
THE WOMEN OF TEAM USA
This February in PyeongChang, the women of Team USA have made their mark at the Winter Olympics. Of the 108 women representing the U.S in South Korea, 45 competed collegiately at 25 different schools.
To-date, the U.S. female collegiate contingent has made history in cross-country skiing, ice hockey, speedskating and bobsled. Learn more about their notable performances.
Cross-country skiers rewrite history
Jessie Diggins and Alaska Pacific’s Kikkan Randall made U.S. Olympic history after winning the Team USA’s first women’s cross-country medal, a gold, with a victory in the team sprint. The duo crossed the finish in 15:56.47 to reach the top of the podium.
Randall, a five-time Olympian, relished the chance to win an Olympic medal in a team race.
“In 2013, when we won the world championships, I saw that a team gold is worth far more than any individual accolade,” Randall said. “What really kept me going over the last four years was trying to contribute to a team medal.”
Ice hockey brings home first gold medal in 20 years
For the first time since 1998, Team USA took home the gold medal with a dramatic 3-2 shootout victory over Canada. All 23 U.S. athletes skated collegiately at nine NCAA institutions, with 13 athletes lacing up for their first Olympic Winter Games.
The U.S. was led in goal by current Minnesota-Duluth student-athlete Maddie Rooney, who recorded 87 saves during the tournament and yielded only a 1.16 goals against average. On the offensive end, Minnesota’s Dani Cameranesi and North Dakota’s Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson led the team in total points with five. Lamoureux-Davidson scored the most goals with four and Wisconsin’s Brianna Decker tallied the most assists with three.
As for what the win will do for women’s hockey in the U.S., Wisconsin’s Hilary Knight notes, “I hope the growth of it explodes. I hope we can go back and share this success, and I hope the young girls that are watching get inspired and want to do essentially what we did 20 years later after watching the 1998 Olympics.”
Speedskaters take home USA’s first team pursuit medal
Florida Atlantic’s Brittany Bowe made history in South Korea after winning a bronze medal in the team pursuit alongside teammates Heather Bergsma, Mia Manganello and Carlijn Schoutens. The medal marks Team USA’s first Olympic medal in women’s long-track speedskating since 2002, and the first team pursuit medal since the event debuted in 2006.
"I’m feeling blessed to be here. Couldn't have done it without the team, and happy to do it with these fine ladies,” Bowe said of the medal-winning performance. “It has taken an army to get me here, it's taken an army to get these three other ladies here. We couldn't have done it without each other. It's great to be a part of Team USA."
During her stint in PyeongChang, Bowe also racked up top-five finishes in the 500m, 1000m and 1500m.
Bobsledders win third-consecutive Olympic medal
Following their silver-medal performance in PyeongChang, George Washington’s Elana Meyers Taylor found herself on the podium for the third-straight Games. The former softball student-athlete and Brown’s Lauren Gibbs finished with a time of 3:22.52, just 0.07 seconds behind gold-medal winning Germany.
"The women's team has been so successful, and it's an honor to live up to the legacy,” said Meyers Taylor. “We've won a medal at every single Olympics, so that's what we knew we had to come out and do."
The speed and power forged in their college days helped propel the U.S. women bobsled athletes to success in PyeongChang.
Notable medal-winning performances
Former California Davis club water polo athlete Brita Sigourney took home bronze in the freestyle skiing halfpipe after posting a score of 91.60 en route to the podium.
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs student Mirai Nagasu helped Team USA to a team figure skating bronze, skating for the U.S. in the ladies short program. Individually, Nagasu finished 10th with an overall score of 186.54.
Team USA collegiate athletes competed in biathlon and figure skating on day 14 of the Olympic Winter Games in South Korea, tallying top-10 finishes in both sports.
Biathlon
Vermont’s Lowell Bailey, along with teammates Tim Burke, Sean Doherty and Leif Nordgren, placed sixth in the men’s 4x7.5k relay Friday night at the Alpensia Biathlon Centre. The quad crossed the finish line in a time of 1:19:06.7, less than four seconds behind the gold-medal pace of Sweden, 1:15:16.5.
Team USA’s finish is a ten-spot improvement from Sochi and ties the 1972 result for the country’s best-ever finish in the event.
Read more about the relay on TeamUSA.org.
Figure Skating
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs student Mirai Nagasu wrapped up her 2018 Olympic competition with a free skate program that placed her 10th in the event. Nagasu recorded a 119.75 in the free skate for an overall score of 186.54.
Read more on the women’s figure skating finals on TeamUSA.org.

2/24: m. bobsled (four-man)
9:30 a.m. KST (2/23 5:30 p.m. MT)
C. Valdes (UCLA), C. Fogt (Utah Valley), C. Kinney (Georgetown), E. Weinstock (Brown), H. Abdul-Saboor (Virginia Wise), J. Olsen (Air Force), N. Cunningham (Boise State), S. McGuffie (Rice), S. Michener (Idaho), S. Langton (Northeastern)

2/24: m/w alpine (team event)
11 a.m. KST (2/23 7 p.m. MT)
D. Chodounsky (Dartmouth), M. Engel (Utah)

2/24: m. cross-country skiing (50k mass start)
2 p.m. KST (2/23 10 p.m. MT)
T. Kornfield (Alaska Fairbanks), S. Patterson (Vermont)


