Cross-country Skiing: In case you're wondering, no, the skiers from Brazil, Kenya and Ethiopia did
not finish last in the
men's 15-kilometre classical, though they were in the back of the pack. No, the last-place finisher was 48-year-old
Prawat Nagvajara, the lone athlete from Thailand at these Games. He finished 97th; his time was 1:07:15.9, more than 29 minutes behind the gold medallist. (More on Professor Nagvajara in a moment.) Only two skiers were more than 20 minutes back; another eleven skiers were more than 10 minutes back; there were two
DNFs. It looks like this event may be one of the more open ones at the Winter Games (see the
qualifying rules); many of the athletes who are the sole representatives of their countries were in this race.
Snowboarding: The finals for the
women's snowboard cross have not yet been run, but I'm already able to assign a last-place finish in this event based on the
qualification runs. 25-year-old French boarder
Julie Pomagalski was disqualified on her second run and had to make do with her first-run time of 1:36.32, which was 8.47 seconds behind the leader and left her in 23rd place; the top 16 advanced.
Standings to date: Thailand is now the first country to have as many last-place finishes as athletes; France enters the top ten.
Later today: men's skeleton; women's alpine combined.
Labels: cross-country skiing, france, snowboarding, thailand, torino 2006
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