Deadly Collision Claims 67 Lives in U.S. Air Disaster | At Least 30 Dead and Many Injured in Stampede at Maha Kumbh Mela in India | Chinese President Xi Jinping Affirms Cambodia's Role as a Key Partner in China’s Diplomatic Strategy | Xi Jinping Concludes State Visit to Cambodia, Strengthening Bilateral Ties | Chinese President Xi Jinping Concludes Successful State Visit to Cambodia | Chinese Ambassador: US-China Trade Tensions Harm Developing Nations; President Xi Urges Investment in Cambodia and Expanded Market Access | Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force Ships Bungo and Etazima Dock at Ream Sea Base for Four-Day Visit | Prime Minister Hun Manet Expresses Displeasure Over Criticism of Chinese Investments During Kampot International Tourist Port Inauguration | Asian Development Bank Collaborates with Cambodia on New Development Projects Worth Over $1 Billion |

Alpine skiing-Austria's Mayer claims historic gold in men's super-G

INTERNATIONAL: Austria's Matthias Mayer became the first man to win an Alpine skiing gold medal at three consecutive Olympic Games after winning the super-G at the Beijing Games on Tuesday.

Mayer, who won gold in downhill in Sochi in 2014 and super-G in Pyeongchang four years ago, raced down 'The Rock' in a time of 1:19.94 with American Ryan Cochran-Siegle just four hundredths of a second behind him.

Mayer had picked up bronze in Tuesday's downhill but got his hands-on gold with a stunning final stage to his run where he made up the decisive time to move ahead of Kilde.

"I tried to push hard, really hard," said Mayer, "I saw Kilde's run on TV at the start and it was really good, so I knew that I had to go all-in. "That's such a big success, I can't imagine right now," he said.

The Austrian found it hard to process his achievement of winning gold at all three Winter Games he has featured in. Austria men's head coach Sepp Brunner said Mayer had earned his status among the country's all-time greats. "He is one of the best. Sure Herman (Maier) won more races (in his career) but Matthias is up there with him. He is a superstar now. But he's a good guy, still staying on the ground."

Brenner said Mayer's technique was perfectly suited to the packed, artificial snow of the past two Olympics.



Related News