2010 Winter Olympics: Maria Riesch wins gold in slalom as Lindsey Vonn goes out

Published: Friday, Feb. 26 2010 4:36 p.m. MST

Lindsey Vonn of the United States reacts after skiing out during the first run of the Women's slalom, at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in Whistler, British Columbia, Friday.

Luca Bruno, Associated Press

WHISTLER, British Columbia — Maria Riesch of Germany won the slalom title for her second gold medal of the Winter Olympics on Friday, as Lindsey Vonn skied out chasing her second victory.

Riesch led after the first leg and had a combined two-run time of 1 minute, 42.89 seconds through the snow and fog on Friday.

Marlies Schild of Austria was 0.43 second back to take silver, adding to her bronze in the same event at the 2006 Turin Games.

Sarka Zahrobska of the Czech Republic trailed by 1.01 to get bronze.

Riesch stood at the start with 0.65 in hand on Schild, who was third-fastest in the first run, but knowing her Austrian rival had set a tough target.

"I heard the Austrian coaches celebrating behind me, so I knew I really needed to attack. Otherwise you get silver," Riesch said. "It worked perfectly."

Germany's Alpine women have enjoyed a stellar Olympics, winning three of the five women's races.

Riesch also took the super-combined and returned to the top step of the podium 24 hours after 20-year-old teammate Viktoria Rebensburg got gold in the giant slalom.

Downhill champion Vonn straddled a gate early in her first run and did not finish for the third time in five races.

Vonn was waiting to greet her best friend Riesch at the finish and told her: "Awesome, I'm so proud of you."

Riesch was fast in the top half of her second run but lost some speed in the flats in the middle.

She appeared tired as she approached a closing straight series of gates with the finish-area crowd roaring her on.

Riesch reached forward for the line and, seeing her victory confirmed, crouched forward with both fists clenched in delight. She punched the air then fell to the snow in delight.

Minutes before her run, Riesch's younger sister, Susanne, who was fourth in the morning, skied out when poised to take the lead. The 22-year-old Riesch straddled a gate and lay back flat in the snow in dismay. Siblings haven't medaled in the same Alpine event since American twins Phil and Steve Mahre went 1-2 in slalom at the 1984 Sarajevo Olympics.

"Fortunately, I didn't get (that news) at the start. That would have not been good for me, for sure," Maria Riesch said.

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