Alpine skiing-Shiffrin lurks as Scheyer takes lead in combined
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[February 17, 2022] By
Simon Evans
YANQING, China (Reuters) - Austria's Christine Scheyer was in pole
position after the downhill leg of the women's combined on Thursday
but American favourite Mikaela Shiffrin was within striking distance
as she searches for her first medal of the Beijing Games.
Scheyer completed the downhill in 1:32.42, putting her one hundredth
of a second ahead of Czech Ester Ledecka, who is searching for
another Olympic double after winning gold again in snowboard's
parallel giant slalom.
Shiffrin was fifth fastest in the speed event, 0.56 off the lead but
the American will fancy her chances of making up that time in her
preferred slalom.
The American, who is the reigning world champion in combined and
took silver medal in the 2018 Winter Olympics, said she had used
Italian downhiller Sofia Goggia's downhill skis but admitted she now
had to overcome some mental hurdles for the slalom.
Shiffrin came into the Games as the leading technical skier of
recent years but she dramatically failed to finish her first runs in
both the slalom and the giant slalom and surprisingly remains
without a medal in Beijing.
"It's nice to know I have some practice and certainly a lot of speed
in slalom but I also have a little bit of, I don't know, I have to
overcome the image that I am going to ski out on the fifth gate,"
she said, referring to the section that troubled her in both her
exits.
"I am just trying to stay calm because I think I was doing pretty
well with that this morning. Stay calm and have a good run at
slalom.
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Mikaela Shiffrin of the United States reacts after her run.
REUTERS/Wolfgang Rattay
"I am really excited to have another chance at
racing on the rest of the tech track. That's going to be nice," she
said.
The American then finished ninth in the super-G and 18th in the
downhill but she is part of an exciting group of women skiers who
are comfortable in both technical and speed events.
Scheyer is more at home in the speed races but has clearly had the
combined in mind and said she had carried out several slalom
training days during the Games.
"Slalom makes me more nervous because I am doing it much less than
downhill but I am excited (for the second run), we will see," she
said.
Defending combined Olympic champion Michelle Gisin of Switzerland
was a full second behind Scheyer's time.
Austrian downhiller Ramona Siebenhofer was 0.14 off the lead with
France's Romane Miradoli also well positioned in fourth place, 0.53
behind Scheyer.
(Reporting by Simon Evans, additional reporting by Simon Jennings;
Editing by Himani Sarkar and Jacqueline Wong)
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