SOCHI, RUSSIA – Ted Ligety didn't try to hide behind any excuses Friday when he became the latest high-profile U.S. athlete to bomb at the Sochi Olympics. "To put it simply, I choked,'' said Ligety, the defending world champion in Alpine skiing's super combined event. "It's just a bummer."
Or, as the snowboarders on the halfpipe might say, epic fail. Through the first nine days of the Winter Games, the megastars of the U.S. team have wilted under the spotlight on the world's biggest sporting stage. But athletes in the newer sports on the Olympic program, particularly the extreme sports, have kept their country in the thick of the medals race.
The Americans have won 16 medals in Sochi with seven days remaining in the Winter Games, putting them one behind The Netherlands and tying them for second place in the total count with host nation Russia. Their four gold medals tie them for fifth in that category.
They have done it without contributions from marquee names such as snowboarder Shaun White, speedskater Shani Davis and cross-country skier Kikkan Randall, all of whom have flopped under the Olympic pressure — some of them multiple times — and have delivered neither medals nor the kind of performances that made them household names.
But sports that are new to the Olympics this year have raked in six medals for the Americans, including their most dominant performance thus far: a sweep of the podium in men's slopestyle skiing, only the third 1-2-3 performance in U.S. history. The events that NBC host Bob Costas derided as "Jackass'' sports — referring to the TV show featuring mindless and dangerous stunts — are saving the Americans' pride. And that, the extreme athletes say, is just insane.
"For the U.S., hopefully people are stoked on our sport because we just won a bunch of medals," said Gus Kenworthy, silver medalist in slopestyle skiing. "The Olympics are the pinnacle event, the highest level of competition in any sport.
"Our sport is young and cool. We're bringing this new breath of life into the Olympics, and they're helping our sport by showcasing it to the world. It's kind of a cool dynamic."
Only four of the U.S. medals have come in events with a long Winter Games pedigree. None of those is gold, and three are bronze, from Julia Mancuso (women's Alpine skiing super combined), Bode Miller (men's super-G) and Erin Hamlin (women's luge). Another bronze came in team figure skating, a new discipline in a traditional sport.