BORMIO, Italy — The day on the Olympic slalom course saw a little bit of everything — fog, snow, sunshine, crashes, a larger-than-typical field and, unusually, an epic meltdown.
Loic Meillard weathered it all Monday to become the first Swiss man to win the Olympic slalom since skiing on home snow at the 1948 St. Moritz Games. He added gold to a silver he won in the team combined and bronze from the giant slalom at the Milan Cortina Games.
''To have three races, three medals, and to top it off with a gold — it's perfect,'' said Meillard, who joins the company of Swiss racer Edi Reinalter, winner of the Olympic slalom in 1948.
It was quite an adventure to get there, though. There was the changing elements (snow and fog gave way to sun) and spills like the one that ended the day of Brazilian ski racer Lucas Pinheiro Braathen, who was bidding for another Olympic gold.
Maybe above all, Norway's Atle Lie McGrath, the first-run leader, straddling a gate and becoming so irate that he threw his ski poles over the netting on one side. He then went outside the fencing on the other side, trudging along in the snow. He sat down and then fell back, breathing heavily. McGrath was that emotional.
Meillard finished in a two-run combined time of 1 minute, 53.61 seconds as he edged Fabio Gstrein of Austria by 0.35 seconds. Henrik Kristoffersen of Norway took bronze.
Kristoffersen understood his teammate's emotional outburst.
''This is sports,'' said Kristoffersen, who was leading the slalom at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games only to ski out in the final run. "What are sports without the emotions?''