Ted Ligety wins gold in giant slalom


February 19, 2014, 6:53 AM E-mail the writer

United States' Ted Ligety passes a gate in the first run of the men's giant slalom at the Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics, Wednesday, Feb. 19, 2014, in Krasnaya Polyana, Russia. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)Ted Ligety passes a gate in the first run of the men’s giant slalom Wednesday. (Luca Bruno/Associated Press)


KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia — For years, Ted Ligety has so owned giant slalom racing on the World Cup circuit that he had ended the argument about whether he was one of the best of all-time. Now, after a performance here in which no other racer could hope to touch him, he has Olympic gold to top it off.


Ligety took a huge lead in his first run Wednesday and did enough in his second run to hang on to win the giant slalom, rounding out his resume in the discipline — with more turns and technical elements than downhill but more speed than slalom. His combined time was 2 minutes, 45:29 seconds, .48 seconds better than France’s Steve Missillier. Alexis Pinturault, also of France, won bronze. Ligety is the first American male with two Alpine Olympic golds.


Ligety, a 29-year-old from Park City, Utah, held an advantage of 0.93 of a second after the morning first run – which doesn’t sound like much, until you consider that span of time covered the third through 17th finishers. It put him in perfect position for the afternoon, when he could ski hard but not at risk of making a significant error.


Ligety’s first gold medal came in surprising fashion when he won a combined (downhill and slalom) at the 2006 Turin Games. He then went on to establish himself as the best giant slalom racer in the world, winning last year’s World Championship in the discipline as well as four season-long titles on the World Cup circuit.


The only thing that remained: an Olympic medal. Ligety finished a disappointing ninth in giant slalom in Vancouver, so there was pressure to perform here.


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Photos from Day 11 | Daily TV schedule | U.S. medal winners





Wednesday, February 19 EST







































































































3 a.m.Men's hockey (Swe-Slo)NBC Sports
5 a.m.Women's curling (GBR-Can)USA
5:30 a.m.SnowboardingNBC Sports
Cross-country skiing
7:30 a.m.Men's hockey (Fin-Rus)NBC Sports
9 a.m.Women's curling (Swe-Sui)MSNBC
10 a.m.Figure skatingNBC Sports
11:30 a.m.Figure skatingNBC Sports
NoonMen's hockey (U.S.-Cze)USA
NoonMen's hockey (Can-Lat)MSNBC
2:30 p.m.Men's curling (Swe-GBR)MSNBC
3 p.m.SpeedskatingNBC
Cross-country skiing
3 p.m.Encore hockeyNBC Sports
5 p.m.Hockey game of the dayNBC Sports
5 p.m.Men's curling (Can-China)CNBC
8 p.m.Alpine skiingNBC
Women's bobsled
Figure skating
Snowboarding

See full TV schedule