-
Relive the Best Snowboarding Moments of the 2022 Winter Olympics
From Shaun White’s final ride to Chloe Kim’s repeat, here were the best snowboarding moments at the Winter Olympics.
-
Team USA's Oldest Olympians Take an '80s Trivia Quiz
They’re the oldest, most experienced athletes at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, but how well do these ’80s babies know their birth decade? NBCLX’s Ngozi Ekeledo and Fernando Hurtado learn about some of Team USA’s most seasoned members and the origin story of biathlon.
-
WATCH: Olympic Champions Ace This 80s Babies Quiz
Snowboarders Lindsey Jacobellis and Nick Baumgartner may be Olympic champions, but they’re also totally boss at 80s trivia. Like, totally, dude.
-
WATCH: Team USA Earns First Ever Gold in Mixed Team Snowboard Cross Debut
History was made on Saturday in Beijing as Team USA’s Lindsey Jacobellis and Nick Baumgartner won the first-ever gold medal in the Olympic debut of Mixed Team Snowboard Cross. The victory gave Baumgartner, a four-time Olympian, his first gold, while Jacobellis collected her second Beijing 2022 gold after finishing first in the women’s competition. The two were the oldest...
-
Team USA wins gold for Mixed Snowboard Cross
Team USA won gold in mixed team snowboard cross. This is Nick Baumgartner’s first ever Olympic medal and Lindsey Jacobellis’s second gold medal for the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics
-
CT's Lindsey Jacobellis Gets 2nd Gold, Wins Mixed Team Snowboard Cross With Nick Baumgartner
It’s a golden week for Lindsey Jacobellis! The Connecticut native won her second gold medal of the Winter Olympics, as she and Nick Baumgartner won the first-ever gold medal in mixed team snowboard cross. Two of the most “seasoned” members of Team USA, Jacobellis, 36, was previously the oldest medal winner in the Beijing Olympics — until the 40-year-old Baumgartner…
-
Mixed Team Snowboard Cross Makes Its Olympic Debut: Here's How It Works
It is not a new event in the snowboarding world, but it is the first time it is occurring at the Olympics — here are the rules
-
Something Else Olympian Lindsey Jacobellis Is Really Good at? Label-Making
There’s no disputing gold medalist Lindsey Jacobellis is one of the top snowboarders in the world, but she would also like people to know she’s really good at organizing. “Label-makers are my things,” Jacobellis said.
-
At 36, Olympian Lindsey Jacobellis Is Oldest US Woman to Medal – But She Prefers ‘Seasoned'
When cross snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis took home Team USA’s first gold medal at the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, she became the oldest American woman to place at any Winter Games. But don’t tell the five-time Olympic athlete that.
-
Lindsey Jacobellis' Reporter Cousin Cheers From Sidelines at Winter Olympics
NBC Connecticut’s Gabrielle Lucivero was just 14 years old when she watched on TV as her big cousin experienced heartbreak in the 2006 Winter Olympics in Torino. Her cousin, Lindsey Jacobellis, was leading the snowboard cross final event in Torino when she fell just yards from the finish line, losing out on a gold medal and taking the silver instead….
-
Watch Lindsey Jacobellis Snowboard Her Way to First U.S. Gold Medal of 2022
Watch Lindsey Jacobellis’ run that earned gold in the snowboard cross big finals — finally getting the USA’s first gold medal of the 2022 Winter Olympics.
-
Watch Lindsey Jacobellis Snowboard Her Way to 1st USA Gold in Beijing After Infamous Stumble
You have to fall before you can get back up, and that’s what U.S. snowboarder Lindsey Jacobellis did at the 2022 Beijing Olympics. The 36-year-old Connecticut native had been best known for taking a massive lead into the final jump at the 2006 Turin Games and then falling and settling for silver. Sixteen years later, she rode hard all the…
-
Lindsey Jacobellis Wins USA's First Gold Medal–and Redemption–in Women's Snowboard Cross
Lindsey Jacobellis won gold in the women’s snowboard cross final, the first gold for the U.S. in the Winter Olympics, and redeemed herself sixteen years after an infamous last-minute blunder cost her gold in 2006.
-
Lindsey Jacobellis Wins Snowboard Cross, Giving US 1st Beijing Gold
Lindsey Jacobellis has officially completed her redemption tour. Sixteen years after famously losing a commanding lead in the final moments of the women’s snowboard cross, the 36-year-old has earned her place atop the podium and given the U.S. its first gold medal of the 2022 Winter Olympics. Jacobellis entered Beijing with high expectations. After opening her Olympic career with...
-
Jacobellis Advances to Finals of Women's Snowboard Cross
Olympic hopes for American Lindsey Jacobellis remain alive as she heads to the finals of the women’s snowboard cross. All four Americans advanced to the quarterfinals but only Jacobellis and Stacy Gaskill advanced to the semifinals. In the round of eight, Gaskill finished fourth in her heat, ending her time in women’s snowboard cross. In the semifinals, Meghan Tierney...
-
Women's Snowboard Cross Quarterfinals Features Four Americans
All four American women finished in the top two of their qualifying heats to advance to the quarterfinals of women’s snowboarding cross.
-
Team USA's Lindsey Jacobellis Seeks Return to Medal Stand in Women's Snowboard Cross
It’s been a long and sometimes challenging road for Jacobellis – one of four Americans competing in the women’s snowboard cross early Wednesday morning.
-
US Medal Haul Well Short of Committee's Projections
It was a sweeping goal, spelled out on a colorful, full-screen slide and presented to leaders of the U.S. Olympic Committee in a meeting last year. Sports executives in America targeted athletes on Team USA to win 37 medals at the Pyeongchang Games. Heading into the final 48 hours of action, the United States had 21. Even if things were...
-
4 to Watch: Figure Skating Finale, Daring Ski Cross and Shani's Speedskate Highlight Day 13 of the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics
There should be no shortage of must-see action on Day 13 of the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics.
-
The Curse of 4: Are US Athletes Doomed by Korea's Unlucky Number?
Every culture has a number considered unlucky because of superstitions. In the United States it’s 13. In South Korea, it’s four. The reason behind the fear of the number four, known as tetraphobia, lies in the way it sounds. The Korean word for “four” sounds much like the word for “death.” Americans competing in Pyeongchang are learning that you don’t...