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Wescott overtakes Canada’s Robertson for SBX gold 2/15/2010 WEST VANCOUVER, B.C. — American Seth Wescott repeated his 2006 gold medal in men’s snowboardcross, overtaking Canadian Mike Robertson for the gold at Cypress Mountain on Monday.

SNOWBOARDING:

Wescott overtakes Canada’s Robertson for SBX gold

Feb. 10, 2010     ►Photos: Mike Robertson (CSF); SBX action (Oliver Kraus, FIS)     

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WEST VANCOUVER, B.C. — Even in a sport as wild and unpredictable as snowboardcross, it shouldn't come as too big a surprise to see the Olympic champion defend his title.

Heading into the last half of Monday's final, the 33-year-old from Maine was barely within shouting distance of Canadian Mike Robertson. Then, out of nowhere, Wescott closed the gap, overtook the Canadian and held him off at the finish to take the gold medal — his second straight and America's second of these Winter Olympics.

"That kind of gap, most people — well, really, nobody, overcomes that," said America's snowboard coach Peter Foley.

Tony Ramoin of France won the bronze, finishing ahead of American Nate Holland, whose spinout about a third of the way down the course set up what seemingly looked like a breeze for Robertson, an underdog who was going for his country's second gold medal of the Games.

Wescott made up the distance over a series of five consecutive jumps that can sap speed if not executed correctly.

"I'd made some mistakes in there earlier in the day," Wescott said. "I knew if I came back and executed it correctly, I could do it. It wasn't a situation of looking for a miracle at all."

The crowd, about half Canadian and half American, gasped and cheered. Wescott crossed the line first and fell to the ground, then draped the Stars and Stripes across his shoulders.

Robertson’s silver was Canada’s fourth medal of the Games.

Canadian Robert Fagan won the small final for fifth place.

Cypress has been a good venue for Canada, with three of the country’s four medals so far coming at the West Vancouver venue — silver in snowboardcross, Jenn Heil’s women’s moguls silver and Alexandre Bilodeau’s historic gold in mens’ moguls Sunday.

“The final was a tight battle,” Robertson said. “Me and Nate were battling up top for a little while then I got the lead and Seth managed to pass me and it was super close at the line. But I’m OK with silver right now!”

The second-place finish is the best result any Canadian has had in snowboardcross at the Olympics. SBX made its Olympic debut at the 2006 games in Torino, where Jasey-Jay Anderson, now racing in parallel giant slalom, was the top Canadian in men’s competition, finishing fifth.

Wescott’s result was hard to believe — not so much because of his history in the sport but because of his last two months.

Wescott dinged up his leg and pelvis at an event two months ago, couldn't walk for two weeks and came to the Olympics admittedly not riding his best.

He finished 17th of the 32 riders in qualifying — not up to his standards — and was one of the few riders who would acknowledge that the conditions at weather-plagued Cypress Mountain — slushy, flat light, inconsistent snow — were crummy.

"You're pretty much riding blind in there," he said between qualifying and the finals.

His low seeding meant he had to wear the black vest for the final three of the four races he ran (the top seed in each race gets to wear red, No. 2 blue and No. 3 yellow).

But the man in black, a technician who prides himself on finding the winning paths down any course, won gold.

He did it by emerging unscathed through four races during which almost anything can, and usually does, happen.

The fastest rider in qualifying, Aussie Alex Pullin, wiped out in the first race.

This year's top-ranked rider in the World Cup, France's Pierre Vaultier, got mixed up with Canadian Drew Nielson and wiped out.

Last year's World Cup champion, Markus Schairer, came in with broken ribs and left early after a wipeout.

American Graham Watanabe, who qualified second, got beat in a photo finish, and his teammate, Nick Baumgartner, slipped and went sprawling into the netting.

Another Canadian, Francois Boivin, did a somersault and a face plant.

On and on it went until Holland, the American who won his fifth straight Winter X Games last month — made the final mistake, a spinout that knocked Wescott back to third, way behind Robertson, who missed the wreck.

But maybe the message Wescott sent is that snowboardcross, for all its craziness, isn't so unpredictable after all.

It has been in the Olympics twice, and Wescott has won them both.

The sport was brought to the Olympics in 2006 to inject some life and youth and X Games attitude into Games that were, by many measures, falling behind the times. It did that. So much so that the Olympics are introducing its cousin, ski cross, to the program this year.

These races are must-see TV, NASCAR on ice, some crazy crash or unseen stumble lurking around or behind every one of those bumps and jumps and, in this case, even a few ledges to keep everybody honest.

Organizers even got two of the riders, Baumgartner and seventh-place finisher Mario Fuchs, to wear mini-cams on their heads to give TV viewers a first-person view of what it's like skidding down the hill at 30 mph, trading paint, and elbows, in a constant struggle for position.

And luckily this time, there was nothing too violent, no need for anyone to be taken off in a stretcher or worse — an issue that came to the fore after the death of Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili during a training run last week.  SRC

— The Canadian Press and the Canadian Snowboard Federation contributed to this report


Cypress men's Olympic snowboardcross results

Rank Bib FIS Code Name Year Nation Result Level Points
 1  41  1053614 WESCOTT Seth  1976  USA       1000.00
 2  40  1711080 ROBERTSON Mike  1985  CAN       800.00
 3  52  7530521 RAMOIN Tony  1988  FRA       600.00
 4  47  1134900 HOLLAND Nate  1978  USA       500.00
 5  38  1371774 FAGAN Robert  1976  CAN       450.00
 6  42  1089213 GRUENER Lukas  1981  AUT       400.00
 7  39  7050128 FUCHS Mario  1976  AUT       360.00
 8  48  1440547 SPEISER David  1980  GER       320.00
 9  36  7530230 VAULTIER Pierre  1987  FRA       290.00
 10  56  7040096 HAYLER Damon  1976  AUS       260.00
 11  49  1213761 NEILSON Drew  1974  CAN       240.00
 12  46  1407276 BOIVIN Francois  1982  CAN       220.00
 13  53  7510085 CADUFF Fabio  1985  SUI       200.00
 14  62  1398255 POZZOLINI Stefano  1977  ITA       180.00
 15  65  1638912 BOLDYKOV Andrey  1983  RUS       160.00
 16  37  1697985 NOVOTNY Michal  1981  CZE       150.00
 17  33  1044987 PULLIN Alex  1987  AUS       140.00
 18  35  1135870 WATANABE Graham  1982  USA       130.00
 19  50  1313865 DE LE RUE Xavier  1979  FRA       120.00
 20  45  9530138 BAUMGARTNER Nick  1981  USA       110.00
 21  55  1447822 SCHIAVON Alberto  1978  ITA       100.00
 22  61  7290000 RAIMO Federico  1986  ITA       90.00
 23  34  7050145 SCHAIRER Markus  1987  AUT       80.00
 24  60  7560011 ROGELJ Rok  1987  SLO       70.00
 25  43  1516304 DE LE RUE Paul-Henri  1984  FRA       60.00
 26  51  9420018 SIVERTZEN Stian  1989  NOR       50.00
 27  63  9420058 HAVIKHAGEN Joachim  1991  NOR       45.00
 28  59  1434971 JODKO Maciej  1982  POL       40.00
 29  54  1427743 LIGOCKI Mateusz  1982  POL       36.00
 30  58  1332101 MALUSA Simone  1974  ITA       32.00
 31  66  9490102 HERNANDEZ Regino  1991  SPA       28.00
 32  44  9150022 BAKES David  1982  CZE       0.00
 33  57  7200001 SCHAD Konstantin  1987  GER       0.00
 34  67  9020005 MARIN TARROCH Lluis  1988  AND       0.00
Did not finish
 64    1302516 FONT Jordi  1975  SPA       



 

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