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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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Germany sweeps Olympic luge events as relay team takes gold

Germany sweeps Olympic luge events as relay team takes gold

The German luge relay team celebrates after winning gold at the Beijing Olympics, on Feb. 10.THOMAS PETER/Reuters

The giants of German luge combined their immense talents to take gold in the team relay on Thursday night, in a performance that underlined their mastery of the sport and means they will take home all the luge gold this Olympics had to offer.

It was a closely fought battle as the Germans made the last run of the night. Austria put in an outstanding collective effort, and Germany’s lugers fell a thousandth of a second behind their pace, only to catch up again, at least four times.

Natalie Geisenberger and Johannes Ludwig riding solo, followed by doubles duo Tobias Wendl and Tobias Arlt, rocketed down one after the other with the flair of athletes with nothing left to prove, finishing with a track record time of 3:03.406.

In the end the Austrian team of Madeleine Egle, Wolfgang Kindl and the pairing of Thomas Steu and Lorenz Koller were 0.08 seconds slower than their neighbours, taking silver.

The Latvians, a constant force in the luge event, finally secured their country’s first Olympic medal in the sport, taking bronze with a time 0.948 seconds behind the leaders.

Germany’s Tobias Wendl and Tobias Arlt celebrate after their run in the team relay event.THOMAS PETER/Reuters

It was the third Olympic team relay since its introduction in Sochi eight years ago. Germany has won all of them.

The relay features one woman, one man and one doubles team from each nation sliding in back-to-back-to-back runs. At the finish each athlete makes contact with a touch pad, which automatically opens the start gate for the next team member.

With lugers having just one run each to get it right, and with major actors from previous luge dramas making their return, the relay has a gala-feel for some of the teams, and a last chance-saloon for others.

Curve 13, a tricky twisting section at the conclusion of the Snow Dragon’s 1,615-metre track, wreaked almost as much havoc on the teams as it had with the women’s singles event on Tuesday.

After a promising first two runs, Slovakia were unable to finish after Tomas Vavercak and Matej Zmij skidded and crashed in that section.

South Korea’s Lim Namkyu flipped face down and skidded across the finishing line. Ukraine’s Yulianna Tunytska also had to right herself after a tip.

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