Skeleton-Austria's Flock erases Pyeongchang pain with brilliant gold
CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy, Feb 14 : Austria's Janine Flock finally erased her Pyeongchang pain on Saturday when, at the age of 36, she won the Olympic women’s skeleton singles with a performance of masterful consistency and iron nerve.
Flock, who led going into the final run eight years ago but slipped to fourth to miss a medal by two hundredths of a second, made no mistake this time to win a first women's skeleton medal for her country.
Germany's Olympic debutant Susanne Kreher took silver, three tenths adrift but ahead of compatriot Jacqueline Pfeifer, who added bronze to her silver from 2018.
Another German, Hannah Neise, who won gold in Beijing as a 21-year-old, finished fourth.
Flock is the country’s second skeleton medallist after Martin Rettl took a men’s silver in 2002. She is also the oldest winner of the women's event that joined the Games in the same year.
"I stayed with myself the whole time. I felt incredibly comfortable from the very beginning and never doubted that I could win here," said Flock, who either side of Pyeongchang 2018 finished ninth and 10th in Sochi and Beijing respectively.
"It’s an unbelievable feeling to cross the finish line, to hear the cheering, to see the red‑white‑red flags and to be able to embrace all the team members and my family.
“I couldn’t tell what my time was (on the final run). I just knew I put down four really consistent runs and hoped that it was enough."
FLOCK ENJOYS DREAM START
Flock had a dream start to the night as she went out first on the third run and posted the same time as on her second on Friday – 57.26 seconds – marginally behind the track record set on her first run and a level of consistency nobody could match.
She then sat back and watched the three Germans who had


