elgerber
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Feb 17, 2000
- Messages
- 24,620
Are those the players three brothers? I haven't seen that outfit yet, but since they always match and wear red white and blue, I would guess it's them.
Are those the players three brothers? I haven't seen that outfit yet, but since they always match and wear red white and blue, I would guess it's them.
His grandfather died on opening day. I’ll give him some grace.I watched the second run of the men’s slalom live. They had about 7 or 8 low seeded athletes from countries that never medal, never even come close to the top 10. It was refreshing to watch them.
Iceland
Haiti
Bosnia-Herzegovina
Israel
Chile
And a few others.
The first run had athletes that didn’t make the cut to the second round:
India
Singapore
Iran
Guinea-Bissau
Etc.
The final athlete, the favorite to win gold from Norway, messed up and had a hissy fit. He threw his ski poles, took off his skis, then climbed under the netting fence and stomped off to the margins.
He was probably considered hiking back to Norway.
Yeah, he said he didn't even know if he would ski at all. And then he barely missed a medal in the GS prior to the slalom. That's a lot. I'd probably head for the woods, too.His grandfather died on opening day. I’ll give him some grace.
I'm not sure. I saw them later on and one of them had his head off and it looked youngish ... college aged.Are those the players three brothers? I haven't seen that outfit yet, but since they always match and wear red white and blue, I would guess it's them.
No skating in curling lol

I was going to come back and confirm this LOL. Our local news station anchor that is over there, posted a photo with them later that day with those outfits and hoods.
Thanks for the heads up! It worked!If you can prove that you pay for the NBC channels through a TV service, you can also use the NBC Sports app to watch all replays and live events the same as Peacock.

Johnny Weir said the mistake on the double axle cost Amber 7 points, and she's back like 12 points off the lead. So sad. She said she had it -- her triple axle was amazing, but messed up an easier jump. I hope she has a better long program, but 12 points is a lot to make up. The Japanese were phenomenal. Congrats to American Alyssa Liu.A question for anyone who understands figure skating scoring:
Did she end up in eighth place just because she turned a triple/double into a double/single or something like that? I didn't see her fall. Were all the other short programs so clean that simply downgrading a jump could drop someone that low?
A question for anyone who understands figure skating scoring:
Did she end up in eighth place just because she turned a triple/double into a double/single or something like that? I didn't see her fall. Were all the other short programs so clean that simply downgrading a jump could drop someone that low?
It was not the mistake on the axel - that was perfect.Johnny Weir said the mistake on the double axle cost Amber 7 points, and she's back like 12 points off the lead. So sad. She said she had it -- her triple axle was amazing, but messed up an easier jump. I hope she has a better long program, but 12 points is a lot to make up. The Japanese were phenomenal. Congrats to American Alyssa Liu.
Agreed. That's why I said it was amazing.It was not the mistake on the axel - that was perfect.
Later in the program, she did a double only jump. That jump must be a triple to score. If it's not, she loses all points for the element and scores 0 for that element. When there are only 7 elements, that's huge.
TL/DR - it would have been better to just keep rotating and fall on an attempted triple, b/c she'd have gotten at least 2-3 overall points then, vs doing a clean double. The short program is the program you must do what the judging asks, or lose significant points. The same would happen if someone did a single axel vs a double/triple axel - 0 points - even though normally the element has a point value.