Norway’s Braaten beats strong field to win Olympic men’s ski slopestyle

Oystein Braaten’s boxer shorts have never been luckier.

The Norwegian, who always wears the same lucky underwear during ski finals, had a terrific day on the slopes, topping a strong field to take home an unexpected men’s ski slopestyle gold medal.

Braaten’s score of 95.00, racked up in his first final run, was enough to keep him ahead of the pack; the USA’s Nick Goepper and Canada’s Alex Beaulieu-Marchand won silver and bronze with best scores of 93.60 and 92.40 respectively.

The event was ultra-competitive from start to finish — eight of the 12 qualifiers for the final scored more than 90 points. The final results saw the top five finishers all score 90 points or more.

Braaten’s golden effort at Phoenix Park in Pyeongchang, South Korea, is the first Olympic medal of his career; the Norwegian athlete finished 10th at the Sochi Olympics four years ago.

His best-ever performance before today was a first-place finish at the 2017 Winter X Games in Aspen, Colorado. He placed second in the same event this year. Braateen is the second Norwegian to win a medal in freestyle skiing, after Audun Groenvold took bronze in the men’s ski cross in 2010.

Silver medalist Goepper, who won bronze in Sochi, becomes the first athlete to win multiple Olympic medals in this event.

Gus Kenworthy, a silver medalist at Sochi, had an event to forget. The 26-year-old American, who broke his thumb while training ahead of the Olympics, put on a horror show, notching up a best score of only 35.00 points to finish at the foot of the 12-man final table.

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