LIVIGNO, Italy — The difference between silver and gold in Olympic men's big air was a matter of who did a trick called a ''nose butter'' better.
The fact anyone can do it at all was only one of the amazing things to come out of a contest that will be long remembered by anyone who saw it.
Tormod Frostad of Norway edged out Mac Forehand of the United States by 2.25 points in Tuesday's final with the scores approaching the maximum of 200 points each. Frostad did so by nailing the nose butter — but with a physics-defying twist of his own — on all three of his jumps of a snowy freeskiing nail-biter on the big hill Tuesday night.
The 24-year-old Forehand's reaction after such a narrow loss?
''I'm happy to walk away alive from that event,'' he said. ''It was super heavy, people are going crazy and this is a really dangerous sport. I'm just happy to ski away and be OK, and (to do so) with the silver medal is pretty cool as well.''
Frostad had the lead through most of the 12-man final after nailing two massive jumps. But Forehand flipped a thrilling competition on its head when he moved ahead of Frostad on the second-to-last jump of the night.
That turned what had been looking like a victory lap for Frostad into the most pressure-filled leap of his career.
But the 23-year-old Norwegian pulled out another flawlessly executed effort to secure his first gold medal in his second Games.