BEIJING (AP) ā When Dave Ryding gets to the start gate of the menās slalom at the Beijing Olympics on Wednesday, expectations on a British skier will be high for the first time in decades.
Ryding became the in the 55-year history of the Alpine skiing World Cup ā and on one of the circuitās most challenging slalom courses ā when he triumphed in KitzbĆ¼hel, Austria, last month.
Now the 35-year-old Ryding, nicknamed āThe Rocket,ā is trying to end his countryās lengthy wait for a first Olympic medal in Alpine skiing.
āThe expectation is naturally going up since KitzbĆ¼hel, and thatās fine,ā Ryding said. āYou know, thatās because Iām skiing well. And if the expectation was rock bottom, itās probably because Iām not skiing well and I wasnāt in a good place.
āWith success comes expectation. But like I always do, keep everything in perspective, do what I can, do the right things going up to it, getting my routine on the day and giving it my all."
Alain Baxter initially won Britainās first Olympic medal in Alpine skiing when he finished third in the menās slalom at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, but he was later stripped of his bronze for using a decongestant that contained a banned stimulant.
The Beijing Games are Ryding's fourth Olympics. His best individual result is ninth ā in the slalom in 2018 ā but he knows he has a chance on Wednesday.
There have been six World Cup slaloms this season and six different winners. Only four skiers have even made the podium more than once and no one has done it more than twice.
āAll I can say is this: six slaloms this year, six different winners,ā Ryding said. āAnd on those six podiums, thereās been 14 different people. So one of those guys whoās had a podium has to finish 14th, itās as simple as that.
āBut I know that itās in me to win and I know I can be reassured that Iām in the form to do whatever on the day. Iāve had a first, Iāve had a fifth, Iāve had a 20, you know, so I will give it my all.ā
The Olympic menās slalom has somewhat of a tradition for producing gold medalists at a late age.
When Andre Myhrer ā who was also 35 at the time ā took gold in slalom at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games, he became the oldest winner of that discipline at an Olympics, breaking the record set by Mario Matt four years earlier.
And Ryding has always come late to things in skiing. He didnāt even ski on real snow until he was 12, having learned on dry slopes near his home in northern England.
Ryding had to wait until he was nearly 26 to break into the top 30 in a World Cup race, and until he was 30 to get a podium. He finally got a victory on the circuit at 35.
But his advanced years might serve as an advantage on Wednesday.
āI always try and keep everything I do in perspective. Iāve always been analytical myself and how Iām skiing and my results,ā Ryding said. āI knew that skiing was in me even before that first. Now it just reiterates the fact that it is there. Donāt rest on your laurels. Keep working hard and bring out what you can on the day.ā
In the speedy world of ski racing, tenths ā or even hundredths ā of a second can mean the difference between a gold medal and not even making the podium.
With slalom this season being all about āalmighty tight, almighty fine margins,ā Ryding knows thereās only one way to approach the race on the course known as The Ice River.
āIāve had a ninth at the Olympics ā¦ so thereās no point trying to get another ninth. I may as well try and go better,ā Ryding said. āAnd the only way to do that now, especially with slalom, is to risk it. And yeah, the winner will take it all.
āItās all about the day and I am in the mindset of I will have to do or die.ā
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Daniella Matar, The Associated Press