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Ramping up the emotions

China Daily | Updated: 2022-02-10 10:01
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Norway's Birk Ruud in action during the men's freeski Big Air competition at the Beijing 2022 Olympic Winter Games at the Big Air Shougang venue on Wednesday. [Photo/AFP]

High-flier Ruud marks Big Air gold with touching tribute to late father

Birk Ruud landed at the bottom of the Big Air Shougang venue and unfurled a Norwegian flag, floating the blue-and-red Nordic cross in the breeze behind him.

A camera came close, and he pulled down his sleeve to reveal a gold bracelet-a gift from his father.

"Papa," he said, tapping his heart. "You're with me."

The 21-year-old Norwegian spun away with a gold medal in the Olympics' first men's freestyle skiing Big Air event Wednesday, re-emerging as a leader in the extreme sport after losing his father to cancer last year.

Like Chinese Big Air gold medalist Gu Ailing, Ruud came to the Beijing Games eyeing medals in Big Air, slopestyle and the halfpipe - no action sports athlete has earned three medals in the same year.

Ruud has been promising to win Olympic Big Air gold since middle school, even though the discipline only became a Winter Games event this year. The last leg of his route to Olympic glory was a painful one. His father, Oivind, woke him late one night in July 2020 with crushing news: a cancer diagnosis. He was gone nine months later.

Ruud had two Winter X Games Big Air gold medals and three World Cup wins before his father got sick. He has only one World Cup victory since and has acknowledged that his dad's illness pulled his mind away from competitive skiing.

His efforts to ramp up for Beijing were interrupted by a knee injury nine weeks ago, and he skipped last month's Winter X Games to play it safe amid the coronavirus outbreak. The rust came off quickly, though. The result was something he's sure Oivind would be proud of.

"I'm just thankful to be in this position and I'm thankful for all the time I had with my dad," he said. "I still have my family, and I have a lot of people who support me, and I'm very thankful for that."

Ruud carved out a commanding lead in his first two runs, coming in backward for a switch triple cork 1980-three off-axis flips with five and a half rotations-and then tumbling forward for a double cork bio 1800.

The only competitor with a chance to keep up with Ruud was American rival Alex Hall, who last month became the first to land a 2160-six full rotations-at the Winter X Games. Hall tried to do it again, but he under-rotated and crashed out for an eighth-place finish.

Ruud went last in the final round with his spot atop the podium assured. His coach handed him a Norwegian flag, and he held it in his left hand during his final trick, a no-pressure bio 1440. He unraveled the flag and waved it behind him after landing.

He tapped his chest and pointed to the bracelet, and later took off his gloves to display the nails he had painted by an artist in the Olympic Village. Flashy and funny, he's a favorite among fans for his hijinks on social media, like the time he bewildered a crowd by skateboarding around disguised as an old man.

Ruud's final score of 187.75 was well clear of American silver medalist Colby Stevenson's 183. Swedish veteran Henrik Harlaut took bronze with 181, passing teammate Oliwer Magnusson on his final run.

Agencies via Xinhua

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