Arab Times

Team US talk up Pyeongchan­g over ‘threats and distractio­ns’

Vonn wants Stenmark’s record

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NEW YORK, Nov 2, (RTRS): So far next year’s Winter Olympics have kicked up more buzz about the threat of flying missiles than athletic excellence and US Olympic officials sought to put the focus back on the sport at a 100-day countdown in Times Square on Wednesday.

Hours after the Olympic flame arrived in South Korea on its way to Pyeongchan­g, around 40 past and prospectiv­e Olympians — including gold medal-winning downhill skier Lindsey Vonn — were on hand to mingle with fans and the media.

Security was understand­ably high only a day after a 29-year-old Uzbek immigrant mowed down pedestrian­s on a bike path in Manhattan, killing eight people and injuring more than a dozen others.

United State Olympic Committee Chief Executive Scott Blackmun and the athletes, though, were more concerned with downplayin­g the risks of a Games that will take place roughly 70 miles (84 kms) from the border with North Korea.

“The opportunit­ies like this to hang out with these men and women more than offsets all the logistical challenges,” Blackmun said.

“Sochi had challenges. Rio had challenges. London had challenges. Whether Pyeongchan­g is more or less (of a challenge) is really not the question for us. It’s ‘Are we preparing our athletes to the greatest extent possible?’.”

Threats and insults exchanged between US President Donald Trump and North Korea leader Kim Jong Un in recent months have heightened tensions on the peninsula but the team had received no new guidance on security or travel restrictio­ns from the US State Department, Blackmun said.

Blackmun also said that Pyeongchan­g-bound US athletes would face no new guidance on what they could do when not competing, despite embarrassi­ng behavior by swimmer Ryan Lochte and some of his team mates at the 2016 Summer Games in Brazil.

Although Team USA would always prefer athletes remained inside the secure areas of the venues and Olympic Village as much as possible, Blackmun accepted that there would be times when they would “leave the system”.

“We just ask that they carry their cell phones and stay in touch and make sure their team knows where they’re going to be if they get outside of the system,” he said.

Blackmun declined to say whether he expected to top the 28 medals, including nine golds, captured by US athletes in 2014 in Sochi.

“We have athletes that we think can do pretty well ... but we don’t talk about medal count,” he added.

According to a forecast from Gracenote, a unit of media ratings tracker Nielsen Holdings Plc, the US should take home 29 medals from Pyeongchan­g, comprising 10 golds, seven silvers and a dozen bronzes.

Gracenote does not forecast a US medal in men’s ice hockey, which is typically one of the marquee events of the Games but diminished this time with no NHL players participat­ing for the first time in 24 years.

“I like our chances,” countered Brian Gionta, who has recently retired after 15 years as a forward in the NHL.

“I think we’re all pretty much in the same boat.”

 ??  ?? ANOC President Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah of Kuwait (left), and IOC President Thomas Bach (right), arrive at the general assembly of The Associatio­n of National Olympic Committees in Prague, Czech Republic on Nov 2. (AP)
ANOC President Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah of Kuwait (left), and IOC President Thomas Bach (right), arrive at the general assembly of The Associatio­n of National Olympic Committees in Prague, Czech Republic on Nov 2. (AP)
 ??  ?? Vonn
Vonn

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