MILAN — Norwegian speedskater Sander Eitrem went from, to use his words, ''probably one of the underdogs" to ''the favorite'' in the men's 5,000 meters at the Milan Cortina Olympics by breaking the world record just last month.
That created pressure and nerves and, well, he didn't handle it all that well at the start of his Winter Games debut Sunday, stumbling for his first few strides off the line. Eitrem gathered himself, though, and soon was skating smoothly and powerfully, all the way to a gold medal and an Olympic-record time.
So what happened at the outset?
''Adrenaline just rushed through my body and I felt I was struggling to move. That's the reason I had a small accident," Eitrem said with a chuckle after clocking 6 minutes, 3.95 seconds, more than 2 1/2 seconds faster than 19-year-old Czech runner-up Metodej Jilek. ''For sure, you're getting stressed.''
Riccardo Lorello, who is from Milan, gave Italy the bronze, a day after speedskater Francesca Lollobrigida won the women's 3,000 meters to give the host nation its first gold of these Olympics in any sport.
Casey Dawson, the American who came in eighth Sunday four years after sitting out the 5,000 in Beijing because he tested positive for COVID-19, could relate to what Eitrem was dealing with.
''It happens,'' said Dawson, who had a similar issue in his heat. ''On such a big stage, there's a lot of nerves going into it, and your feet kind of forget what to do the first couple of steps.''
All sorts of bad thoughts begin to creep in.