
Alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin stood atop the Beijing 2022 Olympics giant slalom hill as a television announcer recalled how she won a gold medal in the same race at the last Winter Games.
Seconds later, the 26-year-old fell cold on the steep, slippery course, wiping out for only the 14th time in 229 competitions and counting.
โShe was going for gold again,โ former champion Lindsey Vonn told NBC viewers.
โShe has a lot more chances in these Olympics,โ two-time gold medalist Ted Ligety reassured.
Indeed, Shiffrin โ a graduate of Burke Mountain Academy in the Northeast Kingdom โ has four more events, including her best, the slalom. But her stumble (โYeah, I am human,โ she posted on Twitter) was just one of several challenges faced by Olympians with Vermont ties upon the opening of the Winter Games.
Shiffrinโs teammate Nina OโBrien, also schooled at Burke Mountain Academy, crashed across the finish line in her second giant slalom run, requiring emergency responders to carry her away โalert and responsive,โ according to a U.S. ski team spokesperson.
โWe are so heartbroken for Nina,โ Shiffrin posted on Twitter. โShe showed so much heart and fire in her skiing today, and it all got shredded to pieces on the final turn. This sport โฆ this sport is SO damn hard. Itโs brutal, and it hurts far more often than it ever feels good.โ
Two-time slopestyle gold medalist Jamie Anderson, whose mother owns the Weaving Dreams alpaca farm in Hartland, found herself denied a snowboarding three-peat โ although her family and friends still cheered from home as the USA Network beamed their watch party to the nation.
Anderson was bested by two competitors from Down Under, Zoi Sadowski-Synnott from New Zealand and Tess Coady of Australia, as well as fellow American Julia Marino, who studied as a 14-year-old at Stratton Mountain School.
Fellow Stratton-trained Jessie Diggins, who won the United Statesโ first-ever gold in cross country skiing in 2018, finished sixth in the womenโs 15-kilometer skiathlon โ and, while it didnโt put her on the podium, a welcome improvement from her 11th-place standing at the halfway mark.
โMy goals for today were to keep fighting, to never give up, to ski with the best technique I could,โ Diggins was quoted by Vermont journalist Peggy Shinn, whoโs covering the games for TeamUSA.org.
Missing out on a medal, in fact, could be a sign of history repeating itself.
โFour years ago, she finished fifth in the 2018 Olympic skiathlon,โ Shinn noted in her story. โEleven days later, she and Kikkan Randall won the U.S. first Olympic gold medal in cross-country skiing.โ
In the menโs skiathlon, University of Vermont graduate Scott Patterson finished 11th, the best Nordic finish by an American man since Vermonter Bill Kochโs silver in the 30-kilometer in 1976.
In the skiing and rifle marksmanship sport of biathlon, the Vermont trio of Sean Doherty, Susan Dunklee and Clare Egan joined teammate Paul Schommer in finishing seventh โ the nationโs best-ever result in the Olympic mixed relay.
In alpine skiing, Starksboro resident Ryan Cochran-Siegle came back from breaking his neck a year ago to place 14th, the top American finish, in the menโs downhill.
Cochran-Siegleโs mother, 1972 slalom gold medal winner Barbara Ann Cochran of Richmondโs Cochranโs Ski Area, appeared on NBCโs live coverage of the race and of Fridayโs opening ceremony.
On the same network, NBC number-cruncher Steve Kornacki, known for analyzing Electoral College maps, broke down the Team USA geography. He noted that while the three largest cities of New York, Los Angeles and Chicago had no 2022 Olympians, the Vermont town of Landgrove, population 177, had one.
(Cue photo of Ben Ogden, a Stratton Mountain School graduate and University of Vermont student.)
Concluded Kornacki: โWho says small towns canโt kindle big dreams?โ
Find out how to watch the two dozen athletes with Vermont ties here.
