Tag Archives: Olympics

Alex Morgan Leads USWNT Over Canada and Into Paris Olympics

The symmetry would not have been lost on any of them: the United States and Canada, two of the world’s best women’s soccer teams, meeting on a sweltering night and chasing a prize only one of them could win.

A tight match. A late penalty kick. A jubilant celebration.

A year ago at the Tokyo Olympics, it was the Canadians who rejoiced, converting a second-half penalty and winning the match on their way to the gold medal.

On Monday night in Monterrey, Mexico, it was the Americans who were dancing at the final whistle. It was they who had won the penalty kick and then the game, 1-0, to guarantee themselves a berth in the 2024 Paris Olympics. It was they who now had a chance to snatch that gold medal back.

Victory came via familiar hands: Lindsey Horan controlling the midfield. Rose Lavelle slipping in behind the defense and winning a penalty. Alex Morgan stepping up to bury it.

The victory was the second major goal achieved by the Americans in Mexico, in a tournament that served as a qualifier for both the 2023 World Cup and the 2024 Olympics. The United States had sealed its place in the former by merely advancing to the semifinals. But it still had a goal to go, and a point to prove, against Canada in the Concacaf W Championship final.

Morgan had started that Olympic semifinal last summer in Kashima, Japan, but had watched the end of it from the bench after being substituted. During the Games, she had been among the most vocal of the veteran players on that roster who had suggested — in no uncertain terms — that Coach Vlatko Andonovski was getting things wrong.

In the year since that defeat, Morgan, 33, had been among the veterans who had been asked to make way for younger attacking talents like Mallory Pugh, Sophia Smith and Trinity Rodman, to give Andonovski room to tinker and retool ahead of next year’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. But she also knew her chance would eventually come again, and on Monday, after two weeks of matches featuring young players and new lineups, Morgan got her chance to make things right, to prove she still has a role to play.

“I’m not surprised but very happy how she has handled the whole situation in how she came back,” Andonovski told reporters after the final. “I said it early on: Alex is a better player. That’s what makes her special. She doesn’t want to stop growing, doesn’t want to stop developing.”

Her opportunity to break the scoreless tie came in the 76th minute. Handed the ball by Horan after Lavelle was tripped in the penalty area, Morgan took a few deep breaths, strode confidently forward and buried a low, hard shot into the lower-right corner as Canada goalkeeper Kailen Sheridan dived the other way.

A few minutes after the final whistle, Morgan was honored as the tournament’s outstanding player.

“It just always feels good,” she said, “to be called a champion.”

Grateful to be back — her longtime frontline teammate Megan Rapinoe did not get off the bench in the final — Morgan appeared to agree with Andonovski’s choices this time. But she also was quick to note that breaking in new players, especially on the tradition-rich U.S. team, sometimes requires having older ones around to show them the way.

“Some of the younger players are able to look up to the older players in a big tournament like this,” Morgan said. “You just can’t replicate that with friendlies. It has to be the real deal. And this is the real deal.”

Andonovski, too, praised players like Morgan, Rapinoe and defender Becky Sauerbrunn for creating a “superb” environment conducive to success. “We came out for the last game of the tournament, after being in a hotel for a month, with the best energy we’ve ever had,” he said. “That’s a testament, first and foremost, to the senior players.”

How far ahead are the United States and Canada of their regional rivals? Neither team lost a game in Monterrey on its way to the final. Neither surrendered a goal. Each scored a dozen goals in its first four games.

Both teams were so dominant, in fact, that once Costa Rica and Jamaica had locked up the other two semifinal places — clinching the region’s two other automatic places in the World Cup — they appeared to stand down ahead of the final, resting some of their top players in the semifinals and focusing instead on winning the third-place game. Victory there seemed a safer bet, after all, and it came with a consolation prize: a shot at the U.S.-Canada loser in a two-legged Olympic playoff that offered a last-chance bid for a place in Paris in 2024.

Defeat in the final was hardly a catastrophe for Canada: Its team is still widely expected to qualify for the Paris Games by beating Jamaica, which beat Costa Rica earlier Monday in the third-place game, in the playoff next year.

Canada learned a few things about itself along the way, too. Sheridan, who kept her team in the game with several outstanding saves in the first half, was named the tournament’s top goalkeeper and now seems entrenched in that role. Julia Grosso won the golden boot as the championship’s top scorer, and she and her fellow 21-year-old Jordyn Huitema came off the bench Monday to provide the kind of game-changing spark that may force Canada into the same sort of young-vs.-old reckoning that the United States is now embracing.

“I think there’s another level,” Canada Coach Bev Priestman had said after her team’s semifinal win, “and I do think that playing a team like the U.S. will bring out some of our strengths that maybe teams haven’t allowed us to do.”

Now she and her players — just like the U.S. team — know a bit more about the mix they will need to get where they really want to go.



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USWNT qualifies for 2024 Olympics, and quashes some concern, with a vengeance

Alex Morgan scored the only goal of the CONCACAF W Championship between the U.S. and Canada. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)

The U.S. women’s national team retained its regional title and qualified for the 2024 Olympics on a Monday night that began with unease.

The Tokyo Olympics had spawned it. The past two weeks in Monterrey, Mexico, at the CONCACAF W Championship, had aggravated it. The USWNT, by its own coach’s admission, remained a work in progress. “If you ask me if we’re ready to go into a competitive World Cup tomorrow,” Vlatko Andonovski said last week, “we’re probably not ready for it.”

But in Monday’s final, the U.S. women offered reminders of unmistakable truths.

They are still the most talented team in North and Central America, and perhaps in the world.

They have, somehow, passed title-winning DNA down from generation to generation, including this one.

They are an unfinished product, but still a fearsome one.

They beat Canada 1-0 on an Alex Morgan penalty, and the scoreline undersold their dominance. Mallory Pugh could have scored as well; Sophia Smith should have. Throughout 90 tense minutes, shots sailed just wide of posts, and balls stopped mere feet short of goal lines. The near-misses spanned the entire first half, and got increasingly agonizing after halftime.

The breakthrough finally arrived after 77 minutes. Rose Lavelle, galloping into the penalty box, was clipped from behind. Morgan converted from the spot with confidence.

But it had been coming all night, ever since Pugh slapped a half-volley toward goal from a sharp angle in the very first minute. It had been coming since Sofia Huerta began fizzing in crosses from the right, and Lindsey Horan began bossing the midfield.

It didn’t quite come when the U.S. concocted a near-perfect counterattack, or when Smith rounded Canada’s valiant goalkeeper, Kailen Sheridan. But throughout the night, the USWNT’s quality rose to the surface. They created more than three Expected Goals worth of chances to Canada’s 0.5.

Whereas preliminary rounds and Thursday’s semifinal brought results but not convincing performances, Monday delivered both and more: a vindicated, celebratory postgame huddle; some revenge for Tokyo 2020 heartbreak; and a trophy lift beneath confetti.

For all the talk of the world catching up, of tactical shortcomings and incomplete evolutions, of incoherence, the U.S. remains the queen of North and Central America. It has not lost a game or even conceded a goal at a continental competition since 2010. Its youth teams hold the U-17 and U-20 regional titles, and have for a while.

There is still work to do, plenty of work to do, between now and next summer’s World Cup. An evolutionary process that typically starts post-Olympics began a year too late. The next generation, a supremely skilled one, has not been battle-tested or fully integrated with the old guard. Injuries, including a devastating one to rising star Catarina Macario, have complicated everything.

But Monday was a battle, and a test enthusiastically passed. It was World Cup champs against Olympic champs, and it offered emphatic evidence of superiority.

“I was very happy with the gradual improvements [throughout the tournament],” Andonovski said postgame.

He improved as a coach as well. Whereas in-game adjustments in the group stage were slow, on Monday, he turned an early injury stoppage into a quasi-timeout, and made a telling tactical tweak. Canadian winger Nichelle Prince had been been twisting and turning Huerta inside and out down the U.S. right. Andonovski, gesturing frantically during the stoppage, called on Smith and the right-sided central midfielder to double down on Prince, who stayed quiet for an hour thereafter.

This title, though, was largely about individual quality. It was about Morgan, after an eight-month USWNT hiatus, turning in a golden-ball performance. It was about Smith and Pugh dazzling, and Andi Sullivan and Emily Fox stepping in for pregnant veterans. “They’re gonna be here for at least three, maybe four World Cups,” Andonovski said of the youngsters, and then he smiled. “So, get used to them.”

The title, the USWNT’s ninth in CONCACAF, also qualified the Americans for Paris 2024, but Andonovski forgot about that until almost an hour after the final whistle. His and the players’ focus has been, and is, on the 2023 World Cup, which begins a year from Wednesday. This qualifying tournament was part of the slow, at times painful build toward 2023. And the USWNT’s progress, in the end, was satisfactory.

“As a coaching staff, we’re celebrating a lot of things, because we think this is just the beginning of what we are going to see in the next 9-12 months,” Andonovski said.

Immediately after admitting last week that his team wouldn’t be ready for a World Cup “tomorrow,” he continued: “But are we going to be ready in a year? Absolutely.”



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U.S. men’s soccer qualifies for Olympics for 1st time since 2008

U.S. men’s soccer is back in the World Cup, and now it’s back in the Olympics.

The United States men punched their ticket to the 2024 Olympics in Paris on Friday with a 3-0 win over Honduras in the semifinals of the CONCACAF Under-20 championship. It is the first time the team has qualified for an Olympics since 2008, when they failed to make it out of group play in Beijing.

The American men got on the board early with a goal by Paxten Aaronson, a midfielder for the Philadelphia Union, in the third minute. They soon piled on two more goals from Alejandro Alvarado and Quinn Sullivan in the first half and never looked back.

The U.S. will play the Dominican Republic in the Under-20 final on Sunday in San Pedro Sula in Honduras.

Qualifying for the Olympics isn’t as big a deal as the World Cup, but it certainly helps reinforce the idea that the U.S. men are finally trending in the right direction.

In past qualifying cycles for the 16-team Olympic field, the U.S. has lost out on spots in mortifying fashion, including an eliminating goal through a goalkeeper’s hands with about a minute left in 2012 and David Ochoa’s infamous howler last year.

There was no such drama this year, and now the team is headed to Paris. Olympic men’s soccer is a different animal than most international competitions, as rosters are limited to players under 23 with each country getting three players over the age maximum.

The United States men are back in the Olympics. (Photo by ORLANDO SIERRA/AFP via Getty Images)

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Six members of the Haitian Special Olympics soccer contingent are missing, Florida authorities say

The sheriff’s office sent out a bulletin looking for Antione Mithon, Nicholson Fontilus, Peter Berlus, Anderson Petit-Frere, Steevenson Jacquet and Oriol Jean. The missing individuals are all men between the ages of 18 and 32 who were in the US for “a soccer competition,” the bulletin said.

The group was participating in the 2022 Special Olympics USA Games in Orlando, which began Sunday and run through June 12.

“The individuals are all adults, five of whom are not Special Olympics athletes and one who is an adult with intellectual disability,” the Special Olympics said in a statement to CNN. “The well-being of these delegates is our foremost concern. Local authorities have indicated they have no reason to believe the health and safety of any of the individuals is at risk. To expand the reach and effectiveness of law enforcement’s efforts to locate these individuals, they have been reported as missing persons.”

The six went missing in Kissimmee — just south of Orlando — and were last seen Monday afternoon around 2:30 p.m., the bulletin said.

They all turned in their room keys and left behind their personal bags and belongings, the release said. The reason they left the games is unknown, the statement noted. Foul play is not suspected, according to the sheriff’s office.

“We are in communication with Walt Disney World, Special Olympics and our Law Enforcement and Federal partners,” the sheriff’s office release said.

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China asked Russia to delay Ukraine war until after Olympics

China urged Russia to delay the invasion of Ukraine until the conclusion of the Winter Olympics in Beijing, it was revealed on Wednesday.

Senior Chinese officials made the request in early February after Washington informed Beijing of the Russian troop build-up in the hopes communist leaders would pressure their ally to stand down, a source confirmed to Reuters.

Russia waged war with Ukraine four days after the Olympics ended, and Russian President Vladimir Putin escalated his military advance and rhetoric in the hours after the closing ceremony ended.

The New York Times first reported the collusion Wednesday, citing White House officials and a Western intelligence report. It was reportedly unclear if the discussions reached Chinese President Xi Jinping and Putin.

A China expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies said it wasn’t clear if the authoritarian leaders were in cahoots.

The Chinese contingent is seen during the athletes parade at the opening ceremony at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing.
PHIL NOBLE

“Given the evidence we have so far, I think we can’t rule out either possibility definitely – that Xi didn’t know (which is bad) and that Xi may have known (which is also bad),” Bonny Lin said.

China said the Times report was untrue and amounted to a “smear” campaign, in a statement.

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends the opening ceremony of the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Sue Ogrocki

As the games began, Putin and Xi met in Beijing and issued a joint statement pushing back on the US and any NATO expansion.

China said Tuesday it would help negotiate a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine.

The Olympics have been a backdrop to Russian military aggression during Putin’s reign.

In 2008, China had bristled at Russia’s invasion of Georgia during the Summer Olympics in Beijing.

Six years later Russia seized Crimea while it hosted the winter games in Sochi.

With Post wires

Rescuers examines the building of the TV tower after bombing in Kyiv, Ukraine. Russian forces have escalated their attacks on crowded cities in what Ukraine’s leader called a blatant campaign of terror.
Sergi Mykhalchuk/SIPA/Shuttersto

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Finnish skier suffers frozen penis during event at Beijing Olympics

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A Finnish skier competing in a men’s cross-country skiing race at the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing suffered damage to his equipment on Saturday, but just not what you might expect, according to a report. 

Remi Lindholm, 24, of Finland, spent over an hour traversing the shortened men’s 50km mass start free race in brutal temperatures and howling winds, causing his penis to become frozen, Reuters reported. 

“You can guess which body part was a little bit frozen when I finished … it was one of the worst competitions I’ve been in,” Lindholm told Finnish media. “It was just about battling through.”

US FIGURE SKATER VINCENT ZHOU EXPRESSES FRUSTRATION AFTER BEING UNABLE TO ATTEND CLOSING CEREMONY

Remi Lindholm of Team Finland competes during the Men’s Cross-Country Skiing 50km Mass Start Free on Day 15 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics at The National Cross-Country Skiing Centre on February 19, 2022, in Zhangjiakou, China. The event distance has been shortened to 30k due to weather conditions. (Photo by Lars Baron/Getty Images)

The 50km race was first delayed by an hour and then shortened to 30km to protect the competitors, who wore thin suits that offered little protection from the wind and cold weather. 

Organizers had been worried about frostbite, according to the news organization. 

After the race, Lindholm said he needed a heat pack to thaw out his downstairs appendage.

“When the body parts started to warm up after the finish, the pain was unbearable,” he added.

WINTER OLYMPICS 2022: FINLAND BEATS RUSSIANS FOR ITS 1ST HOCKEY GOLD MEDAL

Despite the injury, Lindholm still managed to place 28 in the 60-skier event. 

He finished with a time of just under an hour and 16 minutes — about four minutes slower than Alexander Bolshunov of the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC), who won gold in the event.

Lindholm noted it was the second time his penis became frozen during a cross-country skiing race. 

Remi Lindholm of Finland in action competes during the men´s 15km classic cross-country skiing during the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics at The National Cross-Country Skiing Centre on February 11, 2022, in Zhangjiakou, China. (Photo by Tom Weller/VOIGT/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)

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A similar incident happened in Ruka, Finland, last year, he said, according to Reuters. 

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Every U.S. medalist at the 2022 Beijing Olympics

Here’s a look back at the Team USA athletes who reached the podium in Beijing.

Nick Baumgartner and Lindsey Jacobellis

Ashley Caldwell, Christopher Lillis and Justin Schoenefeld

Freestyle skiing, men’s slopestyle

Snowboarding, women’s snowboard cross

Snowboarding, women’s halfpipe

Alpine skiing, men’s super-G

Freestyle skiing, men’s slopestyle

Freestyle skiing, women’s moguls

Snowboarding, women’s slopestyle

Bobsled, women’s monobob

Freestyle skiing, men’s big air

Figure skating, team event

The silver medal is the United States’ best result in the team event since it debuted in 2014, improving on third-place finishes in the two previous Games.

Freestyle skiing, men’s halfpipe

Speedskating, women’s 1000M

Cross-country skiing, women’s individual sprint

Freestyle skiing, men’s halfpipe

Madison Hubbell and Zach Donohue

Figure skating, ice dance

Joey Mantia, Casey Dawson, Emery Lehman and Ethan Cepuran

Speedskating, men’s team pursuit

Elana Meyers Taylor and Sylvia Hoffman

Bobsled, two-woman bobsled

Freestyle skiing, women’s aerials

Pictograms by Álvaro Valiño for The Washington Post.

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The highs and lows of the 2022 Winter Olympics

And Norway did what Norway does best, topping the medal table after 109 events on snow and ice.

CNN looks at some of the most memorable moments from Beijing 2022.

Valieva, the 15-year-old Russian figure skating phenom expected to score gold in the women’s free skate final, faltered while in the midst of a drugs test scandal.

In December, the teen tested positive for trimetazidine, a heart medication used to treat angina and which can increase blood flow to the heart, experts say.

The results didn’t come to light until Valieva was already in Beijing and had won gold in the figure skating team event as she became the first woman to land a quad — a jump that involves four spins in the air.

Despite Valieva’s positive test, she was allowed to compete in the individual figure skating event on the grounds that she was a minor.

During her final program this week, though, she fell several times on the ice and placed fourth behind fellow Russian Olympic Committee teammates Anna Shcherbakova and Alexandra Trusova, who came in first and second respectively. She finished her routine in tears.

Now, eyes are trained on Valieva’s coach, a team doctor and the competitive figure skating community in Russia for their roles in what happened to Valieva.

Nathan Chen wins gold in a redemptive performance

A composed yet jubilant Nathan Chen gave the performance of his career in the men’s single skating competition — and claimed what was rightfully his after a shocking loss at the 2018 Winter Olympics.

Skating to a medley of songs including Elton John’s “Rocket Man,” Chen confidently executed a whopping five quad jumps and ended a nearly five-minute performance with a triumphant smile.

“I definitely wanted to be able to get past that,” Chen told CNN of his 2018 performance, in which he fell and failed to medal.

“I wanted to be able to have two short programs that I felt very proud of and fulfilled by, and I’m really glad that I was able to have that experience here.”

Gu dominates her first Olympics

The 18-year-old freeski superstar won three medals at her first Winter Olympics, including two golds. And in her last program, after a near-perfect performance on the women’s halfpipe, she even took a well-deserved victory lap.
Born in the US but competing for China, a decision that has been under its fair share of scrutiny, Gu had one of the splashiest Olympics debuts this year. And she made some history while she was at it — she’s the first freestyle skier to earn three medals at a single Games.

“It has been two straight weeks of the most intense highs and lows I’ve ever experienced in my life,” she told reporters after her win. “It has changed my life forever.”

Norway keeps winning and breaks a record

Norway won 16 gold medals in Beijing, the most any country has won in a single Winter Games. The country’s competitors have earned gold in cross-country skiing, speed skating and biathlon, among others.
CNN’s Henry Enten says Norway has two big benefits powering its Olympics success: Ideal weather for winter sports and money — the country is a wealthy country, with its GDP in the top 35 worldwide. Winter sports require a lot of gear, training and funds.

Mikaela Shiffrin ends the Games without an individual medal

Mikaela Shiffrin endured multiple hardships at this year’s Games. The American skier hadd earned gold medals in 2018 and 2014, and fans expected a threepeat from the star in Beijing.

However, things didn’t quite work out that way for the 26-year-old Shiffrin who had three DNFs — “did-not-finish” — after crashing out in three individual events.

She’s been inundated with criticism from viewers and shared screenshots of some of the negative comments she’s received. She said in a video shared Friday that, as much as the comments hurt, she hopes that fans who’ve been in a similar situation can learn to tune out their “haters.”

“That message was meant for you guys, to get up and to keep going,” she said in a video shared to Twitter. “Get out of bed the next day even though you’re getting these messages that make you feel awful.”

In her final event at Beijing 2022 the 26-year-old Shiffrin — along with River Radamus, Tommy Ford and Paula Moltzan — finished fourth in the mixed team parallel event at the National Alpine Skiing Centre.

“I have had a lot of disappointing moments at these Games, today is not one of them,” said Shiffrin. “Today is my favorite memory.

“This was the best possible way that I could imagine ending the Games, skiing with such strong teammates.”

Chloe Kim goes for the gold (again)

The unstoppable 21-year-old snowboarder struck gold yet again with a winning performance on the women’s halfpipe — the same category that earned her a gold medal in 2018, when she was just 17.

That Kim once again dominated was a surprise to no one except maybe Kim herself. She told reporters she’d had “the worst practice ever” before her gold-medal performance, failing to stick most of her landings.

That rough practice didn’t show on the snow — she attempted a trick that involved three-and-a-half spins in the air and earned a score of 94, propelling her to the gold once again.

Zhu Yi faces an online firestorm for her performance

The California-born 19-year-old, competing for Team China, was bombarded with negative comments online after falling on the ice during the women’s figure skating short program earlier this month.

Zhu, who gave up her American citizenship to compete on China’s team in 2018 and changed her name from Beverly Zhu, has been criticized by Chinese viewers for her lack of fluency in Chinese in addition to her disappointing performance at the Games.

Still, Zhu is finding the positives in her 2022 trip to the Games. In an Instagram post shared earlier this week, Zhu said she “persevered through years of adversity, and came out a stronger person.”

Erin Jackson wins a gold she almost didn’t compete for

The American speed skater almost didn’t make it to the Olympics — she slipped during qualifying trials — until a teammate gave up her spot so Jackson could compete.

That swap proved to be well worth it — Jackson, 29, became the first Black woman to medal in Olympic speed skating, according to Team USA, and the first American woman to win a gold medal in speed skating since 1994.

She clinched the victory by skating just 0.08 seconds ahead of Japan’s silver medalist.

“I cried immediately, it was just a big release of emotion,” she told reporters. “A lot of shock, a lot of relief and a lot of happiness.”

Meyers Taylor’s history moment

Meyers Taylor became the most decorated Black athlete in Winter Olympics history after she won a bronze medal in the two-woman bobsleigh on Saturday.

The medal is the fifth for Meyers Taylor — passing Shani Davis’ four — as the 37-year-old became the most decorated woman Olympic bobsledder of all-time.

“It’s so crazy to hear that stat and to know that I’m part of a legacy that’s bigger than me,” said Meyers Taylor. “Hopefully it just encourages more and more black athletes to come out to winter sports and not just black athletes, winter sports for everybody.”

Sunday’s Closing Ceremony is likely have been emotional occasion for Meyers Taylor — she was Team USA’s flagbear — who has hinted this would likely be her last Olympics.

“I’m going to take some time to really think about this. It’s going to be really hard to top this Olympics. Two medals and now closing it out with flagbearer, it’s going to be really, really hard to top that.”



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Winter Olympics day 16: GB win women’s curling gold; men’s ice hockey – live! | Sport










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Winter Olympics 2022 Live Updates: Latest Medal Count and News from Beijing

Credit…Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

Eileen Gu made history this week when she became the first freestyle skier to win three medals at a single Olympics, capping a stunning performance in Beijing with a gold in the women’s halfpipe on Thursday.

Gu, an 18-year-old Californian who is competing for China, won her first gold of the Games in the inaugural women’s freestyle skiing big air competition, introduced as part of the International Olympic Committee’s efforts to achieve gender parity at the Games. She also won a silver medal in the slopestyle event this week.

The Beijing Games, which wrap up on Sunday, have been described by the I.O.C. as the most “gender-balanced” Winter Games in history, with women accounting for a record 45 percent of the athletes. That’s up from 41 percent at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games — and 4.3 percent at the 1924 Games in Chamonix, France.

The women’s big air event is one of seven competitions that were added to the Olympic program in Beijing. The addition of the mixed team format — in which men and women compete together — to events in short-track speedskating, ski jumping, aerials and snowboard cross is another part of the I.O.C.’s effort to promote gender equality. The inaugural monobob competition was contested solely by women.

Nicole M. LaVoi, the director of the Tucker Center for Research on Girls and Women in Sport at the University of Minnesota, said that in some ways, efforts to achieve gender parity were headed in the right direction.

“Being able to showcase their talent alongside their male peers is a good move,” LaVoi said of female Olympians.

But the number of women competing in the Games is not the only metric by which equality can be measured, and women are still “competing in a system where they do not feel safe, valued or supported,” she said.

The founder of the modern Olympics, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, barred women from competing in the inaugural 1896 Games. In 1900, 22 women were welcomed in five events — croquet among them — while 975 men competed in everything from track and field to rowing.

The number of women participating in the Olympics has gradually crept up since then, but it was not until 2014 that the I.O.C.’s planning agenda included a recommendation that the committee work “to achieve 50 percent female participation in the Olympic Games.”

While the gap is closing, there are still areas where women have little or no access by comparison with men.

Nordic combined, a sport fusing cross-country skiing and ski jumping that has been on the Olympic docket since 1924, is the only winter sport in which women do not participate. (Women are expected to be able to compete soon, perhaps by 2026.)

Even if a sport is available to both men and women, there are often far fewer competition spots allocated to women than to men. This week, the bobsledder and skeleton athlete Simidele Adeagbo, who in 2018 became the first Black woman to compete in skeleton at the Olympics, sent a letter to the governing body for her sports claiming that gender discrimination had blocked her from competing in this year’s Games. In the letter, which was reported earlier by Reuters, lawyers for Adeagbo said she had been excluded from the monobob event in Beijing because of “an insidious and willful gender disparity in the number of sled spots made available for men and women.”

Men hold the advantage in terms of slots: There are 28 sled spots reserved for men in the four-man bobsled event and 30 spots reserved for the two-man competition. Women are allotted 20 spots in the monobob and 20 in the two-woman bobsled.

There are disparities in other sports at the Winter Olympics. Cross-country skiing, Alpine skiing, biathlon and long-track speedskating all have men’s events that cover greater distances than the women’s events do. If men are competing in events that are seen as “bigger” than women’s, that overshadows women’s events, which may be “seen as secondary or less than,” LaVoi said.

Ski jumping, which added a women’s division in 2014, also comes up short. Though a mixed team event was added to the Olympic agenda in Beijing, giving women another opportunity to win medals, men still have more chances to make the podium. Anna Hoffman of the United States, who made her Olympic debut in Beijing, posted a video on TikTok highlighting the fact that the ski jumping event featuring the large hill, which stands at about 450 feet, excludes women at the Olympics, even though women can now compete on the large hills at other international events, including the World Championships.

Hoffman said that the competition on the large hill in the women’s game was exceptional, yet despite the achievements of recent years, “we are still being told to be patient and wait” when it comes to Olympic programming.

“We shouldn’t have to be fighting for this,” she said, adding later that the issue wasn’t to ensure equal outcomes for men and women in various sports.

“It is about opportunity, and that is what we are asking for,” Hoffman said.

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