BEIJING (AP) ā About the only way the U.S. menās curling team can top its entrance at the Beijing Olympics is by winning another gold medal.
Skip John Shuster carried the American flag into the Birdās Nest for the opening ceremony along with speedskater Brittany Bowe on Friday night. Shusterās teammates, including two who were with him when the Americans won their first Olympic curling gold medal four years ago, walked in just behind him, arm-in-arm.
āBeing able to experience that, honestly, with another athlete, and to lead all of Team USA was the biggest honor of my career to this point,ā said Shuster, a five-time Olympian who also won a bronze at Turin in 2006.
Shuster was the at the Olympics, a sign of how popular the sport has become since the Americansā dramatic win at Pyeongchang in 2018, when they survived five straight elimination matches.
āI had the best seat in the house, baby. I was right behind him,ā teammate Matt Hamilton said Saturday.
Hamilton was still buzzing about a his sister, Becca, a member of the womenās team, took from just behind the menās team as it entered the stadium. It shows Hamilton, Chris Plys, John Landsteiner and alternate Colin Hufman arm-in-arm, with Shuster waving the flag and the Olympic rings in the background.
Hamilton called it āone of the most epic photos I have ever seen. I donāt know if she realized it when she took it, but that photo is incredible and Iām just super stoked to be a part of it. It kind of felt very fitting that John was up there and the four of us teammates behind, linked arm-in-arm, had his back, just like we always do. It just felt like a really perfect start to this Olympics.ā
Shuster and Hamilton said that while there is pressure being the defending gold medalists, they arenāt going to let it overwhelm them.
āHonestly, for us as athletes, the fact that we got to reach the pinnacle of our sport ā¦ weāll always be Olympic champions,ā Shuster said. āThat will be something we always get to carry with us. Thatās kind of let the pressure off me. Iāve always cared so much about going to the Olympics and having a great performance. Getting to be on the top of that podium I think has taken the pressure off and I think weāre just really going to go out there and enjoy the opportunity to try to defend.ā
The menās competition starts Wednesday at the .
āCanāt take that medal away from me now,ā Hamilton said with a laugh. āJust stoked to be back and obviously the first go-around went well. Thatās all I know. Hoping to do it again.ā
Hamilton said he had a moment after the 2018 Games when he had to decide if he was content with one gold medal or wanted to go for another. Plus, thereās the social aspect of being in the tight-knit curling community.
āI realized I was still hungry and love competing,ā he said. āPlaying against all my friends is kind of a dream come true from all the other countries. Theyāre all awesome people. I had some of the guys from the Swedish team come to my wedding the summer before the Olympics. So just the friendships Iāve cultivated through curling is another big reason that I just wanted to continue to compete so I could go around and see all my buddies again.ā
Shusterās Olympic career has had its ups and downs. He won bronze in 2006, the first U.S. Olympic curling medal of any color, as the lead for Pete Fensonās team. He left to form his own rink, earning a trip to the Ā鶹“«Ć½Ó³»Games but performing so badly that he benched himself.
After finishing last in 2010, Shuster won the U.S. trials again four years later but managed just a ninth-place finish in Sochi. When USA Curling put together a high-performance camp of the countryās top 10 players, Shuster didnāt make the cut.
So he put together a foursome called āTeam Rejectsā and not only beat the federation-backed squads in the U.S. trials but won gold in South Korea.
Now itās back to being Team Shuster.
āWe are definitely a team,ā Shuster said. āSomeone said if you could describe your job, Iām like, āI yell at my employees for a living and Iām treated as if Iām their boss, but Iām not really their boss.āā
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Bernie Wilson, The Associated Press