Close call for Mia Brookes in big air as Team GB endure Tragic Monday

A picture


As Team GB’s Mia Brookes stood at the top of a 150ft‑high ramp before her final jump of the big air competition, she had the pounding heavy metal of Pantera blasting her ears, and the smell of an Olympic medal in her nostrils.To grab it, though, the snow­boarding sensation knew she would have to land a trick she had never attempted before on snow – and one so dangerous that she feared it would put her in hospital.Brookes didn’t flinch.She bombed down the ramp – part Evel Knievel, part Simone Biles – flew off it, and then twisted her body through four and a half rotations.The trick? A backside 1620 – one that had been completed only once in history.

It looked perfect,Until she overspun slightly and landed on her heels,And with that her dreams of an Olympic medal had faded into fourth place,Later the 19-year-old revealed that she had no plans to attempt the trick – until she stood in fourth place before her last jump,“It’s not like it’s a trick that I could do,” she said.

“I’ve only ever done it on the airbag and the last time I tried it was five months ago.So that was the first time I’ve ever tried it on snow.But sometimes you’ve just got to grit your teeth and get it done.“I thought I’d got it and I did get it.I got it to my feet but I just gave it too much power, listening to my music too loud, I spun it too quickly.

But yeah, I’m pumped,“I was ­listening to a lot of Pantera,I tried it and I’m not lying in a hospital bed after this, to be honest,All jokes aside, it’s a gnarly trick to do,There is a higher risk, ­especially when you know I would be the second woman to do it.

So, yeah it’s pretty scary,”Most agreed that had Brookes landed it she would have secured at least a bronze medal, and possibly silver,Instead she could only applaud as Japan’s Kokomo Murase took gold, New Zealand’s Zoi Sadowski-Synnott won silver, with the Korean Yu ­Seung-eun claiming bronze,So close,Yet so far.

And alas, it was that sort of day for Team GB.Before the start of play there were hopes within the British ­contingent that they could witness Magic Monday, with potential medals for Brookes, Kirsty Muir in the freeski ­slopestyle, and the mixed curling team, who were ­favourites in their semi-final against ­Sweden.But this was a day where Magic Monday turned into Tragic Monday.First Muir missed out on a medal by 0.41 of a point, after ­thinking she might have done enough.

No wonder she was in tears after finishing fourth,Soon afterwards it was the turn of Team GB mixed curlers to disappoint,Having won eight of their nine group games, Bruce Mouat and Jen Dodds were strong favourites for their semi-final against Sweden,But having gone into an early 1-0 lead, everything started to go wrong,In the second end, a poor clearance from Mouat allowed the Swedes to go 2-1 up.

They lost the hammer to go 3-1 down,But having clawed it back to 3-3, the British pair made three mistakes in a row during a Swedish powerplay and dropped five shots,Soon afterwards it was over as Team GB lost 9-3 in a puzzlingly meek performance,“That was my worst game of the week and it put us behind from the get-go,” Dodds said,“Obviously not the result we were after.

They played great.They capitalised on all of our mistakes.They’ve been on a roll the last ­couple of games with the round robin as well.”There was more disappointment as Team GB’s ice dancers, Lewis Gibson and Lilah Fear, were left in fourth place after scoring 85.47 in the rhythm dance.

They lie behind the French pair of Laurence Fournier Beaudry and Guillaume Cizeron (90.18), the USA’s Madison Chock and Evan Bates (89.72) and Canada’s Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier (86.18) and face a battle to win a medal.Still, all of them will have chances of redemption.

On Tuesday, Mouat and Dodds will play the defending ­champions Italy, who lost 9-8 to the US in the other semi-final, in the bronze medal match.Fear and Gibson have the free programme on ­Wednesday.And Muir and Brookes compete in their best events next week.Brookes, for one, is still buzzing after coming so close to making Olympic history.“And the girl that won, Koko, she’s the only girl that has that trick right now,” she said.

“So if I’d have landed it I would have been the second woman to do it.It’s really special.For women snowboarding if I’d have landed that it would have been insane.” Brookes also reminded us that these freeskiers and snowboarders are built differently.For while they would love an Olympic medal, ­pushing the boundaries of what is possible is just as important.

“I think everyone will be just as stoked about me trying a 16 than me getting a medal,” she said,And when asked if she would go all out again next week, Brookes’ response was unflinching,“Oh yeah, 100% definitely,”
sportSee all
A picture

Flying rumour, or ground for concern? The lengths ski jumpers go to for Olympic glory

Yes, it’s time to talk about the ski jumpers’ penises. Although to be honest the ski jumpers themselves would prefer it if everyone could keep the conversation to their testicles. Figuratively. “This sport,” the former Olympic champion Sven Hannawald once said, “has a lot to do with balls.”This turns out to be more true than you might imagine, even for a sport that involves flying 100m down a mountain

A picture

Twickenham crackdown with 24 fines for ‘public urination’ after England v Wales

Unruly spectators at Twickenham felt the force of a crackdown on antisocial behaviour at the match between England and Wales last Saturday, with Richmond council issuing 24 fixed-penalty notices for public urination, the Guardian can reveal.The Rugby Football Union is trying to persuade local residents to ditch their opposition to proposals to increase the number of concerts held every year from three to 15. Much of the opposition centres around antisocial behaviour experienced during England matches and, as revealed by the Guardian, the RFU hosted a drop-in event for residents in an effort to convince them that their concerns were being taken seriously.Last Saturday, it is understood that 24 FPNs were handed out to those committing urinating offences which took place in a number of places including front gardens, alleyways, main roads, and bushes. That is despite attempts to tackle the problem by installing barriers in hotspots and deploying plain-clothed officers and stewards to ward off potential offenders

A picture

Jutta Leerdam’s ruthless brilliance leaves speed skating in awe and Jake Paul in tears

The Dutch star, who combines commercial visibility alongside elite results, won gold on Monday in front of a packed arena that included her influencer boyfriendJutta Leerdam delivered the defining race of her career on Monday night, roaring to Olympic gold in the women’s 1000m and setting a new Olympic record of 1min 12.31sec to lead a Dutch one-two and deliver the Netherlands’ first medals of the Games.The 27-year-old finished 0.28sec ahead of compatriot Femke Kok, who had briefly held the Olympic record after clocking 1:12.59 earlier in the final group

A picture

Pakistan agree to play India at T20 Cricket World Cup after scrapping boycott

Pakistan are poised to fulfil their T20 World Cup fixture against India on Sunday, having previously been instructed by their government to boycott the game in a move that could have cost the sport millions.The crisis was triggered by Bangladesh withdrawing from the tournament last month – their place handed to Scotland – when a request to play their matches outside India on security grounds was rejected by the International Cricket Council.In an act of solidarity the Pakistan government, led by the prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif, then stated Pakistan would forfeit the game against India in Colombo – a potentially damaging move given the fixture’s centrality to the ICC’s £2.2bn ($3bn) broadcast deal.But after talks between the ICC, the Pakistan Cricket Board and the Bangladesh Cricket Board in Lahore in the past few days – plus representations from the co-hosts, Sri Lanka – the impasse has been broken

A picture

Trying times for Welsh rugby | Letters

Re your editorial (The Guardian view on Welsh rugby: enduring an existential crisis with cultural roots, 4 February), what’s surprising is that it’s taken this long. In the amateur era, Wales, with a much smaller population than that of England, had more wins than losses against most of the home nations. Welsh clubs were among the very best in the world and Cardiff, Swansea, Newport and Llanelli all beat the All Blacks.The game and its culture had great resonance in southern Wales, where relatively slightly built men, fleet of foot and with flair (many from south-west Wales and Welsh speakers) ran with the ball won by forwards often hardened by work in heavy industry. Schoolmasters were dedicated to encouraging talent and participation in team games

A picture

Winter Olympic officials to investigate why medals keep breaking

They are among the most prized possessions in sport, yet embarrassingly for Olympic officials the medals in Milano Cortina keep breaking.On Monday organisers promised to launch an investigation into why it was happening after Winter Olympic medallists, including the American downhill skiing champion Breezy Johnson, reported chipped, cracked and damaged medals.Johnson’s medal broke shortly after the podium ceremony on Satur­day when she was celebrating. “I was jumping up and down in excitement, then it just fell off,” she told ­reporters, before showing her cracked and chipped medal in one hand as the separated ribbon hung around her neck.The Sweden cross‑country skier Ebba Andersson reported that her medal “fell in the snow and broke in two”, before adding: “Now I hope the organisers have a ‘plan B’ for ­broken medals