
Starksboro-raised Ryan Cochran-Siegle and Stratton-trained Jessie Diggins won Olympic skiing medals Tuesday at the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing.
Cochran-Siegle, 29, scored silver in the alpine super-G almost 50 years to the day after his mother, Barbara Ann Cochran, snagged slalom gold at the 1972 competition in Sapporo, Japan.
Hours later, Diggins, 30, took bronze in cross-countryโs individual sprint. She won gold in the 2018 womenโs team sprint, but her latest race makes her the first U.S. woman to nab a solo Nordic cross-country medal and only the second American to do so after Vermonter Bill Koch captured silver in 1976.
Cochran-Siegle skied โa near perfect run,โ according to Rutland writer Peggy Shinn, a reporter for the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committeeโs website, TeamUSA.org.
โHe crossed the finish line, took off his skis, looked at the camera and said, โWhatโs up, Vermont. I hope that holds,โโ Shinn wrote in her story from Chinaโs Yanqing National Alpine Center.
Cochran-Siegleโs time of 1 minute, 19.98 seconds was only four-hundredths of a second behind that of the winner, defending 2018 gold medalist Matthias Mayer of Austria.
โPart of me recognized that I was skiing well, and trusting that, and just fighting all the way to the finish,โ Cochran-Siegle was quoted by Shinn after the race. โItโs definitely a special, special run.โ
Cochran-Siegle was raised at his familyโs namesake Richmond ski area, which his grandfather Mickey Cochran started by installing a rope tow in his backyard.
โHappy, relieved, a little bit of proud,โ Cochran-Siegle said when asked about medaling like his mother. โJust really appreciating that Iโm here and able to accomplish my childhood dream on a day like today. Itโs a lot of really good and positive emotions.โ
USA Today deemed Cochran-Siegleโs victory a โsurpriseโ in part because the skier broke his neck in a downhill racing crash just a year ago.
โYou dream of these moments,โ he was quoted by Shinn. โYou see it in your mind and at times you have to put it away because you have to just focus on the skiing. That was what I was doing today. โฆ I think this was the best second place that Iโll ever get in my life.โ
Viewers of NBCโs Today show watched Cochran-Siegle show off his medal and FaceTime with his mother when Diggins took the podium in her own event.
โItโs so special and so exciting,โ Diggins went on to tell the programโs hosts. โI really felt the love and the cheering all the way from over here and itโs been overwhelming, but in the best way.โ
Jonna Sundling of Sweden won gold by less than three seconds, while teammate Maja Dahlqvist took silver by a stride.
Many believed the individual sprint represented Digginsโ best chance to capture a medal this year, although sheโs set to defend her title in the team sprint next week.
โTo be honest, I actually wasnโt sure that I had definitely gotten the bronze, so I was a little bit scared to celebrate,โ Diggins told NBC after she crossed the finish line.
The New York Times described the freestyle sprint course as โa furious, three-minute tear around a 1.5-kilometer loop on a course built into the side of a hill that includes a lung-busting climb, a dicey descent and a final burst down the flat straightaway to the finish.โ
โI was just in a lot of pain,โ Diggins told NBC. โItโs a really challenging course, but I love that. My biggest goal today was to just finish with nothing left. Iโm so proud to say that I definitely did that.โ
Find out how to watch the two dozen athletes with Vermont ties here.
