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Jacobellis falls, comes up short

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    Lindsey Jacobellis of the United States crashed in the women’s snowboard cross semifinal as Canada’s Dominique Maltais tried to avoid her.

SOCHI, Russia » It wasn’t the hint of danger from the challenging snowboard cross course that got into the head of Lindsey Jacobellis.

From Turin to Vancouver to Sochi, the problem could be something else for arguably the best rider never to win gold.

Jacobellis was far out in front in the semifinals of the women’s snowboard cross event Sunday at Rosa Khutor Extreme Park. She crashed about three-quarters of the way down the course despite a tenacious effort to hold on.

"I thought I was going to be able to pull it off, and as soon as I hit that snow, it just slows you down so quickly," Jacobellis said. "It makes your body continue going and then there’s no way to recover from it."

Four years ago, she clipped a gate in Vancouver in the semifinals, an automatic disqualification. Eight years ago, she was way out front and famously tried a "method grab" of her board, crashed and lost the gold medal in Turin, taking silver.

On Sunday, Eva Samkova of the Czech Republic won gold, Dominique Maltais added to Canada’s medal count with a silver and Chloe Trespeuch of France took the bronze.

Americans Faye Gulini and Jacobellis placed fourth and seventh. Their teammate, Jackie Hernandez, suffered a concussion after a crash in qualifying but was on hand to watch the final rounds in the afternoon.

"There’s worse things in life than not winning," Jacobellis said. "… A lot of people can say what they want and put as many opinions out there — that don’t know how to do this sport — and that’s fine. It’s not going to affect how I view myself and how I look at my past resume for everything else."

Gulini was passionate and analytical in describing the expectations placed upon Jacobellis.

"I think people don’t understand how much pressure is put on her," Gulini said. "It breaks my heart because I think it takes the fun out of it just for this event. She loves the sport. She’s a phenomenal snowboarder. But it’s in her head.

"I’ve never had that kind of pressure on me. But I know that it just breaks her as an athlete and it makes it hard for her. She said her head was in it and so maybe it was just kind of a fluke mistake, and it’s a bummer if that’s the case because I think she deserves more."

Jacobellis had to deal with questions about her method-grab-gone-bad in Turin in the pre-event news conferences here, and dealt with them all in a professional manner while showing significant personal insight. She even said that she might have even retired had the silver in Italy been gold.

Jacobellis said another try in 2018 isn’t entirely out of the question.

"It is possible that I could be doing it," she said. "We could have a team event and that’s another chance for a medal … it would be a great thing to be working together to win a medal as well have our individual chance."

CROSS-COUNTRY

Sweden’s win in the 4×10-kilometer relay came one day after the Swedish women had won gold in the same race. No country has won both relays since the old Soviet Union did it 42 years ago. Swedish anchor Marcus Hellner skied alone for the entire fourth leg and grabbed a Swedish flag to wave as he entered the stadium. Russia took silver in front of President Vladimir Putin.

CURLING

Sweden and Canada became the first men’s teams to qualify for the semifinals. Norway, Britain and China are battling for the other two spots. The Swedes and Canadians also advanced to the semifinals in the women’s tournament. China, Britain, Switzerland and Japan still have a chance for the remaining two semifinal spots.

HOCKEY

Phil Kessel became the first American player in 12 years to score an Olympic hat trick in a 5-1 U.S. win over Slovenia. Austria won its first men’s Olympic hockey game in a dozen years, defeating Norway 3-1.

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