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Sochi day one: Britteny Cox takes fifth in moguls

Norway's Marit Bjoergen (front left) in the women's cross-country.

Norway's Marit Bjoergen (front left) in the women's cross-country.

Scotty James out of slopestyle

Australian skier Britteny Cox has finished fifth in the moguls at Sochi, the best ever result by an Australian woman in that discipline.

The event was won by Canadian Justine Dufour-Lapointe, while her sister Chloe took silver. Defending Olympic champion Hannah Kearney from the United States took bronze.

Cox, 19, said after the event: “Incredible. That’s the skiing that I needed to do tonight. That final round of 12 was some of the best skiing I’ve ever done.

“I had a lot of fun on that moguls course. It definitely feels like a win. These are happy tears right now.”

Cox wobbled slightly on her final run after completing a clean 360. “A little bit overcooked on the bottom air which probably cost me a few points there, but I’m happy because I pushed the limits and personally that’s a big step and big hurdle for me,” she said.

“In Moguls skiing, anything can happen especially when you’re down to that final six and the girls are just really pushing it. I could have been in there, on the podium, but I’m happy with my skiing tonight and really excited for what I can do in the future.”

Australians Nicole Parks and Taylah O’Neill finished 15th and 16th respectively.

Gold and silver: sisters Chloe and Justine Dufour-Lapointe of Canada.

Canadian sisters Justine and Chloe Dufour-Lapointe, who ‘quinellad’ the moguls. Picture: Getty

In other results from day one of competition, Norwegian biathlete Ole Einar Bjoerndalen made a mockery of his 40 years when he won a record-equalling 12th Winter Olympic medal.

Bjoerndalen went level with compatriot Bjorn Daehlie, who also gathered 12 medals in his cross country career.

He also became the oldest gold medallist in an individual event thanks to an astonishing display of raw power and technique which saw him romp to victory in the 10km sprint.

But the Norwegian, nicknamed ‘The Cannibal’, wasn’t the only evergreen athlete chewing up the competition on the first full day of action on the edge of the Black Sea.

Outspoken ski star Bode Miller, 36, was headline-grabbing on and off the slopes at Rosa Khotur, dominating downhill training before lambasting the state of the course.

Meanwhile, 30-year-old Austrian veteran Daniela Iraschko-Stolz was the top performer as women made their ski jumping debut at the Olympics.

And 33-year-old Marit Bjoergen won her fourth Olympic title and became the most successful female Norwegian Olympian in history, after taking the first cross-country skiing gold in the women’s skiathlon.

At least, snowboarder Sage Kotsenburg of the United States broke the magic spell of the senior performers when the 20-year-old claimed the first gold medal of the Sochi Olympics in men’s slopestyle. Australian Scotty James did not qualify for the final.

Bjoerndalen was the undoubted star of the day when he overcame a penalty lap to clock 24min 33.5sec to take his seventh Olympic gold in his sixth Games ahead of Austria’s Dominik Landertinger, in 24:34.8sec, and Jaroslav Soukup of the Czech Republic, who clocked 24:39.2.

In the aftermath of the race, Daehlie told reporters that Bjoerndalen was comfortably the greatest ever Norwegian athlete.

“It is nice to hear that from Bjorn, but for me he still is the biggest star in Norway and in the world,” said the champion.

Ole Einar Bjoerndalen, the 'greatest ever Norwegian athlete'. Picture: Getty.

Ole Einar Bjoerndalen, the ‘greatest ever Norwegian athlete’. Picture: Getty.

Ski veteran Miller, who won gold, silver and bronze at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, was fastest in training for Sunday’s blue riband medal race up in Rosa Khutor.

But he then unleashed a fierce critique of the challenges of the course. “This course is very treacherous. It has teeth everywhere,” he said.

In the spectacular slopestyle event, Kotsenburg, who only just squeezed into the final, claimed the inaugural title.

His first run scored 93.50 and although some of his rivals put in high scores on their second runs, the 20-year-old from Utah held on for victory.

“I’m really excited. It feels awesome. I don’t know what to call it,” said Kotsenburg.

Norway’s Staale Sandbech (91.75) claimed silver while Mark McMorris of Canada took bronze with 88.75.

Bjoergen claimed her fourth career gold to become her country’s most successful female Olympian, surpassing legendary figure skater Sonja Henie.

Norway's Marit Bjoergen (front left) in the women's cross-country.

Norway’s Marit Bjoergen (front left) in the women’s cross-country.

Under stunning blue skies at the Laura cross-country ski centre, Bjoergen won the combined 7.5km classic style/7.5km freestyle event.

Sweden’s Charlotte Kalla was second with Heidi Weng of Norway taking the bronze.

Bjoergen won three golds in Vancouver four years ago.

In women’s ski jumping, Iraschko-Stolz won two of the three training jumps, ahead of Japanese teen star Sara Takanashi.

Speed skater Sven Kramer retained his Olympic 5000m title, destroying the field to win by nearly five seconds as the Netherlands swept the podium, 50 years after the last clean sweep.

Kramer’s time of 6min 10.76sec was a new Olympic record. Jan Blokhuijsen took silver in 6:15.71 while Jorrit Bergsma (6:16.66) won bronze. With AAP

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