LIVIGNO, Italy — On a frosty night in the Italian Alps, the queen of big air, Anna Gasser, bid adieu to her favorite Olympic event.
She left without a medal, but that didn't make it all bad. The snowboarders who won them — led by the new queen, Kokomo Murase of Japan — all knew they had Gasser to thank for pushing the envelope to help the sport look as good as it did Monday night.
''I'm happy to pass on the crown, the big crown, to Kokomo," said Gasser, who finished eighth. ''She really deserves it and, yeah, it's crazy to see how far the sport has come in the last years.''
Kokomo, silver medalist Zoi Sadowski-Synnott and third-place finisher Seung-eun Yu all got to the podium with triple-cork, 1440-degree jumps — that's three head-over-heels flips with another rotation mixed in. Those weren't around in women's big air at the last Olympics, where Gasser won her second straight gold medal.
''Progression," a term snowboarders have co-opted over their 30-plus years in business, looked like this in the women's final:
—The three medalists combined for five triple corks out of the six jumps that counted toward their scores.
—British 19-year-old Mia Brookes, who got the 1440 trend going three years ago, tried a 1620 this time. It has only been landed once in a competition, and she landed it this time but skidded an extra half revolution in the snow after her landing, which cut down on her score.
''I can definitely go home saying I gave it everything,'' said Brookes, who finished fourth.