MILAN (AP) – The crash. The gasps. The helicopter.
Breezy Johnson and Ilia Malinin star for US at Milan Cortina Olympics as Lindsey Vonn crashes
MILAN (AP) - The crash. The gasps. The helicopter.
Lindsey Vonn's frightening fall in the women's downhill at the Milan Cortina Olympics couldn't help but overshadow U.S. teammate Breezy Johnson's feat - winning her country's first gold medal at these Games.
Johnson's victory Sunday in Cortina wasn't the Olympic comeback story everyone expected, as the focus was on Vonn going for gold despite a torn ACL. Even as Johnson sat in the leader's box on the verge of securing her first Olympic gold medal, her emotions swung from anticipation to anguish when Vonn went down.
"It was one of the most heartbreaking moments of my life," Johnson said.
Still, the 30-year-old Johnson became only the second American woman to win the Olympic downhill - Vonn won it in 2010 - and it came after her own injury concerns as well as a 14-month ban for violating "whereabouts" rules when it comes to testing for doping.
Sometimes, she said, "you just have to keep going because that's the only option."
No delays this time.
The U.S. defended its team figure skating gold medal by edging Japan on Sunday.
Ilia Malinin beat rival Shun Sato in a head-to-head showdown to break a deadlock in the final session of the competition. The U.S. ended up with 69 points while Japan finished with 68.
Malinin, nicknamed the "Quad God," landed five quadruple jumps and scored 200.03 points for his free skate. Sato followed him with three quads in his program, but he could only manage 194.86 points, leaving the Japanese with a second straight silver medal in the team event.
Four years ago, the Americans - and Japanese - were denied a medal ceremony in Beijing because of a lengthy investigation into Russian doping, which kept them from receiving their medals until the 2024 Summer Games in Paris.
Must be the home cooking.
Host nation Italy won six medals Sunday - five bronze and one silver - the most Italy has ever won in a single day at the Winter Olympics.
The Italy team delivered the silver medal in the mixed relay biathlon race.
Downhill skier Sofia Goggia won Italy's first bronze medal of the day, followed by Lucia Dalmasso's third place in snowboarding's parallel giant slalom. Riccardo Lorello claimed bronze in the men's speedskating 5,000 meters.
Dominik Fischnaller took bronze in men's singles luge before Italy rallied for third place in the figure skating team event.
That followed Italy's Day 1 total of three medals, led by speedskater Francesca Lollobrigida's gold in the 3,000 meters.
Five charter planes carrying NHL players - including Canada's Sidney Crosby - arrived in Milan on Sunday morning from New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport. This is the first Olympics with NHL players since the Sochi Games in 2014.
Sweden was the first of the teams comprised of almost exclusively NHL players to take the ice for practice at Milano Santagiulia Arena, followed by the U.S., Czechia, Canada and Finland.
The 12-team men's tournament starts Wednesday. The U.S. and Canada are the heavy favorites, and both teams begin their campaigns Thursday. The Americans face Latvia. Canada plays Czechia.
Finland is the defending champion, but Canada has won each of the past two Olympics with NHL players.
No surprise that a Czech racer won snowboarding's parallel giant slalom Sunday in Livigno. The shocker was that it wasn't Ester Ledecka.
Ledecka, who was trying to become the first snowboarder to win gold medals at three straight Olympics, lost her quarterfinal race by 0.06 seconds to Austria's Sabine Payer.
The gold medal went to Ledecka's teammate, 22-year-old Zuzana Maderova. It was her first victory in a major event. Payer took the silver medal. Italy's Lucia Dalmasso won bronze.
Ledecka hadn't lost a PGS World Cup race in almost two years.
There's plenty of interest here in the Super Bowl, even if the game kicks off Monday at 12:30 a.m. in Italy. A couple of sports pubs in Milan said on Sunday that they're fully booked and will turn away walk-ups. The New England Patriots face the Seattle Seahawks in Santa Clara, California.
A few days before competing in Sunday's women's downhill, American skier Jacqueline Wiles noted that she's a "big, big fan" of the Seahawks. A native of Portland, Oregon, Wiles finished tied for fourth on Sunday, just missing out on a bronze medal.

















































