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Ted Ligety Ties For 15th In Giant Slalom, Austria's Marcel Hirscher Wins Gold

Ted Ligety finished 15th in the men's giant slalom on Sunday. He told reporters this Olympics will likely be his last.
Dimitar Dilkoff
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AFP/Getty Images
Ted Ligety finished 15th in the men's giant slalom on Sunday. He told reporters this Olympics will likely be his last.

Ted Ligety, one of America's most decorated Alpine skiers, tied for 15th place in the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics men's giant slalom. The favored Marcel Hirscher of Austria won gold, while Henrik Kristoffersen of Norway took silver and Alexis Pinturault of France took bronze.

Ligety, a 33-year-old from Park City, Utah, won gold in the 2014 Winter Olympics's giant slalom, and gold in the super combined event in the 2006 games. The athlete skis with what The New York Times has called a self-invented style, positioning himself so low on each turn that he's almost "sitting on the snow."

Among more than 100 competitors in the field, Ligety was older than all but three, according to The Washington Post. He's been ranked ranked eighth in the world in giant slalom.

"Ski racing is probably the least guaranteed sport out there, you know. It's really rare — actually, oftentimes — when the favorites win," Ligety told NPR in 2014.

This year, the favored skier did win. Hirscher crossed the line at 1:08.27 in his first run, putting him in first place before the race's second run.

Ligety's first run wasn't so hot — the American put an unusual distance between his skis and the course's markers, and finished his first run in 1:10.71. American Ryan Cochran-Siegle, 25, crossed at 1:10:75.

Hirscher held onto first place and won the event's gold medal with a second run time of 1:09.77 and a total time of 2:18.04 — beating silver medalist Kristoffersen by over a full second.

Ligety's second run improved at 1:10.71. He tied with Gino Caviezel of Switzerland for 15th place, with both skiers accruing a total time of 2:21.25.

Cochran-Siegle crossed his second run at 1:09.99, placing 11th overall with a total time of 2:20.74.

Giant slalom is an Alpine skiing event where athletes ski downhill between sets of poles. NPR's Tamara Keith has quipped that the event's goal "is to be out of control enough to go extremely fast, and in control just enough not to crash."

PYEONGCHANG - Marcel Hirscher of Austria in action during the Alpine Skiing Men's Giant Slalom. (Alain Grosclaude/Agence Zoom/Getty Images)
Alain Grosclaude/Agence Zoom / Getty Images
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Getty Images
PYEONGCHANG - Marcel Hirscher of Austria in action during the Alpine Skiing Men's Giant Slalom. (Alain Grosclaude/Agence Zoom/Getty Images)

"I was really surprised when I saw the time. It didn't feel like I crushed it, but it didn't feel 2 and a half seconds bad," Ligety told The Associated Press.

"I just thought it would run a little bit more challenging than the way it did. ... I just kind of like over-skied it and maybe thought the rolls were going to come into play a little bit more, and they were easy. No excuse," he said, according to Bleacher Report.

Ligety told reporters after the race that Pyeongchang would likely be his last Olympic games.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Emily Sullivan is a city hall reporter at WYPR, where she covers all things Baltimore politics. She joined WYPR after reporting for NPR’s national airwaves. There, she was a reporter for NPR’s news desk, business desk and presidential conflicts of interest team. Sullivan won a national Edward R. Murrow Award for an investigation into a Trump golf course's finances alongside members of the Embedded team. She has also won awards from the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association for her use of sound and feature stories. She has provided news analysis on 1A, The Takeaway, Here & Now and All Things Considered.