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February 6, 2022

Aussie Covid curlers create feelgood story of Olympics Australia’s Tahli Gill (R) curls the stone next to Australia’s Dean Hewitt during the mixed doubles round robin session 5 game of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games curling competition between Sweden and Australia, at the National Aquatics Centre in Beijing on February 4, 2022. (Photo by LILLIAN SUWANRUMPHA / AFP)

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Australia’s unluckiest Winter Olympians finally caught a break — and turned it into curling’s version of the miracle on ice.

Australia’s unluckiest Winter Olympians finally caught a break — and turned it into curling’s version of the miracle on ice.

Tahli Gill and Dean Hewitt — Australia’s first curlers to qualify for the Olympics — may not have won a medal in China but they still manufactured the feelgood story of the Games.

From the depths of despair, they beat Switzerland 9-6 in their penultimate round robin match to claim their first win of the tournament after having nothing but rotten luck from the moment they got to China.

They were threatened with being kicked out of the mixed doubles competition even before it began when Gill tested positive to Covid on arrival at Beijing airport, through no fault of her own.

The result came from an old infection which China’s ultra sensitive testing system picked up but the Aussies were cleared to play in the nick of time when her next two daily samples both came back negative.

But that wasn’t the end of their cursed run, it was just the beginning.

They lost each of their first seven round-robin matches — four of them by a solitary point — ending their hopes of making the semi-finals.

Then just before their final matches on Sunday — their last shot of chalking up a consolation win before heading home — they got another kick in the guts.

Gill was notified she had tested positive again but there was not enough time left for her to produce the required two negative tests to play.

That meant they had to forfeit their last two games, against Switzerland and Canada, and Gill would have to relocate to a Covid isolation facility.

The Australian Olympic Committee (AOC) requested they be allowed to return home immediately, triggering an urgent meeting of Chinese officials which resulted in a spectacular backflip that worked in the Australians’ favour.

With no time to spare, the Medical Expert Panel reversed the ruling and told the Aussies to get themselves ready to play the Swiss.

Trailing 6-3 after five of the eight ends, it looked like being another lost cause. Then suddenly the Aussies went on a roll, scoring six unanswered points to pinch the win.

“We are thrilled for Tahli and Dean,” the Australian team chef de mission Geoff Lipshut said.

“I am delighted that our headquarters team continued pressing her case, after earlier advice that the pair could no longer compete.”

Wild story of Canuck-turned-Aussie’s bid to do a Bradbury

Not for the first time, Canada’s loss is Australia’s gain in winter sports.

If things had gone the way he planned, Brendan Corey might have been skating for Canada at the Beijing Olympics.

Instead, he’s competing for Australia, in the same short track event that Steven Bradbury famously won gold in two decades ago.

And Bradbury’s heir apparent is already through to Monday’s quarter-finals after breaking the Australian record in Saturday’s heats.

How he ended up representing Australia is as wild as the sport of track itself.

It wasn’t that long ago that Corey represented Canada at the junior world championships but he switched his allegiances to Australia after he was unfairly left off the national team and was offered a spot on the Australian team.

Currently ranked 11th in the world, he isn’t the first disgruntled Canadian to come to Australia looking for brighter things.

Dale Begg-Smith left the Great White North when he was a teenager and moved to the Snowy Mountains, then won gold in moguls at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin.

While Corey’s own family found some of the precious metal in Australia too, literally.

“My mother’s father is a gold miner,” Corey told News Corp. “He helped develop the Plutonic mine, which is one of the largest mines in Western Australia.

“He’s a dual citizen. And my mother grew up in Australia too. So to get the chance to wear the green and gold at the Olympics means so much to my family. I’m so excited.”

Ranked 11th in the world for the 1,000m race, Corey is Australia’s lone representative in short track speed skating.

When Bradbury won his first Olympic medal, a bronze at Lillehammer in 1994, Australia had an entire relay team, but those days have long gone.

For Corey, part of the lure of switching allegiances to Australia was to rebuild the program.

“I was too young at the time to remember it but I’ve watched Steven’s race multiple times,” he said.

“I don’t think that a moment like that will ever happen again in short track but it reminds me that even on your lowest days when you think the world is against you, you just dig deeper and come back even stronger.”

Coincidentally, Corey did most of his training for Beijing in Salt Lake City, the Utah capital where Bradbury won Australia’s first Winter Olympic gold in 2002 after all his opponents in the final fell over.

When Corey made the team, Bradbury was one of the first people to congratulate him.

“He just wanted to reach out to personally congratulate me and say that he’s very proud of all the hard work and commitment I’ve shown,’ Corey said.

“He gave me some hints about what things I am doing well and some of the strengths that he saw in me that I will be able to use at the upcoming Games.”

The often forgotten part of Bradbury’s incredible victory is that years before his Olympic victory, he almost died after he collided with another skater at a World Cup meet in Montreal and was sliced open by his blade.

Corey also suffered a life-changing injury just after being selected on the Canadian national senior team when a teammate slipped over and collided with him.

He had suffered a concussion which ruled him out of selection but was never picked again.

“I was very upset at the time, I’m not going to lie,” he said.

“I did go through an appeal process, because I was really unhappy with the decision and felt like it was not a fair one.”

A chance meeting with Australian coach Richard Nizielski, who teamed up with Bradbury to win Olympic bronze in 1994, convinced Corey that his future was in green and gold so he jumped at the chance.

“Words can’t explain how I feel,” he said. “But this is just the start.

“This year was my first year on the World Cup so I went in with an underdog mentality and no pressure, and I think that helped me to achieve what I have this season.

“To be 11th in the world in my first year, I still can’t believe it and now I’ve been selected on the Olympic team. It’s just an incredible bonus.”

Is Australia’s long wait for Winter Olympic gold about to end?

It’s been 12 years since an Australian woman has claimed the biggest prize on snow and ice but there’s now renewed hope the drought could be over as early as Sunday night.

No-one’s counting their chickens yet because there’s absolutely no guarantees in extreme winter sports, where the tiniest slip can spell disaster but don’t anyone go to bed early because if Australia’s rising moguls star Jakara Anthony can stay on her skis she has a real shot at the podium.

Fourth on her Olympic debut four years ago when she was just a teenager, the Victorian is now entrenched among the best and most consistent performers and has already laid the challenge to her rivals since arriving in Beijing.

Showing no signs of nerves, she easily finished top of Thursday’s qualifiers after a breathtaking run down the bumpy course then declared she can do even better in Sunday’s three-stage final series.

“There has been a four-year build-up to this, so to finally get the chance to ski at the Olympic stadium was a phenomenal feeling,” she said.

“It was a really good run but there were some things I was happy with and things I definitely did better in training, so I definitely have a lot of room to improve on that.”

That’s a frightening prospect for her closest competitors, particularly France’s Perrine Laffont and Japan’s Anri Kawamura, but that counts for nothing because moguls is one of the most unforgiving of all the skiing disciplines as there are so many dangers.

Competitors not only have to navigate their way down the steep, bumpy slope as fast as they can but they also have to impress the judges with their technical ability on the turns, and wow them with their jumps.

That’s where the 23-year-old Anthony has an advantage over her rivals because she’s the only woman in the world who can nail a Cork 720 mute, one of the hardest tricks in moguls that involves a full flip with two rotations and a grab of the skis in mid-air.

But the Olympics creates more pressure than any event in the world so she’ll also have to do it when the heat is on, if she makes the final six where the medals will be decided by a single run.

It promises to be a white-knuckle ride because to be the very best, competitors need to take risks and push themselves to the absolute limit, both physically and mentally.

“We do all sorts of training, and strength is a really big one for us,” Anthony said.

“You’re taking a lot of impact in the moguls and on the jumps so you need to be as strong as you can, particularly in your legs.

“We do some aerobic training and we do anaerobic training.

“A run is about 30 seconds, so we really need to be working that lactate which is not fun.

“There’s a lot of other bits in between, some speedwork, tricks, everything really.”

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