Olympic Notebook: 天美麻豆 at the Games, Day by Day

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The 2018 Pyeongchang Games close with celebration, a look to 2022.

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Laura Stacey '17
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Mannella Turns in Three Top-Ten Finishes in Paralympic Games

March 20

The 2018 Paralympic Winter Games in Pyeongchang concluded on March 18 with Team USA finishing with the top overall medal count at 36, and 天美麻豆 undergraduate Staci Mannella 鈥18 finishing in the top ten in three of her four Alpine events.

Mannella competed in the super-G on March 11, where she finished 10th; the super combined on March 13, where she did not finish; giant slalom on March 14, where she finished 10th; and the slalom on March 18, where she took ninth.

Mannella races with guide Sadie DeBaun in the visually impaired women鈥檚 Alpine category because she was born with achromatopsia, which limits her visual acuity to three feet and causes extreme sensitivity to light.

Clocking their 10th-place finish in the giant slalom on March 14 had added meaning for Mannella and DeBaun, the youngest members of the U.S. Alpine Paralympic ski team. The duo finished just behind veteran U.S. competitor Danelle Umstead who came in eighth. Umstead is the duo鈥檚 mutual friend and mentor.

Alumna Kristina Trygstad-Saari 鈥07, was a guide to Team USA鈥檚 Mia Zutter, a visually impaired Paralympian who competes in cross-country and biathlon. At 天美麻豆, Trygstad-Saari was a member of the women鈥檚 Nordic team and was recognized for her team leadership in 2006 with the Spirit of Skiing Award. Zutter did not record a finish at the games.

 

Pyongchang Winter Games Close With Celebrations and An Eye Toward 2022

February 27

As Jessie Diggins, the first American ever to win an Olympic gold medal in Nordic skiing, carried the flag leading Team USA into the closing ceremony Sunday, she was beaming, surrounded by her teammates.

Diggins and co-gold-medalist in the women鈥檚 team sprint, Kikkan Randall, had said from the beginning of the games that the team spirit in women鈥檚 cross-country was pushing everyone to unprecedented success.

In fact, Team USA cross-country, led by coach and including five 天美麻豆 skiers, achieved half a dozen firsts, capped off with the gold medals. , who raced with Diggins and Randall in the 4x5km cross country relay, led off the race that gave the team a fifth-place finish, a best ever in the event for the Americans. Caldwell also tied Diggins at sixth in the sprint, a record for U.S. skiers in that race.

Looking back on the 4x5km relay at the close of the games, Christa Case Bryant of the wrote, 鈥淚 saw it in the finish line hugs and smiles of the U.S. women鈥檚 cross-country ski team, which had been dreaming of a medal in the 4x5 km relay for years, but never recovered from a 1-minute deficit after the first leg. Their embrace of Sophie Caldwell, who skied a brave but tough opening leg, was a beautiful expression of the team culture that yielded America鈥檚 first gold medal in the sport just a few days later.鈥

The only medal for a 天美麻豆 athlete at the Pyeongchang Olympics was silver for , a forward on the Canada women鈥檚 hockey team, in one of the most talked-about events in this year鈥檚 Winter Games. A 3-2 shoot-out win for Team USA ended Canada鈥檚 20-year gold medal streak.

The Canadians were not really celebrating their medal, said coach , who took a leave from leading 天美麻豆 women鈥檚 hockey to head Team Canada.

鈥淲henever you commit the way that our girls commit to excellence and you just fall short and just get so close, it鈥檚 tough,鈥 Schuler told the . 鈥淗opefully one day they鈥檒l be able to be proud of their efforts and know they gave everything they had.鈥

It was a tough year for the Americans and for 天美麻豆 in Alpine skiing, as well. Mikaela Shiffrin, whose father, Jeff Shiffrin 鈥76, introduced her to skiing at the 天美麻豆 Skiway, won gold and silver, and Lindsey Vonn won bronze, accounting for all the U.S. Alpine medals for both men and women this year. But Team USA highlighted a number of first-time Olympians in Pyeongchang as future Winter Games medal contenders, including , who is starting at 天美麻豆 in the spring.

Merryweather finished 15th in the women鈥檚 combined, just 5 seconds behind Shiffrin, who took silver, and ahead of Vonn, who did not finish.

Biathletes and both attracted a lot of media attention heading into the Olympics. Dunklee, for example, was the focus of a essay explaining the skiing and shooting sport to readers. But high winds and icy conditions in early races hindered both athletes, disqualifying them for some other contests. Dunklee later led off the U.S. mixed relay team鈥檚 15th place finish, and Dunklee and Dreissigacker represented Team USA in the women鈥檚 4x6 kilometer relay, finishing 13th.

, a 天美麻豆 Rhodes Scholar and the lone member of Bermuda鈥檚 Winter Olympics team, achieved exactly what he set out to do. He skied his best in his third trip to the Olympics, finishing 104th out of 116 in the men鈥檚 15 km freestyle cross-country race.

Murphy told that he fell in love with cross-country skiing at 天美麻豆 and later trained at Vermont鈥檚 Craftsbury Outdoor Center, run by Dreissigacker鈥檚 parents, Dick Dreissigacker and Judy Geer.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a great honor and privilege to represent your country,鈥 Murphy told necn. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e part of a much bigger, diverse, and fascinating world.鈥

 

Next, It鈥檚 Staci Mannella鈥檚 Turn to Go for the Gold

February 27

As some Olympians are saying goodbye to Pyeongchang, others, including 天美麻豆鈥檚 , are saying hello to the Paralympic Winter Games, March 9 through 18.

Mannella was born with achromatopsia, which severely limits her visual acuity to about three feet, and causes sensitivity to light, but that hasn鈥檛 held her back on the slopes. She started ski racing through the Adaptive Sports Foundation when she was 5, and competed in the 2014 Olympics in Sochi.

She鈥檒l race in South Korea with a guide, Sadie De Baun, who skies about 10 feet in front of her. They communicate about course conditions using a Bluetooth headset attached to their helmets. On a slalom course, Mannella says, she can see DeBaun as a shadowy shape navigating the gates.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 see the terrain, I can鈥檛 see what she is doing with her skis to slow herself down, but I do see where she is, and sometimes I can see her get past the gate. Her goal is to find a speed that will push me to ski as fast as I can, but not so fast that I am uncomfortable and skiing poorly because I can鈥檛 see her.鈥

Mannella says her close, year-round friendship with DeBaun is crucial to their success on snow.

鈥淢ost of the time, when people think of ski racing, they think of an individual sport. For us it鈥檚 a team sport, and that brings a new dynamic to it,鈥 says Mannella.

The partners won bronze in super combined in Mannella鈥檚 world championship debut in 2017. Reaching the podium next month, says Mannella, would be 鈥渋ncredible, but definitely within our reach.鈥

 

Team USA Ends 20-year Gold Run for Canada Women鈥檚 Hockey; Schuler and Stacey 鈥16 Take Silver

February 22

The legendary Canada-U.S. women鈥檚 hockey rivalry added another thrilling chapter Thursday in Pyeongchang with a 3-2 win for Team USA, ending Canada鈥檚 20-year gold medal streak in a shoot-out.

Team Canada鈥攍ed by 天美麻豆 hockey coach and featuring former Big Green forward 鈥攁nd Team USA battled to a tie after 60 minutes of regulation play, 20 minutes of sudden death overtime, and five rounds of a penalty shootout, where one player from each team gets one shot against the opposing goalie.

鈥淏ut when Jocelyne Lamoureux beat Canadian goaltender Shannon Szabados in Round 6 and one of the greatest scorers in Olympic history, Canada鈥檚 Meghan Agosta, was denied, it finally ended,鈥 wrote the .

The silver medal was little consolation to Canada鈥檚 players, Schuler told the Sun.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard because honestly the immediate effect right after a game is you are disappointed and you feel like you鈥檝e let a country down,鈥 Schuler said.  鈥淲henever you commit the way that our girls commit to excellence and you just fall short and just get so close ... it was a natural emotion to have.

鈥淗opefully one day they鈥檒l be able to be proud of their efforts and know they gave everything they had.鈥

 

Alice Merryweather 鈥21 Ready for Primetime

February 22

caught the attention of NBC commentators Dan Hicks and gold-medal skier Bode Miller as she entered the gate for the slalom run of the women鈥檚 combined race on Thursday.

Hicks observed that Merryweather is starting at 天美麻豆 in the spring; she made Team USA just a week before the opening games. Now she is racing with legends like Lindsey Vonn, Hicks said.

Merryweather, who won gold in downhill in the junior World Cup in January, hit the slalom hard and finished the race at the top of the leaderboard with Vonn and Mikaela Shiffrin still to come. In the end, Shiffrin finished with the silver medal one second behind Swiss gold medalist Michelle Gisin, whose combined time was 2 minutes and 20.9 seconds. Merryweather finished 15th, just over 4 seconds from the bronze medal, outskiing Vonn, who hooked her ski on a gate and did not finish.

In the men鈥檚 slalom Thursday, two-time Olympian  led the American team, finishing 18th with a time of 1:40.84. , three-time Olympian, ranked 34th after the first run but did not finish the second. 

 

Dunklee 鈥08 and Dreissigacker 鈥11 Take Their Last Shots in the 2018 Winter Olympics

February 22

, Clare Egan, and Joanne Reid represented Team USA in the women鈥檚 4x6-kilometer relay Thursday, finishing 13th with a time of 1:14:05.3. 

 

Wednesday Night鈥檚 Olympic Coverage Offers Great Chance to Spot 天美麻豆 Athletes

February 21

Tonight鈥檚 the night to tune into the Winter Games to watch 天美麻豆 Olympians go for the gold.

In addition to the women鈥檚 hockey final pitting Team USA against arch rival Canada鈥攍ed by 天美麻豆 hockey coach and featuring former Big Green forward 鈥擟ollege Alpine skiers , , and will be racing. Watch the action on NBC鈥檚 primetime Olympic broadcast Wednesday night. Also, biathletes and will have their last shots at medaling early Thursday morning Eastern time.

Kasper and Chodounsky are racing in the men鈥檚 slalom. The first run begins at 8 p.m. Eastern time, with the second run scheduled to start at 11:30 p.m. Eastern time.

Merryweather is racing in the women鈥檚 combined downhill along with U.S. teammates Mikaela Shiffrin and Lindsey Vonn. The first run begins at 9:30 p.m. Eastern time, with the second run at 1 a.m. Eastern time Thursday, Feb. 22.

The women鈥檚 hockey gold medal match will be shown at 11:10 p.m. Wednesday on NBCSN.

 

Two Women鈥檚 Cross-Country Skiers Get the Gold, Cheered on by Big Green Teammates 

February 21

When an exhausted Jessie Diggins crossed the finish line in the women鈥檚 cross-country sprint Wednesday, she and her relay teammate, Kikkan Randal, made sports history. They are the first women鈥檚 cross-country ski team ever to win an Olympic medal鈥攁nd it鈥檚 gold.

Diggins鈥 father told the , 鈥淭he entire American women鈥檚 cross-country team came out to practice on Tuesday morning with Diggins and Randall.鈥 Three of those other team members are 天美麻豆鈥檚 , , and .

鈥淭here were only two of them skiing today, but the entire team came out to support them鈥攑racticing tags and everything,鈥 Clay Diggins told the AP. 鈥淭hat to me is pretty cool. They wanted to be there for them, for the team. And I think Kikkan and Jess felt that (support) on the course.鈥 

 

It鈥檚 On: Canada and USA Battle for Gold in Women鈥檚 Hockey

February 20

Canada and the U.S., fierce women鈥檚 hockey rivals, will meet again in Pyeongchang as they fight it out for the gold.

Team Canada, led by 天美麻豆 hockey coach and featuring former Big Green leader , secured their chance to play for a fifth consecutive Olympic gold medal when they pulled off a 5-0 victory over Olympic Athletes from Russia in a semifinal on Monday. It was Canada鈥檚 24 th straight Olympic win.

鈥樷楨veryone鈥檚 plans are falling into place, and you have two great opponents at the end,鈥欌 Schuler told Tuesday.

It is the third straight time Canada will face the United States in the final. Team USA, the reigning champions in non-Olympic international competition, are seeking their first Olympic gold in 20 years, since the inaugural women鈥檚 event in 1998 at Nagano.

The two teams met in the first round of the Winter Games after both had already secured spots in the semifinals, but the game was far from meaningless. It was marked by intense play, dozens of shots on goal by both teams, and a scuffle in the third period (which included Stacey).

The Canada-USA women鈥檚 championship game will be televised on Wednesday, Feb. 21, at 11:10 p.m. Eastern time on NBCSN.

 

Alpine Skiers Kasper and Mangan Inflate Their Chances to Vie for Gold

February 20

It turns out, even if you fall in an Olympic skiing event, and lose the opportunity to advance, you get an unpredictable second chance to grab gold. , who skidded off the women鈥檚 giant slalom course last week, was, luckily, unhurt, and therefore able to enter another race.

Snow tubing.

Mangan was one of five Olympians who gathered with their inflated tubes at the top of an icy hill in Pyeongchang to test their mettle against ABC broadcaster Matt Gutman, who, ,鈥 announced the formation of the 鈥渋nternational snow tubing federation.鈥

The other Team USA medal contenders: Alpine skiers and Mark Engel, speed skater Erin Jackson, and snowboarder Arielle Gold, who won bronze in women鈥檚 halfpipe.

With two 天美麻豆 racers on the roster, the odds favored a Big Green win. Still, Mangan and Kasper flinched a bit when Gold quipped, 鈥淭hat event that I got the bronze in was just a warm-up for this.鈥

When Gutman asked Mangan if she was intimidated by him, she answered, 鈥淚 hate to say this, but鈥攏o.鈥

Kasper seemed equally confident as he and Engel melodramatically tore off their jackets to reveal sleek white spandex one-piece speed suits. (Engel admitted, though, 鈥淲e鈥檙e totally unprepared.鈥)

Apparently preparation is not necessarily a prerequisite for skilled tubing. From the start, Kasper took a commanding lead and shot ahead of the pinballing pack to win the race.

As Gutman hung a doughnut-sized gold metallic snow tube on a ribbon around Kasper鈥檚 neck, the winner was modest. 鈥淚t was a good competition with really strong defenders. I鈥檓 psyched,鈥 he said.

Best case scenario: Kasper, a three-time Olympian, matches his gold-medal tubing performance in his next 鈥渞eal鈥 event, men鈥檚 slalom, at 8 p.m. Wednesday Eastern Time.  

 

Susan Dunklee 鈥08 Clocks Strong Leg in 15th Place Mixed Relay Biathlon Finish

February 20

led off the U.S. mixed relay with a strong first leg Tuesday, with the four-member U.S. biathlon relay team taking 15th place overall.

Dunklee and teammates Joanne Reid, Tim Burke, and Lowell Bailey Starting toward the back of the field in the 18th position, but Dunklee maintained a strong pace, finishing her leg of the race in fifth place, 23.8 seconds off the lead despite two misses shooting from the prone position.

鈥淚t was fun to be right in the mix,鈥 Dunklee told Team USA writer Bill Kellick after the race Tuesday. 鈥淚 was closing on the lead group for the first k or so, then by the top of the big hill I kind of ran out of steam a little bit.鈥

Reid and Burke both had misses in their standing target phases that set the team back in the pack, then a strong final leg by Bailey, with a second-fastest range time that included only one miss from the standing position, moved the team back up to the 15th place finish.

Dunklee鈥檚 last shot at a medal in the 2018 Winter Games comes Thursday with the women鈥檚 4x6km relay beginning at 6:15 a.m. Eastern time. The race will be streamed live at .

 

Sophie Caldwell 鈥12 Is Part of Fifth-Place Relay Finish, Best Ever for U.S. Women鈥檚 Cross Country

February 19

Sophie Caldwell 鈥12 takes off on the first leg of the women鈥檚 4X5km cross-country relay at the Winter Olympics on Saturday, Feb. 17. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard Photo)

led off for Team USA in the 4x5km cross country relay on Saturday, a race that concluded with a sprint by teammate Jessie Diggins to take fifth place, the best ever finish for the American women at the Olympic Games.

Caldwell, along with Kikkan Randall, Sadie Bjornsen, and Diggins, finished just 36.8 seconds from what many had hoped would be the first women鈥檚 Nordic medal in modern Olympic history.

鈥淲hile we tend to be really focused on the medals, we know deep in our hearts it鈥檚 so possible,鈥 said Randall, a five-time Olympian who is competing at her last Games. 鈥淚 still think it was amazing to put together four strong legs today and to get that best ever result and keep the pathway going forward.鈥

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The skiers of the U.S. women鈥檚 4X5 relay team, from left, Sadie Bjornsen, Sophie Caldwell 鈥12 (head down), Jessie Diggins (from back), and Kikkan Randall, embrace after Diggins crosses the finish line. (U.S. Ski & Snowboard Photo)

The four relay team members are picked by the Nordic coaches based on top finishes in races leading up to the event. Coach named the four U.S. women who had been on a World Cup podium in an individual event this season, with Caldwell and Diggins winning the final World Cup races in January before the Olympic Games began.

鈥淎ll four athletes are clearly in top shape, and we feel this team is our best chance to bring home a medal for the USA,鈥 Grover said on the eve of the Olympic relay.

After the race, Randall told that it was not the end.

鈥淲e had to leave something for the next generation to go after,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 mean, come on, this group, we鈥檝e had a lot of firsts. But there鈥檚 a really awesome young group of girls coming up with junior world podiums in the relay. 

鈥淪o I think there鈥檚 high hopes, and we can hopefully leave a good path for them.鈥

 

Tommy Ford 鈥12 Finishes 20th in Giant Slalom and Enjoys the Ride

February 19

Tommy Ford 鈥12 finishes sixth in his second run of the men鈥檚 giant slalom Saturday. Ford finished 20th overall. 

Despite finishing 20th in the men鈥檚 giant slalom on Sunday, told his hometown newspaper that he鈥檚 relishing his return to the Olympics.

Ford finished 26th in the giant slalom in 2010 but missed the 2014 Games after what many considered a career-ending injury.

鈥淚 was in Vancouver and pretty overwhelmed, and here I鈥檓 able to enjoy it and be a part of it,鈥 he told the . 鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely a special event and I鈥檝e learned to appreciate that more and more.鈥

 

Hockey Coach Laura Schuler: Blazing an Ice Trail for Women

February 16

Canada coach Laura Schuler talks to the team during the gold-medal game of the women鈥檚 world hockey championships in 2017. (AP Photo)

天美麻豆 hockey coach is making history in Pyeongchang. She鈥檚 the first Olympic athlete to coach a Canadian team at the Games, having competed on a silver-medal-winning hockey team in Nagano in 1998.

Schuler was a trailblazer at an early age.

As a 10-year old, according to the , she was a leading scorer on a boys鈥 hockey team in Scarborough, Ontario, but got bounced from the team because, in those days, parents insisted on single-sex teams.

鈥淔eminine Laura Schuler can handle a puck, but boys鈥 league can鈥檛 handle her,鈥 declared one headline reported by the Star. Undeterred, Schuler kept scoring goals of all kinds, including coaching jobs at the University of Massachusetts/Boston, Northeastern University (her alma mater), the University of Minnesota Duluth, Canada鈥檚 national women鈥檚 team, and most recently, 天美麻豆.

Schuler acknowledges encountering the early roadblocks faced by many women hockey players鈥攁nd aspiring coaches. But, at least in media interviews, she doesn鈥檛 complain about them. 

鈥(Coaching) is something that is very male-dominated, but at the same time I鈥檝e been really blessed with the men I鈥檝e had around me,鈥 Schuler told the . 鈥淓veryone wants to be the best they can be and help their athletes be at their very best, and it doesn鈥檛 matter if it鈥檚 a female or male coaching them. What matters is having people who care around you.鈥

What also matters to her: winning. The Canadian women handily defeated teams from Russia and Finland in preliminary rounds, and bested archrival U.S. in a hotly contested game this week. If both the American and Canadian women win their semi-final games against other countries, they鈥檒l face each other again for gold.

鈥淚n terms of confidence, we鈥檙e in a good spot,鈥 Schuler says of her team. 

 

Alice Merryweather Makes Her Olympic Debut

February 16

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Just after their arrival in Pyeongchang, Tricia Mangan 鈥19, left, Laurenne Ross, a Team USA alpine skier from the University of Oregon, center, and Alice Merryweather 鈥21 celebrate making it to the Olympics. (Courtesy of Alice Merryweather)

made her Olympic debut Friday in women鈥檚 slalom, completing two runs on the treacherous course and finishing 38th, with a time of 1:49.01, in the first run, and 49th, with a time of 1:53.15, on the second run. Faced with icy, wind-swept conditions, 24 skiers did not finish the race; gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin came in fourth place in the race, missing her chance at a second medal in the 2018 games.

Merryweather told Matt Pepin of  after the morning run, 鈥淢y run was far from perfect, I had a lot of problems, stopped a couple of times, but I was determined to make it down, I wanted to cross the finish line and say I completed an Olympic run and I鈥檓 really happy to have done that, it was so fun.鈥

The icy conditions were also a big factor in the men鈥檚 Super-G, wiping out 14 skiers, including past medalist .

天美麻豆 Rhodes scholar and Team Bermuda cross-country skier finished 104th  in the men鈥檚 15k freestyle race. Murphy, who also raced cross-country in Sochi in 2014 and in Vancouver in 2010, is the third Bermudan to ever participate in the Winter Olympics, and the first to compete in Nordic skiing.

As the lone Bermudan in the winter games, Muphy is realistic about the competition.

鈥(My) chances of medaling are none,鈥 he told . 鈥淚鈥檓 here to ski the best race I can.鈥

Speaking about his preparation for the games, Murphy added, 鈥淚 do a lot of training on the beach, running with poles,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou have to get up very early, because you don鈥檛 want to get a reputation as the crazy Bermudian who goes out in cross-country skis on the beach.鈥

 

A Daughter鈥檚 Olympic Gold: 鈥淰alidation for All Her Effort鈥

February 15

Eileen Shiffrin, Mikaela Shiffrin, and Jeff Shiffrin 鈥76 at the 2017 Audi FIS Ski World Cup Finals in Aspen, Colo. (Photo by Getty Images)

On Thursday, Jeff Shiffrin 鈥76 watched his daughter accomplish what she went to Pyeongchang to do: win the gold. It was a come-from-behind victory for Team USA鈥檚 Mikaela Shiffrin in the second run of the giant slalom, which isn鈥檛 usually her strongest event.

It was 鈥渁 validation for all her effort,鈥 about the go-for-broke victory.  

As the , 鈥淪urging past the finish, Shiffrin looked over her shoulder to see her name atop the scoreboard. 鈥楾he most amazing, sweetest feeling,鈥 Shiffrin said. 鈥業 was determined to push all the way down, and at that moment I really knew where I was.鈥 鈥

Also at that moment, cameras showed her jubilant father in the stands, clapping his hands to his head, saying, 鈥淥h my God!鈥 Afterwards, he spoke with , about Mikaela鈥檚 chances in the next three Alpine races. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it gets any easier, but I think she can take a deep breath and say, 鈥楾he pressure鈥檚 off a little bit. Maybe.鈥欌

Many observers expect Shiffrin to make more trips to the podium before the games are over. She鈥檒l be racing tonight (Friday morning in Korea) in the slalom, which earned her a gold medal at the Sochi Games in 2014. Also in that race will be Team USA latecomer , who will begin classes at 天美麻豆 in the spring.

While Mikaela鈥檚 mother, Eileen Shiffrin, coaches and travels with her, Mikaela credits her father with instilling the basics of her technique. A former ski racer for 天美麻豆, and, until the family moved West, an anesthesiologist at 天美麻豆-Hitchcock Medical Center, Jeff Shiffrin was a formative influence in his daughter鈥檚 early years, as she practiced at the 天美麻豆 Skiway.

In a New Yorker article, Jeff Shiffrin shares what he learned by studying Austrian skiers, and passed along to his daughter: 鈥淓very turn you make, do it right. Don鈥檛 get lazy, don鈥檛 goof off. Don鈥檛 waste any time. If you do, you鈥檒l be retired from racing by the time you get to 10,000 hours.鈥

also competed in the giant slalom, but lost her balance and skidded into a restraining barrier early into the first run. She walked away, apparently unhurt, and told , 鈥淚鈥檓 obviously super bummed to crash, but I actually think I was skiing OK, and I鈥檓 glad I was going for it.鈥

Canada Beats Rival U.S. 2-1 in Fiery Woman鈥檚 Hockey Matchup

February 15

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Laura Stacey 鈥16 plays for the Canadian women鈥檚 hockey team, led by 天美麻豆 coach Laura Schuler. (Photo courtesy of Laura Stacey)

Team Canada鈥檚 women鈥檚 ice hockey team, led by 天美麻豆 coach , completed the preliminary round in Pyeongchang with a 2-1 victory over fierce rival United States on Thursday.

The game was a long-awaited rematch after Team USA lost in a heartbreaker in the 2014 gold medal game in Sochi.

Both the Canadians and Americans were 2-0 heading into the match and had already earned spots in next Monday鈥檚 semifinals, but that did not diminish the passion on the ice. The game was marked by intense play, dozens of shots on goal by both teams, and a scuffle in the third period (which included Canada鈥檚 , a 天美麻豆 hockey standout).

Afterwards, Schuler was asked by sportswriter Cathal Kelly about the intensity of a game that would make no difference in the next round.

鈥淚t鈥檚 good to see. It鈥檚 part of the rivalry. It鈥檚 a strong, healthy one,鈥 Schuler said.

The victory gives Canada a perfect 3-0 record heading into the playoff round as the team pursues a fifth consecutive Olympic gold medal.

 

Dunklee Delivers Top-20 Finish in Olympic 15k Biathlon

February 15

A day after being sidelined by high winds, led Team USA to a top 20 finish in the women鈥檚 15km race in Pyeongchang Thursday.

Recording only two misses in the shooting phase, Dunklee ended with a time of 44:33.5, good for 19th place. She finished 3:26.3 behind gold medalist Hanna Oeberg of Sweden, who crossed the line in 41:07.2, 24.7

Dunklee鈥檚 performances was a turnaround from her disappointing finish in Saturday鈥檚 sprint where she placed 66th. In Thursday鈥檚 15k, Dunklee cleaned both prone stages and had two misses in standing stages. With a minute added to a racer鈥檚 time with each miss on the range, Dunklee finished 3 minutes, 26.3 seconds behind the gold-medalist Oeberg of Sweden, who did not miss a shot.

鈥淚 think one of the things that biathlon does is train you how to be resilient and how to pick yourself up over and over again,鈥 Dunklee told Team USA reporter Bill Kellick. That鈥檚 what she did after Saturday鈥檚 disappointing performance.

鈥淵ou have to let yourself be sad for a few hours, but then you kind of have to set a deadline and say okay, by this time of day I鈥檓 going to start only allowing myself to focus on the positives again and move forward,鈥 Dunklee said.

suffered a slow start with two misses on the range but settled down to hit 13 of her remaining 15 targets, finishing the race at 67th.

鈥淚 started out with two misses in prone which I really wasn鈥檛 happy with,鈥 Dreissigacker said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 kind of unusual for me, usually prone is my stronger position. My skis were really fast again today. Our wax techs did an amazing job again, so that was awesome.鈥

 

High Winds Delay the Return of Biathletes Dreissigacker 鈥11 and Dunklee 鈥08 for 15K Final

February 14

Emily Dreissigacker 鈥11 had to put her second Olympic medal attempt on hold Wednesday, Feb. 14, after high winds prompted race officials to postpone the women鈥檚 15k individual biathlon final. (Team USA photo)

High winds and low visibility in Pyeongchang forced the postponement of the women鈥檚 biathlon 15-kilometer individual final featuring and Wednesday. The 15k will be the second Olympic event for the two 天美麻豆 athletes, seen by many as U.S. medal contenders.

The competition will now take place on Thursday evening, Feb. 15 (which, in Eastern time, translates to before dawn Thursday).

Also postponed due to weather was the women鈥檚 alpine slalom competition, featuring 天美麻豆 newcomer and headliner (daughter of Jeff Shiffrin 鈥76). The competition will now take place the morning of Feb. 16, Korean time, and will be broadcast during NBC鈥檚 Thursday night primetime coverage.

, another last-minute 天美麻豆 addition to the U.S. Alpine team, will be skiing in the women鈥檚 giant slalom, along with Shiffrin, on Thursday morning, Feb. 15. The event will be televised during NBC鈥檚 Primetime Olympic coverage Wednesday night, weather permitting.

 

Golden Advice From Alumni Olympians

February 14

The site recently shared some words of wisdom and inspiration from 天美麻豆鈥檚 past Olympic athletes with the competitors at this year鈥檚 Winter Games. Sara Studebaker-Hall 鈥07, who competed in biathlon in the 2010 and 2014 Olympics, summed up the theme that ran through all of the reflections.

鈥淭he Olympics are special, and while you might have raced in bigger races, there is nothing like an Olympic race. Rather than treating them like one gigantic, important race (or tournament, or what not), treat them like the experience they are. Soak in the atmosphere, as you鈥檒l never experience anything like that anywhere else.鈥

 

Caldwell 鈥12 Finishes Eighth in the Sprint; U.S. Women鈥檚 Cross-Country Still Looking to Medal

February 13

Image removed.

Sophie Caldwell 鈥12 pushes hard over the crest of a hill after a long climb in a World Cup race prior to the Olympics. (Team USA photo)

Sophie Caldwell 鈥12 advanced to the women鈥檚 cross-country sprint classic semifinal Tuesday in Pyeongchang, but was 0.18 seconds shy of making it to the medal round, finishing eighth overall.

Caldwell, a two-time Olympian, finished fourth in her semifinal heat with a time of 3:13.32, clocking the fastest finish of any collegiate U.S. athlete in the sprint classic.

鈥淎ny day you make it into the semifinal is a good day,鈥 Caldwell told Team USA reporter Peggy Shinn after the race. 鈥淥f course you always want more, especially at the Olympics. But I think it鈥檚 important to take a step back and recognize that that was a really good day, especially in classic sprinting. It鈥檚 my best result this season.鈥

Image removed.

Ida Sargent 鈥11 leans into the home stretch in a World Cup race before the Olympics. (Team USA photo)

U.S. cross-country teammate Ida Sargent 鈥11 placed 33rd and finished in 3:25.80 in the qualifying round, but did not advance to the quarterfinals. Sargent arrived in Pyeongchang ready to compete despite having had surgery on her left thumb just over a week before, following a training crash on Jan. 27.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 get many injuries in cross-country skiing, so we鈥檙e appreciative that Ida could get back quickly,鈥 Team USA cross-country head coach Chris Grover 鈥93 said before the start of the Winter Games. Team USA still has high hopes about their Olympic chances, he says.

U.S. teammate Jessie Diggins reached the final heat of the women鈥檚 sprint race Tuesday with a final time of 3:14.07, ultimately placing sixth and recording Team USA鈥檚 top finish in the race.

The sprint was the second of six cross-country ski races at these Olympics. The competition continues on Thursday, Feb. 15, in the women鈥檚 10k freestyle and February 16 with the men鈥檚 15k freestyle.

The team is especially looking forward to the 4x5-kilometer on Saturday, which Diggins is likely to anchor,鈥 Caldwell said. 鈥淚 think we鈥檙e definitely knocking on the door of a medal. I think we鈥檙e very capable of getting one.鈥

 

U.S. Cross-Country Coach Chris Grover 鈥93: 鈥淓ven-Keeled, Fiercely Competitive鈥

February 13

Image removed.

Cross-country ski team members, from left, Pete Althausen 鈥93, Diana Sabot 鈥95, Chris Grover 鈥93, and Brian Jacquet 鈥95, at practice in 1992. Grover is now head coach of the U.S. cross-country ski team. (天美麻豆 Ski Team photo)

The last time a U.S. cross-country skier brought home a medal from the Olympics was 1976, when Bill Koch won silver. This year, reports , a 鈥渂udding cross-country powerhouse鈥 could end that drought. And while it is still literally an uphill battle to the podium, the American team is expressing confidence, not only in themselves, but in their coach, Chris Grover 鈥93.

鈥淧robably no one in the U.S., or anywhere, has been more responsible for how far the U.S. team has come,鈥 veteran skier Andy Newell . (Newell is married to another Nordic skier, Erika Flowers Newell 鈥12.) In the article, Grover said, 鈥淥ur basic objective is to win medals at the Olympics and world championships. It鈥檚 pretty cut and dried. That鈥檚 my job description, to win medals at the absolute highest levels.鈥

That won鈥檛 be easy, given the dominance of Norway, which Grover notes spends 15 times as much as the U.S. on training its cross-country team. Still, he says, what leads to victory is not just money, but stability. 鈥淚n my opinion, it is because we have created a stable platform鈥攖he same staff, coaches, some of the same camps鈥攕o that the athletes can incrementally build their training and experience from year to year.鈥

Matt Whitcomb, the U.S. women鈥檚 coach, calls Grover 鈥渢he most professional ski coach on the World Cup.鈥 If the team wins an Olympic medal, he adds, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a medal for Chris Grover, it鈥檚 a medal for the U.S. Ski Team, it鈥檚 a medal for everyone.鈥

 

Dreissigacker 鈥11 Is Top U.S. Finisher in Women鈥檚 7.5K Biathlon Sprint

February 12Image removed.

Emily Dreissigacker 鈥11 crosses the finish line of the women鈥檚 7.5-kilometer biathlon sprint at the Pyeongchang Olympic Games on Saturday. (Team USA photo)

Contending with single-digit temperatures and gusty winds, was the top American finisher in the women鈥檚 7.5-kilometer biathlon sprint on Saturday, the first weekend of the Winter Games.

Dreissigacker clocked a time of 23:27.2 after hitting nine of 10 targets for 51st place, putting her 2 minutes and 21 seconds behind gold medalist Laura Dahlmeier of Germany. Dreissigacker鈥檚 time earned her a spot on the starting line of the women鈥檚 10K pursuit on Monday, where she finished 47th after racking up four shooting penalties through the course of the race.

The wind was a factor, she told USA Today after Saturday鈥檚 race. 鈥淚t was very windy for the shooting. In prone (position) I definitely got kind of lucky and the wind was about the same as what I had zeroed in. And then in standing, I could feel the wind pushing my barrel around a little bit.鈥

, the other 天美麻豆-linked biathlete in Saturday鈥檚 7.5-kilometer sprint, missed five targets and finished 66th in 24:13.1.

鈥淵ou work for four years and you have big dreams to see what鈥檚 possible and it all comes down to one of these races like this,鈥 Dunklee told USA Today.

Also Saturday, came in 58th in the women鈥檚 skiathlon. U.S. teammate Jessie Diggins took fifth place in the women鈥檚 skiathlon鈥攖he highest Olympic finish ever for a U.S. women鈥檚 cross-country skier, supplanting , who finished sixth in the sprint in 2014.

On Sunday , a current 天美麻豆 undergrad and Sophie Caldwell鈥檚 cousin, finished 51st in the men鈥檚 skiathlon.

The high winds and cold were a factor in all the events this weekend, with several of the Alpine races featuring 天美麻豆 athletes postponed until later in the week.

 

Biathletes Rely on Their Good Stock

February 12

Image removed.

Susan Dunklee 鈥08 races to the finish in the women鈥檚 7.5-kilometer biathlon sprint on Saturday, her rifle slung vertically over her back to minimize resistance. (Team USA photo)

When skis into the shooting range for the biathlon events at Pyeongchang, she reaches into her shoulder harness for an unusual rifle. Its gunstock鈥攖he part to which the barrel is attached, and is held against the shoulder鈥攚as designed and built by her brother, Ethan Dreissigacker 鈥13, Thayer 鈥15, who has retired from international biathlon competition.

The challenge, in biathlon, is to ski really fast on a cross-country track, and then, either standing or prone, slow down your heart rate enough to hit a target with a steady hand. You need a rifle that touches your shoulder, your trigger finger, and your opposite hand at just the right spots, because there鈥檚 no time to adjust position.

鈥淲hen I was competing, I was always buying new gunstocks鈥攚hich can be $1,000 each鈥攁nd modifying them with drills or files or grinders, until I got what I wanted, and I noticed other biathletes were doing the same thing,鈥 says Dreissgacker. So, he thought, why not design a stock that goes together sort of like a LEGO set, 鈥渃ompletely modular, really adjustable, that you can adjust and change, and use for more than one rifle?鈥 

Dreissigacker鈥檚 versatile gunstock, made of aluminum, plastic, and other composites, can easily be configured for him鈥攁 6-foot-5 elite competitor鈥攁nd also for the 6-year-olds he now coaches at the Craftsbury Outdoor Center, in Vermont. He wants to make it easier and more affordable for young people to enter the sport, using equipment that will grow with them as they get bigger and better. 

Craftsbury is also home to  Lost Nation R&D, where Driessigacker is making and selling his new product. It鈥檚 been successfully field-tested by his two sharp-shooting siblings: first Hannah 鈥09, Thayer 鈥10, who competed in Sochi in 2014, and now, Emily.     

Dreissigacker says 天美麻豆 allowed him to pursue twin passions: skiing and engineering. Now he鈥檚 rooting not just for his sister at the Olympics, but also for the rifle he hopes will help her hit each mark. 鈥淚t can feel like a magic thing,鈥 he says, 鈥渉aving a direct effect on an object that is 50 meters away.鈥

Emily Dreissigacker placed 51st in the 7.5-kilometer biathlon sprint鈥攖he top American finisher鈥攁nd moved up to 47th in the 10K pursuit.

 

Dunklee Takes the Long View on Olympic Sports

February 12

In an on Sunday about the U.S. biathlon team鈥檚 chances to medal at the Pyeongchang Olympics, is quoted about the organized doping scandal in Russian sports.

鈥淲e certainly want to focus 100 percent of our energies on doing well at the Olympics, but at the same time, there鈥檚 more important things, and one of them is leaving a better world for the next generation,鈥 says Dunklee. 鈥淭hat clearly does involve advocating for clean sport at this time.鈥

 

Let the Games Begin

February 9

Erin Hamlin, a U.S. luger, is flag bearer leading the largest U.S Winter Olympics team ever at the opening ceremony Friday. 

The largest-ever contingent of 天美麻豆 athletes joined the largest-ever U.S. Winter Olympics team as they marched into Pyeongchang Stadium Friday with Korean pop hit Gangnam Style playing over the sound system.

Although the temperatures moderated from the sub-zero forecast, the 35,000 spectators in the open-air stadium were bundled against the 20 degree weather. But the cold didn鈥檛 bother the 天美麻豆 athletes.

鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to have it finally feel like winter,鈥 Team USA cross-country skier Ida Sargent 鈥11 told . 鈥淚t鈥檚 fun to embrace winter and remember that we鈥檙e winter-sports athletes.鈥

Bermudan cross-country skier Tucker Murphy 鈥04 carries his country鈥檚 flag at the opening ceremony in Pyeongchang. 

Sargent was dressed for the cold, but not Bermudan cross-country skier Tucker Murphy 鈥04, who got shout-outs for his Bermuda shorts as he carried his country鈥檚 flag in the ceremony. (Murphy鈥檚 exposed knees were soon eclipsed on the internet by images of bare-chested Tonga cross-country skier Pita Taufatofua carrying his country鈥檚 flag).

天美麻豆 had 15 athletes and two head coaches in the opening ceremony. All of the Big Green athletes except Murphy, Canadian hockey coach Laura Schuler (who took a leave from coaching 天美麻豆 women鈥檚 hockey for the games), and Canadian hockey player Laura Stacey 鈥16, were part of the 242-member Team USA, the largest national contingent to take part in a Winter Olympics.

The first full day of competition Saturday will feature 天美麻豆 athletes in the women鈥檚 7.5 km biathlon sprint and the women鈥檚 7.5脳7.5 km cross-country skiathlon. Alpine racing events begin Sunday with the women鈥檚 giant slalom.

For a complete schedule of events, venues, and starting times, visit the  and for broadcast coverage information, visit the .

 

Art Is an Olympics Event, Too, and 天美麻豆鈥檚 Alexi Pappas 鈥12 Is on the Creative Team

February 9

The last time distance runner Alexi Pappas 鈥12 participated in the Olympics, she was racing for Greece at the , setting a national record of 31:36:16 in the 10,000-meter run. Now, in Pyeongchang, she has a different reason to live in Olympic Village.

The writer, actress, and filmmaker is one of four Olympic chosen by the International Olympic Committee to 鈥渂ring Olympic values to life through art.鈥 Pappas and her partner, Jeremy Teicher 鈥10, will create a series of short films featuring the actor Nick Kroll, with cameos by current Olympic athletes.

Artists used to compete in the Games. From 1912 to 1948, gold, silver, and bronze medals were given in five categories: painting, sculpture, architecture, literature, and music. The Olympic Committee is reviving the tradition, not as a contest, but 鈥渢o celebrate the spirit of Olympism through art with a wider audience via the hashtag #OlympicArt.鈥 

Pappas and Teicher scored positive reviews last year for Tracktown, their semi-autobiographical indie comedy. 鈥淚t feels like my background as an athlete and a filmmaker are coming together at this intersection,鈥 about the Olympics arts residency. She still races professionally, and will keep a training regimen in South Korea.

 

Two More 天美麻豆 Skiers Make It Under the Wire

February 8

Alice Merryweather 鈥21, left, and Tricia Mangan 鈥19, were picked by the U.S. Olympic Alpine ski team this week to fill slots that opened up due to injuries. Mangan was the final athlete added to Team USA. (AP Photos)

Undergrads  and  won spots on the U.S. Olympic Alpine team just days before the Winter Games opening ceremony on Friday.

Merryweather, who plans to start classes at 天美麻豆 in the spring, and Mangan, a biomechanical engineering student, were finishing up Junior World Cup competitions in Europe when they got word that they had been tapped by the U.S. ski team to fill out competition slots that had opened up due to injuries, according to the Team USA website. Mangan, who got the call on Monday, has the distinction of being the final athlete added to this year鈥檚 U.S. Olympic Team.

Mangan, who has been skiing with the U.S. Alpine C team for more than a year, returning to her studies in the spring and summer terms, finished fourth in the super-G at the FIS Junior Ski Championship last weekend in Davos, Switzerland. She replaces Jackie Wiles, who was injured on Feb. 3 in a competition at Germany.

Merryweather, who was accepted into the Class of 2021 but deferred her start until next fall, skis out of the Stratton Mountain School in Vermont. She won downhill gold last season at the FIS Junior World Ski Championships, then broke into the top 20 in downhill at the FIS World Cup Final in Aspen last March. Merryweather replaces Steven Nyman, who was injured on Jan. 26 while competing in Germany.

 

Most 天美麻豆 Athletes Ever to March in Opening Ceremony

February 8

With the late addition of  and  to the U.S. Alpine ski team, 天美麻豆 will have 15 athletes and a head coach marching in tomorrow鈥檚 2018 Winter Olympics opening ceremony in Pyeongchang, South Korea, the most ever for the College.

And, with Paralympian Staci Mannella 鈥18 set to compete in Pyeongchang next month, that brings to 17 the total of 天美麻豆 athletes taking part in the Olympics.

 

Backstage at the Olympics

February 6

U.S. Ski Team coach Peter Anderson 鈥06, left, stands slopeside last month during a World Cup race in Kitzb眉hel, Austria. (Photo courtesy of Peter Anderson)

The 天美麻豆-Olympics connection includes more than athletes. Alumni contribute to the Winter Games in many ways, from coaching to medical support to anti-doping oversight.

is assistant coach with the U.S. Men鈥檚 Alpine team, working with the skiers in the downhill and Super G races. This is Anderson鈥檚 second Winter Olympics. He coached the U.S. women鈥檚 slalom and giant slalom at the Sochi games in 2014.

鈥淚t is really an honor to be representing the United States in South Korea, but also to be representing 天美麻豆 College. It has been amazing over the years how many people, both athletes and coaches, have represented 天美麻豆 at the Olympic Games,鈥 says Anderson, a philosophy major who skied for 天美麻豆 in the World University Games in Innsbruck, Austria, in 2005. Anderson was featured, along with two-time Super G medalist Andrew Weibrecht 鈥09, in a recent Ski Racing Media video,

Two doctors with ties to the College, and , MED 鈥94, MHCDS 鈥12, have each served as team doctors for U.S. Olympic skiers for more than a decade. Watkins, a math major and 天美麻豆 Outing Club lifer, worked with the ski patrol at the Skiway. He is at the 2018 games as a team doctor for the women鈥檚 alpine team. Merrens, who served as U.S. Biathlon team physician in four Olympic Games, has recently been elected to the board of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. In the wake of the Russian doping scandal after the Sochi games, Merrens says he is honored to be chosen to the board of the agency that is fighting for the integrity of international sports.

Merrens says his role on the board is to advise and deliberate on scientific and medical questions related to drug testing and the effects of blood doping. Because he is not involved with testing or other clinical protocols at the games, 鈥淚 continue to cheer for 天美麻豆. I am not going to the games, but you can be sure I鈥檒l be watching and rooting for our 天美麻豆 athletes,鈥 particularly biathletes and .

 

鈥淔rom Pure Exertion to Pure Focus鈥

February 6

The New York Times Magazine鈥檚 Olympics issue as a search for stillness in the midst of heart-pumping speed. The story quotes saying that when she races, she鈥檚 鈥渋n what she calls 鈥榯unnel mode鈥欌攖otally closed off to anything except the race.鈥 Dunklee, the Times notes, 鈥渋s one of Team USA鈥檚 top hopes for its first-ever medal in biathlon.鈥 .

 

Will the Olympics Break the Ice Between the Two Koreas?

February 1

The 2018 Winter Olympics seem to have defused tensions鈥攁t least temporarily鈥攐n the Korean Peninsula, but two 天美麻豆 professors caution that friendship between sports teams does not necessarily mirror international diplomacy.

 

What Makes a Dream Team?

January 29

Sophie Caldwell 鈥12, left, and Ida Sargent 鈥11, bronze medalists in the women鈥檚 team sprint at the FIS Cross-Country World Cup 8 in Pyeongchang, South Korea. (Photo by Ramil Sitdikov/Sputnik via AP)

When the U.S. women鈥檚 cross-country ski team members, including three 天美麻豆 alumnae, race at Pyeongchang next month, they have an excellent chance of racking up medals. That鈥檚 the prediction from Peggy Shinn, a free-lance writer based in Rutland, Vt., who reports on the Olympics for TeamUSA.org. 鈥淚n 28 world cup races to date this season, the U.S. women鈥檚 cross-country skiers have finished on the podium in over a third of them,鈥 Shinn

Her newly published book, , asks why, in 2012, after years of struggle, America鈥檚 women suddenly began to shine in cross-country skiing world cup events. She interviewed team members Kikkan Randall, Liz Stephen, Jessie Diggins, Sadie Bjornsen, the now-retired Holly Brooks, and 天美麻豆鈥檚 own Sophie Caldwell 鈥12, Ida Sargent 鈥11, and Rosie Brennan 鈥11. 鈥淭hey all credited better teamwork,鈥 says Shinn. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what made the difference.鈥

And, she says, the U.S. team got a boost this year with a new waxing truck. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of like a lab on wheels, where skiers and wax techs and coaches can all be in one place as they test out waxes on a variety of different skis that have different flexes and different structures imprinted on the bottoms.鈥 The Americans won鈥檛 have the truck in Korea, but neither will other teams. And it has helped them prepare for the games, Shinn says. 

, 天美麻豆鈥檚 director of skiing and head coach of women鈥檚 Nordic skiing, also expects great things from the women鈥檚 cross-country Olympic team. 鈥淚 am very proud of Sophie, Ida, and Rosie, as well as biathlete Susan Dunklee 鈥08,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t is a great advantage to be racing fearlessly, rather than defensively. Confidence breeds success!鈥

And success has also come to two more 天美麻豆 athletes who, just under the wire, were added to the cross-country team on Friday: Patrick Caldwell 鈥17 (cousin to Sophie) and Annie Hart 鈥14.

 

天美麻豆鈥檚 Olympic Reputation Hailed

January 26

With 15 competitors headed to the Winter Games, 鈥溙烀缆槎 College鈥檚 Olympic skiing reputation continues to grow,鈥 Team USA proclaimed in a headline this week. Two more 天美麻豆 Nordic skiers were named to Team USA on Friday as the final rosters were announced. Including the 2018 contingent, 天美麻豆 athletes have earned 147 spots on Winter Olympics team rosters, with athletes from the College competing in every Winter Games since the first one in 1924. To date, 天美麻豆 athletes have won a total of 13 gold, nine silver, and six bronze medals, more than many countries. .

 

They Made It!

January 22

Add two more names to the long list of 天美麻豆 athletes soon to test their mettle at the Winter Games. David Chodounsky 鈥08 and Nolan Kasper 鈥14 both qualified in men鈥檚 slalom at Sunday鈥檚 World Cup in Kitzbuehel, Austria. (On Friday, also in Kitzbuehel, Andrew Weibrecht 鈥09 carved a path to the U.S. team, in super-G.) 

Chodounsky finished 15th, rising to the top of the U.S. slalom standings. While Kasper, a two-time Olympian, did not finish in Sunday鈥檚 race, he had already racked up 11 points with an impressive showing in Wengen, Austria鈥攈is first World Cup in three years, following a string of injuries. In that race, he progressed from a 52nd start position to 20th place. Kasper ranks second on the U.S. world cup slalom ladder.  

Headlining this weekend鈥檚 announcement on its , Team USA notes that Chodounsky and Kasper  鈥渃ontinue 天美麻豆鈥檚 strong Olympic pipeline.鈥 The Olympic contingent now numbers 13 competitors with 天美麻豆 ties. Jeffrey Shiffrin 鈥76 also has bragging rights: His daughter, Mikaela, described by the Los Angeles Times as 鈥減erhaps the best female skier alive,鈥 will be a top competitor in Pyeongchang next month.

 

Slalom Showdown

January 19

It鈥檚 going to be a make-or-break weekend for David Chodounsky 鈥08 and Nolan Kasper 鈥14. Both slalom skiers get their final chance Sunday to qualify for the Olympic team in Kitzbuehel, Austria.

At 天美麻豆, Chodounsky won the NCAA slalom title as a first-year skier on the men鈥檚 Alpine team. In 2008, he finished his Big Green career by leading the team to a fourth-place overall NCAA finish. Chodounsky also holds a fistful of U.S. Championship titles. When he joined the U.S. Alpine team for the Sochi Olympics in 2014, he was the only team member with a college degree. He began skiing when he was only 2 years old, when his parents gave him a push down the hill in front of their house. This weekend:  different yard, steeper slope, higher stakes.

Nolan Kasper 鈥14 as a member of the 2013 U.S. ski team. 

Kasper is a 鈥渃omeback kid,鈥 says Ski Racing magazine. He competed in the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, was a World Cup silver medalist in 2011, got sidelined for the 2013 season by serious injuries, and came back for the 2014 Games in Sochi, where he was the top American slalom finisher. Then a cartilage tear in his knee robbed him of two more seasons. But he鈥檚 back, big-time. 天美麻豆, Kasper tells Ski Racing, helped him stay focused on his ultimate goal鈥攔eturning to the Olympics starting gate. 鈥淚 think having the outlet with school was really, really key to making sure that I wasn鈥檛 getting too mentally down when things weren鈥檛 going well.鈥

Image removed.

Andrew Weibrecht 鈥09 takes to the air during a 2014 World Cup race at Beaver Creek Mountain Avon, Colo. (Photo by John Risley)

Another 天美麻豆 star, Andrew Weibrecht 鈥09, clinched his spot on the 2018 team on Friday by placing 24th in the super-G World Cup in Kitzbuehel. Nicknamed 鈥淲ar Horse,鈥 Weibrecht won a bronze medal at his Olympic debut in 2010, and upset Bode Miller for the silver medal in Sochi. 

 

From Bermuda To Pyeongchang

January 19

Tucker Murphy 鈥04 carries Bermuda鈥檚 national flag during the opening ceremony of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. 

Tucker Murphy 鈥04, a 天美麻豆 Rhodes scholar and Big Green Nordic ski team standout, will represent Bermuda in cross-country skiing at this year鈥檚 Winter Games.

Murphy, who graduated with a degree in biology modified by anthropology, and studied biomimetics at Oxford University, raced cross-country in Sochi in 2014 and in Vancouver in 2010. At the Vancouver Winter Games, he made quite a splash, carrying the Bermuda flag in the Opening Ceremony wearing the team uniform: a blue blazer, black knee socks, and red Bermuda shorts.

Murphy is the third Bermudan to ever participate in the Winter Olympics, and the first to compete in Nordic skiing. At 天美麻豆, he was also on the heavyweight crew team and was an editor and writer for the 天美麻豆 Undergraduate Journal of Science.

 

All in the Family

January 17

天美麻豆 has had scores of contenders at the Olympics over the years, so it鈥檚 not surprising that the tradition gets passed down from one generation to the next, and from one sibling to another.

For example, when biathlete Emily Dreissigacker 鈥11 competes in Pyeongchang, she鈥檒l be the standard bearer for an athletic family whose 天美麻豆 roots run deep. Her mother, Julia 鈥淛udy鈥 Geer 鈥75, transferred to 天美麻豆 in 1973, the year after the College went co-ed. She was the first women鈥檚 crew team captain, and, in 鈥76 and 鈥84, rowed for the U.S. at the Summer Games. In 1984, Emily鈥檚 aunt Charlotte 鈥淐arlie鈥 Geer 鈥80 became the first 天美麻豆 woman to earn an Olympic medal鈥攁 silver in crew.

Like relatives on their mother鈥檚 side, all three Dreissigacker children鈥擡mily, Hannah 鈥09, and Ethan 鈥13鈥攚ent to 天美麻豆. Hannah joined the Big Green Nordic ski team and competed in biathlon at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. Ethan is also a biathlete. Emily started out rowing for 天美麻豆, where she was a two-time All-American. After college, she shifted her focus to biathlon and, in January, qualified for the U.S. Olympic team, along with fellow 天美麻豆 alumna, Susan Dunklee 鈥08.

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Sophie Caldwell 鈥12 competes in a cross-country skiing event during her time at 天美麻豆. (Photo by Paul Bussi)

Sophie Caldwell 鈥12 also seems to have Olympic ability baked into her DNA. Her grandfather, John Caldwell 鈥50, raced for the U.S. Nordic ski team at the 1952 Winter Games in Oslo. Her uncle, Tim Caldwell 鈥77, competed on cross-country skis in four Winter Olympics.

 

Nine Qualify for the Games; Five More Contending

January 17

鈥淲e pride ourselves on being in the forefront of skiing in the U.S. and internationally,鈥 says , 天美麻豆 director of skiing and head coach of women鈥檚 Nordic skiing. 鈥淚t is a tradition that we reinforce with each new class of athletes, and our Olympic participation shows just how far our athletes can go.鈥 Check out the lineup so far of 天美麻豆-affiliated athletes who have made Olympic teams. .

 

Peter Graves on the Art of Announcing

January 16

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Peter Graves, who will be announcing the Alpine ski events in this year鈥檚 winter Olympics, also covered the 2014 Sochi Olympics as an announcer.

When Peter Graves of East Thetford, Vt., watches skiers go for the gold in Pyeongchang, his voice will ring out loud and clear鈥攐ver the public address system. Graves, the husband of Cami Thompson Graves, 天美麻豆鈥檚 director of skiing and head coach of women鈥檚 Nordic skiing, will be announcing Alpine races this year.

鈥淭his will be my 11th time covering the games, in one way or another,鈥 Graves said recently over coffee in Hanover. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a beauty to the Olympics movement that moves me to the core, and I feel blessed and humbled to be a part of it.鈥

Graves does his research before stepping into the booth. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important, not just what you say, but how you say it鈥攜our inflections, your word choices, and the true stories you tell about the athletes,鈥 he says. Long before the opening ceremony, Graves spends months gathering information and writing notes about each skier on stacks of 3-by-5 cards. 鈥淚鈥檓 old school that way,鈥 he says.

鈥淎 good announcer educates, inspires, and informs,鈥 says Graves. 鈥淚 want to tell the story of the kid from a rural New England town, or from a rural and isolated mountain town in Austria, who have dedicated their lives to this movement.鈥

Drawing on his long experience in front of the microphone, Graves, 65, coaches younger announcers, and he has a lot of history to share. In addition to working at the Olympics, he鈥檚 been a radio news director, a cross-country ski coach, and a sports commentator for NBC and ESPN.

鈥淎nnouncing races feel to me a little like sitting around a campfire. You are reaching the audience that is right in front of you, and that includes everyone from an athlete鈥檚 mother to heads of state,鈥 says Graves. 鈥淚 love my job.鈥

Bill Platt can be reached at William.C.Platt@dartmouth.edu. Charlotte Albright can be reached at Charlotte.E.Albright@dartmouth.edu. Erin Supinka can be reached at Erin.M.Supinka@dartmouth.edu.

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