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Lauren Macuga is skiing fast and having a blast doing it

Lauren Macuga is skiing fast and having a blast doing it

USA Today25-03-2025
Lauren Macuga is skiing fast and having a blast doing it
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Kirsty Coventry becomes first woman elected president of the IOC
Kirsty Coventry of Zimbabwe became the first woman and first person from Africa to be elected president of the International Olympic Committee.
SUN VALLEY, Idaho — Used to be, Lauren Macuga was best known for her collection of bucket hats and colorful shirts with American flags all over them.
Now it's her skiing that's getting all the buzz.
Macuga went from an up-and-comer to a legitimate medal contender at next year's Milan-Cortina Olympics this season. And it happened almost as fast as she skis.
She raised eyebrows in December by winning two super-Gs in a lower-tier event at Copper Mountain, finishing ahead of eventual overall champion Federica Brignone. A month later, Macuga got her first World Cup victory, in the super-G at St. Anton, Austria.
She medaled in her very first world championships, winning the bronze in super-G. And earlier this month, she was second in a World Cup downhill in Kvitfjell, Norway.
With one race left at the World Cup finals, the 22-year-old is the top U.S. woman in the overall standings.
'It's just been chaos. But it's been fantastic,' Macuga said Tuesday after finishing 15th, good enough to earn her points, in her first-ever World Cup giant slalom race. 'I couldn't have asked for a better season. I mean my team, the support and just, it's literally just been so fun.'
Fun is the operative word in the Macuga family.
Dan and Amy Macuga (pronounced muh-SUE-gah) moved their family to Park City, Utah, when their kids were small. Name a snow sport, and it can be done in Park City because of the facilities left over from the 2002 Olympics, and the Macuga kids tried most of them.
Lauren and her brother Daniel gravitated to ski racing. Younger sister Alli took to moguls. Older sister Sam loved the thrill of ski jumping.
Mind you, this was meant to just be a fun thing, a way for the kids to stay active. Not produce future Olympic hopefuls.
And yet, that's where they are, with Lauren, Alli and Sam all on their respective national teams and Daniel racing on one of the lower circuits.
'I don't know how we got here,' Amy Macuga said. 'It just all suddenly happened. It's pretty surreal.'
Or chaos, as Lauren Macuga happily describes it. (Sam even carried a sign with 'Chaos Cougs' on Tuesday.)
Amy Macuga uses a spreadsheet to keep her kids' schedules straight, as well as another to track who is taking care of the family pets while they crisscross the globe. The siblings make frequent use of the location functions on their phones to keep tabs on where the others are.
And sometimes there's a little intervention by the travel gods.
Earlier this season, Sam was in the Munich airport when someone came up behind her at baggage claim. Turns out, Lauren was flying through Munich, too, and had spotted her sister.
'She scared me so bad! I was like, `I'm hallucinating. Lauren, what are you doing here?'' Sam said, laughing at the memory. 'It was so funny. We sent a selfie to our family.'
With the exception of Daniel, the whole family was in Sun Valley over the weekend. Though the downhill race Saturday was canceled and Lauren had her first-ever 'did not finish' in the super-G, it didn't put a damper on what has been a breakout season for the burgeoning star.
Macuga was in the top five in seven of her 19 races, and in the top 10 in another three. Though she wound up fourth in the team combined at the world championships, she had the fastest downhill run in the event.
Macuga finished the season fourth in the downhill standings, and sixth in super-G.
'My expectations for the season were high, but I definitely surpassed them. Which has been so exciting,' she said before the World Cup finals began. 'My super-G expectations were definitely high and my downhill, I was hoping it was as good last year and now it's just as good as my super-G. It's really cool to … say, `If I can put my best skiing down, it can be a really good run.''
Her success, along with her bubbly personality and made-for-NBC family story, will put Macuga squarely in the spotlight ahead of next year's Olympics. While that kind of attention can be daunting, Macuga is made for it.
Even before she was challenging for podiums, Macuga stood out from other skiers with her goofy hats. It started four years ago, she said, when she spotted a cute bucket hat with mushrooms on it and wore it in the finish area. It quickly became her signature and, in a sport where athletes can be anonymous once they take off their helmets, has helped make Macuga a fan favorite.
Keep skiing like this, and she could pick up some new, shinier accessories at the Milan-Cortina Olympics.
'(This season gave me) a lot of confidence and it's so cool. But it's also crazy to be like, no, I still have to work hard through the summer,' Macuga said. 'Yeah, I'm sitting very well right now, but it's all up to next year and you can't just sit around and do nothing.
'It actually gets me more excited to work harder to try to get even better for the Olympics.'
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
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As France's sports budget faces cuts, are Olympic promises being broken?
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As France's sports budget faces cuts, are Olympic promises being broken?

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Frederick Richard is taking his fight to make gymnastics 'cool' to a new front: His uniform
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Frederick Richard is taking his fight to make gymnastics 'cool' to a new front: His uniform
Frederick Richard is taking his fight to make gymnastics 'cool' to a new front: His uniform

San Francisco Chronicle​

timean hour ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Frederick Richard is taking his fight to make gymnastics 'cool' to a new front: His uniform

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Frederick Richard is taking the fight to make men's gymnastics matter to a new front: his wardrobe. The charismatic 21-year-old Olympic bronze medalist switched out the stirrup pants that have long been a staple of the men's uniform for shorts with compression leggings at the U.S. Championships this weekend, firm in his belief that the three-tenths (0.3) deduction he receives every day of competition that he breaks the rules is worth it if it makes his sport more accessible. Even when those tenths add up. Richard edged Fuzzy Benas by less than a quarter of a point for second place behind two-time national champion Asher Hong. If Richard had worn the traditional uniform, his margin over Benas could have been a little more comfortable. Yet asked if the statement he is trying to make — that it's time for men's gymnastics to modernize its uniforms — is worth the risk to his potential placement during a given meet, he didn't hesitate. 'It's 1,000% worth it,' Richard said. 'If you look at these kids in the crowd, I'm thinking about them and I'm thinking about when I was younger.' Finding an alternative While Richard quickly fell in love with gymnastics as a kid growing up in the Boston area, the stirrup pants worn by the guys on pommel horse, still rings, parallel bars, and high bar were another matter. 'If I left the gym to go to the gas station, I didn't want anybody to see me in my pommel horse pants,' Richard said. 'Kids would say, 'Do you do gymnastics?' I'd say 'Yeah.' But I didn't want them to search 'gymnast' and see the uniform. I didn't feel like it was cool.' His solution was to design an alternative. With the help of the apparel company Turn, Richard debuted the look earlier this year and 'refined' it ahead of nationals. During the opening night of competition on Thursday, the rising Michigan junior wore maize-and-blue colored zebra-patterned leggings with (almost) matching blue shorts. On Saturday, Richard swapped the maize and blue for gray. Both times, there was a 'ND -0.3' next to Richard's score on the first event in which the traditional pants were required. Yet Richard wasn't as focused on the ribbon board where his score was posted, but on the young boys in the stands below them. '(I want them to) see this, and they're like, 'This is cool. I want to wear this. This kid is trying to make the sport cool, he looks cool,'' Richard said. 'And that's the stuff that gets kids into the sport, that's stuff that keeps kids in the sport.' Even if it's a largely American conversation. Fighting for relevance While the popularity of men's gymnastics in the U.S. has declined for decades (though there is optimism that the bronze medal Richard and his teammates captured at the 2024 Olympics could help stem the tide), there are no such issues overseas. They're not talking about stirrup pants in China. Or Japan. Or Russia. Places with dominant programs whose stars become champions and national heroes in the process. The challenges men's gymnastics faces in the U.S. are many. The number of Division I programs that offer it as a scholarship sport is a fraction of what it was decades ago. And the impact of the recent House settlement could make opportunities at a level that has long served as a feeder system to the U.S. national team even scarcer. At the Olympic level, the men have long competed in the shadow of the star-studded (and highly successful) women's program. Richard has long understood this. He's seen the attrition firsthand. While the uniform didn't stop him from pressing on, he believes he might be the exception, not the rule. Countless young boys dabble in multiple sports growing up, gymnastics included. Richard thinks tweaking the uniform requirements into something he considers more modern could remove what he thinks might be a roadblock to sticking with it for some. 'It does add to what makes a 12-year-old boy decide, 'Do I want to keep doing this sport? Or should I play football or soccer, because my friends think I'm cool when I play with them?' he said. The rules do allow for a little latitude. Some German female gymnasts opted for full-body unitards at each of the last two Olympics, though the design does not run afoul of FIG regulations. What Richard is doing does. Pushing the limits And while he stressed he would never wear his outlawed uniform in a team competition — he wore regulation pants while helping lead Michigan to the NCAA championship this spring — that might not be the case the next time he competes internationally. 'We'll see about the world stage,' Richard said. 'We'll have to talk and see what they allow, but I want to keep pushing it. I'm having fun. I feel more free.' He'll have some time to think about it. When the six-man roster for the 2025 World Championships was announced late Saturday night, Richard's name wasn't on it. The decision had nothing to do with Richard's uniform but the uniqueness of this year's world meet, which does not include a team event and is largely designed for event specialists. At his best, Richard is one of the top all-arounders on the planet. Yet even he admitted he was at about '80%' at nationals following a whirlwind stretch that included traveling to places like Uganda. Richard is partnering with the African nation to open a facility for boys there interested in acrobatics. The joy he felt during the trip was palpable. So has the criticism he's received back home for his uniform choice, with some telling him if he wants to look like a basketball player, maybe he should go play basketball. While Richard's modified look wouldn't look out of place on the court, pommel horse specialist Stephen Nedoroscik — who won a pair of bronze medals in Paris and became a breakout star in the process (all while wearing stirrup pants) last summer — agrees with his Olympic teammate that there 'should be a certain level of flexibility' when it comes to uniforms, though he also pointed out that having everyone wear identical outfits is designed to help the judges do their jobs. 'So like, you can't wear like super baggy clothes, obviously,' Nedoroscik said. 'But I do like there should be maybe a little bit of wiggle room.' That's all Richard says he is asking for, though it seems highly unlikely the FIG would eliminate the deduction for a uniform violation anytime soon. That is not going to stop Richard from pressing on. 'I'll wear it for the next 10 years if I have to,' he said. 'So eventually, if I keep succeeding and winning, and eventually on the international stage do the same thing and keep winning, (the FIG) will see how people like it (and) the younger kids will start wearing it ... and the trend is going to grow.'

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