Destiny delivers a skate of fate
Japanese and US medalists certainly deserved success
Karma was working overtime at the Ice Ribbon.
Miho Takagi claimed a gold medal two days after losing one on the final turn when her older sister fell in the team pursuit.
Brittany Bowe took the bronze, which seemed a fitting reward for her generosity toward American teammate Erin Jackson.
"We have a lot to celebrate," Bowe said. Takagi won her fourth speed skating medal of the Beijing Games and the first individual gold of the Japanese speed skater's brilliant career with an Olympic-record victory in the women's 1,000 meters on Thursday.
The silver went to Jutta Leerdam of the Netherlands, while Bowe claimed the first individual medal of her career with a third-place showing.
"Obviously Miho put down a phenomenal performance, which was not unexpected," Bowe said. "She has skated out of her mind this entire competition."
Takagi added to silver medals in the 500m, 1,500m and team pursuit at the Beijing Games - and this one was especially sweet after losing a gold in the team event when her sister Nana lost her balance and crashed into the padding with Japan leading around the final turn.
Nana tried to make light of the crushing result before Miho headed off to the oval for the last of her five events at Beijing 2022.
"I remember what my older sister said to me this morning," Takagi said through a translator. "She said, 'It's amazing if you win four silvers.'"
Not to worry.
This one was gold.
"Each medal is special to me," Takagi insisted. "Every single one of them."
The 27-year-old capped a remarkable display of versatility at these Games, which started with a sixth-place showing in the 3,000m. She eclipsed her performance from the Pyeongchang Games four years ago, where she took gold in the team pursuit, silver in the 1,500m and bronze in the 1,000m.
Takagi won with a time of 1 minute, 13.19 seconds, easily breaking the previous Olympic record of 1:13.56 set in 2018 by Jorien ter Mors.
Leerdam posted a time of 1:13.83 despite dragging her left hand on the ice to stay upright in a turn.
"I had a really big mistake," she said. "I was a little bit sad about that after I came across the finish. But at the end, I can be super happy with a silver."
Bowe grabbed the bronze in 1:14.61, only 0.1 ahead of Russian skater Angelina Golikova and a huge relief for the longtime star of the US program.
Bowe's only medal over three Olympics had been a bronze in the team pursuit at the Pyeongchang Games.
The 2018 Games were especially excruciating for the 33-year-old former inline champion from Ocala, Florida. Bowe had one fourth-place showing and two fifths in her three individual events, missing out on three potential medals by a total of 0.85 seconds.
This time, the clock worked in her favor.
Bowe's medal was the third at the Beijing Games for a much-improved American team - with all three ex-inline skaters from balmy Ocala contributing to the haul. Erin Jackson won the women's 500m, and Joey Mantia led a bronze-medal effort in the men's team pursuit.
"For all the Ocala kids to bring home some hardware is really special," Bowe said.
The US team won only one medal-total - at the last two Winter Olympics.
"So far, three medals," Bowe said. "I would count that as a huge win for us."
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