Olympics-Bobsleigh-Friedrich caps off German sliding gold rush with four-man crown

FAN Editor
Bobsleigh - 4-man Heat 1
2022 Beijing Olympics – Bobsleigh – 4-man Heat 1 – National Sliding Centre, Beijing, China – February 19, 2022. Francesco Friedrich of Germany, Thorsten Margis of Germany, Candy Bauer of Germany and Alexander Schueller of Germany in action. REUTERS/Thomas Peter

February 20, 2022

By David Kirton

YANQING, China (Reuters) -Francesco Friedrich’s crew capped off an extraordinary showing of German sliding prowess this Winter Olympics by thundering to gold in the four-man event on Sunday, further elevating his position in the pantheon of the sport’s all-time greats.

Germany has always been strong in bobsleigh. But it has taken its domination to another level at the Yanqing National Sliding Centre, clinching nine out of ten sliding golds and 17 of the 30 medals the sports had to offer.

The Dresden police officer they call the ‘Ice Kaiser’ gave an imperious performance in the last run of the Games, a black and yellow blur flashing down “Flying Snow Dragon” track under an azure sky.

His team finished with a combined time of 3:54.30 after four runs.

That was 0.37 seconds faster than the crew of his compatriots piloted by Johannes Lochner, who settled for silver behind Friedrich again, just as on the podium for the two-man event on Tuesday night.

Germany was tantalisingly close to a historic second medal sweep in the bobsleigh, but for Canadian Justin Kripps and his team, 0.79 seconds off Friedrich’s pace.

After three strong runs their fourth was relatively weak, with their advantage over Christoph Hafer’s crew dwindling with each corner they turned down the serpentine track.

In the end, the Canadians were just 0.06 seconds faster, enough to deny another German wipeout.

Friedrich joked before the Olympics that he was struggling to find space at home for his bobsleigh treasure trove – the squeeze will be worse after again winning the two- and four-man events as he did in Pyeongchang four years ago.

It was a great morning for Britain, with Brad Hall’s team delivering the country’s best four-man performance since 1998 with their sixth place finish.

(Reporting by David Kirton; Editing by Jacqueline Wong and Himani Sarkar)

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