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Zhier Fan Zooms Under Olympic Trials Cuts in 3 Events at American LC Meet

Zhier Fan Zooms Under Olympic Trials Cuts in 3 Events at American LC Meet

2022 NT American Long Course Meet

  • July 20-23
  • Garland ISD Natatorium
  • LCM
  • Results on Meet Mobile: “2022 American Long Course”

A few incoming college freshmen posted fast times at the 2022 NT American Long Course Meet last month in one of their final competitive tune-ups before the NCAA season begins this fall. 

Leading the way was Zhier Fan of Metroplex Aquatics, who clocked three times that would qualify for Olympic Trials if he can repeat them in the qualifying period after November 30. The Stanford commit shaved nearly four seconds off his previous best in the 400-meter IM, swimming a 4:21.93 that ranks him sixth among 18-year-old boys this season. Fan also set a new personal best in the 200 IM, reaching the wall in 2:02.48 to remain the sixth-fastest performer this season for his age. He was under the Paris Olympic Trials cut in the 100 breast with a 1:02.10, but he was more than a second slower than his personal best from April’s International Team Trials. 

Sage Sungail tallied four wins, all in personal-best times, including some huge time drops by sprint event standards. The SMU commit took .44 seconds faster off his previous-best 50 freestyle time from prelims, in the process moving up to fifth this season among 18-year-old boys. In the 100 free, Sungail went more than half a second faster than his previous best from last month with a 50.83. He also dropped almost half a second in the 100 fly (54.99) and added a 1:51.69 in the 200 free to rise the ranks to No. 12 this season for his age.

Nova Southeastern University commit Luka Samsonov lost the 100 back title by .01 seconds to John Culver of Dallas Mustangs, but the 18-year-old Samsonov had already earned his first Junior Nationals cut during prelims with a personal-best 58.36. He may have also hit his stride prematurely in the 200 back, where he went slower than his personal best from prelims (2:07.81) on his way to taking third place in the final (2:08.05). 

On the girls side, Scarlet Aquatic Club’s Kathleen Turano chipped away at five personal bests, becoming a top-10 performer among 14-year-old girls this season in three events. She dropped nearly five seconds in two months in the 400 free, firing off a 4:23.76 that ranks No. 8 this season for her age. Turano took four seconds off her personal-best 800 free time of 9:03.32, moving up to No. 8 this season. She also posted a personal best in the 1500 free, improving by nearly seven seconds from just a couple months ago. 

Scarlet teammates Chloe Kim and Iris Kim had impressive meets, too. Chloe recorded five personal bests and three victories, including a 2:25.36 in the 200 breaststroke that ranks eighth this season among 15-year-old girls. Chloe also threw down a 2:17.46 in the 200 fly, moving up to 13th this season for her age.  Her other individual win came in the 100 fly (1:02.84).

Iris, 14, just missed a few personal bests in the 200, 400, and 800 free races, but she did make her mark with a record 100 free split of 58.03, which ranks 13th this season for her age. 

Fellow Scarlet swimmer Richard Poplawski broke the 52-second barrier for the first time in the 100 free (51.99), one of four personal bests for the 16-year-old. His 1:54.17 in the 200 free ranks ninth this season for his age while his runner-up effort in the 200 IM (2:06.27) leaves him as the No. 12 performer this season. Poplawski also cruised to a win in the 400 free (4:03.18). 

Jacob Turner achieved a Junior Nationals standard in the 100 breast with 1:05.35, finishing about three seconds behind Fan. Fellow Metroplex 16-year-old Grant Hu climbed into the top-20 rankings this season with a 4:31.17 in the 400 IM that sits at No. 20. 

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Olympic 100-metre champ Marcell Jacobs wants to win ‘everything’ ahead of marquee events | CBC Sports

Olympic 100-metre champ Marcell Jacobs wants to win 'everything' ahead of marquee events | CBC Sports

Marcell Jacobs already won another gold medal at the world indoors. He’ll likely get a huge reception at Rome’s upcoming Diamond League meet. Then a reunion with his once-estranged father at the world championships. Followed by more potential medals at the European championships.

And, to top it all off, a wedding in September.

If last year — when Jacobs sprinted from virtual unknown to Olympic 100-metre champion and then added another surprising gold at the Tokyo Games with Italy’s 4×100-metre relay team — proved remarkable for the Texas-born runner, 2022 could be even more memorable.

For all those who thought Jacobs was just a one-hit wonder — and there were plenty of naysayers — the Italian has other plans.

“Winning these next two big events would mean winning everything there is to win in athletics,” Jacobs told The Associated Press in an interview at his Rome training base this week. “But I’ve got a huge target on my back wherever I go now — everyone wants to beat me. So it’s all very complicated.”

What’s perhaps even more complicated is Jacobs’ relationship with his dad, Lamont.

Born in El Paso to an American father and an Italian mother, Jacobs moved to Italy when he was 6 months old after his parents split. He didn’t see his dad again until a meeting was arranged in Orlando, Florida, when Jacobs was 13.

In his newly published autobiography, “Flash: La mia storia [My story]” Jacobs looks back fondly on that 2008 meeting.

WATCH | Jacobs 1st Italian to win Olympic 100-metre gold medal:

Canada’s Andre DeGrasse captures bronze medal at Tokyo Olympics

Andre DeGrasse of Markham, Ont., is Canada’s first male athlete to win a medal at the games, following a third place win in the men’s 100-metre race.

“Everything was great, idyllic, but unfortunately it ended there,” Jacobs wrote. “I never heard from him anymore and I didn’t see him again.

“When I got back to Italy, at the most he would send me messages. That’s when I put up a wall between us. I asked myself why I didn’t have a dad like everyone else. Even now, if you ask me what my father is like, I don’t really know how to answer.”

Two years ago, on the advice of his mental coach, Jacobs renewed his relationship with his father — who was stationed with the U.S. military in Italy when he met Jacobs’ mother — and they exchanged messages before the 100-metre final in Tokyo.

“He told me, `Remember what matters is all that you’ve done to reach this point, so don’t be afraid of anybody and run as fast as you can,”‘ Jacobs said.

WATCH | CBC Sports explains the 100-metre dash: 

CBC Sports Explains: The 100m dash

The 100m dash is the most electrifying 10 seconds in sports. Usain Bolt and Florence Griffith Joyner have been on top of the world for years, being the earth’s fastest humans. But how fast can humans really run, and have we reached our peak?

In July at the world championships in Eugene, Oregon — which will mark the first time that the biggest event in track and field outside of the Olympics will be held in the United States — Jacobs’ father is planning to watch his son compete in person for the first time.

“It will be really emotional and will be give me extra energy,” Jacobs said.

Not that Jacobs has been lacking energy lately.

In March, the muscular Italian beat American standout Christian Coleman in a photo finish to become the first reigning Olympic 100-metre champion to claim the world indoor 60-metre title. The victory was all the more impressive considering that the 60 isn’t really suited to Jacobs’ strengths — he’s a slow starter and tends to accelerate gradually.

Coleman would have been a favorite for gold at the Olympics had he not been banned from the Tokyo Games for missing three anti-doping tests in a year.

Questions about 9.80-second victory

Coleman’s absence, the retirement of Usain Bolt, and the fact that the world leader in 2021, Trayvon Bromell, didn’t make it out of the semifinals, made Jacobs’ Olympic title seem underwhelming to many.

Add in that Jacobs had never broken the 10-second barrier before last year and there were also plenty of insinuating questions about his 9.80-second victory.

Jacobs, however, has never failed a doping test.

“I always put down 6 a.m. for my availability because that way I know I’ll be in bed and I’ll want to go pee as soon as I get up,” he said. “So it can be all done in 10 minutes. When I was in Tokyo I was tested eight times over two weeks. Then since Tokyo they come every two weeks. I was tested at every indoor race this season. I’ve never missed a test and I’ve always tried to handle it the best way possible.”

At 27, Jacobs attributes his rapid development on the track to his late switch from long jumping and frequent knee injuries that curtailed him earlier in his career.

“The [questions] had more of negative impact on the people close to Marcell than they did on him,” said Paolo Camossi, Jacobs’ coach and himself a former jumper who is also still learning about elite sprinting. “We know the history. We know how many times he scraped his knees because of all the falls we had, how many tears we had to dry.”

Some of the most pointed criticism of Jacobs’ Olympic golds came from London’s tabloids, which then had to report how Britain’s 4×100 team was stripped of the silver medal it won behind Jacobs’ Italy because of a doping violation involving C.J. Ujah.

“When you want to hurt someone it comes back to bite you,” Jacobs said.

Jacobs received another major snub in October when he wasn’t even named among the 10 nominees for male athlete of the year by World Athletics — even though he was the only man to win two golds on the Tokyo track.

“I’ll work even harder so that [this] year they’ll have to nominate me,” Jacobs said.

Slow start to outdoor season

However, Jacobs is having a slow start to his outdoor season, having had to sit out a meet in Kenya because of a stomach issue and then withdrawing from this weekend’s Diamond League meet in Eugene because of a strained muscle.

In his only 100-metre race since the Olympics at a meet in Savona last week, Jacobs won his semifinal heat in 9.99 seconds but didn’t seem his usual, powerful self in the final, despite finishing first in 10.04.

Jacobs lost 2 kilograms (4 1/2 pounds) of weight from the virus he had in Kenya. Add that to the weight he had already shed under a new training regime, and Jacobs’ body is still adapting to it its new lightness.

“My idea is that a sprinter should be like a gazelle or a jaguar rather than a rhinoceros,” Camossi said. “But losing 2 kilos when he was already thin wasn’t ideal.”

Camossi is thinking long-term with the next Olympics in Paris only two years away, plus the 2024 European Championships in Rome.

“The goal [for 2024] is to run the 100 and 200,” Camossi said.

First, though, Jacobs is aiming to recover in time to compete at the Golden Gala meet in Rome on June 9 — his first major international outdoor competition since Tokyo.

“Marcell is a national hero,” Camossi said. “It’s really going to be something to see him run at the Stadio Olimpico with a tattoo of the colosseum on his arm.”

Once the season ends, Jacobs will marry his longtime partner, Nicole Daza, with whom he has had two of his three children.

“There are 18 relatives from the U.S. coming for the wedding,” Jacobs said, adding that it will mark his father’s first time in Italy since before he was born. “I’m really happy to have reconnected with that part of the family.”

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Equestrian event to be dropped from Olympic pentathlon after German coach struck horse

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Coach Kim Raisner punched a horse at the Tokyo Games when it refused to jump a fence, an attack that led to criticism of the sport

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Obstacle course racing looks set to be voted in as the replacement for the equestrian element in the modern pentathlon at the Olympic Games from 2028, but an athlete group opposing the move is calling for an investigation into the sport’s governance.

The sport’s global governing body, the UIPM, said in November it would remove equestrianism from the Los Angeles Games, with a suitable replacement determined by a consultation process.

That decision came after Germany’s modern pentathlon coach Kim Raisner struck the horse Saint Boy at the Tokyo Games last year when it refused to jump a fence, an incident that led to widespread criticism of the sport.

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Pentathlon United representatives including Britain’s Olympic champion Joe Choong wrote to International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach on Sunday asking him to intervene and investigate the UIPM’s lack of transparency.

“The UIPM’s consultation process has been illusory at best and, it would appear, designed only to legitimise a pre-determined outcome (which we are advised will be obstacle racing in collaboration with World OCR),” the group stated in their letter.

“The IOC was clear in its expectation that athletes must play a central role in the review and consultation process for a fifth discipline. This has not happened,” they wrote.

The UIPM, which is set to hold an executive board meeting later on Monday, did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

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Modern pentathlon has been an Olympic sport since 1912 and features five events: fencing, swimming, equestrian show jumping, pistol shooting and cross-country running.

“We request that the IOC conducts a comprehensive, independent investigation into the standards of governance and probity of the UIPM and the fifth discipline consultation process.”

Pentathlon United also said a survey of 310 past and present athletes found that 95% of them were unhappy with the UIPM’s decision, while more than 77% said they were unlikely to stay in the sport if the equestrian element were to be removed.

“Athletes have been excluded from the dialogue and their clear preference for the retention and reform of the equestrian element has been ignored,” the letter added.

(Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar and Hritika Sharma in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Rutherford and Hugh Lawson)

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World Curling looking for event hosting bids for next four-year Olympic cycle – World Curling Federation

World Curling looking for event hosting bids for next four-year Olympic cycle - World Curling Federation

The World Curling Federation is looking for Member Associations who would like to host a World Curling event within the next Olympic cycle.

The Federation aims to award events early to allow Local Organising Committee’s as much time as possible to implement events to the best of their ability.

Please note that the Federation can award any events at any time if a suitable bid has been received.

It would be appreciated if letters of intent or complete bids for the 2022–2023 season are received no later than 30 April 2022. Any events for later seasons should be received no later than 31 May 2022.

If you have any questions please send them either to Colin Grahamslaw or Eeva Röthlisberger.

Events that require bids

2022–2023 season with proposed dates

  • World Mixed Doubles Qualification Event 2022 — 3 to 7 December 2022
  • World Wheelchair Curling Championship 2023 — 4 to 11 March 2023
  • World Wheelchair Mixed Doubles Curling Championship 2023 — 12 to 18 March or 13 to 19 April 2023
  • European Curling Championships C-Division 2023 — 29 April to 6 May 2023

2023–2024 season with proposed dates 

  • World Mixed Curling Championship 2023 — 14 to 21 October 2023
  • Pan-Continental Curling Championships 2023 (A & B Divisions) — 23 to 29 October 2023
  • World Wheelchair-B Curling Championships 2023 — 4 to 11 November 2023
  • Le Gruyère AOP European Curling Championships 2023 (A & B Divisions) — 18 to 25 November 2023
  • World Mixed Doubles Qualification Event 2023 — 3 to 7 December 2023
  • World Junior-B Curling Championships 2023 — 8 to 19 December 2023 OR 13 to 21 December 2023
  • World Junior Curling Championships 2024 — 17 to 24 February 2024
  • World Wheelchair Curling Championship 2024 — 2 to 9 March 2024
  • World Wheelchair Mixed Doubles Curling Championship 2024 — 10 to 16 March or 11 to 17 April 2024
  • World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship 2024 & World Senior Curling Championships 2024 — 20 to 27 April 2024
  • European Curling Championships C-Division 2024 — 27 April to 4 May 2024

2024–2025 season with proposed dates 

  • World Mixed Curling Championship 2024 — 12 to 19 October 2024
  • Pan-Continental Curling Championships 2024 (A & B Divisions) — 21 to 28 October 2024
  • World Wheelchair-B Curling Championships 2024 — 2 to 9 November 2024
  • Le Gruyère AOP European Curling Championships 2024 (A & B Divisions) — 16 to 23 November 2024
  • World Mixed Doubles Qualification Event 2024 — 3 to 7 December 2024
  • World Junior-B Curling Championships 2024 — 8 to 19 December 2024 OR 3 to 11 January 2025
  • World Junior Curling Championships 2025 — 13 to 23 February 2025 (Proposed dates Torino, Italy; Test Event for the 2026 Olympic Winter Games)
  • World Wheelchair Curling Championship 2025 — 1 to 8 March 2025 (Proposed dates Torino, Italy; Test Event for the 2026 Paralympic Winter Games)
  • World Women’s Curling Championship 2025 — 15 to 23 March 2025
  • World Wheelchair Mixed Doubles Curling Championship 2025 — 9 to 15 March or 10 to 16 April 2024
  • World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship 2025 & World Senior Curling Championships 2025 — 19 to 26 April 2025
  • European Curling Championships C-Division 2025 — 26 April to 3 May 2025

2025–2026 season with proposed dates 

  • Pre-Olympic Qualification Event (Men & Women) — 17 to 24 October 2025
  • World Mixed Curling Championship 2025 — 11 to 18 October 2025
  • Pan Continental Curling Championships 2025 (A & B Divisions) — 28 October to 2 November 2025
  • Le Gruyère AOP European Curling Championships 2024 (A & B Divisions) — 22 to 29 November 2025
  • World Mixed Doubles Qualification Event 2024 — 3 to 7 December 2024
  • World Junior-B Curling Championships 2025 — 3 to 7 December 2025 OR 3 to 10 January 2026
  • Olympic Qualification Event 2025 (Men & Women) — 6 to 13 December 2025
  • Olympic Qualification Event 2025 (Mixed Doubles) — 15 to 20 December 2025
  • World Junior Curling Championships 2026 — 21 to 28 February 2026
  • World Men’s Curling Championship 2026 — 28 March to 5 April 2026
  • World Wheelchair Mixed Doubles Curling Championship 2026 — 9 to 15 April 2026
  • World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship 2026 & World Senior Curling Championships 2026 — 18 to 25 April 2025
  • European Curling Championships C-Division 2026 — 25 April to 2 May 2026

Engage with the World Curling Federation on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and Weibo and be searching the hashtags #curling

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Olympic Champion Kaylee McKeown May Add 3 Events To Commonwealth Lineup

Olympic Champion Kaylee McKeown May Add 3 Events To Commonwealth Lineup

Australia’s multi-Olympic gold medalist Kaylee McKeown hasn’t stopped since Tokyo, already putting up the top 100m back and 200m back times in the world this year.

McKeown clocked both of the #1 times in the world at last month’s Victorian Open, with the versatile ace posting marks of 58.31 and 2:04.64, respectively. The latter time beat out what it took McKeown to win gold in the event in Tokyo (57.47, Olympic Record).

With these types of recent performances, it appears that McKeown’s move from the USC Spartans under Chris Mooney to Griffith under coach Michael Bohl has been a smooth transition.  Mooney is now at the helm of the Bond swimming program and McKeown chose to move in a different direction.

Speaking to NewsCorp Australia, McKeown said that family was a big part of her decision to move to train alongside sister and 2016 Olympic finalist Taylor McKeown,

“(Family) was probably 90 percent of my reasoning to move down to the Gold Coast,” she said. “My mum is moving down to the hinterland and Taylor is already down here so it was going to be quite lonely for me and I’m a big family and friends person, so to not have that support there I knew I would struggle.

“I think the move not only swimming-wise but outside of the pool-wise has been really good for me.

“I think surrounding yourself with people who are driven and motivated really does put you up in a level of training that you may not be able to reach in certain squads and surrounding myself with those sorts of people will inevitably make me a better swimmer.

“I think it was just the right path for me to go down if I wanted to make myself a better person and grow mentally and physically as well.”

McKeown’s father Sholto, died in August 2020 at the age of 53 after a two-year battle with brain cancer.

Looking ahead to the Commonwealth Games, which take place in Birmingham in July and August, McKeown is reportedly thinking of adding two additional individual races to her 100m/200m backstroke double.

The 50m backstroke, 400m IM and 200m IM are being tossed around, the latter of which she actually qualified for Tokyo before deciding to drop the race from her program.

Should McKeown race all 3, she could match Ian Thorpe or Susie O’Neill’s 6-gold medal Commonwealth Games hauls. But, it’s a big ‘if’ for adding all three events.

“I’m not going to lie, I hate swimming the 400 IM so if I can get out of that I definitely will, but I do love the 200 medley so we will see what happens,” McKeown gold Newscorp Australia.

“It could be something to look out for that is for sure.

”You want to have this (year) as a pathway and step to eventually getting behind the blocks at an Olympics and not only doing two individual events but potentially three or four.”

Schedule-wise, should McKeown race the 5 individual events plus relays, this is how her Commonwealth Games may look. The races are actually spread out quite nicely, save for the grueling 200m back/200m IM double on Monday, August 1st.

Possible McKeown Commonwealth Games Schedule:

Friday, July 29th:

  • 400m IM Heats in AM
  • 400m IM Final in PM

Saturday, July 30th:

  • 100m Back Heats in AM
  • 100m Back Semi-finals in PM

Sunday, July 31st:

Monday, August 1st:

  • 200m Back Heats, 200m IM Heats in AM
  • 200m Back Final, 200m IM Final in PM

Tuesday, August 2nd:

  • 50m Back Heats in AM
  • 50m Back Semi-finals, Mixed Medley Relay final in PM

Wednesday, August 3rd

  • 50m Back Final, Women’s Medley Relay final in PM

 

McKeown’s best times and the all-time world and Australian ranks are below.

Event Best Time Date Aussie All-Time Rank World All-Time Rank
50m Back 27.16 May 2021 1 6
100m Back 57.45 WR June 2021 1 1
200m Back 2:04.28 June 2021 1 3
200m IM 2:08.19 June 2021 3 8
400m IM 4:32.73 December 2020 2 14

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Hockey, Curling Most Popular Olympic Events At Canadian Online Sportsbooks

Rob Schumacher/USA TODAY

The Winter Olympic Games concluded last weekend in Beijing, China, and provincial sportsbooks across Canada were pleasantly surprised with the betting interest in many of the events, especially curling and hockey.

Canadian athletes claimed 26 medals — four gold, eight silver, and 14 bronze — at this year’s Games, trailing only Germany, the Russian Olympic Committee, and Norway in medal count. Curling and hockey have been strong events historically for Canada, but the country only walked away with two medals — a bronze in men’s curling and a gold in women’s hockey — across five disciplines in the two events.

According to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, over 70% of Canadians — 26.5 million unique viewers — tuned in for coverage of the Winter Olympics. Canadians streamed over 468 million minutes of video content, making it the most-streamed Games ever on the network.

Roughly half of CBC’s Olympic viewers watched an average of 102 minutes each night in prime time for 15 of the 16 days of competition, with numbers drastically dropping off for one night due to the Super Bowl on Feb. 13. The numbers were impressive considering most of the live action from Beijing was overnight across Canadian time zones.

High public interest in the Olympics also translated into a good online sports betting turnout in Canada for the various events. This is the first Olympics for which single-event wagering was permitted across Canada.

The Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation, which provides the only legal sports betting option in the province through its PROLINE + platform, is not sharing specific handle numbers, but its communications department told Sports Handle it had “very good customer interest” in the Winter Olympics.

The British Columbia Lottery Corporation also had a successful Olympics with its PlayNow platform, with spokesman Matt Lee crediting the ability to place single-game wagers and an increased number of offerings on more obscure sports such as bobsled and speed skating.

Hockey

Both the men’s and women’s hockey events were, far and away, the most popular events of these Olympics on PROLINE+ despite a number of negative factors, including a lack of NHL participants, unfavorable start times in North America, and a poor finish by Canada’s men’s team, which lost to Sweden in the quarterfinals.

Roughly 2.7 million people watched Team Canada take on Team USA in the women’s hockey gold medal game on Canadian networks, even though the game didn’t start until 11:30 p.m. ET. The game also drew a massive audience in the United States.

“The gold medal game, in particular, was the most popular event of the Games despite its late start time. Sales for this game were 70% more than even the highest men’s game (vs. China) and higher than the average NHL game during this period,” OLG Director of Communications Tony Bitonti said.

Gamblers took the Canadian women on the moneyline at an 80% clip, resulting in a huge win for the bettors, but OLG also saw significant action on Canada -1.5 (72%) and over 5.5 goals (77%), with both of those outcomes falling the way of the book.

Of the 31 possible “Correct Score” markets OLG offered, 16% of players predicted the exact 3-2 score for Canada, at an average price of 13-to-1.

“On PlayNow.com, hockey was the most popular Olympic sport to bet on, with men’s and women’s hockey accounting for 78% of all Olympic bets made by players,” Lee said. “There was significant player interest in Team Canada events, specifically Canada’s men’s and women’s hockey games. The women’s hockey gold medal game between Canada and the U.S. was by far the most popular event to bet on for the Olympics on PlayNow.com. In fact, that game was more popular amongst PlayNow.com players than the majority of NHL games this season.”

Curling and other events

Curling was the second-most popular event of the Olympics, as Brad Gushue and his Canadian men’s team picked up a bronze medal.

“The most popular curling events of the Games were actually a pair of men’s and women’s round robin games — Gushue vs. Italy and [Jennifer] Jones vs. ROC — both of which ended favorably for our players,” Bitonti noted.

As far as curling outright gold medal odds, Canada was favored across all three curling disciplines — mixed, men’s, and women’s — but failed to grasp a gold medal, making it a big win for the books.

Outside of hockey, curling was also the second-most popular sport amongst PlayNow.com players during the Olympics, accounting for 18% of Winter Olympic bets.

PROLINE + bettors were also interested in the speed skating events. The 14 events combined made for the third-highest sales/sport with the women’s team pursuit, which Canada claimed gold in, being the most popular.  Snowboarding events also received action from Ontario bettors in the men’s slopestyle and big air competitions, where a pair of Canadians — Max Parrot and Mark McMorris — combined for a gold medal and two bronze.

Future of Olympic betting

The sports betting landscape in Canada will be drastically different for the next Olympics in Paris in summer of 2024. With over 30 private operators set to launch in Ontario’s regulated iGaming market on April 4, Ontario bettors will have all kinds of new offerings to choose from as companies compete for their betting dollars. If Ontario’s open market is a success, other provinces could also adopt the model and open up their respective markets to private operators in the months and years to come.

The location of the next Games will also benefit sportsbooks and bettors, as Paris is only six hours ahead of Eastern Time in Ontario, Canada’s most populous province with roughly 15 million people. With most of the live action in Beijing taking place during the overnight hours across Canada, peak audiences were limited to those willing to stay up late to catch their favorite events. With a more favorable time zone, TV networks and sportsbooks could see record numbers.

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Canada’s Justin Kripps in third midway Olympic four-man event

Canada’s Justin Kripps in third midway Olympic four-man event

Canadians Justin Kripps, Ryan Sommer, Cam Stones and Benjamin Coakwell start the four-man heat 2 at the Winter Olympics on Feb. 19, 2022, in the Yanqing district of Beijing.Dmitri Lovetsky/The Associated Press

Canada’s Justin Kripps was in third place midway through the four-man bobsled competition at the Olympic Games.

Kripps, of Summerland, B.C., teamed with Ryan Sommer of White Rock, B.C., Cam Stones of Whitby Ont., and Benjamin Coakwell of Moose Jaw, Sask., to post a two-run time of one minute 57.38 seconds.

“It was pretty good execution. The boys pushed well, loaded clean and drove pretty well, so I was pretty happy,” Kripps said. “[We’re] going to look to come out and do the same thing tomorrow [Sunday].”

German sleds were in the top two positions, with Francesco Friedrich posting a time of 1:57.00 and Johannes Lochner coming in a mere 0.03 seconds behind.

No one else is within a half-second of the lead. The sled driven by Germany’s Christoph Hafer is fourth, 0.55 seconds behind Friedrich.

“It’s pretty tough. They have really good equipment, they’re pretty fast today,” Kripps said of the top-two German sleds. “Good starts from Francesco, we’re right there with Johannes, but he has really good speed down the track.”

Kripps and Friedrich shared the gold medal in the two-man event at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games, but Kripps struggled in that event this year and slid to a 10th-place finish on Tuesday at the Yanqing National Sliding Center.

“Pretty much got everything today,” he said when asked if he has ironed out his mistakes from the two-man event. “[We’ll] have to look at the video to see the little details but everything felt pretty straight, parallel, really clean, so I was happy with that.”

Christopher Spring of Priddis, Alta., piloted his sled to 11th, while Taylor Austin of Lethbridge, Alta., was 21st.

Friedrich is seeking his fourth Olympic gold medal and his second bobsled double-double.

There have been six instances of a bobsled driver winning gold in two-man and four-man at the same Olympics: Andreas Ostler in 1952, Eugenio Monti in 1968, Meinhard Nehmer in 1976, Wolfgang Hoppe in 1984, Andre Lange in 2006 and Friedrich in 2018.

Nobody has done it twice.

Friedrich gave himself that opportunity by winning the two-man gold earlier in the Olympics, and rallied in the second heat to give himself the halftime lead going into Sunday’s final two runs – the last chapter of the sliding competition in Beijing.

He trailed by 0.16 seconds after the first heat, then was 0.19 seconds faster than Lochner in the second heat.

Hunter Church, pushed by Josh Williamson, Kris Horn and Charlie Volker, is the top U.S. sled in the field, placing 13th so far in 1:58.61.

“We’ve got a big opportunity tomorrow to climb back and get into the top 10,” Church said.

Going into the final two competitive runs of the season on Sunday, Church said he’d be holding nothing back.

“There’s nothing left to chance tomorrow,” Church said. “I don’t care what I’m feeling. I’m going to be numb and I’m going to be ready to go.”

Frank DelDuca and his team of Carlo Valdes, Jimmy Reed and Hakeem Abdul-Saboor are tied for 14th, finishing their two runs Saturday in 1:58.82.

“These guys do a great job on and off the ice,” DelDuca said. “I have a ton of respect for them. I’ve been in many different races with them over the years as a push athlete and now as a driver. It’s pretty cool to come together on the biggest stage and just put together the best results we can. I know we’re digging deep to do the best we can, and it’s a great feeling to be with them.”

Of the eight bobsledders that the U.S. had on the ice for the four-man race, only two – Valdes, who is retiring, and Abdul-Saboor, who plans on sticking around for a run at the 2026 Milan-Cortina Games – had Olympic experience before the Beijing Games.

Valdes gave DelDuca high marks.

“Frank, for his first Olympics, he’s handled it great,” Valdes said. “He’s business as usual. He’s not overthinking anything.”

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Alpine team event preview: Mikaela Shiffrin to race final 2022 Olympic event

Mikaela Shiffrin of the USA reacts at the finish line after her fall on the slope.

As Alpine skiing’s mixed gender team event makes its second Winter Olympics appearance, Mikaela Shiffrin will compete for the sixth and final time at these Games.

The 26-year-old Shiffrin, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, finished ninth in women’s super-G and 18th in the downhill and skied out in the giant slalom, slalom and the slalom portion of the combined at these 2022 Winter Olympics. The disappointing performance has Shiffrin baffled yet demonstrating some weighty perspective while competing in all six Olympic Alpine events.

“Why do I keep coming back? Gosh knows it hurts more than it feels good lately,” Shiffrin tweeted after the combined Thursday, calling out some of the online abuse she has received since her first DNF. “I come back because those first 9 turns today were spectacular, really heaven. That’s where I’m meant to be and I’m stubborn as s—. So let’s go for some team event training tomorrow, and then the final race of this Olympics.”

Shiffrin will team up with Paula Moltzan, Tommy Ford, Luke Winters, A.J. Hurt and River Radamus.

“I’m really excited because it adds a really user-friendly, watchable event, to the Olympics,” Moltzan told On Her Turf. “Ski racing is not the easiest [to follow] whereas the team event is a head-to-head competition where you can see who’s faster.”

This knockout-format team event, one of nine mixed-gender events being staged (four of which are new), debuted at the 2005 world championships in Bormio, Italy, and was added as a regular event in the World Cup Finals beginning in 2006. Switzerland won the inaugural Olympic team event in 2018 with a team that featured slalom silver medalist Wendy Holdener, who followed up with a slalom bronze and a silver in the combined. Austria claimed silver and Norway took bronze to complete an all-European sweep.

How to watch alpine skiing’s mixed team event at the 2022 Winter Olympics:

The mixed team parallel slalom kicks off with the Round of 16 in the U.S. on Friday, Feb. 18, at 10 p.m. ET. The final races of the day are expected to take place at 12:46 p.m. local time (11:46 p.m. ET).

Event Date / Time (U.S. Eastern) Date / Time (Beijing, China) How to Watch
Alpine Skiing – Mixed Team Event 2/18/22 10:00 PM 2/19/22 11:00 AM NBC | Peacock | NBCOlympics.com

What are the U.S. team’s chances in the parallel slalom?

The U.S. faces stiff competition from the usual suspects, with Shiffrin’s 2022 Olympic finale grabbing its share of the spotlight.

While Shiffrin doesn’t regularly participate in the team competition, she hinted ahead oh her first race that she was interested in the event this time.

Moltzan believes the U.S. is a medal contender with Shiffrin in the lineup.

“She’s still the best in the world, and she’s gonna put on a fight,” said Moltzan, who is making her Olympics debut and finished eighth in the slalom and 12th in the giant slalom. “I think any athlete, when you’re paired head-to-head with them, is going to push harder than ever, and I think she will be totally fine with no experience in parallel in a while. … I think it will be no problem for her to step in and (be) the fastest competitor on the hill.”

In 2018, the U.S. team did not have stars like Shiffrin, Lindsey Vonn or Ted Ligety in the lineup and lost in the first round to 13th-ranked Great Britain.

What countries will contend in the Olympic Alpine mixed team event?

Switzerland is the defending Olympic champion, and they followed up their 2018 Olympic gold with a win at the 2019 world championships. They currently lead the individual Alpine medal count, with five gold, one silver and three bronze. Among the Swiss medalists are Lara Gut-Behrami (gold in super-G, bronze in GS in 2022), Holdener (bronze in slalom, silver in combined) and Corinne Suter (gold in downhill).

Austria, silver medalist both at the 2018 Olympics and 2019 worlds, are second in the Alpine medal count with six – two gold, three silver and one bronze. They are led by 2021 women’s parallel giant slalom and slalom world champion Katharina Liensberger, who was part of the silver medal team in 2018 and won silver in the women’s slalom.

The Norwegians enter as the reigning world champions, and they were also on the podium four years ago with a bronze in PyeongChang. Sweden has medaled in five of the last six world championships (bronze in 2011, 2015, 2017; silver in 2013, 2021), while Germany won bronze at the 2021 worlds. Italy, bronze medalist at 2019 worlds, fields a strong team including three-time Olympic medalist Federica Brignone and world medalist Marta Bassino.

Why is the Alpine mixed team event special?

The parallel slalom is unique in Alpine in that it offers the intensity of a side-by-side duel with the emotion of a team event. Add in the excitement of it being the final Alpine skiing race of the Games, and it’s a recipe for “must-see” action.

“I think it’s a really fun event,” U.S. skier Megan McJames said in 2018. “We’re still working out the kinks, but both racing someone head-to-head and being able to train and race with the boys is super fun.”

“The course is short, so you have to be more precise than the slalom and GS; it’s a cool event that should be continued,” said Michael Matt, who was part of Austria’s silver in PyeongChang.

How does the Olympic Alpine mixed team parallel competition work?

As in 2018, the team competition will feature the 16 best teams seeded in a single-elimination bracket. The competition kicks off with a round of 16, followed by the quarterfinals, semifinals and the final.

The knockout format allows teams to include up to six skiers, but just four racers – two women, two men – compete in each round. Like other parallel slalom competitions, two opponents ski at the same time on two identical courses that sit side-by-side on the slope. The course uses GS gates, although they are slightly closer together than a traditional GS course. The country with the most points after the four races wins. If the teams tie at 2-2, the team with the best aggregate time wins. If both skiers fall or miss a gate, the skier who progressed the farthest wins the point.

While the event will be back at the National Alpine Ski Center in Yanqing, athletes will compete on a different track than was used for any of the women’s or men’s previous five events, moving to a slope that features wider terrain with less severe pitches laterally.

“You can’t really ski parallel on a really steep hill, because it’s just really difficult,” explained Moltzan. “So, it’s a pretty moderate hill with some built-in terrain, but it allows the event to be more fair from left to right. This hill is basically as straightforward as you get.”


On Her Turf editor Alex Azzi and NBC Olympics Research contributed to this report. 

MORE FROM ON HER TURF: Brittany Bowe wins speed skating medal of her own, Miho Takagi ends silver streak

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How Team Canada athletes fared in the 7 new Olympic events at Beijing 2022 – Team Canada – Official Olympic Team Website

Eliot Grondin and Meryeta O'Dine raise their arms on the podium

Leah Hennel/COC

While Beijing 2022 has been full of classic Winter Games events, it’s also introduced us to some brand-new additions to the Olympic program.

The inclusion of those seven events hasn’t just brought fresh excitement, it’s helped the IOC pursue its goal of gender parity. So, what has that meant for our Canadian athletes? Let’s have a look.

Mixed team ski jumping

Four ski jumpers stand on the podium with arms raised
Team Canada ski jumpers Alexandria Loutitt, Matthew Soukup, Abigail Strate and Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes receive their bronze medals in the mixed team event during the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games on Tuesday, February 08, 2022. Photo by Kevin Light/COC

You can normally pencil in Canada as a medal contender in a bunch of different events at the Olympic Winter Games. Ski jumping has never been one of them — until now.

The team of Mackenzie Boyd-Clowes, Alexandria Loutitt, Matthew Soukup and Abigail Strate shocked the world with a bronze medal in this event, Canada’s first ever Olympic medal in ski jumping. It’s the sort of result that could very well help push the sport forward in this country.

Short track mixed team relay

Florence Brunelle and Kim Boutin skate around the track
Florence Brunelle, Kim Boutin, Steven Dubois and Pascal Dion compete in the Mixed Team Relay during the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games on Saturday, February 05, 2022. Photo by Leah Hennel/COC

Now, if you want to talk about “pencil Canada in for some medals” sports, short track speed skating fits the bill. And things were going pretty well for the Canadian team (Courtney Sarault, Florence Brunelle, Kim Boutin, Steven Dubois, Pascal Dion and Jordan Pierre-Gilles) in this new event, with a second-place finish in their quarterfinal heat and first place in their semifinal heat.

But in the four-team final, Canada was penalized for a push and would officially end the competition in sixth place. A few members of the team did enjoy individual success, though: Dubois won silver in the men’s 1500m and bronze in the 500m, while Boutin claimed bronze in the women’s 500m. And oh yeah, let’s not forget that amazing gold medal in the men’s 5000m relay.

See? We told you to pencil Canada in for some short track hardware.

Mixed team snowboard cross

Grondin and O'Dine hug at the finish line
Team Canada snowboarders Eliot Grondin and Meryeta Odine celebrate after winning bronze in the mixed teams snowboard cross event during the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games on Saturday, February 12, 2022. Photo by Leah Hennel/COC

Snowboard cross is one of the most exciting disciplines on the Olympic program. So of course the mixed team version of the event had it’s share of drama. Meryeta O’Dine found herself embroiled in a gnarly accident when a competitor landed on her head during the final.

But in one of the gutsiest showings of these Games, O’Dine pulled herself to her feet and made her way down the rest of the course to secure an historic bronze medal for herself and teammate Eliot Grondin.

Mixed team aerials

Three Canadian aerialists happily hug as they hear their scores
Team Canada freestyle skiers Marion Thenault, Miha Fontaine and Lewis Irving win bronze in mixed team ariels during the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games on Thursday, February 10, 2022. Photo by Kevin Light/COC

In yet another new mixed team event, the Canadian trio of Lewis IrvingMarion Thénault and Miha Fontaine won bronze, the first Olympic medal in all of their respective careers.

While the achievement is historic in its own right, there’s even more history with this trio: Fontaine’s father competed in three official Olympic Games in aerials and was a silver medallist when it was still a demonstration sport, while Irving’s father is a Paralympic alpine skier.

Women’s monobob

Front shot of Christine de Bruin driving bobsled into finish area
Team Canada’s Christine de Bruin wins bronze in the women’s monobob event during the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games on Monday, February 14, 2022. Photo by Mark Blinch/COC

Men have long had two bobsleigh events and now women do too with the addition of the monobob. Two Canadians — Christine de Bruin and Cynthia Appiah — came into the event’s Olympic debut with pedigree and expectations after having had good success this season.

De Bruin was consistent through the four runs and grabbed the bronze medal. Appiah did her best to recover from a tricky first run and would finish eighth.

Men’s freestyle skiing big air

Evan Mceachran of Canada competes in the men's freestyle skiing big air
Evan Mceachran of Canada competes during the men’s freestyle skiing big air qualification round of the 2022 Winter Olympics, Monday, Feb. 7, 2022, in Beijing. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

The big air event in freestyle skiing was added to the Olympic program on both the men’s and women’s sides in Beijing, with a number of Canadians aiming to make their marks.

Evan McEachran reached the final and was able to put up a massive 93.00 score on his first run, the second highest score of any run on the day. But he went down on his subsequent two runs, and would finish ninth in his second Olympic appearance.

Édouard Therriault was painfully close to reaching the final, finishing just two points shy of the qualification zone. Max Moffatt and Teal Harle also competed, but did not get past the qualification round.

Women’s freestyle skiing big air

Team Canada freestyle skier Megan Oldham competes in the women’s big air qualification round
Team Canada freestyle skier Megan Oldham competes in the women’s big air qualification round during the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games on Monday, February 07, 2022. Photo by Leah Hennel/COC *MANDATORY CREDIT*

A pair of youngsters carried Canada’s hopes into the women’s big air final: 20-year-old Megan Oldham and 17-year-old Olivia Asselin.

Both put in solid performances, with all three of Oldham’s runs being worth 85 points or more, and Asselin laying down an 85.50 in her third run. Oldham would wind up just shy of the podium, in fourth place, while Asselin’s eighth-place result leaves plenty of optimism about what’s to come.