'Blown away' - Swede Myhrer wins shock Olympic slalom gold

Sweden's Andre Myhrer competes in the Men's Slalom at the Yongpyong Alpine Centre during the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympic Games in Pyeongchang on February 22, 2018. PHOTO | DIMITAR DILKOFF |

What you need to know:

  • Ramon Zenhaeusern of Switzerland won silver, 0.34sec behind, and Michael Matt of Austria the bronze after his countryman Marcel Hirscher and then Henrik Kristoffersen of Norway imploded.
  • Myhrer, at 35 years and 42 days, becomes the oldest man to win a slalom Olympic medal, breaking the record set by Austria's Mario Matt — Michael's brother — in 2014.

PYEONGCHANG

Swedish veteran Andre Myhrer captured a shock slalom men's gold at the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics on Thursday as the two favourites both spectacularly bombed out.

Ramon Zenhaeusern of Switzerland won silver, 0.34sec behind, and Michael Matt of Austria the bronze after his countryman Marcel Hirscher and then Henrik Kristoffersen of Norway imploded.

Myhrer, at 35 years and 42 days, becomes the oldest man to win a slalom Olympic medal, breaking the record set by Austria's Mario Matt — Michael's brother — in 2014.

He also follows his "idol" Ingemar Stenmark, who won the slalom and giant slalom in 1980, as only the second Swedish man to claim a Games alpine skiing crown.

"It means everything. I've been training my whole life for a moment like this," said the unheralded Swede.

"I took a medal in Vancouver (2010), a bronze, but I've been always dreaming about the gold medal and now it's a reality and I'm totally blown away."

Myhrer was flattered to be talked about in the same breath as Stenmark.

"He's like an institution in Sweden and one of the greatest athletes in Swedish history," he said.

"To be named alongside him is a great honour for me. He was my idol since I was growing up, to be named alongside him is simply amazing."

Myhrer is the second 35-year-old man to take Alpine gold in South Korea after Aksel Lund Svindal of Norway won the downhill.

HIRSCHER CRASHES OUT

Myhrer feared his chance had gone as he came to the end of his second run.

"I haven't seen the split times but that was my feeling coming into the last part and I just tried to force everything I had," he said, after clocking a winning combined time of 1:38.99.

"Luckily it was enough to go home with the gold."

Kristoffersen, who went fastest in the morning, just ahead of Myhrer, looked to have one hand on the title.

But nerves appeared to get the better of the Norwegian, skiing last, and his dreams of a first Olympic gold evaporated when he failed to finish his second run.

Just as surprisingly, Hirscher crashed out in the morning leg, ruining his hopes of a golden hat-trick in South Korea.

Hirscher, 28, failed to find his rhythm on a course set by his own coach, Michael Pircher, and eventually missed a gate, failing to even make the second run.

Hirscher — who had already won the alpine combined and giant slalom at these Games, his first individual Olympic titles — revealed he had never been comfortable in the lead-up to the slalom, even in training.

"The feeling was really bad the whole week on slalom skis and this is the final result," he admitted.

"I had absolutely no confidence on this kind of snow. I skied really badly. This is what also can happen and is part of the game, part of the sport.

"You have success and sometimes you have not the best days."

Hirscher had been aiming to become only the fourth skier in history to win a third gold medal at a single Olympics, joining Austria's Toni Sailer (1956), Frenchman Jean-Claude Killy and Croatia's Janica Kostelic (2002).