

SKI CROSS:
Schmid claims gold as Canadians shut out in ski cross
WEST VANCOUVER, B.C. — The Olympic debut of ski cross began with America's grizzled old veteran landing hard on his back and ended with one of Canada's newest favorites tumbling uncontrollably through the powder.
When all the bumping and crashing was over Sunday, Michael Schmid of Switzerland was still standing — the first Olympic gold
medalist in a sport that entertains the fans as much as it hurts the skiers.
"It's different. The snow was very different,” Schmid said. “It was so soft but the slope was good. We had a lot fun out there today. The start was very important. Today was almost perfect. I had very fast skis and all the small things were great."
Schmid easily outpaced Austria's Andreas Matt and Norway's Audun Groenvold in the final, while Chris Del Bosco, a Colorado resident who competes for Canada, let third place slip when he got too aggressive on the next-to-last jump and went flailing, then falling out of contention.
Read more about Chris Del Bosco's gamble.
Canadian Davey Barr finished sixth and Stanley Hayer 10th.
“I started quite well in the finals,” Matt said. “Only Schmid was in front of me. I tried to hang in and stay in touch with him and ski properly. There were more problems than the last turn, it was relatively OK."
Much earlier, American Daron Rahlves lost any chance for the medal that has eluded him in three previous Olympics in alpine.
One of the United States' most decorated downhillers, the 36-year-old Rahlves collided with France's Ted Piccard and landed hard on his back in the day's opening race. He got up, skied to the finish, then writhed in pain at the bottom — a painful end to both his day, and his career.
"That's it for me," he said.
Hard to imagine too many of the 32 skiers who started the day would be eager to rush right back out there.
This is a brutal, free-for-all of a sport, with four men and their eight skis and eight poles screaming down the mountain for each race, all of them seeking the perfect lines and taking not-so-perfect chances when desperation sets in.
Ski cross is the cousin of snowboardcross, which made its Olympic debut to rave reviews in 2006. Wanting more of the same, the International Olympic Committee figured “Why not?” and brought ski cross in for this year.
The first two races of the day showed why.
Rahlves' wreck opened the proceedings and was followed shortly by a dust-up between Anders Rekdal, who fell in the path of Simon Stickl, sending him spinning and allowing Canadian Davey Barr and Errol Kerr, a New Yorker who trains in California and competes for Jamaica, to advance.
Winners in ski cross are, quite often, the ones who take all the fun out of it, and Schmid did just that.
He finished with the fastest time in qualifying, then won all four of his races without much of a fight. He won the first two World Cup events of the season, came into the Olympics ranked No. 1 and couldn't find much of a challenge on a sunny, springlike day at Cypress Mountain.
"He's a damn good skier," Groenvold said. "He had good equipment and he's a good skier. There was a lot of things going on."
Schmid's victory put a damper on the next chapter of Del Bosco's remarkable comeback story.
Addicted to drugs and alcohol four years ago, his sister intervened and got him into rehab, telling him he was running out of chances to turn his life around.
A man who was once lying in a ditch with a broken neck, almost sure to die had a passerby not rescued him, found himself two good jumps away from an Olympic bronze medal. Or maybe silver. Del Bosco was trying to pass Groenvold down the stretch, but got out of whack and took a gruesome tumble down the second-to-last big hill.
"That's pretty typical Del Bosco fashion right there," said his teammate, Davey Barr. "Leave it to the last minute and try to make it all happen. More often than not, he actually does it."
Not this time, though.
"You can ease up and settle in for a medal or try and prove how good you are," said Dave Ellis, high-performance director for Canadian ski cross. "I think, yeah, he made a risk and it's another fourth-place story for Canada, but for us I'm happy to see that he has clearly proven his talent out there."
Barr was a late sub for Dave Duncan, who was injured in training. When teammate Brady Leman couldn't go due to a leg injury, Barr got the call Saturday that he was in the race.
“It’s been a little crazy,” Barr said. “I knew I was an alternate. I was actually testing skis for the team on the other side of the mountain, watching them across the valley and dying to get over to run the course.
“Everyone else had two days of training prior to today and I did get three runs in this morning. It was a fine balance between getting to know the course and saving something.
“It definitely didn’t help me sleep last night.”
While he didn’t medal, Barr said the experience was unforgettable.
“It’s unbelievable,” Barr said. “I’ve been thinking about this for years. To finally be here and see the awesome crowd and familiar faces has been great.”
American Puckett is another skier who has plenty of talent, but no Olympic medal to show for it.
At his fifth Olympics, Puckett, like Rahlves, was trying to put an exclamation point on an alpine career that has moved over to ski cross for one last chance at Olympic glory.
Like Rahlves, who dislocated his hip three weeks ago, Puckett came to Vancouver dinged up — recovering from a badly separated shoulder.
And like Rahlves, Puckett finished last in his opening race.
"It easily could have gone the other way," Puckett said. "I just didn't have enough strength out of the start."
Still, he didn't have to endure any physical punishment on his trip down the mountain. Some days, in the wild sport of ski cross, that can feel like a victory, even if it's not accompanied by a gold medal.
"I hope people were" entertained, Schmid said. "The skicross was good for the people. There were a lot of fights."At his fifth Olympics, American Puckett, like Rahlves, was trying to put an exclamation point on an alpine career that has moved over to ski cross for one last chance at an Olympic medal.
Like Rahlves, who disclocated his hip three weeks ago, Puckett came to Vancouver dinged up — recovering from a badly separated shoulder.
And like Rahlves, Puckett finished last in his opening race, though didn't have to endure any physical punishment on his trip down the mountain — which some days in the wild sport of ski cross can feel like a victory, even if it's not accompanied by a gold medal.
"I hope people were" entertained, Schmid said. "The ski cross was good for the people. There were a lot of fights." SRC
— SRC's Gordie Bowles and The Canadian Press contributed to this report
Cypress men's Olympic ski cross results
| Rank | Bib | FIS Code | Name | Year | Nation | Result | Level | Points |
| 1 | 1 | 2455006 | SCHMID Michael | 1984 | SUI | 1000.00 | ||
| 2 | 4 | 2451417 | MATT Andreas | 1982 | AUT | 800.00 | ||
| 3 | 5 | 2484376 | GROENVOLD Audun | 1976 | NOR | 600.00 | ||
| 4 | 2 | 2526820 | DELBOSCO Christopher | 1982 | CAN | 500.00 | ||
| 5 | 13 | 2389628 | GAVAGGIO Enak | 1976 | FRA | 450.00 | ||
| 6 | 25 | 2447828 | BARR Davey | 1977 | CAN | 400.00 | ||
| 7 | 12 | 2527144 | KNELLER Scott | 1989 | AUS | 360.00 | ||
| 8 | 7 | 2527032 | FLISAR Filip | 1987 | SLO | 320.00 | ||
| 9 | 9 | 2527138 | KERR Errol | 1986 | JAM | 290.00 | ||
| 10 | 10 | 2526725 | HAYER Stanley | 1973 | CAN | 260.00 | ||
| 11 | 11 | 2386524 | KRAUS Tomas | 1974 | CZE | 240.00 | ||
| 12 | 14 | 2450835 | MIAILLIER Sylvain | 1986 | FRA | 220.00 | ||
| 13 | 23 | 2400395 | ELIASSON Tommy | 1980 | SWE | 200.00 | ||
| 14 | 27 | 2412617 | SPALINGER Richard | 1975 | SUI | 180.00 | ||
| 15 | 30 | 2384390 | WITTNER Markus | 1973 | AUT | 160.00 | ||
| 16 | 32 | 2386718 | ILJANS Eric | 1969 | SWE | 150.00 | ||
| 17 | 3 | 2389531 | KUHN Xavier | 1978 | FRA | 140.00 | ||
| 18 | 6 | 2411938 | ZANGERL Thomas | 1983 | AUT | 130.00 | ||
| 19 | 8 | 2526789 | STICKL Simon | 1987 | GER | 120.00 | ||
| 20 | 15 | 2448410 | NETZER Conradign | 1980 | SUI | 110.00 | ||
| 21 | 16 | 2484562 | PICCARD Ted | 1978 | FRA | 100.00 | ||
| 22 | 17 | 2484763 | REKDAL Anders | 1987 | NOR | 90.00 | ||
| 23 | 18 | 2526254 | PUCKETT Casey | 1972 | USA | 80.00 | ||
| 24 | 19 | 2387009 | LEWEN Lars | 1975 | SWE | 70.00 | ||
| 25 | 20 | 2525886 | KOROTKOV Egor | 1986 | RUS | 60.00 | ||
| 26 | 22 | 2412132 | HAUKKALA Juha | 1978 | FIN | 50.00 | ||
| 27 | 21 | 2526137 | FORSLUND Michael | 1986 | SWE | 45.00 | ||
| 28 | 24 | 2526958 | RAHLVES Daron | 1973 | USA | 40.00 | ||
| 29 | 26 | 2190772 | TAKIZAWA Hiroomi | 1973 | JPN | 36.00 | ||
| 30 | 28 | 2484604 | KOLLER Patrick | 1983 | AUT | 0.00 | ||
| 31 | 29 | 2527676 | FIALA Martin | 1968 | GER | 0.00 | ||
| 32 | 31 | 2527501 | HOFER Beni | 1978 | SUI | 0.00 | ||
| Did not finish | ||||||||
| 1028 | 2412714 | SAFAR Zdenek | 1978 | CZE | ||||
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