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Olympic-Sized Flub For US Snowboarder

The debut of snowboard cross in the Olympics will be remembered for a very long time. The men's final was a gripping thriller. The women's final Friday was simply bizarre.

Lindsey Jacobellis seemed to have a lock on the Olympic women's snowboard cross gold medal, which would have given the United States a gold sweep in snowboarding, and then ¿ incredibly ¿ she made one last move on the penultimate jump and fell.

Coasting to what should have been an easy victory, the American grabbed her board on the way to the finish line. It caused her to fall and, while she scrambled to her feet, Switzerland's Tanja Frieden sped past and became the first champion in the strange and wild sport of Olympic women's snowboard cross.

Jacobellis won silver, but should have had the gold. She was well ahead of Frieden, and the other two women in the four-rider final had fallen long before.

Snowboarding is about style, though, so Jacobellis decided to show off for the fans in front of the grandstand near the end of her ride. But after she landed from her grab, she caught an edge, then went tumbling outside the blue line. When she recovered, she trailed Frieden over the finish line, then put her hands on her knees and held her palms up.

Jacobellis insisted she wasn't showing off.

"When you grab in boarder cross you're trying to get back on the ground as fast as possible," she said. "You try to be stable in the air."

Before the race her proud family was hoping she had the gold in the bag, CBS' Manuel Gallegus reports.

U.S. coach Peter Foley fell onto the ground in disbelief.

He said Jacobellis has always had a tendency to grab her board for stability, but after looking at a frame-by-frame breakdown of the jump shot by Associated Press photos, he conceded Jacobellis probably had gone over the top.

"She definitely styled that a little too hard," he said.

Foley wasn't alone in thinking Jacobellis may have been showing off.

"Sometimes it's subconscious, but that was putting on a show," said American Seth Wescott, the men's champion from the day before. "It's one of those things. I did it in my early rides yesterday but you've got to choose your time and make sure you don't miss."

Despite winning the men's gold in snowboard cross Thursday, the United States fell to fourth in medal rankings, behind Norway, Russia and Germany.


Check the schedule of upcoming events.
Track the current medal count here.
In related developments:
  • Also Friday, Russian figure skating champion Evgeni Plushenko did something he never did Thursday in the men's long program ¿ he crashed. Plushenko was involved in a minor car crash in thick fog on his way to Milan airport. Ari Zakarian, Plushenko's agent, said no one was hurt. His gold Thursday night helped restore some Russian pride after the country became embroiled in the first doping scandal at the Turin Olympics.
  • For the first time since international competition in women's hockey began in 1990, the U.S. and Canada won't meet in the championship match. On Friday, Kim Martin made 37 saves and stopped all four American attempts in a shootout, while Maria Rooth had two regulation scores and the clinching shootout goal in Sweden's 3-2 victory in the semifinals. Canada, which faced Finland in the late semifinal, and the U.S. had never lost to anybody except each other since international play began in 1990. The Americans won the sport's inaugural gold medal in Nagano, and Canada won in Salt Lake City.
  • The NHL will review several factors ¿ including the risk of injury ¿ before deciding if it will commit to sending players to the Olympics past the 2010 Games in Vancouver. NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly said Friday that the length of the break needed to accommodate the Olympics will also be considered. The NHL agreed to shut down for these Olympics and Vancouver as part of the labor agreement reached with the players union last summer.
  • Figure skater Michelle Kwan, whose quest for Olympic gold ended because of a groin injury, has signed on with The Walt Disney Co. as a celebrity spokeswoman, the entertainment conglomerate said Thursday. Kwan, 25, will be featured in ads and other media promoting Disney's businesses. She'll also appear in the media company's original programming, the company said. Financial terms of the multiyear deal were not disclosed.
  • Emily Hughes isn't wasting any time getting familiar with her surroundings at the Olympics in Turin, Italy. The last-minute replacement for Michelle Kwan arrived in Turin yesterday with her father and coach, and was spotted at the men's final a few hours later. She'll have her first practice today, and hold a news conference.
  • Plushenko's flawless free skate gave him the Olympic title hours after Russian biathlete Olga Pyleva was stripped of a silver and kicked out of the games for testing positive for a banned stimulant. Russian officials claimed Pyleva was the unwitting victim of an error by a doctor who gave her an over-the-counter medication that contained the banned stimulant carphedon, but didn't list it on the package. "It's a shocking situation," Pyleva told Russian TV, "because I've always been against using banned medications."

  • U.S. champion Johnny Weir, who fell out of medal contention with a cautious program filled with errors, stormed out of the rink when his mediocre marks were shown. He finished fifth. "I missed the bus. They changed the schedule," Weir said. "It was every 10 minutes. Today it was every half-hour. I was late getting here and never caught up. I never felt comfortable in this building. I didn't feel my inner peace, I didn't feel my aura. Inside I was black."
  • In the surest sign yet that curling has reached the big time, the stone-and-broom game has joined other Olympic endeavors with a nude calendar. "It's about time," said Paal Trulsen, the skip of the Norwegian men's team. "It's a fun thing, but we want curling to be just like other sports. We had the doping thing, now we have the calendar."
  • American Kristina Koznick of Eagan, Minn., took three runs today with a brace on her right knee, her first time on skis since injuring herself almost two weeks ago. The top-ranked U.S. women's slalom racer skied on a gentle slope. Koznick's coach and boyfriend, Dan Stripp, said the practice was "awesome" and said she didn't feel much pain. He says she'll practice again tomorrow if the knee doesn't swell up too much.
  • Also on the seventh day of Olympic competition, Estonian cross-country veteran Andrus Veerpalu had to plow through fresh snow to retain his Olympic title in the 15-kilometer classical race and give his tiny Baltic homeland its third gold of the games. Janica Kostelic's defense of her Alpine combined crown was postponed after high winds forced the downhill to be stopped. "We have three golds for Estonia," Veerpalu said. "We are a very small country, so it's a great day for the country."

    That debate will linger about whether Jacobellis was showing off. Either way, though, it was hard to think the only American rider in the women's finals ¿ one of the best in the world ¿ could blow this one.

    But she did.

    Her flub left the American contingent standing in the bleachers stunned and shocked ¿ Frieden, as well. She knew she had no business winning the gold.

    Thus ended another strange and memorable day on the snowboard cross course, where it's the side-by-side racing that usually causes the thrills and spills.

    That was very much the case at the top of the course in the finals. Canadian Maelle Ricker, the fastest woman in qualifying, came off a jump, rotated awkwardly, caught her backside edge on the landing and smacked her back and head onto the ground. She was taken off the course on a stretcher. She was conscious and was being taken to a hospital in Turin for observation.

    A few moments later, teammate Dominique Maltais, the eventual bronze medalist, went careening into the netting after a jump.

    That made it a two-woman show and it wasn't even a contest. Jacobellis could have practically crawled the rest of the way to the finish line. She probably wishes she had.

    During the awards ceremony, she stood on the podium beneath Frieden and smiled, but there looked to be some tear stains there.

    Jacobellis came into the Olympics as one of the best-known Americans, a poster child for her sport, to say nothing of the credit card company she endorsed. She'll also leave as a poster child for something much different ¿ the whole idea of making sure the victory is sealed before you celebrate.

    What's to look forward to? Friday night, American ice dancers show-off their moves in their first performance of the Olympic games. And as Gallegus reports, one of the couples hopes their synchronicity on and off the ice will translate to Olympic gold.

    Denis Petukhov and Melissa Gregory portray Romeo and Juliet. Yet the pair is living a separate fabled romance. They say fate brought them together ¿ just as they were both about to give up the sport.

    They were both without partners when Petukhov decided to search one last time online.

    "We were e-mailing and decided to have a tryout," Petukhov said. "I came to the United States and never used my return ticket."

    Soon, their chemistry on the ice became love, a passion that brought their performance to new heights.

    "We're married, we're in love and we're going to the Olympics," Petukhov said. "We're pinching each other: Are we real?"

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