LIVIGNO, Italy — The nickname for the trick is ''disaster.'' Freeskiing star Eileen Gu saw it as something other than that.
Because Gu landed that trick once at the top of the supersized rails portion of the Olympic slopestyle course Monday, she opened her Milan-Cortina odyssey — three events and up to 15 dangerous trips down the slopes over 15 days — with a second straight silver medal in the event.
Because she couldn't land it the other two times over the three-run contest, she never really had a chance to go for gold.
For the second straight time, that belonged to Switzerland's Mathilde Gremaud in what, only minutes after it was over, was already being hailed as the best women's slopestyle contest in the sport's history.
''That was definitely the best slopestyle run I've ever done,'' Gu said.
And Gremaud: ''I would say it's the best one I've ever done in my life, yes.''
Megan Oldham of Canada hit back-to-back jumps with 1260 degrees of spin — not an everyday occurrence out there — and finished with the bronze.
Not surprisingly, the world's two best skiers each nailing the best runs of their lives resulted in a margin of .38 — a sliver of space that was virtually the same as the gap when they also finished 1-2 at the Beijing Games four years ago.