center. A second women’s downhill training run was canceled because of the conditions on Sunday.

It was the first medal in a major championship for Odermatt, who is competing at his first Olympics. He was seventh in Monday’s downhill and failed to finish the super-G the following day.

Odermatt has dominated in the giant slalom this season, winning four of the five races on the World Cup circuit to lead the discipline standings as well as the overall standings.

He let out a roar after crossing the line on Sunday and raised his ski poles above his head.

Odermatt was fastest in the first run despite having to recover quickly after getting pushed low and off the racing line about 15 seconds in. But Kranjec beat him by more than half a second in the afternoon to leap from eighth and also claim his first medal at a major championship.

“I don’t fully understand it yet," said Kranjec, who was fourth at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games. “After the first run I said maybe it’s over, I don’t have any more chance. But my second run was really good. It’s unbelievable."

Stefan Brennsteiner of Austria was 0.04 behind Odermatt after the first run but he fell with a few gates remaining. He managed to get back on course but finished more than 15 seconds off the pace.

Henrik Kristoffersen, who won silver in Pyeongchang, also almost skied off the course known as The Ice River but managed to catch himself. He had been fourth after the first run but finished eighth, 1.90 behind Odermatt.

“(The recovery) doesn’t matter when you lose 1.5 on it," Kristoffersen said. "I didn’t feel that great going down the first pitch. I felt like I skied really bad and slow down the first pitch. I think that made me stress a little bit.

“(Odermatt) did almost what I did in the pitch, in the first run, but he’s so in the flow that it doesn’t really matter. When you’re in this flow, you can do that. When you’re not 100% in the flow like I am at the moment, mistakes are costly unfortunately.”

Two of the other top eight finishers from the first run — Manuel Feller and Luca De Aliprandini — failed to finish, helping Kranjec move up six places.

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More AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/winter-olympics and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

Daniella Matar, The Associated Press