South Korean teenager Choi Gaon on Thursday recovered from a brutal fall to shock US snowboard superstar Chloe Kim in the Olympic women’s halfpipe final as the American missed out on a historic hat-trick.
Choi, 17, scored a competition-high 90.25 in her third run to top Kim’s mark of 88.00, posted in her first run, with the American forced to settle for silver.
Japan’s Mitsuki Ono took bronze with a score of 85.00 in a final littered with crashes.
Photo: Reuters
World Cup leader Choi recovered from a dramatic fall on her first outing, which resulted in a score of just 10.00.
She clipped the lip of the halfpipe, sliding down the wall, and lay motionless on the ice as medics went to her aid.
A stretcher was brought onto the snow, but Choi regained her feet after a few minutes and drifted to the bottom of the halfpipe, cheered by a knot of South Korean fans.
Choi fell again early on her second run, leaving her Olympic dream at the Milano Cortina Games hanging by a thread, but she saved her best for last, landing a brilliant third run under intense pressure as the snow swirled down on the floodlit venue.
Kim, skiing last, gathered her thoughts at the top of the halfpipe, adjusting her equipment, but crashed early, confirming Choi as the champion.
“It’s the kind of story you only see in dreams, so I’m incredibly happy it happened today,” Choi said. “During the final, mentally it was so tough, but right now I am the happiest. My knees are a bit bad, but I feel like I’m overcoming it all with happiness.”
Choi, the same age as Kim when the American won her first gold at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games, is the first athlete from South Korea to win an Olympic gold medal in snow sports.
Kim, watched by her boyfriend, NFL star Myles Garrett, and US rapper Snoop Dogg, had appeared to be on the brink of becoming the first snowboarder in history to win three Olympic golds at consecutive Games.
The 25-year-old, who suffered a dislocated shoulder last month while training in Switzerland, has dominated women’s halfpipe since the 2022 Beijing Games, winning X Games gold in 2024 and last year, and claiming her third world championship title last year.
No snowboarder, man or woman, has managed to win three straight Olympic titles, with two athletes missing the chance to do so earlier in these Games — Ester Ledecka of the Czech Republic and Austria’s Anna Gasser.
Even Shaun White, widely regarded as the greatest snowboarder of all time, did not manage the feat, winning three golds in halfpipe over four Olympics.
Kim said she was proud of her silver after her injury-disrupted season, describing Choi’s victory as a “full-circle moment.”
“Today might’ve been my eighth day on snow this entire winter,” she said. “I haven’t been able to practice as much as I would’ve liked. Just proud of myself for putting it down today.”
She praised Choi, saying: “It was so inspirational. It’s so funny because she won her first Olympic gold medal at the same age as I did. It’s such a full-circle moment.”
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