Chemmy Alcott battles to 19th as rivals make history together on a golden day

 
Robin Scott-Elliot12 February 2014

For the first time in Olympic history two skiers climbed together onto the top of a podium after the women’s downhill ended in a dramatic tie today.

Slovenia’s Tina Maze and Dominique Gisin of Switzerland held hands as they stepped up to receive the accolade of a noisy crowd at the foot of the Rosa Khutor slopes each having stopped the clock at 1min 41.57sec.

Gisin shed tears of relief after realising she was still in the gold medal position in the wake of Maze crossing the line and ‘one’ flashing up on the scoreboard with the Slovenian’s name on the top.

Chemmy Alcott, who finished a creditable 19th, described it as an “epic” race down the “toughest” course. The two gold medal winners ski in contrasting style but there was no separating them.

Silver medals have been shared three times in the 90 years of the Winter Olympics but, until today, never gold. Gisin was the eighth racer to go and set a dynamic pace. She had the advantage of an early start as the warm weather — this morning was T-shirt time in the mountains — saw the last 100m become increasingly soft.

Joint winners Switzerland's Dominique Gisin (2nd L) and Slovenia's Tina Maze hold hands as they jump onto the podium next to third-placed Switzerland's Lara Gut (back R) at the flower ceremony after the women's alpine skiing downhill race at the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics
REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach

Maze, who won two silvers in Vancouver, went off 21st. Before her she had seen the two favourites, Julia Mancuso of the United States and Germany’s Maria Hoefl-Reisch fail to trouble Gisin’s time, or even the medal positions. The 30-year-old made a flying start and was ahead through the first four splits. By the fourth she was 0.38sec quicker but slowed over the lower half.

She punched the air and threw her goggles in the air. In the medal enclosure Gisin’s coach rubbed snow on her face to cool her down. After some confusion it was confirmed the gold would be shared and then came more tears.

Alcott came close to tears of her own after ending a troubled year on a high. The Briton broke her leg for a third time seven months ago but recovered to make her fourth Games. This was her third top-20 finish.

“After what I’ve been through, it’s amazing justice. I’m swelling with pride and I’m on a buzz,” she said. “I know it sounds crazy to some people but 19th is a gold for me.”

Meanwhile, Lizzy Yarnold was again fastest in her fifth and final official training run at the Sanki Sliding Center today as she completed her preparations for her bid for British Winter Olympic history.

She finished 0.44sec clear of second-fastest Anja Huber of Germany, before electing not to take part in the sixth and final heat.

Yarnold finished fastest in four of the five official heats in which she was involved, strengthening her status as Britain’s best bet for a Winter Games gold in more than a quarter of a century. Yarnold and team-mate Shelley Rudman will do the first two of their four race runs tomorrow, with the competition set to finish on Friday.

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