The World Para Alpine Skiing World Cup Finals took place in Kimberly, British Columbia in February 2018. The event was the last one used to decide who would represent the United States at the 2018 Games. The team to go was announced on 20 February 2018. In the men's downhill sitting race, Andrew Kurka of the United States won gold. He also won a silver in the men's Super-G sitting race.
The last date that countries could nominate people for their para-Nordic skiing teams at the 2018 Games was 23 February 2018. Kendall Gretsch won two gold medals in the first two days of competition. One was in biathlon's women's 6 km race. The other was in cross country skiing's women's 12 km sitting race. Daniel Cnossen won two medals in the first two days of competition. His first was a gold in the men's 7.5 km sitting biathlon race. His second was a silver in cross country skiing's men's 15 km sitting race.
The World Para Snowboard World Cup Finals in Big White, British Columbia took place in February 2018. The event was the final one used to decide who would represent the United States at the 2018 Games. On February 20, the names of the U.S. Paralympic Snowboarding Team were made public.
The USA finished in the first four at the 2017 Sledge Hockey World Championships. This was why they could compete at the 2018 Winter Paralympics. The United States, South Korea, the Czech Republic and Japan were in Group B for the sledge hockey competition.
Before the Games started, American wheelchair curlers had a few important dates in preparation for the Games. These included the U.S. Open in Utica, New York in December 2017, the Kisakallio Cup in Kisakallio, Finland in January 2018, and Sochi Open in January 2018. They started play on 10 March.
Team
The country has the largest team among all nations. It has 63 people.[1][2] New Zealand, Sweden and the United States were the first countries to name people to their teams. The people won their places by November 2017.[3]
The table below contains the list of members of people (called "Team USA") that will be participating in the 2018 Games.
The World Para Alpine Skiing World Cup Finals took place in Kimberly, British Columbia in February 2018. The event was the last one used to decide who would represent the United States at the 2018 Games.[12] 19 February 2018 was the deadline for American alpine skiers to get 2017-18 season race points in at least one race to be eligible to represent the United States at the Paralympic Games.[12] The team to go was announced on 20 February 2018.[12]
Schedule and training
Skiers had training runs for the downhill race on 7 March.[13] Their practice runs in the downhill on 8 and 9 March were cancelled.[14][15]
The first event on the para-alpine program was the downhill. It started on 10 March, running from 9:30 AM to 1:30 PM. The second event on the program is Super-G. All skiers will race between 9:30 AM and 1:00 PM on 11 March. The super combined takes place on 13 March. The Super-G part of the event is in the morning. The slalom part is in the afternoon. The slalom event gets underway on 14 March and conclude on 15 March. Women and men both race during the same sessions in the morning. The afternoon sessions start with the women doing their second run. Then the men go.The last para-alpine skiing race of the 2018 Games is the giant slalom. It takes place on 17 - 18 March. Men and women both race at the same time in the morning sessions. Women race first in the afternoon sessions, with the men racing a half hour after they end.[16]
Results
Anna Schaffelhuber of Germany won gold in the women's downhill sitting race. Momoka Muraoka of Japan won silver. Laurie Stephens of the United States won bronze.[17] In the men's downhill sitting race, Andrew Kurka of the United States won gold, Taiki Morri of Japan won silver and Corey Peters of New Zealand won bronze.[17] In the men's Super-G sitting race, Kurt Oatway of Canada won gold, Andrew Kurka of the United States won silver, and Frederic Francois of France won bronze.[18]
Men
Athlete
Event
Class
Run 1
Run 2
Total
Time
Rank
Time
Rank
Time
Rank
Andrew Kurka
Downhill, sitting
LW12-1
1:24.11
Stephen Lawler
LW12-1
1:32.82
18
Andrew Haraghey
Downhill, standing
LW1
1:32.84
18
Mark Bathum
Guide: Cade Yamamoto
Downhill, visually impaired
B3
DNF
Kevin Burton
Guide: Brandon Powel-Ashby
colspan=4
1:31.35
7
Jasmin Bambur
Super-G, sitting
LW11
DNF
Josh Elliot
LW12-2
DNF
Andrew Kurka
LW12-1
1:26.89
Stephen Lawler
LW12-1
1:38.33
22
Tyler Walker
LW12-1
1:29.10
12
Andrew Haraghey
Super-G, standing
LW1
1:34.19
24
Jamie Stanton
LW4
1:31.31
17
Thomas Walsh
LW4
1:30.38
13
Mark Bathum
Guide: Cade Yamamoto
Super-G, visually impaired
B3
1:35.97
11
Kevin Burton
Guide: Brandon Powel-Ashby
B2
1:32.42
9
Women
Athlete
Event
Class
Run 1
Run 2
Total
Time
Rank
Time
Rank
Time
Rank
Laurie Stephens
Downhill, sitting
LW12-1
1:35.80
Stephanie Jallen
Downhill, standing
LW9-1
1:40.64
8
Ally Kunkel
LW6/8-2
DNF
Melanie Schwartz
LW2
1:39.38
7
Danelle Umstead
Guide: Rob Umstead
Downhill, visually impaired
B2
DNF
Laurie Stephens
Super-G, sitting
LW12-1
1:36.98
5
Stephanie Jallen
Super-G, standing
LW9-1
1:44.30
10
Ally Kunkel
LW6/8-2
1:40.74
7
Melanie Schwartz
LW2
1:42.77
8
Staci Mannella
Guide: Sadie De Baun
Super-G, visually impaired
B3
1:44.25
10
Danelle Umstead
Guide: Rob Umstead
B2
1:38.91
6
Para-Nordic skiing
Qualification
In December 2017, the World Para Nordic Skiing World Cup took place in Canmore, Alberta.[19] The World Para Nordic Skiing World Cup in Oberried, Germany took place in January 2018.[19] The last date that countries could nominate people for their teams at the 2018 Games was 23 February 2018.[19]
Skiers
Blind skier Danelle Umstead is married to her guide skier, Rob Umstead. The two call themselves "Vision4Gold". Umstead is one of the few mothers competing in South Korea.[11]Oksana Masters was born in 1989 in Ukraine, near the Chernobyl site. Her disability was because of the radiation from the accident in 1986. When she was 7-years-old, she was adopted by a woman from the United States who said she should play sports. Masters tried very hard, and later went to the 2012 Summer Paralympics where she competed in adapted rowing. After the 2012 Games, she had pain in her back and changed to para-Nordic skiing.[10]
Cross country skiing events take place on 10, 11, 14, 17 and 18 of March. Biathlon events take place on 10, 13 and 16 of March.[20] On 12 March, the 15 km race takes place, with standing and vision impaired women starting at 10:00 PM. Thee sprint classic qualification takes place on 14 March from 10:00 AM – 11:25 AM for both men and women in all classes. It is followed in the afternoon by the semifinals and finals. The classic race takes place on 17 March. The standing and visually impaired women's race takes place from 10:00 AM - 12:30.[16]
Results
Biathlon
Dan Cnossen won the first gold medal for the United States in biathlon. He won gold in the men's 7.5 km sitting race.[21][22]
Men
Athlete
Event
Class
Factor
Real time
Misses
Time
Rank
Daniel Cnossen
7.5 km, sitting
LW12
100 %
23:49.7
1 (0+1)
23:49.7
Aaron Pike
LW11.5
96 %
27:20.9
3 (3+0)
26:15.3
12
Bryan Price
LW11.5
96 %
30:05.0
1 (1+0)
28:52.8
20
Andrew Soule
LW12
100 %
25:08.3
3 (3+0)
25:08.3
8
Jeremy Wagner
LW11.5
96 %
29:43.8
1 (1+0)
28:32.4
19
Ruslan Reiter
7.5 km, standing
LW8
96 %
23:52.9
4 (2+2)
22:55.6
16
Women
In the women's 6 km biathlon sitting race, Kendall Gretsch of the United States won gold, Oksana Masters won silver and Lidziya Hrafeyeva of Belarus won bronze.[22]
Athlete
Event
Class
Factor
Real time
Misses
Time
Rank
Kendall Gretsch
6 km, sitting
LW11.5
96 %
22:46.7
1 (0+1)
21:52.0
Oksana Masters
LW12
100 %
22:14.8
0 (0+0)
22:14.8
Joy Rondeau
LW11.5
96 %
28:59.0
0 (0+0)
27:49.4
14
Cross country skiing
Men
In cross country skiing's men's 15 km sitting race, Maksym Yarovyi of Ukraine won gold, Daniel Cnossen of the United States won silver, and Sin Eui Hyun won bronze.[23]
Athlete
Event
Class
Factor
Real time
Calculated time
Rank
Daniel Cnossen
15 km, sitting
LW12
100 %
42:20.7
42:20.7
Sean Halstead
LW11.5
96 %
50:39.6
48:38.0
22
Andrew Soule
LW12
100%
44:36.9
44:36.9
11
Jake Adicoff
Guide: Sawyer Kesselheim
20 km, visually impaired
B3
Women
In cross country skiing's women's 12 km sitting race, Kendall Gretsch of the United States won gold, Andrea Eskau of Germany won silver, and Oksana Masters of the United States won bronze.[23]
The World Para Snowboard World Cup Finals in Big White, British Columbia took place in February 2018. The event was the final one used to decide who would represent the United States at the 2018 Games.[24] To be eligible to represent the United States at the Paralympic Games, American snowboarders had to get season race points in at least one race in the 2017-18 season. The deadline to get the points was 19 February 2018.[24] On February 20, the names of the U.S. Paralympic Snowboarding Team were made public.[24]
Schedule and results
The snowboard cross event starts on 12 March, running from 10:30 AM to 5:00 PM for all classes for both men and women.[25] The slalom race is scheduled to take place on 16 March, going from 10:30 AM – 4:55 PM for men and women in all classes.[16]
Sledge hockey
Qualifying
The USA finished in the first four at the 2017 Sledge Hockey World Championships. This was why they could compete at the 2018 Winter Paralympics.[26][27] They went to South Korea after winning a gold medal in sledge hockey at the 2014 Winter Paralympics.[28]
Before the Games
The United States went to the 2018 Winter Paralympics looking to win their third consecutive Paralympic gold, having claimed gold at the 2010 and 2014 Winter Paralympics.[29] Canada was thought to be their biggest competitor. They had won three consecutive gold medals at the World Championships, with their most recent gold at the 2017 World Championships A-Pool.[29]
The United States national sledge hockey team played in several tournaments and friendly games to get ready for the Winter Paralympics.[30] The team played in the December 2017 World Sled Hockey Challenge in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.[30] They played in the Para Ice Hockey International Tournament in Turin, Italy in January 2018.[30] They also played in the 2018 Border Series in Buffalo, New York and Pt. Colborne, Ontario in February 2018.[30]
Roster
19-year-old Brody Roybal is from Chicago. He was part of the United States national sledge hockey team at the 2014 Winter Paralympics. He won a gold medal at those games. He started playing sledge hockey in 2006. He was born with a congenital, bilateral amputation.[31]
Chicagoan Kevin McKee also was part of the United States national sledge hockey team at the 2014 Winter Paralympics. Competing with the team, he won a gold medal in Sochi. in 2018, he was ranked third on the national team. This was based on his performance at the World Sled Hockey Challenge in December 2017. McKee has sacral agenesis. He was born with this disorder.[31]
Schedule and results
The United States, South Korea, the Czech Republic and Japan were in Group B for the sledge hockey competition.[27][32] They played against Japan on 10 March.[32][33] They play against the Czech Republic on 11 March.[32] They play against South Korea on 12 March.[32]
The national team first decided who might be part of the national team in September 2017 in Incheon, South Korea.[34] The second time when the national team said some people may not be able to go was at an event in Green Bay, Wisconsin in October 2017.[34] The final choice of who would be on Team USA for the 2018 Games was made at USA National Team event in Wausau, Wisconsin in early November 2017.[34]
Before the Games started, American wheelchair curlers had a few important dates in preparation for the Games. These included the U.S. Open in Utica, New York in December 2017, the Kisakallio Cup in Kisakallio, Finland in January 2018, and Sochi Open in January 2018.[34]
They started playing on 10 March. They played against Sweden on 11 March.[33]
↑ 16.016.116.2"Programm". Austrian Paralympic Committee (in German). 12 February 2018. Archived from the original on 9 February 2018. Retrieved 17 February 2018.