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Kaillie Humphries Takes Gold in Monobob's Olympic Debut

Most bobsledders approached their few precious training runs on China’s snow dragon as if they were college students cramming for a midterm, trying to learn as much as possible in a short time frame before the big test.

Kaillie Humphries of the United States was the only athlete among the field of 20 who skipped the final monobob training heats on Saturday at the National Sliding Center. She had the track — its nuances and tendencies — memorized.

On Monday, she proved that her instincts were correct. Humphries won gold in the inaugural monobob event, in which one female athlete pushes and pilots her sled down the icy track.

Humphries zigzagged for a four-run total time of 4 minutes, 19.27 seconds. Elana Meyers Taylor, who was chosen as a flag-bearer for the opening ceremony, but tested positive for the coronavirus, left quarantine in time to win silver for the United States. Christine de Bruin, of Canada, got the bronze.

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Bobsled:

Women’s

Monobob
 ›

Time

Gold

Kaillie Humphries

USA flag
United States
4:19.27

Silver

Elana Meyers Taylor

USA flag
United States
4:20.81

Bronze

Christine de Bruin

CAN flag
Canada
4:21.03

Humphries’s win paused Germany’s run of golds in sliding sports at the Beijing Games. The country collected golds in all six of the previous sliding competitions.

Humphries now has three bobsled gold medals following her triumphs in the two-woman event at the 2010 Vancouver and 2014 Sochi Games. No other woman has won more than one gold since the International Olympic Committee introduced women’s bobsled at the 2002 Olympics. Humphries, 36, also tied the benchmark established by the snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis earlier in Beijing as the oldest American woman to medal at the Winter Olympics.

This is Humphries’s first Olympics representing the United States following an acrimonious split from Bobsleigh Canada, a program she had lifted to new heights and represented at three previous Olympics.

Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

After winning a bronze medal in 2018, Humphries filed a formal complaint of mental and verbal abuse against Todd Hays, a coach for Bobsleigh Canada. She asked to be released from the program, initiating a protracted standoff.

Other countries recruited Humphries with the offer of immediate citizenship to compete in Beijing under their flag. Humphries instead waited out the lengthy process it took to become a U.S. citizen with no assurances that she would be granted a passport with enough time to compete at the Games.

“I’m becoming an American,” Humphries said before the Olympics. “Reminding myself of that made it much bigger and much more grand. At the end of the day, the Olympics is a race. It’s what I work for, but it’s not a part of who I am, and becoming an American is very much a part of who I am.”

She became one in December, allowing just enough of a window to qualify for the Winter Games.

“This has been a very hard fought battle to get here, and it definitely feels different,” she said.

Humphries and Meyers Taylor, friends and rivals, have traded wins and places among the World Cup circuit for more than a decade. Meyers Taylor has collected two silvers and a bronze in past Olympics.

“We have shared the podium since 2010 together,” Humphries said. “And we have this battle royale where I push her and she pushes me to be better. And it always worked.”

The I.O.C. announced monobob’s Olympic inclusion in 2018, but only for women. Men are still the only competitors in the four-man bobsled event.

“What I would love to see in our sport is that men get the opportunity to do monobob and that women get the opportunity to do four-man and our sport grows and actually becomes very equal,” Humphries he said.

Humphries and Meyers Taylor will have another opportunity to add to their medal totals. The two-woman bobsled event starts on Friday.

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