Mancuso wins surprise bronze in super combined

  • By Chris Dufresne Los Angeles Times
  • Monday, February 10, 2014 4:32pm
  • SportsSports

SOCHI, Russia — Julia Mancuso knows that trying to catch Lindsey Vonn in World Cup victories is futile, like a baseball pitcher saying he wants to catch Cy Young.

Mancuso and Vonn both are 29 and with Vonn leading by the World Cup score of 59-7, that ballgame is over.

Mancuso has been left to carve out a different legacy, but it’s the one America, and NBC, will probably remember longer.

Mancuso’s ski racing legacy will be the Olympics.

She made that clear Monday at Rosa Khutor when she out-of-nowhere earned a bronze medal in the women’s first event — the super combined.

It enabled Mancuso to double up on Vonn, four to two, in Olympic hardware, with her best races yet to come.

She has been tripping over herself all year on the World Cup circuit, but apparently all you have to do to shake a slump is point Mancuso to an Olympic start gate.

Earning bronze in the super combined required Mancuso to complete a downhill and slalom in the same day.

The downhill was no problem, as Mancuso won the morning run by nearly half a second.

Completing the slalom, though, for her is like getting a drunk to walk a straight line.

Mancuso had not finished a World Cup slalom race since 2012 and had not completed one in a combined in nearly a year.

But this was the Olympics, so of course she did it Monday.

She built up enough of a cushion in downhill that she was able to medal with only the 13th-fastest slalom time.

After the downhill, Slovenian superstar Tina Maze joked with Mancuso in the mixed zone.

“Get ready for some slalom,” Maze said.

Mancuso’s response: “Game on.”

Maze finished fourth in the super-combined.

Mancuso did not have enough juice to overcome Germany’s five-tool star, Maria Hoefl-Riesch, who defended her Olympic combined gold with a total time of 2 minutes 34.62 seconds.

Hoefl-Riesch trailed Mancuso by 1.04 seconds after the downhill but easily made up the time in the gates. The reason was simple: Hoefl-Riesch is also the defending Olympic slalom champion.

Mancuso also could not overcome the slalom skills of Austria’s Nicole Hosp, who won silver with a total time of 2:35.02, ahead of Mancuso’s 2:35.15

Mancuso was able to bronco-ride a very tricky and slippery slalom slope, though, to further distance her from all other American women in Olympic Alpine lore.

She is the first American Alpine skier to win medals in three different Olympics and is only one medal from tying teammate Bode Miller for the all-time American lead.

Something happens to Mancuso when the Olympic lights go on.

“She really sucks up the energy going into the Games,” U.S. women’s coach Alex Hoedlmoser said. “It fills her up with energy.”

Bill Marolt, outgoing chief executive of the United States Ski Association, stood in stunned amazement in the finish corral.

“She’s a game changer,” he said of Mancuso. “She’s a gamer.”

It would be disingenuous not to note that Mancuso has benefited from Vonn’s Olympic travails.

In 2006, Vonn crashed in training just before the start of the Turin Games and had to be airlifted to a hospital. She climbed out of bed to race but was too battered to seriously contend.

Vonn returned to win gold and bronze in Vancouver, but is missing the Sochi Games while recovering from her second major knee surgery in a year.

Vonn’s misfortunes have helped Mancuso earn an Olympic medal of every color, with an extra silver on the side.

Mancuso said she admires Vonn’s sustained World Cup excellence and her “breaking records left and right.”

Mancuso added: “To have something I can break records in at the same time is also fun and exciting for me. In our own ways we have such strengths, and it’s cool to be a part of.”

Mancuso’s medal train might keep on rolling. Her win in the downhill half of the combined makes her an immediate favorite in Wednesday’s women’s downhill. Mancuso will also have opportunities in super-G and giant slalom, in which she won gold at Turin.

It’s amazing how, every four years, the karma turns in Mancuso’s favor.

“The Olympics is my redemption,” she said.

The warm weather in Sochi turned the Rosa Khutor course into the kind of spring-condition tracks Mancuso grew up on in Squaw Valley.

Mancuso wore a gold scarf on Monday’s medal run and don’t be surprised if she gets a medal matching that color.

“See it works!” she said of calling on her positive Olympic vibes. “Believing in yourself really works. I got a medal today.”

It wasn’t her first — and may not be her last.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Sports

Defenseman Landon DuPont, who the Everett Silvertips selected first overall in Thursday’s WHL prospects draft, is considered a generational talent. (Photo courtesy of the WHL)
Patterson: Tips fans, get ready for the Landon DuPont show

Everett is getting a generational talent who will make nights at Angel of the Winds Arena must-see viewing.

Arlington’s Peyton Aanstad pitches to Marysville Getchell’s Parker Johnson in the Class 3A District 1 softball tournament Friday at Phil Johnson Fields in Everett. The Chargers won the loser-out game 7-2 (Evan Wiederspohn / The Herald)
Emme Witter powers Marysville Getchell past Arlington

The Chargers are one of four teams that stayed alive at the Class 3A District 1 softball tournament.

X
Prep roundup for Friday, May 10

Prep roundup for Friday, May 10: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To report results… Continue reading

Glacier Peak’s Atticus Quist leaps in the air to catch a bouncing baseball after a missed catch in the outfield during the 4A district game against Bothell at Funko Field on Thursday, May 9, 2024 in Everett, Washington. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Bothell’s big inning dooms Glacier Peak baseball

The Grizzlies were felled by a nine-run fifth, but they still have one last shot to make state.

Forward Mirco Dufour was selected by the Everett Silvertips 19th overall in the first round of Thursday’s WHL prospects draft. (Photo courtesy of the WHL)
Capsules: Everett Silvertips draft picks at a glance

The Tips selected 10 players in the WHL prospects draft and two in the U.S. prioirity draft.

Even after ‘ultimate flush-it game,’ M’s offense issues linger

The Mariners’ offensive woes beg the question as to whether lineup changes are needed.

X
Prep roundup for Thursday, May 9

Prep roundup for Thursday, May 9: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To report results… Continue reading

Lake Stevens junior Teagan Lawson arches his body over the high jump bar on the first day of the Wesco 4A League Championship on Wednesday at Snohomish High School. Lawson claimed the league title after clearing a 6-foot, 6-inch bar. (Taras McCurdie / The Herald)
Lake Stevens’ Lawson leaps above star-studded field

In a field of state championship contenders, Lawson claims the Wesco 4A title in the boys high jump.

Stanwood’s Rubi Lopez (3) secures an out on second during a prep softball game between Stanwood and Jackson at Henry M. Jackson High School on Tuesday, April 2, 2024 in Mill Creek, Washington. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
District softball tournaments begin Friday

Snohomish in 3A, Jackson in 4A are among the teams looking for another deep postseason run.

Jay Franco has been named the head coach of the Everett Community College women’s basketball team. (Photo courtesy of Everett Community College)
Jay Franco hired as new EvCC women’s basketball coach

Franco, who served as an assistant the past three seasons, takes over for Jeannie Thompson.

Julio Rodríguez (44) of the Seattle Mariners reacts during the T-Mobile Home Run Derby at T-Mobile Park on July 10, 2023, in Seattle, Washington. (Steph Chambers/Getty Images/TNS)
Mariners hitters must deal with the marine layer menace

The atmospheric conditions at T-Mobile Park make life difficult for those holding the bat.

X
Prep roundup for Wednesday, May 8

Prep roundup for Wednesday, May 8: (Note for coaches/scorekeepers: To report results… Continue reading

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.