Snowboarding - Galmarini upgrades to men's PGS gold in Pyeongchang
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[February 24, 2018]
By Jack Tarrant
PYEONGCHANG, South Korea (Reuters) -
Switzerland's Nevin Galmarini upgraded his silver medal from four
years ago when he held off the challenge of South Korea's Lee
Sang-ho to win gold in the men's snowboard parallel giant slalom on
Saturday.
Galmarini claimed victory by 0.43 seconds from local favorite Lee,
who claimed his country's first ever medal in a snowboard event, as
Slovenia's Zan Kosir defeated Sylvain Dufour of France in the small
final to complete the podium.
Galmarini finished second to Russia's Vic Wild in Sochi four years
ago but the Swiss had enough in the tank this time to overcome a
local rider when he defeated Lee in the final.
Lee's semi-final win over Kosir, guaranteeing the hosts a first ever
Olympic snowboarding medal, was greeted by huge cheers from the
crowd, who had turned up in huge numbers for the last day of action
at Phoenix Snow Park.
Kosir matched his bronze medal from Sochi with victory over Dufour,
who struggled to maintain the speed that had carried him into the
semi-finals.
In PGS, two boarders compete against one another on parallel
courses, with the athletes holding the highest seeding from
qualification choosing their preferred course; red or blue.
The red course appeared to be the fastest throughout competition and
Galmarini said he wanted to go fast right from the start to ensure
he had the best chance to win.
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Gold medallist Nevin Galmarini Of Switzerland flanked by silver
medallist Lee Sang-ho of South Korea and bronze medallist Zan Kosir
Of Slovenia celebrates during flower ceremony. REUTERS/Mike Blake
"I knew I was in good shape but I just wanted to ride without fear,
go hard into every turn and if it doesn't work out then walk away
proud and if it does work then even better," said the Swiss, who
qualified in first position.
"That was my first thought; just go hard in every run and not think
about the consequences.
"There are some races where choosing is important, others not. In
this one I wanted to go hard and take risks in qualification to have
the result on my side."
Nevin said he was still coming to terms with being an Olympic
champion.
"Today was fantastic," he added. "Now I am the Olympic champion. It
sounds both surreal and fantastic."
(Reporting by Jack Tarrant; Editing by John O'Brien and Sudipto
Ganguly)
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