Sports

Australian medal tally made for a good, but not great, Winter Games

The 2010 and 2014 Games each delivered three medals, and with five logged at the 2017 freestyle skiing and snowboarding world championships, four podium finishes at these Olympics looked quite achievable.

Australia's David Morris flies in the men's aerials competition.

Photo: AAP

He may have only taken bronze but Scotty James finishes as the Australian star in PyeongChang: knowing when to give an opinion, understanding when to hold back and then going on to deliver one of the spectacles of the Games in the snowboard halfpipe.

Matt Graham, 23, skied well to grab silver in moguls and like James with Shaun White, was in the queue behind the greatest athlete his sport has seen in Mikael Kingsbury.

No shame there.

Snowboard cross has exceptional depth in Australia and the group was rewarded with a silver to Jarryd Hughes.

For all the talk about a fractured relationship with teammate Alex Pullin – and clearly there was and is one – the coaching structure works well as evidenced by having three men finishing in the top 10.

Snowboarders Jarryd Hughes and Scotty James with their Olympic medals.

Photo: AAP

Adam Lambert, 20, crashed out in his first heat but good judges suggest he may ultimately may yet go on to be the best of the group.

But there were also disappointments.

The aerial skiing team – so often the bedrock of Australian winter sports performance – couldn't jag a medal.

It was the first time since 1998 and with Lydia Lassila's retirement, Morris no sure thing to continue and no full-time development program in the sport, there may be more fallow Games to come.

Moguls skier Britt Cox, who had the most dominant season of any Australian athlete in winter sports in 2016-17 with seven wins and a world championship, just couldn't bring that form into this season and finished fifth.

Jakara Anthony's fourth – a best result for the 19 year-old – suggests good things to come.

Jakara Anthony delivered a promising result in the moguls.

Photo: AP

Elsewhere, there were hits and misses and sometimes at the same time.

Snowboarder Tess Coady tore her ACL in the slopestyle while teammate Jess Rich hobbled into the big air. Slopestyle skier Russ Henshaw couldn't use the stairs before his competition; Anton Grimus fractured his clavicle in ski cross.

It was situation normal in sliding sports; the investment required to make them successful looks to be a bridge too far, with Australia's dalliance with a program in skeleton over some years ago.

Figure skating was solid if not spectacular; perhaps people misunderstanding where Harley Windsor and Ekaterina Alexandrovskaya were actually at in the senior levels of the sport.

Yet as world junior champions there's every suggestion they could go on to achieve a best ever Games result for Australia in years to come.

The fact Windsor was Australia's first indigenous athlete was significant.

Cross country was again a bridge too far with no results worth speaking of in a sport dominated by Europeans.

There was a glimmer for Australia's otherwise moribund alpine skiing program when Greta Small finished 20th in the downhill – the country's best result in ski racing in 16 years.

AAP

Comments disabled

Morning & Afternoon Newsletter

Delivered Mon–Fri.

[contf] [contfnew]

SYDNEY MORNING HERALD

[contfnewc] [contfnewc]

Related Articles

Back to top button