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Men
snowboarders complete United States medals sweep in the Olympics
By
EDDIE PELLS
Associated Press
PARK CITY,
Utah Gold, silver, bronze. Red, white and blue.
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KRT
CAMPUS
USAs Kelly Clark acknowledges the crowd after being
presented with the gold medal for womens snowboarding halfpipe
Sunday in Salt Lake City, Utah. Clark won the first gold
medal of the Winter Olympics for the United States in the
event. Clark later watched her countrymen sweep the event
on Monday.
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Snowboarders
Ross Powers, Danny Kass and J.J. Thomas rendered those colors interchangeable
and indivisible Monday, giving the United States its first medals
sweep in the Winter Olympics in 46 years.
With chants
of USA, USA, USA coming from the crowd of 30,000, the
three Americans made history on the halfpipe, soaring into the sunshine
for an unforgettable Olympic moment.
They catapulted
their Gen X sport out of the fringe and into the spotlight
and put America alone on the medals stand.
I couldnt
ask for anything more, said Powers, who turned 23 on Sunday.
Its the best birthday present ever. These guys beside
me is also huge. Today was just the perfect day.
Flying 10 and
15 feet above the hollowed-out snow chute, the Americans won all
three medals in a Winter event for the first time since the 1956
Cortina Games, when the U.S. mens figure skating team did
it.
It was only
the second Winter Games sweep ever for the United States, and it
was topped by Powers, who adds gold to the bronze medal he won in
Nagano four years ago.
The sweep bumped
the United States up to six medals in these Olympics, including
the halfpipe gold won Sunday by Kelly Clark, who was on hand to
watch her countrymen sweep. Before the games, the Americans said
they hoped to win a total of 20 medals.
On Monday, it was a rare sweep in front of frenzied, flag-waving
fans.
It was the biggest
crowd any of these athletes had performed for, a turnout boosted
when high winds postponed the womens downhill event and sent
thousands down the mountain to check out the halfpipe.
And really,
there was no better place to be on this day.
After all, where
else would fans have taken in the sight of Finnish star snowboarder
Heikki Sorsa, who used an entire can of hairspray to spike his hair
and give himself a foot-high mohawk?
How about a
rock band playing during intermission?
Or the way the
winners celebrated, signing the bare breasts of an avid fan? (Thomas
took care of the left, and Powers did the right).
Olympic victories
are supposed to put athletes on Wheaties boxes, but maybe not this
time.
Im
going to be on the Count Chocula box! Kass yelled. Count
Chocula!
Thats
snowboarding X-treme, X-citing, X-hilirating, and something
America and the world will see much more of in the wake of this
unprecedented success.
Its
a fun sport, Powers said. Its people listening
to music, having a fun time, going for it. Everyones friends.
Powers set the
winning mark of 46.1 early. He was the fourth rider to hit the snow
in the finals, and his very first push above the rim of the pipe
was stunning his body flying 15 feet in the air, parallel
to the ground, with the sun overhead making for a picturesque silhouette.
Probably
the highest airs Ive ever done in my life, he said.
Further down
the chute, he made two full revolutions, once while doing a somersault
in the air. He did tricks with names like mute grab,
stalefish and switch McTwist, each one more
daring than the next and all with landings as smooth as the shiny
ice on the sides of the pipe.
It came after
a harrowing fall in his first qualifying run. That could have made
him nervous, but he recovered, made a great second run to advance
to the finals and then went on the ride of his life for the gold.
Kass, the 19-year-old
future of the sport, had two chances to top Powers.
Listening to
a compilation of music through his earphones while he went down
the chute Metallica, AC/DC, Black Sabbath Kass was
incredible in his own way. But his corkscrew turn and his famed
Kasserole spin two upside-down twists while grabbing
the board werent enough to win gold. He scored a 42.5,
and it was still a great day.
Getting a medal is just downright radical, he said.
The 20-year-old
Thomas won the bronze on his second ride with an equally impressive
run, pulling a 2 1/2 -revolution spin and soaring almost as high
as Powers.
I just
had fun on that second run, he said. I watched these
guys do it and I just followed up. Its not about me. Its
about Ross. Ross is the man.
Sixth-place
finisher Tommy Czeschin was the only American left out of the party.
His first run put him in third place, but after Thomas overtook
him, Czeschin needed to go higher. He thought he did, but when his
score was posted, he looked on in disbelief, and the crowd booed.
But really,
it was hard to call any American a loser on this day.
Snowboarding
is a distinctly American sport, created on a lark by a man in Michigan,
Sherman Poppen, who in 1965 braced a pair of skis together and tied
them with a rope so he could give his daughters something to do
during the winter.
He called the
contraption a Snurfer, combining the words snow and surfer. A few
years later, entrepreneur Jake Burton Carpenter improved the snowboard
and started the wave that continues to this day.
When the International
Olympic Committee added snowboarding in 1998, many questioned whether
the so-called lifestyle sport belonged in the Olympics.
Carpenter was
one of the skeptics, but he couldnt deny the magic of this
moment.
This is
a whole new level, he said. You wouldnt get riding
like that if this was a cutthroat sport. They were out there pulling
for each other.
Indeed, the
runners-up were happy for Powers, a veteran of the sport
compared to Kass and Thomas, if only because he has previous Olympic
experience.
Hes also
an X-Games veteran, although his greatest success in those games
came back in 1998, when he won two golds at the competition that
used to be considered the pinnacle of this sport.
Until now.
Im
sure after this, the public will see how far snowboarding has come,
Thomas said.
Theyll
see the time we had today. And theyll see this is one of the
funnest sports in the world.''
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