MILAN — The U.S. men's team pursuit trio of Casey Dawson, Emery Lehman and Ethan Cepuran dominated that speedskating event lately. They are the reigning world champions and world record-holders. They won five World Cup titles. They came to the Milan Cortina Olympics in search of just one thing: the gold medal.
They'll leave with the silver, though, because they could not keep up with Italy's Davide Ghiotto, Andrea Giovannini and Michele Malfatti and lost to them twice at these Winter Games, including by 4 1/2 seconds in the final on Tuesday. China took the bronze.
''You can't just be the best going in,'' Lehman said after his last race before retirement. ''You have to be the best on the day you compete.''
Giovannini celebrated his country's first Olympic title in the event since the 2006 Turin Games by mimicking NBA star Steph Curry's ''Night night'' gesture.
''The Americans were an inspiration for us, because these last two years, they almost always won. ... We knew we had worked a lot for this race, but the favorites were the Americans,'' Giovannini said. ''They made us raise our level.''
Canada collected its second consecutive Winter Games title in women's team pursuit when Ivanie Blondin, Valerie Maltais and Isabelle Weidemann — the same athletes who won gold four years ago in Beijing — finished in 2 minutes, 55.81 seconds, nearly a full second ahead of runner-up Netherlands. Japan defeated the U.S. for the bronze.
''We promised each other," said Maltais, who got the bronze in the individual 3,000 meters on Feb. 7, ''that we're going to empty the tank.''
Buoyed by raucous cheering from the home crowd at the Milano Speed Skating Stadium, the Italian men clocked 3:39.20. The United States started the final well and led for the early stages.