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Eileen Gu takes silver in women’s slopestyle, and the U.S.-born freestyle skier eyes a 3rd medal in the halfpipe

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ZHANGJIAKOU, China — In a post-event interview, Eileen Gu was praised for grabbing “gold” with her final run.

“Silver,” she ever-so-politely corrected. “Don’t tease me like that.”

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By the slimmest of margins too.

The standout American-born freestyle skier who represents China finished runner-up with her last run of the Olympic women’s slopestyle contest Tuesday. It keeps alive her quest to become the first action-sports athlete to capture three medals at the same Winter Games.

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Her bid for another gold medal was thwarted by Mathilde Gremaud. The skier from Switzerland ended up taking the event by just 0.33 with a sensational second run. Kelly Sildaru of Estonia took the bronze on a bitterly cold and hazy day with the temperature hovering around minus-5.

“So, so special,” Gu said of earning silver. “It really came down to the last run — again.”

Just like last week, when she earned gold in big air by coming up clutch in her final attempt.

“I don’t know why I keep doing it to myself,” Gu said. “It doesn’t make it easy for myself. It certainly doesn’t make it easy for my coaches. My mom has a heart attack every day. It’s definitely not the easiest. But I’m happy I was able to push through and turn that pressure into fuel.”

China's Eileen Gu competes during the women's slopestyle finals Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022, in Zhangjiakou, China.

Sitting in eighth place after two runs, Gu used a strong final performance to work her way onto the podium. Her run included a double-cork 900 with a Buick grab at the end that impressed the judges and earned her a score of 86.23. She couldn’t catch Gremaud, though, who scored an 86.56 on her second run.

It’s an upgrade in medals for Gremaud, who won the silver at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games and captured bronze in big air last week in Beijing. She also finished second at the Winter X Games last month.

That’s now two medals for Gu, 18, who is competing for her mother’s home country of China. She’s also in the halfpipe competition starting with qualifying Thursday.

“My goal coming into the Olympics was to have one gold and have one more podium in a different event,” Gu said. “I’ve already met that goal and I’m going into my strongest event.”

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It was a difficult start for Gu, who struggled on an early rail in her first run. Then on her second pass through the Secret Garden course, she over-rotated on a trick off a rail and tumbled to the snow. She put her helmet back on and skied to the bottom.

Before starting her third and final run, she put her hands on her hips and stared off to the side of the course to find her focus. Then she turned in a splendid run.

“Absolutely love Eileen. She’s just an incredible human,” said American skier Maggie Voisin, who finished fifth. “I mean, no one works as hard as that girl does. She deserves everything.”

American freestyle skier Marin Hamill made the field for the final but didn’t start after hurting her leg in a crash during the qualifying round. The team said she was heading back to the United States for further evaluation.


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