Winter Olympics: Team GB's Kirsty Muir and Katie Summerhayes into freeski slopestyle final
- Published
24th Winter Olympic Games |
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Hosts: Beijing, China Dates: 4-20 February |
Coverage: Watch live on BBC TV, BBC iPlayer, BBC Red Button and online; listen on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds; live text and highlights on BBC Sport website and mobile app |
Freestyle skiers Kirsty Muir and Katie Summerhayes will try to win Team GB's long-awaited first medal of the 2022 Winter Olympics on Tuesday after qualifying for the slopestyle final.
Muir, 17, finished in sixth place with a best score of 70.11 from her two runs, with 12 qualifying for the final.
Summerhayes moved into her third Olympic slopestyle final with a top score of 66.56 to qualify in 10th.
But fellow Briton Katie Ormerod failed to make the snowboard big air final.
Ormerod, who was 18th in the slopestyle last week, finished 25th after falling on two of her three runs.
"I don't usually fall in big air," she told BBC Sport. "I knew I could do these tricks. These are the ones I usually do for qualification. I got it on my second jump and then I decided to go for my cab 9 because I knew I needed that to go into the finals. Unfortunately I just didn't quite make the landing.
"Although it really sucks, I struggled with this jump all week. I just couldn't clear it very well. It's been tough."
'Hoping to clean everything up'
Slopestyle qualification had been rescheduled to Monday after heavy snowfall and poor visibility at the Genting Snow Park in Zhangjiakou on Sunday.
In temperatures of -25C, Estonia's Kelly Sildaru progressed top of qualification after scoring 86.15 on her second run, while China's 'snow princess' Eileen Gu - who won the big air title last week - was third.
But 2018 Olympic champion Sarah Hoefflin of Switzerland failed to reach the final, while American Marin Hamill looked to sustain a serious injury after crashing on the last jump.
Muir, who is Team GB's youngest competitor at these Games and finished fifth in the freeski big air, told BBC Sport: "I feel like I definitely had a few mistakes in the first run, and not as good on my second, but I'm hoping to clean everything up."
Summerhayes, 26, said: "I'm pretty happy. I just squeaked through, it's pretty nice no matter what place you qualify, just so long as tomorrow goes well.
"I'm pretty stoked to get another chance."
Top 10 finish for Fear and Gibson
Elsewhere, Team GB figure skaters Lilah Fear and Lewis Gibson finished 10th in the ice dance.
Skating to the Lion King soundtrack, they scored 115.19 for their free dance to add to their 76.45 for their rhythm dance, giving them a total of 191.64.
France's pre-Games favourites and four-time world champions Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron took the gold medal in the ice dance with a total of 226.98.
The Russian Olympic Committee's Victoria Sinitsina and Nikita Katsalapov won silver, while bronze went to Americans Madison Hubbell and Zachary Donohue.
"I feel such confidence leaving this experience; we completed two really good performances at the Olympics," said Fear. "It can be daunting but knowing we can do it just fills us with optimism.
"Knowing we've done it well is the biggest thing, we didn't shy away from the experience."
Meanwhile, Britain's two-man bobsleigh team of Brad Hall and Nick Gleeson appear out of contention for a medal at the halfway point.
After two of four runs, Hall and Gleeson are in 11th place with a total time of one minute 59.74 seconds.
That leaves them 1.36 seconds behind German leaders Francesco Friedrich and Thorsten Margis - and 0.42 seconds off Russians Rostislav Gaitiukevich and Aleksei Laptev, currently in bronze position.
"Unfortunately we're not higher up but we don't deserve to be at the moment," said pilot Hall. "We will look back and see where we went wrong and make the corrections for tomorrow."
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