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US skier Colby Stevenson wins silver in men's big air

The gold went to Norway's Birk Ruud, who re-emerged as a leader in the sport after an injury and his father's death.

BEIJING, China — American freeskier Colby Stevenson is an Olympic silver medalist after the Olympics’ first men’s freestyle skiing big air event -- huge for any athlete, but especially for one who nearly lost his ability to ski in a crash. 

Norway’s Birk Ruud won gold, re-emerging as a leader in the extreme sport after losing his father to cancer and injuring his knee.

A day after Eileen Gu’s gold medal temporarily broke Chinese social media site Weibo, the men put on another impressive show at Big Air Shougang — a shuttered steel mill that now hosts the world’s only permanent big air jump.

Ruud has two Winter X Games big air gold medals and four world cup wins, but only one since 2019. The 21-year-old’s father died of cancer last April, and Ruud has said the loss pulled his mind away from competitive skiing.

Ruud’s final score of 187.75 was well clear of Stevenson’s 183. Swedish veteran Henrik Harlaut took bronze at 181.

Who is Colby Stevenson?

Before the 24-year-old earned silver at the Beijing Olympics, a 2016 auto wreck injury nearly took away his chance to ever ski competitively again. 

According to the official Olympics site, Stevenson was heading home from a freeski event -- when the truck he was driving flipped over twice on a rural Idaho road. He received more than 30 skull fractures, and doctors didn't have much hope for a full recovery. 

After weeks in the hospital, Stevenson's journey back onto skis began with a bike. It took five months for him to return to his lifelong sport, but he went on to win two X Games -- and of course, take on the Beijing Olympics.

Rust comes off quickly for Norway's Birk Rudd 

Ruud has two Winter X Games big air gold medals and four World Cup wins, but only one since 2019. The 21-year-old’s father, Øivind, died of cancer last April, and Ruud has said the loss pulled his mind away from competitive skiing.

His efforts to ramp up for Beijing were interrupted by a knee injury nine weeks ago, and he skipped last month’s Winter X Games to play it safe amid the coronavirus.

The rust came off quickly.

Ruud carved out a commanding lead in his first two runs, coming in backward for a switch triple cork 1980 — three off-axis flips with 5½ rotations — then tumbling forward for a double cork bio 1800.

Alex Hall was Ruud's toughest competitor — the American became the first to land a 2160 at the Winter X Games last month. Hall tried to spin out only the second-ever 2160 in the final round but crashed out for an eighth-place finish.

Ruud went last in the final round with his spot atop the podium already assured. He grabbed a Norwegian flag and held it in his left hand for his final trick, a no-pressure bio 1440. He unraveled the flag and waved it behind him after landing.

Ruud ripped off his gloves to display the nails he had painted by an artist in the Olympic Village. Flashy and funny, he's a favorite among fans for his hijinks on social media, like the time he skateboarded around disguised as an old man, bewildering an unassuming crowd.

The men have been rapidly pushing the boundaries in this high-flying sport. When Magnusson won X Games gold in 2021, his best trick was a switch triple cork 1800 — coming into the jump backward, making five full rotations while doing three off-axis flips.

A year later, five of the Olympics’ 12 finalists threw down a similar trick in the first round. Magnusson started with a double cork 1980 and ranked only fourth — Ruud led with 95.75 points after his 1980.

Magnusson momentarily put himself in medal position with a switch double cork 1800 in the final round before Harlaut bumped him out for bronze.

The 30-year-old Harlaut is a favorite among his younger rivals, a hero in the sport for his style, if not his technical skills. The six-time X Games big air gold medalist used the flex of his ski to pop off the jump for a Nosebutter triple cork 1620 on his final jump, then got a huge hug from the 21-year-old Magnusson.

 

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