
Welcome to The Home Team, VTDiggerโs daily Olympic dispatch. Every morning, weโll feature the highlights of Vermonters competing in the 2018 Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea. Check out ourย full list of Vermont athletes on Team USA, and meet author Kevin OโConnor in our Olympic preview podcast.
Skiers relay for best-ever result
The U.S. womenโs cross-country ski team keeps competing for its first-ever Olympic medal โ and coming miraculously and/or maddeningly close to winning it.
Vermonters Sophie Caldwell and Jessie Diggins were two of the nationโs four 4×5-kilometer relay racers who collectively finished fifth this weekend, just 36.8 seconds from landing on the podium.
Itโs the U.S. womenโs best-ever Olympic relay result โ and the fourth time Diggins has found a silver lining in a top-six finish in South Korea.
โI got to see each of my teammates ski their heart out,โ the part-time Stratton resident tells Vermonter Peggy Shinn, a writer for the U.S. Olympic Committeeโs website. โWeโre going to walk away proud of what we did here today because thereโs more to it than just medals. Seeing everyone go out there and lay down a solid race and give it everything they had, thatโs what really matters.โ
U.S. women have two more chances to score in the team freestyle sprint Wednesday and the 30-kilometer mass start classic Sunday.
Clark snags a medal after all

When the U.S. Olympic Committee told 2018 halfpipe champion Chloe Kim she could thank a coach with an Order of Ikkos medal, the 17-year-old decided to give it to someone else: Her teammate, Vermont-schooled Kelly Clark.
The 34-year-old who grew up in West Dover has competed in five Olympics and medaled in three. Kim cited that inspiring record as the reason for giving Clark an award named for the first recorded coach in ancient Greece.
โEverybody promotes what a talented snowboarder Chloe is, but Iโm prouder of her for the person she is,โ Clark tells ESPN. โI said, โThis speaks volumes about you and about your success and accomplishments.โ And I ended up getting a medal anyway!โ
Perhaps in return, Ben & Jerryโs is set to reward Kim. When the newly crowned champion tweeted she โcould be down for some ice cream,โ the Vermont-based company contacted her agent to say itโs preparing a cooler of products.
Could be down for some ice cream rn
— Chloe Kim (@ChloeKim) February 12, 2018
โWe pay attention to what people are saying online,โ Ben & Jerryโs marketing manager Jay Curley tells the Washington Post, โand we like to send out ice cream to our fans, whether theyโre regular folks or celebrities.โ
No word if Kim will follow in the tracks of Vermont snowboarder Hannah Teter, who received her own limited-edition flavor, Maple Blondie, after she won a halfpipe gold medal in 2006.
Looking Ahead: The U.S. womenโs ice hockey team, which includes forward Amanda Pelkey of Montpelier, is set to play a semifinal against Finland today. The Americans are aiming for the gold-medal game and their first Olympic title since 1998.
