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hckošice

Totallympics Grand Master
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  1. About the eligibility rules Probably yes, but the mistake is even more strange since they are apparently inline hockey players and inline hockey is also under IIHF Thats cool, great to hear that the opponents are prepared to help your team, we must keep in mind that at first it´s just a sport and it´s for fun. let the guys will enjoy the rest of the "tournament" and earn some good moments and who know maybe also result(s). Good luck
  2. thats just what i was thinking about when I read it can not understand how they managed to finish the match and not die oh man, the players must be totally wrung out already after the first match even in the prehistoric era of the hockey they was some 13-14 players playing
  3. FIS ALPINE SKIING WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS 2017 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Men's Slalom Final Results HIRSCHER Marcel 1:34.7546.43+48.32 FELLER Manuel 1:35.4347.10+48.33 NEUREUTHER Felix 1:39.0247.19+48.49 Second Gold medal for Marcel Hirscher in concluding slalom St. Moritz 2017 concluded with a thrilling men’s slalom under fantastic weather conditions, where the Austrians were the dominant team with Marcel Hirscher claiming the gold medal ahead of teammate Manuel Feller. Germany’s Felix Neureuther grabbed bronze. Not a single cloud in the sky, a compact race track, the best athletes in the world and thousands of spectators; all conditions were gathered for an excellent concluding day at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in St. Moritz. The one that used those conditions the best and claims another World Champion title is Marcel Hirscher. The Austrian was the favourite entering today's slalom and lived up to all the hype to walkaway with two gold (slalom and giant slalom) and a silver (alpine combined) medal. “It’s perfect,” Hirscher said after the race. “Sun is shining, great conditions today and the skiing was in all pretty good. Austria is pretty stoked with another two podiums. The young guns are kicking my ass during the training runs so I am very grateful for this, it has helped me to improve myself every training run.” After the first run, all four Austrian athletes were sitting in the Top 7, with behind Marcel Hirscher Marco Schwarz in second, Michael Matt in third and Manuel Feller in seventh. The good spirit within the Austrian slalom team definitively proved to be prolific, as at the end of the race, it’s a double win for Austria with younggun Manuel Feller holding on to the pressure and earning his first career podium. It’s a relief for Feller, who was barely qualified for the World Championships as he finished only three of the eight World Cup slaloms he participated in this season. The other surprise of the day came from Felix Neureuther. Not that a podium comes as a surprise for the German, he already won two World Championships medals in slalom and podiumed twice in slalom in this World Cup season, but because he was sitting in eights position after the first run. The experienced German had a sensational second run, which was enough to lift him to the bronze medal. It was the first medal for Germany at these Championships, saving the country from going home from St. Moritz empty handed. Finishing in fourth place was Norwegian Henrik Kristoffersen, who has been going head-to-head this season against Hirscher in the slalom standings, but could not find his rhythm in St. Moritz at these World Championships and will head home empty handed. Hirscher closed the World Championships with an amazing three medals, leading all athletes. He earned gold in the slalom and giant slalom and took silver in the alpine combined, missing the gold by a mere 0.01 seconds. Today's Austrian success also lifted the nation to first place in the St. Moritz 2017 final medal standings with nine medals. Host Switzerland led throughout the Championships, but after going home today empty handed, had to settle for second place with seven medals. Both alpine nations earned three gold medals in total. Full Results Here Final Medal Table Here Marcel Hirscher Slalom World Champion 2017 1st Run 2nd Run Race Replay 1st Run 2nd Run
  4. This weekend is traditionally the womens weekend in ice hockey, as each year this day is reserved for the Global Girls game. You can follow the score Here
  5. Sundby in top form in Otepää 15 km classic win Martin Johnsrud Sundby of Norway was in top form in today's 15 km classic interval start competition in Otepää, Estonia. Sundby bested second place finisher Iivo Niskanen of Finland by 37.1 seconds. Norway's Hans Christer Holund took third place +49.1 seconds back. It was just his third career individual World Cup podium. Finland place two skiers in the top 5 (Heikkinen 5th +58.1) as the World Cup now turns it's attention to the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Lahti, Finland. Competitions begin Thursday 23 February with free technique sprints. Full Results Here
  6. Kauf and Kingsbury triumph in Tazawako dual moguls A big weekend of back-to-back competitions in Tazawako (JPN) closed with an exciting dual moguls competition on Sunday, where 20-year-old Jaelin Kauf (USA) claimed the first win of her young career in the ladies’ event and Mikael Kingsbury (CAN) rattled off his fifth-straight victory in men’s competition while officially locking down the 2016/17 moguls World Cup title in the process. In just her second full season and 16th competition on the World Cup tour, Kauf has already established herself as one of the fastest ladies’ in the world on a moguls course. This hard-charging style lends itself especially well to dual moguls competition, where the head-to-head nature of the challenge often pushes athletes outside of their comfort zone and forces them to make mistakes. With her win, Kauf now has three World Cup podiums, and all three are in the duals, proving that the high-intensity format suits her just fine. Kauf went toe to toe with Yulia Galysheva (KAZ) in a hard-fought big final that resulted in the closest ladies’ finals score we’ve seen this season, with judges scoring the matchup 19-16 in favour of Kauf. For Kauf, both of whose parents were champions on the Pro Moguls Tour, the moment was sweet. “I can’t really describe how I’m feeling right now,” said Kauf. “I was just pushing the speed all day and trying to beat the other girls down the course. I wasn’t expecting this to happen, but it’s amazing and I couldn’t be happier.” While losing out on such a close battle in the final was surely disappointing for Galysheva, Sunday’s result was the best of the season for the 24-year-old who finished 2015/16 ranked 4th overall, but who has struggled this season. Third place on the day went to Olivia Giaccio (USA), as the 16-year-old in her first full season of World Cup competition capped a great day for the US ladies’ squad by capturing her first World Cup podium in just her 9th start. Giaccio bested last season's moguls crystal globe winner Chloe Dufour-Lapointe (CAN) easily after Dufour-Lapointe skied out of her line just before the bottom air bump. While she wasn’t part of the big finals picture Sunday, Australia’s Britteny Cox was still an important figure of the competition, as the 22-year-old earned herself a 9th-place finish while making official what has already been known by most for a long time; she will claim the 2016/17 moguls Moguls World Cup title. Cox’s achievement is the biggest so-far in what has been huge season for the Aussie snow sports contingent, with her’s being the first moguls globe for the nation since Dale Begg-Smith did it in 2009/10. However, because of her season-low finish on Sunday, she was unable to lock up the Freestyle overall globe. Though it would take an unlikely sequence of events for her to lose her lead atop the overall standings - back-to-back wins by ski cross athlete Marielle Thompson (CAN) and a pair of results with zero or next-to-zero points for Cox would do it - the pressure is still on Cox to perform at next week’s World Cup finals. Kingsbury wins fifth straight event, sixth-straight globe Over on the men’s side it was a man who needs no introduction doing again what he has done so many times in his storied career, as Mikael Kingsbury took his fifth win in a row and seventh of the season to lock up what will be his sixth-straight moguls title. And, as is the case with Cox, he is all but assured of taking the Freestyle overall globe at season end as well, which would also be his sixth-straight such title. Kingsbury squared off against second-ranked Ben Cavet (FRA) in the big final on Sunday and the heavyweight matchup did not disappoint, with both athletes throwing down identical jump combos and Cavet battling gamely to match Kingsbury’s relentless speed through the middle section of the course. In the end, the men’s final ended up even more closely scored than the ladies’, with the 21-19 result swinging in Kingsbury’s favour. And while it’s been a foregone conclusion for some time now, the win officially put Kingsbury out of reach of Cavet or any other athlete in the race for this season’s moguls World Cup titles. With one more strong performance next week in China, Kingsbury will again take home a pair of crystal globes. “That was one of the craziest duals days I’ve had,” said Kingsbury, “But I felt really good today. I skied some strong duals against Dmitriy (Rieherd) and Daichi (Hara) in the blue course, which wasn’t the one I skied yesterday in singles. And then for the final I was back on the red course and it was all good. “Now I just want to get some good quality skiing in China and then head to Spain on a mission to win two gold medals (at the world championships).” Cavet’s performance gave him two podiums on the weekend and continued a remarkable season that has seen the 23-year-old Frenchman miss the podium only three times in nine competitions. Third on the day went to Matt Graham (AUS), as the Australian returned to the podium for the first time since his victory in Calgary back in January by besting Dmitriy Reiherd (KAZ) in another closely fought matchup. With the performance, Graham was able to open up a little more breathing room between himself and Philippe Marquis (CAN) in the battle for third place on the moguls leaderboard. The moguls tour now moves to Thaiwoo, China, for the moguls World Cup finals which will feature another weekend of single and duals competitions on February 25-26, 2017. Full Results Men and Women
  7. Bjoergen wins 10 km classic in Otepää In the final World Cup competition before the start of the FIS Nordic World Ski Championships in Lahti, Finland Marit Bjoergen of Norway won her 106th World Cup in dominant fashion. Bjoergen won the ladies' 10 km classic interval start competition in Otepää, Estonia by 26 seconds over Sweden's Charlotte Kalla who took second place and 57.2 seconds ahead of the Overall World Cup leader Heidi Weng in third. Both Bjoergen and Kalla have competed selectively this season with Bjoergen returning from pregnancy and Kalla coming back from a health scare during week one in Ruka, Finland. However, both showed they are race ready with the start of Lahti 2017 just 4 days away. Full Results Here
  8. Clark and James win Olympic halfpipe test event Kelly Clark (USA) and Scotty James (AUS) have claimed victory in the 2016-17 season's final halfpipe World Cup event which took place in the Bokwang Phoenix Park Resort, South Korea today, whilst also serving as official test event for the 2018 PyeongChang Olympic Winter Games, too. While James, who had triumphed in the X Games earlier this season, therefore walked away with his career's second Crystal Globe since 2014, Chloe Kim (USA) celebrated the title on the women's side of things; it was her career's first. However, the teenage halfpipe sensation who had kicked off the season with back-to-back wins had to settle for fourth today as Clark (94.00), fresh off a win at Mammoth Mountain (USA) as well as Chinese shredders Jiayu Liu (91.50) and Xuetong Cai (86.50) threw down runs which impressed the judges more. 33-year-old veteran Clark landed a frontside air to backside 540 mute, frontside 1080 indy, cab 720 invert and a crippler indy knowing that she is finally back at her game: “This is a huge step for me in my process just coming back from my hip surgery to get my riding back to a really high level. Since last week, I finally feel that I'm back to where I was before I got injured. I'm thankful to put down the run I did today, and I'm stoked of my snowboarding and even more stoked to end up atop of the podium,” she said. To do so, she was able to step it up after her first run wasn't as good as she was hoping it to be whilst sitting in second position behind of Liu who had set the bar high with her high and well executed backside air to frontside 900 tail, backside mute, frontside 720 stalefish and cab 720 tail. “In practise I did some cleaner runs. In my first run, I landed in the flat a couple of times and kind of under-rotated a few things. It was good to get one under my belt but I knew I could do it cleaner. And that was just my whole approach: land higher on those walls, hang under those grabs longer because I know that execution is important at those events. That was what I really was trying to do,” Clark recapped her career's 13th World Cup win. Her season's second was also the fourth consecutive triumph in an official Olympic test event World Cup after prevailing in Bardonecchia (ITA) in 2005, Cypress Mountain (CAN) 2009 and Sochi (RUS) back in 2013. “I have hoped that I can build. It's awesome to be at a test event knowing that I have a whole year to progress,” she added. James atop Over in the men's event, reigning world champion Scotty James added another big win to his palmares earning the highest score of the day with a 96.00 in his third run which consisted of a backside double cork 1260, frontside double cork 1080, cab double cork 1080 and frontside 900 therefore putting so far leading US superstar Shaun White under pressure. But the two-time Olympic gold medallist couldn't step up his game as last to drop in keeping his 95.00 from run one earned for a massive method to frontside double cork 1080, cab double cork 1080, frontside 900 and a final backside double cork 1260. “It's extremely disappointing,” White said. “I absolutely came here to win and do my thing. It was a great test run for the Olympics. Yeah, I think lesson is learned.” Especially as he knew where and when he might lost it today: “The truth is, I rode for two days and then went for shopping in Seoul, then rode qualifying and went back to shop in Seoul. So, I am really tired. By the time I got to my last hit my back leg kinda gave out. So, I'm just disappointed of myself although it's super nice suites I got. So, I hope there is less shopping next time and taking it more serious. But anyway, Scotty had a great run with four magical hits.” And with those four huge hits landed, Scotty James finally had his first ever World Cup win in store: “It feels amazing winning the test event. I absolutely love South Korea. Every run here has been so awesome. The crowds and fans have been so welcoming and very helpful. They put on an awesome pipe here for us to ride, and yeah, I'm really excited. It's twelve months down the track from today. It's going to be another exciting day in one year. And with a halfpipe like that anything is possible. It's going to be awesome.” And that's for sure if the 22-year-old keeps on progressing like the past year. “I put a lot of hard work in 2016, and I kind of continuing on this year as well. I changed up and put a lot of people in place who are pushing me forward to where I want to be. I have got such an amazing team behind me. Me and my coaches have a similar mindset towards where I wanna be. Australia and all my sponsors have been really supportive.” That said, it's obviously that the adjustments pay off. “I'm just trying to develop as a person and as a rider. Being happy is the most important thing for me, and I'm really happy at the moment. And things like this are a plus,” James said with an eye on his Crystal Globe. Yiwei Zhang (CHN), the first rider who had stomped a triple cork in the pipe, rounded out the men's podium as third with a score of 93.25. With the season's last halfpipe World Cup in the books, the great finale of the snowboard freestyle overall World Cup tour is slated to take place in Spindleruv Mlyn (CZE), where a slopestyle competition will wrap up things from March 24 till 25, 2017. However, it's time to battle for gold, silver and bronze at the 12th FIS Snowboard World Championships a fe days before with the title decisions taking place in Sierra Nevada (ESP) from March 7 till 19, 2017. Full Results Men and Women Halfpipe World Cup 2016/17 Final Ranking Men and Women
  9. Biathlon Qualification Standing after Event 16/22 Mens 1 Germany 5629.0 2 Russia 5493.0 3 France 5431.0 4 Norway 5371.0 5 Austria 5006.0 6 Ukraine 4646.0 7 Czech Republic 4582.0 8 Italy 4094.0 9 Switzerland 4028.0 10 Bulgaria 3969.0 11 Sweden 3898.0 12 USA 3878.0 13 Canada 3505.0 14 Belarus 3236.0 15 Slovakia 3185.0 16 Kazakstan 3180.0 17 Slovenia 2978.0 18 Romania 2628.0 19 Estonia 2582.0 20 Finland 2405.0 21 Latvia 2294.0 22 Lithuania 2291.0 23 Poland 2120.0 24 Japan 1894.0 25 South Korea 1158.0 26 Belgium 989.0 27 Croatia 467.0 28 United Kingdom 416.0 29 Serbia 151.0 30 Greece 103.0 31 Hungary 70.0 32 Australia 47.0
  10. 12th place, the best seasons relay result achieved at world championships, this is a certainly good result, pitty for the slow skiing times, the top 10 was today very close, but well, we haven´t 4 equal competitors for a top 10 relay so far, even if Michal Šíma really had a good race today, perfect shooting and a decent skiing, surprisingly he was able to fight for the top 10 untill the end. Maybe a better shooting in 3rd leg by Tomáš Hasilla would ranked us among the dreamed ten, but well, what can we do, the guys tried their best, this is just the top of their posibilities they can do right now, but still it´s a fine result compared to the previous relays. In the Nations Cup we moved to 15th place, overpassing Kazakhstan by 5 points. 557 points advantage against 18th Romania for next season World Cup 4 starters and 991 points ahead of Latvia for the 5 WOG quotas. Tomorrow is the last day of the championships with both Mass Starts competitions scheduled. Unfortunately any of our mens did qualified for the grand final, among womens we will have 2 athletes Nastya Kuzmina and Paulína Fialková. Good luck babes Start List Mens Mass Start http://ibu.blob.core.windows.net/docs/1617/BT/SWRL/CH__/SMMS/BT_C59A_1.0.pdf Start List Womens Mass Start http://ibu.blob.core.windows.net/docs/1617/BT/SWRL/CH__/SWMS/BT_C59A_1.0.pdf
  11. FIS ALPINE SKIING WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS 2017 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Women's Slalom Final Results SHIFFRIN Mikaela 1:37.2747.80+49.47 HOLDENER Wendy 1:38.9148.18+50.73 HANSDOTTER Frida 1:39.0248.57+50.43 Golden three-peat in slalom for Shiffrin American Mikaela Shiffrin won the FIS Alpine World Ski Championship slalom gold medal for the third straight time after earning an astonishing 1.64-second victory ahead of Swiss sensation Wendy Holdener. Sweden’s Frida Hansdotter took home the bronze medal 0.11 seconds behind Holdener. It was Shiffrin’s second medal of these championships here in St. Moritz and the fourth total of her career. She also took the slalom gold in Schladming 2013 and in Vail/Beaver Creek 2015. She was absolutely unstoppable on the second run as she built her lead to more than a second by the third interval, and continued to cruise from there. "I didn't see my time until I got all the way through and I knew I had a good run, but I didn't know it was that good until I saw the time," said Shiffrin. "Three medals is great, but today is really special today for me because I finally skied this the way I wanted to and that's what means a lot to me today." Holdener was the hero for the Swiss fans, earning the silver medal, her second of these World Championships after she took gold in the alpine combined last week. “I made a few small mistakes in the second run, so when I heard the speaker say I had the lead I was surprised,” said Holdener. “There was no beating Mikaela today, so I’m really happy with the silver medal and these entire World Championships.” Hansdotter now has three medals in the last three World Championship appearances, with one silver and two bronzes. "It means a lot to me today. I had a lot of pressure so it feels nice to have the medal," said Hansdotter "I've been skiing well the last few years and to get a medal at the last three World Championships is great." Shiffrin led the field after the first run 0.38 seconds ahead of Holdener and 0.59 seconds ahead of Slovakia’s Veronika Velez-Zuzulova. Velez-Zuzulova straddled a gate, ending her hopes for her first individual gold, but she still goes home with a silver medal from the nations team event. After Lara Gut’s season-ending knee injury last week, today’s World Championship gold medal is likely not the only major title the American will win as she has a clear command in the race for the Overall World Cup title. Tomorrow the 2017 FIS Alpine World Ski Championships will come to a close with the 11th medal event, the men’s slalom. The first run is at 9:45 CET and the second run will kick off at 13:00. Full Results Here Mikaela Shiffrin Slalom World Champion 2017 1st and 2nd Run Race Replay 1st Run 2nd Run
  12. Matej Falát oh dear, can this day be even more disastrous for us
  13. no, never...we simply will never be there, top 10 is just cursed...meh, maybe next season will be luckiest for our colours, this one was(is) just paintful
  14. we are such a patethic shooters, thats insane
  15. Nilsson and Klaebo win final sprint before Lahti 2017 Stina Nilsson of Sweden continued her career battle with Norway's Maiken Caspersen Falla in the ladies' free technique sprint and Norway's up and coming star Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo recorded his anticipated first World Cup win. Nilsson moved into the lead 6-5 in free technique sprint wins versus Falla with her win today in Otepää. Nilsson was the day's fastest qualifier and in the end the day's final winner by 0.27 seconds ahead of Falla. Nilsson with 6 wins in skate sprints moves into a tie with Petra Majdic (SLO) and Arianna Follis (ITA) for 5th all time. Falla has now finished in the top two in 11 out of 12 of her last World Cup sprints in free technique. She has 5 wins and 6 second place finishes. In third place with Heidi Weng of Norway who continues to add to her Overall World Cup standings lead finishing +3.75 second behind Nilsson. Falla, despite giving up 20 points to Nilsson in the sprint standings continues to lead by 142 points over Nilsson. Klaebo who sits second in the World Cup sprint standings has shown all season that he is capable to ski with the World's best at any distance despite being just 20 years old. Today's he finally got his first World Cup victory and is now just 20 points behind Federico Pellegrino. In second place in today's sprint was Finn Hagen Krogh (NOR) +0.60 behind Klaebo. In third place was Russia's Sergey Ustiugov the 2017 Tour de Ski winner +1.00 back. Competitions continue tomorrow in Otepää with 10/15 km interval start classic competitions. The ladies' 10 km C starts at 10:15 CET (11:15 local time) and the men's 15 km C begins at 12:15 CET (13:15 local time). Full Results Men and Women
  16. Martinod and Yater-Wallace claim wins at Olympic test event in Korea Marie Martinod (FRA) and Torin Yater-Wallace (USA) have claimed victories in the halfpipe World Cup event staged in Bokwang Phoenix Park, which also served as the official test event ahead of the next year's PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympic Games. In the ladies' competition French star Marie Martinod set the bar up high early with her first attempt, stomping her signature run with back-to-back 540s followed by back-to-back flairs and a big leftside 900 tindy to move her on top of the pack with 91.60 points. At the end of the day Martinod's first run score appeared to be also the highest one as she took her third consecutive World Cup win of the season. "It's great to win here in Korea, one year before the Olympics," Martinod said after the competition, "It's very exciting but it definitely will put some pressure on me. I hope I can deal with that pressure, move back to training and come back well-prepared for the final test." With yet another win and 300 points in the ranking, Martinod has also secured herself the halfpipe World Cup crystal globe as now she'll be looking to claim the prize in front of the home crowd at the season's last stop in Tignes. Devin Logan (USA) finished the competition on the second place with Ayana Onozuka (JPN) rounding out the ladies' podium on third. In men's event top qualifier from Thursday, Torin Yater-Wallace had it all under control and keeping his momentum after the win in Mammoth, the US rider put today yet another one on his account. Despite struggling with a heel injury Yater-Wallace managed to stomp his first run going both huge and stylish on each of his four hits including right dub 1260 mute, left 1080 tail, switch right 720 safety and left alley-oop dub flatspin 900 japan, summing up for a total score of 95.60 points. "It's really cool to ski in Korea and see the venue before the Olympics," Yater-Wallace said following the award ceremony, "It feels awesome to be here and I feel very lucky to end up on the first place." Aaron Blunck, also representing USA, finished just behind Yater-Wallace on second, while Benoit Valentin of France had to settle for a third place finish. With the victory today, Torin Yater-Wallace also jumped on top of the overall halfpipe World Cup ranking as he now leads the pack with 218 points. Aaron Blunck and Ben Valentin sit second and third with 190 and 185 points respectively while the last year's World Cup winner Kevin Rolland is currently holding to fourth spot with 179 points. From February 6 to 7, the fourth and final stop of the halfpipe World Cup season is scheduled to take place in Tignes (FRA). Full Results Men and Women
  17. no medal nevermind its only a sport, next year maybe we will have more luck. thanks for support
  18. yes ofc who else can be the setter of the WCh 2nd run than Shiffrin coach..normal..the same will be in PyeongChang
  19. Day one in Tazawako goes to Cox and Kingsbury It was another weekend and another win for the top two skiers on the FIS Freestyle moguls World Cup tour, as Britt Cox (AUS) and Mikael Kingsbury (CAN), both massive frontrunners on the World Cup leaderboard, took the wins in the first of this weekend’s back-to-back competitions. After bad weather wiped out Friday’s training session, the sun came out in Tazawako for competition day on Saturday, and the Canadians, the French, and one standout Australian came ready despite the shortened preparation time. Through the qualifications and the first finals round of the ladies competition it looked like Perrine Laffont (FRA) was primed for a repeat performance on the slope where she earned her first World Cup victory last season. However, come time for the big final, Cox had other plans. While Laffont was able to score the highest turning scores of anyone in the big final, Cox’s faster time and better jumping gave her the edge, but by the slimmest of margins. When it was all said and done less than half a point separated the two skiers - Cox winning with a score of 78.57 to Laffont’s 78.36. The win was Cox’s sixth of the season, giving her seven podiums in eight events and a 234 point lead over Laffont on the World Cup leaderboard. As worth noting is that Cox’s podium was the 24th for the Australian team across the Freestyle and Snowboard disciplines, marking a new season best for the nation. Third for the ladies on Saturday went to Andi Naude (CAN), giving her three straight podiums and four podiums total on what is turning out to be a career year for the 21-year-old. Laffont, meanwhile, was able to leapfrog Justine Dufour-Lapointe (CAN) and move back into second spot on the moguls World Cup leaderboard, with 461 points to Cox’s 705. Kingsbury makes it four in a row After some challenges earlier in the season, Mikael Kingsbury has now well and truly reasserted his dominance on the men’s moguls World Cup, taking his fourth straight win and his sixth victory of the year. Kingsbury already held wins in three of the previous four competitions in Tazawako, and on Saturday he proved again that the Japanese course is just to his liking. Kingsury’s big final score of 89.99 is one of the highest earned by any moguls skier in any stage this season, making it essentially impossible for his teammate and Saturday runner-up Philippe Marquis (CAN) to catch him. With the second fastest time of the finals and the highest jumping and turning scores by a significant margin, Kingsbury simply steamrolled Tazawako. Marquis runner-up was his second-straight podium after a slow start to the season, and the result moves him up into fourth on the moguls leaderboard. Third place for the men went to Ben Cavet (FRA) giving him his fifth podium on the season as he quietly racks up the points. He sits slightly more comfortably on the moguls World Cup leaderboard after Saturday, with 432 points to Kingsbury’s 720 and 27 points up on third overall Matt Graham (AUS) Action in Tazawako resumes on Sunday with dual moguls competition, with preliminary heat beginning at 12:05 and finals slated for 13:30 JST. Full Results Women and Men
  20. Back home, looks I missed Petra and Veronika races, so what´s the situation ?
  21. The 2017 Winter EYOF is over, Another extremely cod day in Erzurum, Russia confirmed it absolute domination winning 39 medals in this games, France finished clearly second and huge 3rd place for Slovenia., Great day also for Poland, our northern neighbors won their first medals today and immediately jumped to the final 6th position in the medal table. Very nice day also for the Netherlands. Today we also won our only medal here after 2 EYOF without medals we can finally celebrate a podium place, it was very tough untill the end for our young players but we won. From the others todays our results, a very nice quarterfinal for our alpine skiing mixed team, after beating Denmark 4-0 in the first round we lost to Slovenia in QF 0-4 The Biathlon mixed relay finished 8th, very good performances especially from our girls from left Veronika Heidelmeierová and Henrieta Horvátová the cross-country skiing mixed relay finished 9th and in the 1000m girls short track event Sandra Trusová and Ema Zelinská both were eliminated in the quarter finals, Trusová finished 11th. All Results can be found Here See you in Sarajevo 2019 and our only bronze Medal
  22. Tomorrow I have to go to work right in the slalom WCh day...this must be a destiny or something...hopefully I´ll be able to find a way to somehow follow the race. anyway Good luck Girls ! Let write our history ! The whole country is going to support you tomorrow
  23. Tomorrow Womens Slalom Start List Tomorrows Men´s Slalom Qualification Start List
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